by Kay Hooper
But for what? I don’t know. I hate to admit that my mind is still affected by the Taser attack, but it must be, because thinking clearly is still difficult, sometimes impossible. One moment I’m certain of something, someone, and in the next I find myself doubting, questioning, worrying.
I don’t understand. Something is happening to me, has happened, something more than the Taser attack. The only possibility I can think of, incredible as it sounds, is—
“Shit,” Riley muttered.
The entry broke off, presumably because she’d been interrupted. And for whatever reason, she had never finished that sentence, never noted whatever possibility it was that had occurred to her.
Now she couldn’t remember what it had been.
If it had been.
“Oh, Christ, I’m losing my mind.” She put her hands up and rubbed her face slowly. Trying to think. Trying to understand.
“I was going to ask if you were feeling better, but I guess not.”
Riley put her hands down, automatically touching the laptop’s keyboard in a macro command that would instantly bring up an innocuous screen saver. The motion was so smooth and practiced that she doubted Ash had even noticed.
I’m doubting him now? Why?
“’Morning,” she said, vaguely surprised that her voice sounded so normal. Even a chameleon had her limits, and Riley suspected she had reached hers days ago. At least.
“I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that you’re up early,” Ash said as he joined her at the table. He bent down and kissed her lightly. “But last night I had the impression you were going to sleep for a week. Or three.”
“I…just needed a little rest.”
“You needed a lot of rest. And still do.” He frowned slightly as he studied her.
“I know I look like hell,” she managed, suddenly realizing she hadn’t even bothered to run her fingers through her hair in her bolt from the bedroom.
“You never look like hell. But you do look worried.”
“I am worried.” She drew a breath. “Ash, I’ve had another blackout.”
“What?”
She nodded. “I don’t remember anything after having that vision yesterday morning in the clearing. That’s more than eighteen hours this time.”
Ash pulled out the chair beside hers and sat down. He was still frowning. “Riley—”
“I thought I might have written more down in the report, but it’s just what I remember anyway. Meeting with Jake and Leah in the conference room at the sheriff’s department, talking. Then the two of us going to the crime scene so I could try to pick up something. And having that weird vision. Ash, I don’t have visions, not like that one, and I don’t understand it. I don’t understand what’s happening to me. Jesus, I don’t even know if I’ve checked in with Bishop—”
“Riley.” He reached over and covered one of her restless hands with his. “What are you talking about?”
“I’m trying to tell you—” She broke off abruptly, really looking at his expression, and felt a chilly wave sweep over her. “Yesterday,” she managed. “Yesterday morning. I told you about the attack on Sunday night.”
He nodded. “Yeah, you told me about that.”
“And—the blackouts? The missing time?”
Ash’s fingers tightened around hers. “Honey, you never said anything about blackouts or missing time. This is the first I’ve heard of any of that.”
It was still early, just before eight, and Riley sat curled in one of the comfortable big wicker chairs on the deck of her rental, hoping the bright sunshine of the warming day would do something about the coldness inside her.
A hot shower hadn’t helped, nor had one of Ash’s excellent breakfasts. Not that she had noticed what she was eating; it was merely fuel to provide the energy she so desperately needed.
And she wasn’t even sure that was still working.
She stared at the ocean, her gaze occasionally roaming as she absently watched more than a dozen of the island’s dog owners taking their pets for a last run before the “dog curfew” that kept them off the beach during most of the day.
Such a nice, pleasant summer morning, filled with nice, pleasant activities. Normal activities. Normal people. She doubted any of them was watching the world as they knew it spinning out of control.
“Here.” Ash sat down in the chair beside hers, handing her a large mug of coffee. “Even in the sun, you’re still shivering.”
“Thanks.” Riley sipped the coffee for a few minutes, aware that he was watching her, waiting. Finally, she sighed and turned a bit in the chair to face him. “So. Where had we gotten to?”
“We had gone over the meeting at the sheriff’s department yesterday morning. You seem to remember all that clearly.”
She nodded.
“Okay. And I gather you remember most of the conversation between us afterward, about why you’d asked me to get involved officially in the investigation. That was when you finally told me about the attack on Sunday night. That it had affected your memory a little and your senses a lot. You said you wanted someone you could trust to keep an eye on you in case the attack had caused more damage than you already knew about.”
Riley sorted through what “memories” she had, wondering again which knowledge or seeming knowledge she could trust. “I didn’t tell you I had forgotten most of the last three weeks?”
Ash frowned. “No, that’s not what you said. You didn’t remember the attack or the hours before it happened. You didn’t remember why you had gone out or where you had gone that night. That’s what you told me. That’s all you told me.”
“Oh.”
“Riley, are you saying now that you didn’t remember anything about the last few weeks?”
“Bits and pieces, but—” She sighed. “Dammit, in my head we’ve had this conversation before. I didn’t remember us, but once you touched me I knew we were lovers, I felt what was between us, and that was the one thing in this whole damn screwy situation I was sure of. So don’t get pissed that I was faking my way through our relationship, because I wasn’t, not in any way that counted. Fumbling a little, I’ll grant you. But not faking.”
“You were…very convincing,” he said finally.
“Now, see, you’re getting pissed again. Please don’t make me repeat the speech about how I was affected by what happened to me on Sunday night and how it left me scrambling to catch up on everything, not just us.”
Dryly, he said, “Sorry, but I wasn’t there the first time.”
“Yes, you were.” Riley shook her head. “At least that’s the way I remember it. Damn, it was—is—so real in my mind. I don’t understand this. Any of it.”
Ash eyed her thoughtfully. “Well, you’re still shaking a bit, but you also seem to be taking this very calmly.”
She didn’t bother to explain that in the SCU, one learned to handle unexpected things thrown at one without warning.
Or else one washed out of the SCU. Rather quickly.
Instead, all she said was, “I’m not calm, I’m numb. Big difference.”
“Riley, maybe you should go back to Quantico.”
“No.” The response came instantly, without thought, and as soon as she heard herself say it Riley felt the rightness of it, the certainty. She wasn’t sure of much, but she was absolutely certain she had to stay the course here. It went against logic and reason, to say nothing of all her training, but it was what she felt.
And how can I trust what I feel any more than what I think? Is this genuine instinct fighting its way through all the bewilderment of lost memories and unreliable senses, or just bloody-minded determination not to quit before the job is done?
It could have been either. Or neither.
Ash reclaimed her attention, saying, “Look, we both know—or at least I hope you know—that I do not want you to leave. I’ve been gathering all the arguments I can think of for you to transfer down here, maybe work out of the Charleston FBI field office. But you’d said you w
ere considering taking a full six weeks off, so I thought I had a bit more time to make my case.”
Momentarily distracted—not surprisingly, considering the current state of her mind—Riley said, “Six weeks? I said I was thinking of staying—what is it now?—another two weeks?”
He nodded. “Saturday, you’ll have been here four weeks.”
“That doesn’t make sense either,” she murmured. By the previous Sunday night, she had to have known that Bishop and the rest of the team were all but overwhelmed with cases; she might not have checked in with him, but it was her habit to keep tabs on the unit wherever she was, and she couldn’t imagine a situation in which she would have been contemplating an extension of her “vacation” knowing how thinly stretched the SCU resources were.
“Thanks a lot,” Ash said.
Riley shook her head. “It has nothing to do with us. Bishop’s current investigation is a serial killer on the rampage in Boston, making the national news on a daily basis, and I would have known the other teams were just as busy; the SCU is strained to its absolute limits right now. It wouldn’t have been in character for me to decide to stay here on what was supposed to be a minor and unofficial investigation.”
“Minor?”
“In the general scheme of things, sure. At least until what happened on Sunday. To that point, all we really had in the way of violence were a couple of instances of arson, property damage; nobody got hurt, and that wasn’t something Jake and his people needed my help to investigate. Why would I have stayed here knowing I was badly needed elsewhere? Unless…”
Ash was watching her intently. “Unless?”
“Unless I knew that, however unthreatening the situation looked on the surface, Gordon’s instincts were right and there was something very dangerous going on here. You’re sure everything I was telling you pointed to—”
“‘No big deal,’ I think were your exact words.” He frowned. “Although if your…performance…since Sunday is anything to go by, you could have been telling me that while believing the opposite, and I’d never have known. Apparently.”
She sighed. “I knew we were going to have to have this conversation again.”
“Riley—”
“Ash, I can’t apologize for not confiding in you during those first weeks because I’m not sure there was anything to confide. Or if there was, why I decided to keep it to myself. And since waking up on Monday I’ve spent most of my time just trying to figure out if my mind and senses will ever get back to something I fondly call normal. I’m sorry if you’re pissed. I’m sorry if you’re hurt. But put yourself in my place for just a minute and think about it. If you had no idea why you had done something uncharacteristic—why you had done a lot of things that were uncharacteristic—how quick would you be to push aside all your doubts and confide everything to the woman unexpectedly sharing your bed?”
After a long moment, he sighed and nodded. “Okay, point taken.”
“Thank you.” Half to herself, she muttered, “I just wish I could be sure we won’t be repeating all this tomorrow. The term ‘déjà vu’ has taken on a whole new meaning for me.”
“You think there’ll be more blackouts?”
“I don’t know what to think. Except that whatever I’m experiencing, it’s like nothing I’ve ever heard of before. Blackouts and lost time aren’t unknown among psychics. In fact, if anything they’re fairly common. But they tend to present as either total unconsciousness or radically different behavior.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that if you and everybody else around here noticed nothing odd about how I was acting during the time I’ve lost, it can only mean I didn’t actually lose those hours. I was functional. I was here, doing normal things. I was me. But then, for whatever reason, those memories and experiences…ceased to exist for me. I’ve lost the perception of their reality.”
“Why does that sound a lot more scary to me?”
“Probably for the same reason it feels a lot more scary. Because how we perceive the world is our reality. And if I’ve lost that, even pieces of it, then…I can’t trust anything I think, or feel…or believe. Especially now. It’s not just holes now; my mind has apparently begun filling in the holes, the blank spots, supplying memories that aren’t real at all.”
“Assuming you can believe me,” he noted.
“I have to believe you,” she said flatly. “I have to have something solid to hold on to, to anchor me. And that’s you. Because you’re in my bed. Because before all this started, I trusted you that much. It’s never casual for me, in case I didn’t mention that. Sex. So you being my lover has to mean I trusted you absolutely within days of meeting you. I may not remember why, but I have to believe that. I have to hold on to it. You’re my lifeline, Ash.”
“I wish you sounded a little happier about that.”
Riley made a determined effort to lighten her tone. “Well, what can I say? It’s those control issues, remember? No matter how happy I am, I’ll always want to steer my own boat.”
“I am the captain of my soul,” he murmured.
“Yeah. We’re none of us master of our fates, but that doesn’t stop us trying to be.”
“You and I have debated that before.”
“Have we?” Riley shook her head. “Then I imagine we will again. In the meantime, if you want to bail, better now than later.”
“I don’t bail, Riley.”
“Didn’t really think you would. Just thought I’d offer.”
“Noted. And refused.”
She found herself smiling. “I’ve got a hunch I picked a pretty good lifeline. And it doesn’t take anything but common sense to know I’m going to need one. Things may get worse, Ash. A lot worse.”
After a moment, he asked, “Is all this due to the Taser attack?”
“I don’t know what else it could be.”
“You said something once about—Riley, could it be the influence of another psychic?”
“Theoretically? Yeah. Energy to energy. Electromagnetic fields can be manipulated, electronic impulses cut off or redirected. Even created. It’s how the brain works, and it can be affected by plenty of external factors. But as far as I know, we’ve never encountered a psychic with the ability to influence another psychic’s mind even in small ways. Not without a very strong blood connection.”
“Which isn’t possible in this case.”
Riley shook her head. “My brothers are scattered around the world and my parents are in Australia. And none of them is psychic anyway.”
“There’s no way a psychic unrelated to you could be doing this?”
“No way I know of. To alter my memories? To create new ones? Even in theory, the sheer amount of energy anything like that would require is…almost unimaginable.”
Burning buildings. A blood sacrifice. No…not just a blood sacrifice…a human sacrifice. How much dark energy would that create?
For a moment, Riley thought there was something on the edge of her mind, but then it slipped off.
“Would you know if your mind was being influenced?”
“Maybe. Probably.” Surely she would. Surely. It made her skin crawl to think otherwise, to consider the possibility that her actions weren’t her own, her memories and even her very thoughts shaped for her by someone else.
It was far less scary to believe a simple electrical discharge had scrambled all the circuits in her brain.
Still…
Could that be why I’m using up energy so quickly? Because my mind is working to fight off a kind of attack I’m not even consciously aware of? Is that even possible?
“Is that why you’re so sure it was the Taser attack?”
“I think that’s more likely.” I hope it is, anyway. She reached up to rub her forehead. “Not that my thinking is all that clear. But I do know that memory is a tricky thing at the best of times; add in an electrical blast of unknown strength and duration, and the brain is very likely to go haywire. Especially a psychic�
��s brain, which tends to have a higher-than-normal amount of electrical activity going on at any given time anyway.”
Ash shook his head. “This is beyond me.”
“It’s beyond me too,” Riley admitted. She hesitated, then added, “I have to report in. Because it’s the right thing to do and because if there’s anyone who might understand what’s going on in my head, it’ll be Bishop.”
“You sound doubtful.”
“Not of that. I’m just wondering how much even he can juggle before one of the plates crashes to the floor.”
And you have absolutely no memory of anything you said or did during the two blackouts?” From Bishop’s calm tone, no one would have guessed either that he found anything unusual in the situation or that he was in the middle of an incredibly intense investigation of his own. For the moment, at least, he appeared to be perfectly capable of juggling multiple tasks.
“No,” Riley answered. “It’s like I passed out and then woke up hours later.”
“Which,” he pointed out, “is different from the first memory loss, immediately after the Taser attack.”
It took a moment, but then Riley realized. “When I woke up Monday afternoon, there were bits and pieces of memory. Uncertain, even wispy, but they were there.”
“Yes. A reasonable physical result of a temporary disruption of the brain’s own electrical activity. Like an explosion of energy that caused a scattering, a…fragmentation of memories. You lacked the ability to stitch them together, but all the pieces, all the experiences, were still there.”
“Just memories?”
“You tell me.”
Riley stood there with the beach house’s phone to her ear and gazed absently through the ocean-side windows. Ash was out there on the deck, waiting patiently, his own brooding gaze fixed on the water. She wondered what he was thinking, feeling.
She didn’t have a clue.
Drawing a breath, she answered Bishop. “No, not just memories. More. Senses. Emotions. Even the normal ability to read other people, to have some idea of what they’re thinking and feeling. It’s all scattered, distant.”