When Dreams Tremble

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When Dreams Tremble Page 25

by Radclyffe


  She stretched one arm out along the back of the sofa, her suit jacket falling open

  and her blouse tightening across her breasts.

  It was a seductive pose, and Leslie knew Rachel knew it. She looked away.

  “Yes and no. About before, yes. About now, not exactly.”

  “So you’re doing the honorable thing before you and she—”

  “No,” Leslie said quickly. “I don’t…we don’t have any plans for anything.”

  “You’re going to stop seeing me because of a high school crush?”

  Rachel’s tone was more incredulous than angry. “And you’re not even pursuing

  her?”

  “I’m pretty turned around right now, Rach. I just don’t feel like I can be with

  anyone.”

  “Maybe you need to take some more time off. I’ve never seen you like this.”

  “You mean emotionally all over the place?” Leslie knew she always appeared to

  be in control because she always kept her emotions so tightly under wraps. But

  now she couldn’t. She couldn’t push the memory of Dev away, or what she felt

  for her, or what she didn’t feel for Rachel. She couldn’t go back to being

  completely focused on work and contenting herself with a casual sexual

  relationship. Part of her mind was always thinking about Dev. About where she

  was. What she was doing. If she was with Natalie. If she was happy. If she

  missed Leslie as much as Leslie missed her.

  “A few weeks off won’t change anything,” Leslie said gently.

  “And it doesn’t feel fair to keep seeing you when I feel this way.”

  “You can’t be happy about this.”

  Leslie closed her eyes for an instant, then smiled weakly. “I’m not, but it’s what

  I have to do.”

  “We have an excellent physical relationship, and we enjoy each other’s

  company. You’re not seeing anyone else, and neither am I.”

  Rising, Rachel set her glass down and glided over to Leslie. She cupped her jaw

  and raised her head. “Why give this up?”

  Leslie felt the familiar pull of Rachel’s mouth moving over hers,

  those long Þ ngers caressing her neck, a warm hand cupping her breast.

  Her nipple hardened in Rachel’s palm and she heard Rachel’s murmur of

  approval. Carefully, she eased back, breaking the kiss and the caress.

  “My heart’s not in it, Rachel. And I need it to be. I’m sorry.”

  Rachel straightened. “I’m not going to wait.”

  “I didn’t think you would.” Leslie stood. “I wouldn’t ask you to.”

  “But,” Rachel said, running her Þ ngertip along Leslie’s jaw, “I think it might

  take me quite some time to Þ nd anyone I enjoy as much as you, especially in

  the bedroom. So call me, if you decide you miss it.”

  “You can call me too,” Leslie said softly, knowing Rachel wouldn’t. Rachel

  didn’t have friends, she didn’t have time. She had colleagues to challenge her

  mind and a lover to satisfy her body. Leslie doubted Rachel would go long

  without Þ nding someone else. She burned too fast and too brightly not to have

  her needs met. “I’m sorry.

  I hate hurting you.”

  “I know, darling.” Rachel’s eyes were cool, her expression remote.

  “I’ll miss you, but I won’t suffer. If I were the kind of person who did, you

  probably wouldn’t be leaving.”

  Leslie said nothing. If she’d thought Rachel would be devastated, she still would

  have found a way to say goodbye. She wasn’t doing either of them any favors

  pretending that what they had was enough for her. And no matter what they

  shared, it wouldn’t be enough to keep her from wanting Dev.

  “Take care, Rachel,” Leslie said, walking with her to the door.

  Rachel collected her briefcase and keys. “I’ve never known you to be a

  coward, Leslie. If you love the woman, for God’s sake, do something about it.”

  “Thank you, Counselor,” Leslie said, smiling ß eetingly. “I’ll take that under

  serious advisement.”

  “You should, because I’m never wrong. Goodbye, darling.”

  When the door closed behind Rachel, Leslie returned to the living room and

  picked up her wine. She sipped slowly, completely alone. It felt both liberating

  and terrifying.

  Dev slowed the park service truck at the mouth of a vacant campsite while

  Natalie jumped off the running board, trotted down the dirt path to the clearing,

  and checked that the Þ re was out in the Þ re pit.

  She jogged back, hooked her arm inside the open window, and steadied herself

  against the outside of the door. She grinned in at Dev.

  “Only Þ ve more to go.”

  “You didn’t tell me I was going to have to work for my dinner.”

  “I did say you could stay back at the ofÞ ce and wait for me.”

  “This saves time,” Dev said, turning onto the last loop of road that snaked

  through the campsite. “Plus, if I waited there, I’d have to listen to Jimmy

  complain about the heat.”

  “Or the bugs.”

  “Or the tourists.”

  “Or—” Natalie laughed and hopped down as Dev slowed again.

  When she climbed back aboard and they moved on, she peered through the

  window again. “Hear anything from Leslie?”

  Dev stared straight ahead. “No.”

  “You haven’t called her?”

  “No.”

  “Going to?”

  Dev shook her head.

  “Should I ask why not?”

  “Among other things, she’s got a girlfriend.”

  “Ah.”

  “This is your stop,” Dev said, braking.

  Natalie checked the last few sites on foot while Dev followed along the narrow

  dirt road. When she returned to the truck, she settled into the passenger seat

  and slipped her hand onto Dev’s thigh. “I’m sorry.”

  Dev glanced at her. “About what?”

  “For bringing it up. I waited two weeks. I thought that was a decent interval.”

  “It’s okay.” Dev pulled into the parking lot behind the ranger’s ofÞ ce. Two

  weeks. It felt like two minutes. She could still feel the warmth of Leslie’s hand in

  hers. She could still hear her voice, smell the subtle scent of her perfume. Leslie

  was everywhere around her, but never anywhere as much as in her thoughts.

  There was no time frame for missing Leslie. No beginning, and no end. It was

  simply part of her life and had been for as long as she could remember.

  “Hey. Don’t go drifting off, Dev. There’s nothing back there but pain.”

  “I know,” Dev said. “I’m okay.”

  “Not quite, but you will be.”

  “Your friendship means a lot to me. Thanks.”

  “Don’t even go there,” Natalie said. “We are friends. And that means you don’t

  have to thank me.”

  Dev grinned and backed into a parking space. “Yeah yeah.”

  “And I’m still going to make a move on you.” Natalie leaned across the gearshift

  and gently bit Dev’s earlobe. “But I’m going to give you a little more time to get

  prepared. A day. Maybe two.”

  Dev laughed. “Thanks for letting me know.”

  Natalie patted Dev’s thigh. “Anytime.”

  “I’m not in any shape to get involved, Nat,” Dev said quietly as they locked up

  the park service vehicle.

  “Can’t shake her?”

  Dev sh
ook her head. Leslie was always in her thoughts, in her dreams. Leslie

  was in her blood.

  “I could help.” Natalie grasped Dev’s hand as they walked toward her SUV.

  “You do help.”

  Natalie laughed. “I meant in a bit more active way.”

  Dev laughed too. “I know.”

  “So when I make a serious offer,” Natalie said, pausing before unlocking her

  vehicle, “you can tell me if it’s what you want or not.”

  “Nat,” Dev said gently. “I don’t want to mislead you. I don’t think—”

  “Ah ah—you have to wait until I make my move to turn me down.”

  Lifting her hands in defeat, Dev nodded. “Okay. And just so you won’t think

  I’m running scared, I’ll tell you right now I’m going to be out of town for a

  couple of days at the end of the month.”

  “Oh yeah? What’s up?” Natalie unlocked the doors and they slid in.

  “I’ve been scheduled on and off for the last four months to testify in a case

  involving industrial contamination of a river upstate, and they keep rescheduling.

  I just heard it’s Þ nally going to go.”

  “So you’re heading upstate?”

  “No,” Dev said quietly. “Actually, the trial is in New York City.”

  “Oh.” Natalie glanced at Dev as she pulled out onto the highway.

  “And?”

  Dev shook her head. “And nothing.”

  “Okay,” Natalie said, reaching for Dev’s hand. She squeezed it brieß y, then let

  go. “My timetable still looks good, then.”

  Dev smiled, but she feared that time alone would not be enough for her to forget

  Leslie.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  I’ll be out the rest of the afternoon, Steph,” Leslie said to her paralegal. “I’ll

  check messages later and get back to you on anything urgent.”

  “Finally taking a few hours off? You’ve been back a month and I think you’ve

  been in here every day.” Stephanie Þ xed her with a reproachful frown and

  lowered her voice. “Weren’t you supposed to be trying something new? Like

  taking it easy now and then?”

  Leslie leaned both hands on Stephanie’s desk and whispered back,

  “I have been taking it easy. I’m out by eight every night.”

  Stephanie shook her head. “That’s not exactly cutting back.”

  “I feel Þ ne. I’ll be in court.”

  “Wait!” Stephanie quickly scanned her calendar. “I don’t have you down for

  anything. Did I forget something?”

  “No.” Leslie shouldered her briefcase and started toward the door.

  “I want to check out the competition.”

  “What—”

  Without looking back, Leslie waved a hand goodbye and disappeared down the

  hall. Forty minutes later she slipped quietly into the back row in a courtroom at

  the federal courthouse. She took a seat behind a fairly large gentleman and

  made notes on another case while listening to testimony with half an ear,

  absently noting that the state’s attorney was knowledgeable and his questions

  sharp. She’d been up against him once, and that had not gone so well for him.

  She smiled at the memory. The young attorney representing the corporation

  accused of venting waste runoff into an unsecured drainage system and

  contaminating a nearby river also seemed on top of his game.

  Twenty minutes after Leslie arrived, the door opened again and Dev walked in.

  Leslie shifted a little so that Dev would not see her as she strode down the

  center aisle. She didn’t want to disturb Dev’s concentration. Her own was shot

  to hell the second she saw Dev, so she quietly slid her notes into her briefcase

  and settled back to watch.

  Dev sat two rows behind the plaintiff’s table, and Leslie had a good view of her

  in proÞ le. Dev had dressed for court in a dark suit and pale shirt. Her chestnut

  hair had been trimmed to just above her collar, and it curled very subtly at the

  ends. She had that tanned, healthy gleam that women who worked outdoors

  often had, but beneath it, she seemed tired. And a little thinner. She was so

  damn beautiful, and Leslie drew a long slow breath to calm the butterß ies in her

  stomach.

  When the state’s attorney called Dev to testify, Leslie positioned herself so that

  the gentleman in front of her shielded her enough that Dev was not likely to see

  her. Witnesses were usually instructed to look only at the jury or the questioning

  attorney during testimony. They rarely scanned the audience. Leslie could hear

  Dev, and she did not need to see her to know exactly how she looked as she

  answered. Hazel eyes intent, her handsome face honest and passionate.

  The state’s attorney had indeed gotten smarter with his questioning, but Dev

  was an ideal expert witness and made the attorney look better than he actually

  was. Dev reduced difÞ cult science to understandable concepts and made

  human arguments that were guaranteed to sway the jury. Her personality alone

  was a signiÞ cant added beneÞ t to her value as an expert defending the river

  and its inhabitants. Knowing Dev, Leslie knew that none of her answers were

  calculated, but what she truly believed.

  When the corporation’s defense attorney began his cross-examination with a

  belligerent tone, Leslie shook her head, feeling sorry for him. She edged over

  slightly so she could see Dev’s face as Dev countered every vehement challenge

  in a calm, reasoned fashion. Then, after a particularly sarcastically phrased

  question from the attorney, something in Dev’s face changed. Her eyes glinted,

  and the bold planes of her face grew stronger. Leslie held her breath.

  Dev leaned forward and regarded the attorney as if he had just made the most

  ridiculous statement she’d ever heard. Then she inclined her body toward the

  jury and moved the microphone a half inch closer to her face, even though her

  voice carried well without it. The jury

  clearly hung on her every word at this point, waiting for whatever critical

  statement she was about to make.

  “What you have to understand,” Dev said, her eyes seeming to meet those of

  every juror, “is that Þ sh are people too.”

  Leslie bit her lip to stiß e her exclamation, grateful that she wasn’t the one going

  up against Dev. It was apparent that every single member of the jury believed

  every word Dev said. The corporation might as well have been dumping nuclear

  waste into their backyards, because that was how they now thought of those

  contaminated waters. Dev had made it personal for them with the elegant

  strength of her conviction.

  Leslie hated when the opposing team used her own strategy against her, and

  she’d never seen it done better. The questioning attorney appeared to share her

  assessment and hastily concluded his cross-examination.

  When Dev Þ nished her testimony and stepped down from the witness box, she

  hesitated for a second, her head tilted as if she were listening to someone

  speaking, although the room was quiet. Then she resumed walking, her gaze

  lasering to Leslie.

  Leslie nodded hello, waiting anxiously for a response. Then Dev smiled, the

  same smile of welcome she had greeted Leslie with a thousand times before. It

  had always made Leslie feel beautiful and special, and it still
did.

  v

  Dev checked her watch and tried not to Þ dget. It had already been late in the

  afternoon when she’d Þ nished testifying, so she knew court would adjourn at

  any minute. She wanted to verify that she wouldn’t be recalled to testify, and

  then she wanted to Þ nd Leslie. The Þ rst glimpse of her after a month of

  thinking about her had nearly stopped Dev in her tracks. At Þ rst she’d thought

  it was some kind of hallucination brought about by the fact that she’d done

  nothing on the three-hour train ride but replay every conversation with Leslie

  she’d ever had. Fortunately, she knew the details of the case thoroughly and

  hadn’t needed to review them, because the closer she came to New York City,

  the more her concentration had waned. Just knowing she was going to be in the

  same city as Leslie made her blood hum. She knew it was crazy, but she

  couldn’t stop it.

  Then to actually see her, sitting in the courtroom so calm and

  composed with her perfectly styled hair and subtle makeup and fashionable suit,

  had pretty much thrown her off the tracks. She had to talk to her. Just talk to

  her. Friends could do that, right? That was normal.

  But the churning in her stomach that felt like hunger but wasn’t—that wasn’t

  normal. The way her skin tingled, shimmering like the air just before a huge bolt

  of lightning dispelled the pent-up electricity in the midst of a storm—that wasn’t

  normal.

  Dev studied her hands, clasped loosely in her lap. They were trembling.

  None of this was normal. She was deluding herself, again. But it didn’t matter,

  she still had to see her. Just—see her.

  “Great job,” the state’s attorney murmured, jolting Dev back to the present. She

  looked around and saw that the jury box was empty and the crowd in the

  courtroom dispersing. Turning rapidly she searched the room behind her, but the

  aisle was already Þ lled with people Þ ling out. She couldn’t see Leslie.

  “Will you need me again?” Dev asked briskly.

  “Shouldn’t. If you can hang around until noon tomorrow, I’ll call you to let you

  know for sure. I assume you’ll be staying in the city?”

  “Yes. I’m at the Hilton at Fifty-fourth and Sixth.”

 

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