The sound of her own scream woke her. She opened her eyes and looked at the clock. 3:45 a.m. Getting out of bed, she took off her sweat-soaked pajamas, searching in the dark for her other pair, shivering.
There was a light knock on her door. “Annie? Are you all right?” It was Drake.
“Just a second,” she called out, pulling on the new pajamas quickly before going to the door and opening it a crack. He stood in the hallway, his hair disheveled. “Did I wake you?”
His eyes were searching her face, as if trying to understand someone who did not speak his native tongue. “No, I was awake. I heard you screaming.”
She opened the door a little wider, still shaking. “It was so real.”
He stepped closer. “Do you want me to come in for a minute?”
“Okay.”
He followed her into the sitting area, turning on a lamp near the fireplace. “You're shaking. Are you cold?”
“I guess.”
He grabbed the blanket hanging over the back of one of the chairs and draped it over her shoulders. She lifted her eyes to his face. What did she see there? Tenderness. Pity? Compassion? “You can't imagine what it's like to know he's out there, waiting. I feel like a hunted animal.”
“I understand more than you might think.” His voice was bitter.
“Why?” It was out of her mouth before she could stop it.
He stepped away from her, putting his hand on the mantle over the fireplace. “Don't. Please.”
“I'm sorry.” She pulled the blanket tighter and sank into one of the chairs, her heart beating fast. Would he now clamp shut?
He looked back at her. “It's not your fault.”
She watched him, wishing he were whole enough to kneel down by this chair and take her into his arms.
As if he read her mind, he said, “I wish I could hold you. But I can't.”
She didn't say anything. What was there to say, after all? What was there to tell him except, yes, I wish you could, too. “Why can't you let anyone touch you?”
He took in a deep breath, moving his eyes towards the ceiling, obviously thinking of how to explain it. “You know how when someone is kind to you when you're sad it can make it worse?”
“Sure. Like you're keeping it together and then someone says something sympathetic and you cry?” You do that to me all the time, she thought.
“Right. It's the same when someone touches me. Only it brings an anxiety attack instead of tears.”
“Has it always been this way?”
“No.” His eyes went cold. Obviously, she was not to ask anything further.
She yawned. “I'm so tired but I'm afraid to go to sleep.”
“I know,” he said tenderly.
She yawned again, rubbing under her eyes. “My mother always told me never to rub my eyes, that it would give me wrinkles.”
“My mother always told that same thing to Bella. Funny, I hadn't thought of it in years.” He scooted forward in his chair. “Come on. I'll put you to bed.”
“What?”
“You heard me.” He stood, pointing towards the bedroom. “I'll sit with you until you fall asleep.”
Inside the bedroom, he pulled back the covers and she slipped between the cool sheets. He went around the other side of the bed. “I'll sit right here. Is that okay?”
“Yes,” she said, settling onto her side and resting her hands under her cheeks, watching him as he climbed on top of the comforter. He leaned against the headboard with his legs stretched out before him.
“Bella's going to need a job. She'll get into trouble sitting around all day here at the house.”
She felt herself relaxing. It was so pleasant to have him here. “She should check at the resort. It's going to open a spa. I bet they would love to have someone like her. I could ask Mike to put in a good word for her.”
“That's a great idea. Okay now, go to sleep.”
And so she did.
The birds chirped and sang outside the window, waking her a little past six. She rolled over and opened her eyes. Drake Webber was sound asleep on her bed. He was sleeping on his side, facing towards her, curled in a semi-circle. He had one of the throw blankets from the bottom of the bed over him. His breathing was steady and his face, in sleep, looked young and relaxed, without the pinch of grief that lingered around his eyes and mouth during his waking moments.
She remained still, hoping not to wake him. Alder wouldn't be up for hours. She would just stay in bed, maybe try and go back to sleep herself so that Drake might catch as much sleep as he could. Closing her eyes, she resisted the urge to move closer to him. After a few moments, she drifted back to sleep. When she awakened two hours later, he was gone, leaving nothing but the impression of his body in the down comforter.
Chapter Fourteen
THE SWIMMING HOLE ON DRAKE'S PROPERTY was as spectacular as Alder had described. The water was deep, matching the color of the firs. There were jutting gray rocks on one side of the river and a small spot of sand on the other. Annie, sitting in a low beach chair, slathered in sunscreen and wearing a large sun hat, flipped through Food and Wine magazine. Bella, next to her, did the same with a movie magazine, sunglasses covering her eyes and wearing a very small pink bikini. Occasionally she looked up to tell Annie funny stories about the celebrities in the photos from her experience with them on movie sets. Alder was jumping from the rock, over and over, his young muscular body brown under the summer sun.
Drake had stayed behind, saying he had a few phone calls to make, so Bella drove them all in her blue Jetta, the dust billowing in the hot air before landing on the once spotless car. Annie had tried not to be disappointed that Drake hadn't come with them but failed.
It was pleasant out, only in the mid-eighties. The sky was a brilliant blue and cloudless. Summer in southern Oregon—it was hard for Annie to imagine a place more beautiful. “What do you think of it here?” she asked Bella.
Bella looked up from her magazine. “Crazy gorgeous.” She waved away a dragonfly buzzing near her face. “Slow, though. Do you ever wish for a little more of a scene?”
“Scene?”
“You know, people. Nightclubs. Culture.”
“Maybe. More people would be nice.”
Bella laughed. “You mean more men people.”
“Right. Like single ones.”
They sat in silence for a few moments, gazing at the water, until Bella turned towards her, wiping a drop of sweat from her forehead. “I'm surprised Drake agreed to help with the town stuff. It's the most positive thing I've seen him do in a while. If you'd known him before.” She shook her head, sadly. “It's like he's not even the same person.”
“Bad things can change you.”
“And this is as bad as it gets, Annie. Just know that.” She shifted in her chair. “It's freaking hot. I'm going in. You coming?”
“Sure.”
Both women set down their magazines and dove head first into the cool water. As always, the shock of the difference between the temperature of the water and the air took her breath away but seconds later her body acclimated to it. She swam in the shallow water, opening her eyes to watch the sun play on the pebbles. Setting her hand on the bottom of the river, she floated, with her legs stretched out behind her. Minnows nibbled on her hands and arms. And this is as bad as it gets, Bella had said. What did that mean? What was the worst thing she could imagine? Was he ill? Dying? She swam over to the other side of the large pool, hoisted herself onto the rock, and climbed up to stand on top of it. Alder, still in the water, called out to her. “Cannonball, Mom.”
Not wanting to disappoint, she tucked her arms around her knees and jumped, falling and slicing into the water. Coming up for air, she saw that Bella was treading water in the middle of the swimming hole, watching her. “You want to jump with me?” she asked her.
Bella shook her head. “I'd like to but I'm afraid of heights.”
“Really?” Feisty Bella with fears? How odd.
The
y swam for a while longer until both Bella and Alder demanded a sandwich. Annie was just digging into the cooler when they heard the low rumble of a car. She tensed, listening. Of course it was Drake. It had to be. No one can get in the gate, she told herself. But she moved her chair so that she might see both the path and Bella and Alder.
Both had already gobbled an entire sandwich and were searching the cooler for additional food when Drake came down the sandy path, wearing nothing but his swim shorts. She let out a sigh of relief. They were safe here. No one can get in the gate, she repeated silently to herself.
And there was Drake—in his swim trunks. She hadn't seen him without his shirt before. He was muscular but lean with very little chest hair. His arms were muscular, too. And his legs? My God, they were gorgeous, too—tight thigh muscles and calves, with just the right sprinkling of dark hair. And he was tan, she supposed, from all the afternoons he'd taken Alder swimming in the last couple of weeks.
Nibbling on a piece of turkey meat from her sandwich, she kept her eyes on the water. Avert your eyes. Do not stare at him. But the thoughts came anyway. What would his thighs feel like pushing against her? How would it feel to trail her tongue down the middle of his torso? Her thighs felt tense just thinking of it and the spot between her legs was suddenly alive. Stop, she commanded herself. You are somebody's mother. Acting like a lustful teenager is not becoming.
Drake took a sandwich from the cooler and plopped on a blanket next to them. “Everyone all right so far?”
“We're having a good day,” said Bella.
“Even though Bella won't jump off the rock,” said Alder, before taking a large bite of his second peanut butter sandwich. “I told her it wasn't scary but she didn't believe me.” This came out slightly muffled, as the boy's mouth was thick with peanut butter.
“Alder, don't talk with your mouth full,” said Annie, rather sharply, given the infraction. This she knew, but Drake sitting so close to her was agitating.
Apparently oblivious to her discomfort, Drake said, “Bella's afraid of heights.”
“Why?” asked Alder.
“Some people just are,” said Annie.
“That may be true, but in my case it's because my father dangled me off the top floor of our apartment building when I was three.”
“What?” asked Alder, his eyes wide.
“Bella, I don't think this is an appropriate story for a ten-year-old,” said Drake. As if to change the subject, he began rummaging through the cooler. “Did you pack any pop, Annie?”
She pointed towards the other cooler. “In there. And there's beer or wine, too.” Poking her foot into the sand, she looked over at Bella. “You want something to drink?”
“Hells yeah, a glass of wine sounds just about perfect.”
“But I want to hear the story about being dangled over the side of a building,” said Alder.
“Sorry, kid, the grownups say no.”
“But, Drake, why?” asked Alder. “I'm old enough to take it.”
Annie was curious what he would say. Perhaps she let Alder know too much, given that it had always been the two of them. Was she in error this way?
Drake popped open a can of root beer and handed it to Alder. “Because there are horrors that happen in the world that a child shouldn't know about until they're older. Once you learn of something like what happened to Bella that day, it will never leave you. You'll carry that image around with you all day and into tonight and all the tomorrows for the rest of your life. And that is not what you need to be thinking about at your age. Or ever, if at all possible. But as you age you'll learn of more and more cruelties of the human race, and of natural disasters that wreak havoc, and wars and crime. The longer we can keep all that from you the better it is.”
They were all staring at him. No one spoke. What a speech. And how did he know this? How had he developed such a strong concept as this when he didn't have children?
“My brother the philosopher.” Bella was at the cooler, pouring two glasses of chilled white wine into plastic cups. “Basically, kid, you're screwed. I can't tell you all the gory details of my father.”
“Too bad. I guess,” said Alder, but he was gazing at Drake with more admiration than Annie had ever seen him possess for anyone. Which was saying something given how much he loved Tommy and Linus. Did Alder feel what she felt? Yes, she was afraid he did. They were both about to get their hearts broken.
After lunch, Alder went back into the water. Drake set up another chair, unfortunately right next to Annie so that she could smell him and could easily have reached out and felt what his skin was like against her fingertips.
“Hey, sorry about that thing with Alder,” said Bella.
“Oh, it's fine. I probably tell him too much, too, given Drake's point.” She smiled at Bella. “And I'm curious about everything, too. Alder gets that from me. It's everything I can do most of the time not to ask people inappropriate questions.”
“Oh my God, I'm the same exact way,” said Bella. “It's like I can't stop myself.”
Drake looked up from his book and then down again.
Bella took a sip of wine, her gaze on the water. “That was the last time we ever saw our father. We think they put him in jail. Then he was dead not much after that. We never really knew what happened to him.”
“Bella, don't talk about this. It's just going to make you upset,” said Drake.
“No, that's where you're wrong, big brother. It helps me to talk about things. You might try it.”
“Here it comes,” said Drake. “Sassy mouth after half a glass of wine.”
“Whatever.” Bella grinned at Annie. “I'm on vacation.”
Annie toasted her. “Cheers.”
“Freaking cheers.”
“Bella, seriously, Alder might hear you.”
“Jeez, Drake, chill out. It's not even the real f-bomb.”
“Where did you learn to talk? I should never have let you move to L.A.”
“You're not in charge of me.”
“Someone needs to be.” Drake let out a long sigh and went back to his book. Although, Annie noted, he hadn't turned a page the whole time he'd had it open.
Bella rolled her eyes at Annie before downing the last of her wine and heading towards the cooler. “You want another?”
“Oh, no. I'm a one-drink girl most of the time.” Annie giggled. The wine was going to her head, too. “Alder already has a potty mouth. I don't know why. He used to call my old boyfriend asshole, with a capital A like that was his name. I couldn't make him stop. It was terrible. Of course, he was right. He was an…well, you know, I don't need to say it again.”
Bella threw back her head, laughing. “My kind of kid.”
Drake got up from his chair, tossing his book onto a towel, and heading towards the water. Annie averted her eyes. Really, there was no reason to stare at his backside like some kind of sex-starved teenager.
With sure and strong strokes, Drake swam across the river to where Alder was sunning himself like a lizard. He hoisted himself up onto the rock, muscles rippling, until he was sitting next to Alder with their feet dangling over the side. Their mouths were moving but she couldn't make out what they were saying.
Bella plopped back into her chair. “Drake never talks about our childhood. And I talk about it constantly. Guess that's the difference between girls and boys.” She indicated with her glass towards Drake and Alder. “He's bonded with your boy, though. It's weird, given everything.”
“What?”
Bella's eyes widened. “Never mind. God, I do have such a big mouth.”
“So, what did happen when you were a kid to make you so afraid of heights?” She giggled again. “I have a big mouth, too. And ask too many questions.”
“You can ask me anything you want. I'll tell you whatever you want to know. Well, unless Drake doesn't want me to but you know what I mean.”
“Yes, I do.” The thought of whatever had made Drake so desperately unhappy sobered her some
. “Tell me what happened with your dad.”
“I don't remember what happened really. I was only three and my mother never told me any details of what the fight had been about. They fought a lot. Our dad was a junkie and he'd go away for periods of time but then when he ran out of money he'd come back to see if my mother would give him more. Drake says the only way to get him to leave was to give him money. And she didn't want him to stay because then he'd detox and start acting crazy and everything. Anyway, apparently this was one of those times. He was out of his mind, either high or coming off a high. I remember playing with my dolly on the kitchen floor and loud voices. My dad yelling, I think, but it's fuzzy. And Drake was there with me, sitting on the floor with his fingers in his ears. Then suddenly our dad was there. He snatched me up and started running out of the apartment to these stairs. I remember that. It was like a bump bump bump with every step. And then we were on the roof of our apartment building. It was a hot day and the sun was harsh in my eyes. My mother was behind us, screaming, crying, the look on her face pure terror. He went to the side of the building and put his arms out straight, dangling me. I could see the street below. The cars stopped. A crowd gathered below, all these faces looking up at me. Then I closed my eyes, waiting for him to drop me. But all of a sudden we were yanked back. I fell out of his arms onto the hot surface of the roof. I don't remember much after that.” She took a big sip of wine. “And that's why I'm afraid of heights.”
“Bella, that's terrible. I'm so sorry.”
“It's weird how much I remember of it. If I'd been younger maybe I wouldn't recall it so clearly and then I wouldn't be so messed up.”
“Do you know who pulled you guys back?”
“I'm assuming it was a cop but I'm not sure. My mother refused to talk about it. Her shame was so deep that she'd put me in that kind of danger, you know, letting him into the house and all. But I don't blame her. What was she supposed to do? A small woman against a guy like that?”
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