Anita Blake 12 - Incubus Dreams

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Anita Blake 12 - Incubus Dreams Page 58

by Laurell K. Hamilton


  “I’m shielding like a son of a bitch right now. I saw that you had a fight, a bad one. But that’s about all I saw.”

  He opened his mouth, then glanced behind him. “I won’t hurt anyone, but this isn’t a conversation for a crowd.”

  The wererats looked at me. I sighed and wondered if I was being stupid. Maybe, but I was going to do it anyway. “You guys can go.”

  Claudia gave me a look. “I don’t think it’s a good idea, Anita.”

  “Neither do I,” I said, “but do it anyway.”

  She shook her head but motioned the two men through the door. She turned with the door halfway closed. She looked at me, and said, “We’ll be right outside. You yell, if you need us.”

  I nodded. “I will, I promise.”

  She gave me a look that said she didn’t believe me, but she went and closed the door behind her.

  “Get out, Jason,” Richard said.

  “It’s his room, Richard,” I said.

  “He doesn’t get to hear this,” Richard said.

  Jason got off the bed, slowly, like he still hurt. “If I leave and you hurt her, neither you nor I will ever forgive you.”

  Richard stared up at the tall wolfman. They had a moment of simply staring at each other, and whatever they saw in each other’s faces seemed to satisfy them both. Richard said, “You’re right. I won’t hurt her.”

  “What about Nathaniel?”

  Richard looked past him to the tall, dark form of Nathaniel. “He needs to leave, too.”

  “Only Anita can order me to leave,” Nathaniel said.

  Richard looked at me, then down. “Two requests, clothes for you, and everyone leaves. Please.”

  The clothes were hard, because I was still covered in goop. What few clothes I had, I didn’t want to get messy. What I needed was a robe, but I didn’t have one in this room. I hesitated too long for Richard’s mood, because he said, “Don’t make me have this talk with you naked, Anita. Please.” He said the please like he had the first time, like it was its own sentence, not an afterthought, but as if the please was more important than normal, and needed to be set apart.

  “I’d love to get dressed, Richard, but I’m still covered in that clear goop. I’d rather not get it all over my clothes.”

  “I’ve got a robe hanging on the back of the bathroom door,” Jason said, “it should fit.”

  “Since when do you wear a robe?” I asked.

  “It was a present.”

  I looked at him.

  “Jean-Claude thought I looked cold.” I think he tried to grin at me, but the wolf muzzle just wasn’t made for it.

  “Let me guess, black silk?”

  “Blue, to match my eyes.” He started toward the bathroom, not exactly limping, but close.

  “I’ll get it. Everybody stay put, and be nice, until I get back.” I went for the bathroom, though search me if I could remember a robe on the back of the bathroom door. But it was there, hanging exactly where Jason had said. It was a lovely blue, sort of soft and bright all at the same time. I’d been more tired than I’d known to miss it last night.

  I put the robe on and caught sight of myself in the mirror. The remnants of yesterday’s makeup still outlined my eyes, though it had smeared a little so it looked a little more Goth than my usual. The lipstick was gone. The clear goop had dried one side of my hair into a case of bed head that only a shower would cure. My body was covered in more of the drying goop, so that it was beginning to flake as I moved. If you have sex with condoms, you forget that what goes in eventually comes out, and I took the time to clean up just a little, because it was too embarrassing not to.

  The blue was too pale for my coloring, and too big through the shoulders. It was one of those moments that I wondered why anyone wanted me. I just didn’t see it. Of course, feeling this bad about myself might have had something to do with dreading Richard’s little talk. Maybe.

  I took in a lot of air, let it out slowly, and opened the door. It was one of the braver things I’d done in awhile. I’d much rather have dealt with bad guys than with Richard. Bad guys were simple, kill them before they kill you. Richard was a lot of things, but simple was so not one of them.

  55

  « ^ »

  Jason left without a word, but Nathaniel said he’d wait outside with the wererats. No one liked leaving us alone, not even me. Hell, I wasn’t sure Richard liked being left alone with me, but he’d asked for it, and I hadn’t.

  Richard stayed on the floor, as if he’d never move again. Since there was no chair, I stripped the stained sheets from the bed and sat on the edge of it. I sat sort of half-cross-legged, with one leg dangling off the bed, but I made sure the robe covered as much of me as it could.

  We sat that way in total silence for at least a minute, though it felt like longer. I broke first, because just watching him kneel there, head bowed, made me want to comfort him, and that would go badly. Richard didn’t take comfort from me anymore, or at least he didn’t without making me pay for it later. That was a game I was no longer willing to play.

  “What’s up, Richard? You wanted privacy for a talk. We’ve got the privacy, now talk.”

  He moved just his eyes up at me, and that one look was enough. Angry. It didn’t spill out into his power, or fill the room, but I think that was because he was shielding, probably as hard as I was. “You make it sound easy.”

  “I didn’t say it was easy. I just said, you wanted to talk, so talk.”

  “Just like that.”

  “Hell, Richard, you’re the one who asked for this talk. I didn’t invite you into a private conversation.”

  “You asked about the fight with Clair. I don’t want to share that with everyone.”

  “You don’t have to share it with me.”

  “I think I need to.”

  “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  He swallowed hard enough for me to hear it, then shook his head. “Let’s start over. I’ll try not to be mad, if you try not to pick at me.”

  “I’m not picking at you, Richard. I’m trying to get you to talk to me.”

  He looked up at me, full face, not so much angry anymore, but not happy. “If a friend had something hard to tell you, would you say, ’so talk’?”

  I took a deep breath and let it out. “No, no I wouldn’t. Okay, how’s this. I’m sorry, you feel like you have to tell me something that is so obviously painful for you. But what I said before is still true, you don’t owe me an explanation about a fight you had with your girlfriend, Richard. You really don’t.”

  “I know that, but it’s the quickest way I can think to explain everything.”

  I wanted to say, “explain what?” but fought the urge. He was obviously hurting, and I tried not to rub salt into anyone’s wounds. But the call for privacy, and the big buildup was making me nervous. As far as I knew, Richard and I didn’t have anything this important to say to each other. The fact that he thought differently made me downright uneasy.

  I sat on the corner of the bed, one hand going to the top of the robe, because even with it belted tight it was gaping. Too big through the shoulders, so it just didn’t fit quite right. I kept one hand on the top and the other hand in my lap, so I didn’t accidentally flash him. I’d been buck naked in front of him for minutes, but suddenly I was all worried about him catching a glimpse. I think it was his comment, that he couldn’t have this talk with me naked. Would I find it hard to talk seriously if he was naked in front of me? I wanted to answer no, but truthfully in my own head, the answer was yes. Shit, I did not need this.

  He was back to staring at the floor. I couldn’t stand it. I had to prompt him, but I tried to prompt him more kindly than before. I tried to think of him as my friend and not as the ex who always seemed to rain all over my parade.

  “What do you want to tell me about the fight with Clair?” I even managed to keep my voice neutral. Points for me.

  He took in a lot of air and let it out, then raised a pair of sad
brown eyes to me. “Maybe that’s not where to start.”

  “Okay,” I said, voice careful, “start somewhere else then.”

  He shook his head. “I don’t know how to do this.”

  I wanted to yell, “do what?” but I resisted. But my patience had never been limitless, and I knew that if he continued to be obtuse, I’d blow it. Or my temper would. That gave me an idea: Maybe if I started talking, he’d just jump in.

  “It’s been a while since I felt your rage,” I said.

  “I’m sorry about that. I lost control, I don’t…”

  “It’s not a complaint, Richard. What I meant to say was that it felt different than the first time I touched it.”

  He looked at me. “What do you mean?”

  “It felt, no, it tasted like my anger, like me, almost more than you.”

  I had his attention now. “I don’t understand.”

  “I’m not sure I do either, but follow my thought. Asher once told me that Jean-Claude had become more ruthless because I was his human servant. But with Damian being my vampire servant, I gained some of his emotional control. You can only gain what your partner has to share.”

  He was looking at me, and the sadness was fading under him thinking. There was a good mind in there somewhere, he just didn’t always seem to use it. “Alright, I understand that.”

  “If Jean-Claude gained some of my practicality, making him more ruthless, then what did you gain? I mean I got some of your beast and your hunger for flesh. I got Jean-Claude’s blood lust and the ardeur. What did you gain from us?”

  He seemed to think about that. “I gained some of Jean-Claude’s blood lust. Blood is as attractive as flesh to me, almost. It wasn’t before.” He moved so he was sitting Indian fashion on the floor. “It’s easier to talk mind-to-mind with you lately, and last night, I interfered with you controlling that zombie.” He shivered just a little, like something about that scared him. Guess I couldn’t blame him.

  “But the mind-to-mind thing being this easy and the zombie stuff is recent, Richard. What did you gain the first time?”

  He frowned at the floor. “I don’t see…”

  “What if you gained some of my anger?”

  He looked up then. “Your anger can’t be worse than the rage of the beast.”

  I laughed, and it was closer to humor than his earlier laugh had been, but not by much. “Oh, Richard, you haven’t spent enough time in my head if you believe that.”

  He shook his head, stubbornly. “A human isn’t capable of the kind of mindless rage that the beast is.”

  “You haven’t researched many human serial killers, have you?”

  “You know I haven’t,” he said, and he sounded grumpy.

  “Don’t go all grumpy on me, Richard, I’m trying to make a point here.”

  “Then make it,” he said.

  “See, that’s exactly what I’m talking about. That sounds more like me, than you. You’ve been quicker to anger for the last bit, and I’ve been less quick to anger, why? What if you got some of my anger, and I got some of your calmness?”

  He shook his head again. “You’re saying that your human anger is worse than my beast’s rage. That’s not possible.”

  It was my turn to shake my head. “Richard, you seem to think that human is better than lycanthrope. I don’t know where you get that idea.”

  “Humans don’t eat each other.”

  “Shit, Richard, yes, they do.”

  “I don’t mean cultures that have ritual cannibalism.”

  “Neither do I.”

  “Comparing lycanthropes to serial killers isn’t going to make me feel better about being a lycanthrope.”

  “My point is that humans can be just as rage filled, just as destructive. The difference is that a werewolf is better equipped for mayhem than a mere human. If human beings had the fangs and the claws that you guys do, then we’d, they’d, be just as destructive. It isn’t lack of wanting to do it, it’s lack of the right tools that make humans less scary.”

  “If this is your rage, Anita, it’s awful. It’s worse than almost anything I’ve ever felt. It’s like being crazy. So angry, almost all the time. I can’t believe it’s something that was in you.”

  “Not past tense, Richard, trust me. I had to embrace what I operate on a long time ago.”

  “What you operate on, what does that mean?”

  “It means that at the heart of me, is this deep, seething, bottomless, pit of pure rage. Maybe I came with it. I know my mother’s death helped fill it up. But as far back as I can remember, it’s been there.”

  He shook his head. “You’re just saying this to make me feel better.”

  “Why would I say something that wasn’t true just to make you feel better?”

  Anger filled his eyes, like magic. One moment trustworthy brown, the next moment serial killer dark. “Thank you, thank you very much, for reminding me that I don’t mean shit to you anymore.”

  I shook my head, and let my hands fall into my lap. “If you meant nothing to me, Richard, nothing at all, we wouldn’t be in this room alone.”

  “You’re right, you’re right. I’m sorry. I just get so angry, so angry.” He tried to rub his arms, but the bloody scrapes hurt.

  “You said you wanted to lick the wounds, go ahead. It won’t bother me.”

  “It will bother me,” he said.

  “No, Richard, licking your wounds would make you feel better. You’d enjoy it, and that’s what bothers you. Not the wanting to do it, but how good it feels when you give in to it.”

  He nodded, staring at his hands. “I tried to embrace my beast, Anita. I really tried.”

  “I felt you feeding on a deer. I felt how happy you were in wolf form. It felt like you had embraced it.”

  “When I’m in animal form, yes. But it’s being human on the outside, and not human on the inside that gets me confused.”

  “Does it get you confused, or Clair?”

  He gave me a look that wasn’t exactly angry. “I thought you didn’t hear the fight.”

  “I got one word when she was screaming at you—animal. Am I wrong? Was she complaining about herself and her beast?”

  “No, you got it exactly right.” He laid his hands in his own lap, and his eyes were back to being sad, like someone had hit a switch. Angry, sad, angry, sad. It was like some sort of demonic baby hormones. “She accused me of raping her.” His voice was soft when he said it.

  I gave him very wide eyes and let just how impossible I thought the idea was to show in my face.

  He gave a very small smile. “Just the look on your face now is worth something. You don’t believe it, just like that, you don’t believe I could do that to her.”

  “I don’t believe you would do that to any woman, but that’s beside the point.”

  “No,” he said, and his voice sounded more relaxed than it had since he entered the room, “that’s not beside the point, not for me. After what a bastard I’ve been to you, that you still believe in me, that means a lot.”

  I wasn’t sure what to say to that. If I agreed that he’d been a bastard would that start a fight? If he thought I believed in him, was that going to give him the wrong idea? I mean, not believing that Richard would rape someone didn’t mean that much to me. He was a decent person, that’s all.

  “I’m glad it makes you feel better, but remember, I saw the beginning of the lovemaking session. You can’t rape the willing, Richard.”

  His eyes looked haunted, as if there was something I’d missed. “She said that I always make love like it’s rape.”

  That made my eyebrows go up again. “Excuse me? Tell that to me slowly, because it made no sense fast.”

  He looked up at me, and there was something in his eyes, some demand, something he wanted me to say, or do, but I didn’t know what. “Do you mean that?”

  “I mean, explain what she meant by it.”

  “She said, I’m always so rough, that it’s like rape. That I don�
�t know how to make love, that I only know how to fuck.” His eyes looked raw, as if the pain in them had been skinned naked to shine out of his face. It hurt me to see it, but I didn’t look away. I gave him my eyes and let him see what I thought of what Clair had said.

  “Is she still your girlfriend?”

  “I don’t think so.”

  “Good, because I’d hate to say she’s crazy if you were still going to date her.”

  “Why is she crazy?” he asked.

  “What kind of head job has she done on you, Richard? Rape isn’t a word that anyone should use lightly.”

  “She didn’t use it lightly,” Richard said, and the small smile was bitter. “She meant it.”

  “How?”

  He looked at me, and the pain was still raw. “Did I ever hurt you when we were together?”

  I started to ask, “emotionally, or physically?” then decided to just ask, “You mean physically?”

  “I mean did I hurt you when we made love?” He shook his head. “I’m sorry to ask you this. I don’t have a right to ask, but I didn’t know who else to ask. I knew you wouldn’t lie, because I was your Ulfric, or because you didn’t want to hurt my feelings. I knew that if I asked, you would give me a real answer.”

  I looked at him and hoped I didn’t look as amazed as I was feeling. After everything we’d done to each other, all the fights, the hurts, and he still trusted me. He trusted me not to lie, not to make it worse than it was, or better than it was, but to tell the truth. I wasn’t sure if I was flattered or insulted. I decided to be flattered, because anything else would have pissed me off. But the amount of trust he was putting in me scared me, not for me personally, because he was right, I’d give him the truth. But a lot of people wouldn’t. A lot of people would have used it as an excuse to twist the knife a little deeper. He was damned lucky I wasn’t one of those people.

  I opened my mouth, closed it, stroked my hands down the silk of the robe, and finally had to look away from those pain-filled eyes while I tried to think how to answer. Not truth or lie, but how to say it.

 

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