She stood still for a moment, rooted to the floor. This was it. She stared at the door, uncertain. Could she do it? Before she could talk herself out of it Betty walked to the door and opened it.
“Betty.” Adam said, his voice breathless.
“Adam.” She replied, her voice as shocked as her face.
Adam gave a light laugh, wondering if they were both standing there with the same shocked look on their faces. He knew she had to be nervous. From her slight hints he knew she had never been with a man before. This was something new for both of them, he had never been with a virgin before.
Betty’s nerves disappeared as soon as she saw Adam and she joined him in laughing as she held the door open.
“Come in. Get comfortable. Do you want something to eat? I know it is late but that was a long day.”
“I am not really hungry now but that wine you mentioned might be nice.” He said as he took off his sport coat and spread it over the back of the couch. He sat down and looked around. The room was furnished with heavy antique furniture but Betty had brought in some bright yellow curtains to brighten the room up. It was decorated sparingly but the room was comfortable. The kitchen was just to the right of the living room, her bedroom in the back along with the bathroom. A small house but it suited her needs.
Adam twisted his hands nervously as Betty appeared with two glasses of white wine. He smiled up at her and thanked her as she sat at the other end of the couch. She looked nervous as she sipped at her wine.
“Are you sure you are not hungry?” She asked, looking at him with her big green eyes rounded.
“No, I am not hungry. Do you want to dance?” He asked, holding his hand out to her.
There was not a lot of room for dancing but Betty liked the idea. She took his hand and they went behind the couch, where the floor was more open, and he took her in his arms.
“Are you alright?” Adam asked as they began to dance, her body close to his.
“I am fine now.” She responded as she allowed herself to melt into him.
It had been years since Betty felt anyone so closely. She had had light hugs here and there but nothing like this. She was vividly aware of every inch of him that was now pressed into her. Her heart speeded up again but this time it was in excitement, not fear. She moved smoothly with him, letting herself lean against him more and more until her head was on his shoulder and they were no longer moving.
Betty could hear his heart beating beneath her ear and knew he felt the same as she did. His heart was racing, strong and steady, but racing. Adam’s hand moved, pulling her chin up so that he could look down into her face.
“You are beautiful, Betty.” His hand traced her cheek and down to her jawline. He looked at her, needing her to let him know he could move forward with this. “This doesn’t have to happen if you do not want it to.” His full lips spoke but Betty only saw their shape, heard the sound of his deep voice.
She placed a finger over his lips before she reached up, letting her lips press into his. She was safe, she was cared for, and with Adam, she was happy. She wanted him.
His lips pressed into hers, as her inexperienced tongue flicked out, curious to feel the soft flesh of his mouth. Adam inhaled slowly, letting her explore as she chose. His hands fell to her waist and held her to his body as he imagined what she was going to feel like, how she would move beneath him. His excitement grew but he controlled the urge to pull her to the couch.
Betty’s hands explored his back but then moved lower, clasping his bottom. She had never felt a man’s bottom before, not sexually anyway. It felt firm, soft but firm. She liked it. She heard a satisfied sound from Adam and continued her exploration, moving her hands up to his front, to the spot just above his belt.
She looked up at him once more, her mind made up. She was going to be brave and discover what she had been missing for so long. She craved him like she had never craved anyone before. It was time.
Chapter Nine
Betty went to work the next day with a spring in her step and a smile on her face. She had had no idea of what she had been missing but now she knew and it was time to catch up. Her brain filled with possibilities as she remembered the way Adam made her feel the night before, but as soon as she stepped onto the second floor of the building and headed for the nurses’ station her smile disappeared. She felt oppressed, as if someone was watching her while waiting to jump her, and fear tangled her smile into a frown of worry.
She saw Adam there, alone, and hurried to get out of the dark hallway and into the light he stood bathed in. For a moment, she thought he looked like an angel, haloed in the bright lights overhead. This man, her man, with his gleaming smile and warm eyes, was the comfort, the happiness, and the completion she had had no idea was missing from her life. She let the fear and anxiety slip away as she came up beside of him.
Betty sighed as she came close to him, and a quiet giggle escaped her throat. She smiled up at Adam and looked to see if they were alone.
“I am so glad you are here tonight. I had the oddest feeling when I came in but now that is all gone.” She truly did feel relieved and went about checking charts and looking at paperwork.
“Have you thought about leaving again? Finding something else? I would push for it but Travis is being transferred to another facility tomorrow. Apparently, Margaret has been working with the doctors to get him moved. Maye it’ll be fine after all?” Adam’s smile looked relieved and he winked at her before he handed her a batch of papers.
“You are kidding?” Betty exclaimed, happiness filling her, pushing away any lingering darkness. “To breathe free without the Lurking Spectre always near, oh how very beautiful that will be!”
“Yes, just a few more hours, and then he’ll be gone. The place will be better for him being gone.” Adam patted Betty on the shoulder before leaving her to go on his rounds.
Betty sighed happily, all well with the world. She could not believe how different she felt this morning, all because she had had sex last night. She felt confident, as though she knew secrets that others did not know, and as though she could conquer the world. There was even a new bounce to her step, though she could not really see it. She just felt different and that made her smile even more.
The evening carried on, Betty’s smile proving infectious as even the patients responded and became calmer, easier to handle. Jackie smiled knowingly at Betty and Betty gave back a pleased smile. Neither would say anything but they knew what had put that smile on Betty’s face.
Betty was getting patients settled into bed, her last patient settling under their covers, when her world started to unravel. She heard screams coming from the same room as the night before. Betty felt as though she had been doused in a bucket of ice water as a feeling of déjà vu washed over her. Not again, please not again, she thought as she ran down the hall.
The man was there in his bed, screaming as he thrashed around, his wrists bloody once more. He was thrashing in the bed so much he had torn his stitches. Betty tried to calm him above the screaming but could not. She could not make out what his screams were but she knew it was something about the Shadow Man. Betty’s own fear grew as the man continued to thrash and scream. Then the fear ended as she felt a pain in the back of her head and the world went dark.
Betty awoke to a dragging sensation, and the sound of water dripping in the total darkness. It was not just the sound of water dripping from a spout though; the sound she heard was that sound that told you your location was dark, deep, cold, and probably concrete or rock. This was the sound of being underground.
Before the world faded away once more Betty heard a laugh. The maniacal laugh of the Lurking Spectre. She knew she was lost in that moment. Nobody could save her now. Throughout the next few hours, Betty awoke to pains, to burning sensations, and to the overwhelming urge to scream in mortal terror. Her mouth would open to unleash the scream but every time something would hit her in the head and the world would disappear once more.
She opened her eyes once and thought she heard Adam screaming her name. But she heard a scuffle in the darkness before she could call out to him and then the world went dark once more. She did not know if Adam had truly been there or if it was all just a part of the nightmare world that did not go away whether she was awake or unconscious; she was trapped in both, unable to escape.
Finally, much later, she heard very loud sounds, the sounds of scuffling in the impenetrable darkness she was surrounded by, and then the sounds of a gun being fired. Then, finally, out of the darkness came a piercing light. Betty fought hard to see the light, to open her eyes but when she did she wished she had gone blind. There before her was Adam.
Along his neck, a red line was oozing blood, and his eyes were staring and dead. The scream that had been building all night in Betty’s throat finally tore free. As the scream tore her throat, leaving it flayed, the world went dark again. There in the new darkness what had happened was not real, the death, the pain, the terror was just something she had dreamed and Betty fought hard to stay in that place but people kept dragging at her, calling to her from the dark depths of her solitude, and finally she could not fight to stay away anymore.
Betty let her eyes flicker open and looked calmly over at Jackie for a moment. Her friend sat there quietly, reading a book aloud in a very soothing voice. The soothing, calm words did not have their desired effect though as Betty started screaming as soon as she woke up. She remembered it all.
She later learned three things after they finally got her to stop screaming. After a month of being in a coma, Adam’s funeral had come and gone and she had missed it. Poor Adam had died trying to save her and she hadn’t even been able to make it to his funeral. Travis Brown had been shot and killed in the act of raping her for a second time, at least. Nobody was sure how many times he had raped her, not even Betty. And, just because her world hadn’t crumbled enough already, just to make sure she fully understood how totally screwed up it all was, the doctor let her know she was pregnant. He said the words as though they’d cheer her up. She wanted to strangle him. Or herself. Instead she rolled over in the bed and tried to make it all go away.
Chapter Ten
The Present Day
Charlotte, North Carolina
I tried to tell Clara about the Lurking Spectre, the Shadow Man as the girls, and that patient oh so long ago, had called him. I wanted to but I knew she would not believe me, she would just dismiss it as part of the disease or as my imagination. She had shocked me this morning with her demands for answers and my response hadn’t been the best.
I still had nightmares, all these years later. I could still see Adam’s dead and staring eyes when I closed my own. And Travis Brown still haunted me. He still wanted me, even in death. I could never escape him.
My now aged hands trembled as I tried to remember how to make toast, such a simple task but one that escaped me for the moment. I wanted to make some toast before I took my pills but could not remember how. I finally gave up and took my pills, hoping the nausea that usually came when I took them on an empty stomach, would stay away.
I tottered off into my room and spread out on the bed. I turned on the television and found the channel that played old television shows. These new programs with all of their sex and violence, the foul language and crude jokes, just did not belong in my world. I sighed as I settled into the mattress, pleased that my daughter had ensured I had a comfortable bed. My old bones ached now and the pressure from the springs could be painful. This pillow top creation was heavenly to lie on!
I twitched as I heard a noise coming from the living room and got up to close the door. Sometimes if I put a barrier between us he would leave me be. His presence was one of the hardest things to get used to after I finally recovered enough to get out of the hospital. He was not really able to touch me, not that I had seen anyway, but he could knock things over, pull things down, move things you know? If I shut the door he might let me have some peace tonight.
I had tried everything under the sun over the years to get rid of him. Praying, exorcisms, spells, psychics, mediums, psychology, all of it but he would not go away. It had been hard enough not knowing who Clara’s father was without his constant presence but with him always lurking, his shadow there, laughing, I had been terrified. And then she came along and I learned to ignore him for the most part as I looked into the precious face of my child.
No matter who her father was I had raised my daughter, I had made sure she had a good childhood, and I had loved her with all of my heart. I never told her who her father was because I simply did not know. The memory upset me, it hurt me, and she had finally stopped asking but some of that hurt was for her, some of my concern had been for her own thoughts and emotions. How do you tell your child her father was a rapist, that she is a product of rape, possibly? It can be hard enough on parents explaining the birds and the bees. Telling a child she could be the result of a rape was impossible for me.
However, she could be Adam’s child, my angel’s child. I tried to see some of either in Clara but she was my spitting image. As though my own biology had wanted to play a cruel trick on me, or perhaps spare me, my genetics proved the strongest and Clara was my double. I simply could not tell who had been her father so I hid the truth away and never told anyone.
I had left Florida after a quiet settlement with my employer and moved back to Charlotte. Florida had been a dream that turned into a nightmare. I would never go back. People knew the truth there, people I had worked with, the police, the doctors and staff at the hospital I had been taken to. Then there were the reporters, those vicious hounds that had plagued me upon my release, begging for my story as the last victim of Travis Brown. When they’d discovered I was pregnant, the reporters went insane, trying to crawl into my windows as I waited for the settlement to go through.
Jackie had finally come one night and packed me off to her house until the settlement was done. We waited until the money arrived in my bank so I could escape Florida and the reporters. I kept in touch with her through letters but I never saw her again and she died five years ago, her children grown and doctors now. Jackie had died peacefully and happy, just as she had deserved. I sometimes wish I could be that lucky.
When Clara finally came along and she was in my arms I finally felt a moment of peace, tranquility, and love like no other I had ever felt before. I did not care who her father was, this tiny human life was my child, and that is all that mattered to me. Clara’s presence dimmed the Lurking Spectre for a long time and I thought he was finally going to disappear into the ether. That would be too much like letting me die in peace, however, and now the laughing, trick-playing Lurker was back. What fresh bit of hell did he have in store for us?
He’d moved things in the house, knocked them over, and Clara had blamed me. I had ignored it at first, trying to discourage it. When he started playing with the girls I became terrified of what he wanted, of whether he could do more than he had let on. Those precious children, my own precious child did not deserve these problems. Then my ailment had come into play and I had lost quite a bit of time, lost in the fog of my memory.
It is odd how we sometimes regress to our earliest years with this disease. It is as though our brains forgot how to reset themselves each day and are going back to the last save point our mental computer has saved on file. Isn’t that what people call it now, save points? That is how I imagine this disease, as a worm. Or is it a virus, perhaps? Is that what the computer bugs are called? Yes, I believe it is called a virus. Anyway, our data becomes corrupted, filled with these holes, until our brains can only reset to those early points and we are left with only our spotty memories and confusion as we try to place the people we are seeing.
I know what’s happening to me and I dread the day I forget who my daughter is but I would not mind forgetting who her father was. I know she wants to know now but I still think she would be better off not knowing. I was hoping I would forget before she would think to ask again but it
seemed not. Turning over in the bed, I decided I would tell her tomorrow. She wanted to know and maybe now she would be old enough to seek help from a professional when she learned the answer. I would try to be there for her but I was no longer able to make such promises.
I wanted to tell her now but it was late and the poor woman was sleeping. I would try to hang on. The girls were going to a slumber party tomorrow and they would have the weekend for Clara to get through the initial shock without having to look after them and me. I just needed to hang onto those memories for a few more hours. The memories could buzz off forever after I told her the truth, but only after I had told her.
I had a few spells this morning, moments of forgetting where I was, where the bathroom was, and it is becoming frustrating. I feel the urgency to tell Clara the truth pressing down on me even more now as the sunlight fades. I am not always aware of it but the disease gets worse in the evenings, as the sun goes down and my memory starts to fade with the light.
Soon enough Wes came home and Clara put dinner on the table. We ate quietly, Clara or Wes occasionally breaking the silence by asking about the other’s day. It was a tense dinner and I was not the only one feeling that tension. I could see it in how tight Clara’s jaw was and the way Wes kept picking up his knife only to put it back down again. I finally could not take anymore and set down my knife.
“Right then, the girls are gone for the weekend and instead of being relaxed you two are like two cats tied together that hate each other. I guess I know what it is all about so if you are finished let’s leave the dishes for later and go into the living room.”
My daughter and her husband looked at me guiltily and stood up. Clara helped me into the living room and we all sat on the long sofa, Clara holding my hand. This was not going to be an easy story to tell.
Thriller: Horror: Conceived (Mystery Suspense Thrillers) (Haunted Paranormal Short Story) Page 37