Secrets Amoung The Shadows

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Secrets Amoung The Shadows Page 20

by Sally Berneathy


  Leanne wanted their lovemaking to go on forever, yet she felt herself rushing headlong, inevitably, to fulfillment. As the waves gathered then rushed over her, exploding along every nerve ending, Eliot groaned and, with a final thrust, shivered and cried out his ecstasy then collapsed beside her.

  She snuggled into his arms, replete and content, her head against his chest, listening to the sound of his heartbeat as it gradually slowed from a rapid pounding.

  But as the euphoric cloud gradually faded, reality returned. He kissed the top of her head and stroked her back lazily. While it felt delicious, while his touch was wonderful, she had to fight an almost irresistible impulse to pull away and scrutinize him...just to be sure.

  Eliot didn't want to move, to disturb this fantasy come true of having Leanne in his arms, but he felt the slight tension in her back muscles and knew what she must be thinking. Not that he blamed her. In fact, he blamed himself for losing control and putting her in this position.

  "Leanne," he whispered into her hair, his breath stirring the silky strands, bringing the clean airy scent to his nostrils. God, this was hard! He wanted to hold her all night, make love to her again, wake beside her in the morning. "I guess we'd better get up."

  She nodded, and he stood, pulling her with him.

  Turning away so she couldn't see his guilt, so he wouldn't have to see the doubt and fear that had undoubtedly replaced the desire in her eyes, Eliot gathered his scattered clothes and began to dress.

  Damn! he thought, sinking to the sofa and pulling on his socks. This wasn't the way things ought to be after making love. The two of them should be lying together in that bed upstairs, cuddling, drowsing, whispering, counting the freckles on each other's bodies.

  Damn Edward and damn his own mind for harboring such a monster!

  "We shouldn't have done that," he said gruffly as she sat down beside him. "It's too dangerous." From the corner of his eye, he saw that she'd dressed again. Greta leapt onto the sofa and curled up beside her.

  "Shouldn't we?" she asked. Her voice was gentle, caring...but tinged ever so slightly with fear.

  That fear sliced through him like a knife, sharp and painful, drawing the lifeblood from him. "You know we shouldn't have. We can't let it happen again. Not until...until it's safe. Until Edward is gone." If Edward was ever gone.

  For just a moment he questioned if he was being honest with himself. He'd never been one to hang around, to spend the night with his lover and wake to a cozy breakfast the next day.

  It didn't really matter, he supposed. Edward was a very real danger. He had to leave.

  "Tell me what happened," he said, forcing himself to look at her, to ask the question he didn't want to hear the answer to. "What did he do to you—what did I do to you that made you cry?"

  "You don't remember anything?"

  Eliot shook his head. "Not really. When I left here, I didn't go straight home. I drove around for a little while in kind of a fog, I guess." A fog of unsated desire, of frustration with himself for not being able to handle the situation. "Then all of a sudden I felt connected to Edward. I could feel him hating you. For just a flash it was like I was in the room with you and him. I didn't want to be there, I pulled away from him, and then I was sitting in the car at a stop sign. I turned around and drove here as fast as I could. Tell me what happened."

  "Somebody knocked on the door. I thought it was you coming back." She pushed her hair from her face as she turned to pet Greta, turned away from him...and he knew this was going to be bad. "I opened the door, but as soon as he kissed me, I knew it wasn't you."

  Eliot clenched his fists as anger and jealousy flooded through him at the thought of Edward kissing Leanne. He hated Edward, he hated himself.

  "I tried to get away," she continued, her voice strained, "but he grabbed my arms. He knew you'd been here and he knew about the trip you made to his house. That's why he called the police, to punish you for that."

  "This is insane. He's mad because I went to his house, a house I'm paying for."

  "I pointed out to him that he'd been in your house and stolen your pictures. That's when he slapped me."

  "He hit you?" Eliot exclaimed in shock and horror. That was impossible! It had to be impossible. No part of him could hurt Leanne. "Where? What happened? Are you all right?"

  "I'm fine." She touched the right side of her face.

  "Is that where?" Eliot moved her hand away and studied her face closely.

  "Am I going to have a black eye?" she asked with a nervous half-laugh.

  "I don't think so. Your face is a little red, though. God, I'm sorry!" He squeezed his eyes shut and shook his head. "Sorry. That seems so lame. I'd cut off my hand before I'd hurt you, Leanne."

  He stroked her skin, barely brushing over it with the tips of his fingers as if he could somehow take away the other, harsher touch. "I wish I'd never gotten you involved in this. I want to make you happy, and all I seem to do is cause you grief."

  She brushed the back of his neck, her touch soft and fragile...and vulnerable. "Just a few minutes ago you made me very happy. Eliot, I know you're fighting Edward, and tonight something new happened. He felt you coming, and he couldn't stop you."

  "What do you mean, he felt me coming?"

  "He got a kind of glazed expression on his face, and I thought maybe a personality shift was taking place, so I called your name. He said you were trying to get here, that you knew he was here and you were worried about me. He said you were getting stronger. Then he left."

  It was the first ray of hope he'd had in a long time. "Does that mean I may one day be able to stop him from coming?"

  "I don't know whether you want to stop him from coming. You did that when you were younger, and now he's erupted as a mutated caricature. We have to cure whatever's causing his anger. But I think you're making progress in that direction if Edward's concerned about your growing strength. You said for a moment you seemed to be here with him, then you got away from him. Tell me how that felt, how he felt, everything you can remember."

  Had he really just made love with this woman? She was back in her doctor mode, wanting to know how he felt about everything but her, pulling away from him the same way he'd pulled away from Edward, putting up barriers between them.

  Not that he blamed her. He really had no one to blame but himself. He'd left himself open, made love to a woman who knew too much about him, knew enough to hate and fear him.

  "I could feel his hatred for you," he said, trying to comply with her request. "I could see you throw his eyes. You were holding Greta, and you looked terrified. I felt—" He hesitated. How had he felt? It happened so fast, he hadn't stopped to analyze it. "I was worried about you. I hated Edward. I wanted to stop him, make him go away and leave you alone."

  "That's encouraging. You need to call Thurman and tell him immediately."

  Eliot stood abruptly. Leanne was doing the right thing, the smart thing, putting their relationship back on impersonal ground. And he hated it. "Tomorrow," he agreed, suddenly anxious to leave, to get away from this reminder of the woman he'd touched so briefly and could never possess, the special intimacy between a man and a woman that would never be his. "It's almost midnight. I'd better get out of here and let you get some sleep."

  Leanne rose, too, and Greta jumped down between them, looking up eagerly, wagging her tail.

  "Oh!" Leanne exclaimed. "I almost forgot. Greta attacked Edward. Did she...is your leg all right?"

  "Greta attacked him? What happened? Did he hurt her? Is that why you were holding her?"

  "Yes. He kicked her across the room."

  Eliot groaned at this latest cruelty. How could he have it in him to hurt a defenseless animal? He leaned down to examine the small dog, running his fingers over her ribs. Greta didn't flinch.

  "She seems to be okay," Leanne confirmed. "What about you? She's had all her shots, but you might want to get a tetanus booster."

  Eliot looked down at his legs. "I don't feel anythi
ng. Which leg?"

  "The left, I think. I'm not sure. It all happened so fast."

  He sat down again, lifted his left foot, lifted his pants leg and pushed down his sock. The skin showed no signs of dog bite. Hesitantly he lifted his right foot and went through the same procedure with the same results.

  He looked up at Leanne and shrugged, then reached down to pet Greta again. "I don't even see any pulls in the fabric of my slacks. Sorry, little one, but I'm afraid those choppers of yours don't qualify you for the police academy. I certainly admire your courage, though." Greta wagged her tail enthusiastically as if she understood, as if he'd never been anything but kind to her.

  How could he do it? How could he hurt this woman he wanted so badly he ached for her and this small dog who seemed to adore him?

  "I've got to go," he said curtly.

  Leanne watched Eliot leave, stared after his car until it turned the corner and disappeared, then went inside and locked the door. After checking all the windows, she went upstairs to bed. But even though the hour was late and she was exhausted, sleep was elusive.

  What on earth had she been thinking tonight? She hadn't been thinking. That was the whole problem. She'd only been feeling. And those feelings had been incredibly wonderful...while they lasted. Making love with Eliot had been everything and more than she'd ever imagined. The memory of that encounter would only make it that much harder in the future to avoid involvement with him.

  The glorious moment they'd shared, the intense closeness, hadn't changed anything. Nor could it ever. No matter how much she wanted him, no matter how much she cared for him, he would still be mentally ill…unpredictable. She'd never be able to trust him. She'd never know when she'd wake up beside a man who was capable of hitting her, kicking her dog...and maybe worse.

  Yet none of that rationale changed the way she felt about him even one iota. She could no more stop caring about him than she could stop caring about her father. She could no more stop hating the effects of his illness than she could stop hating the effects of her father's illness.

  ***

  Their yard was full of other kids. They were three years old today, and Mommy and Daddy were having a birthday party for them. Eliot and Edward, both wearing blue shorts and shirts, sat happily surrounded by all their new toys.

  By mutual, unspoken consent, they moved over to a red plastic dump truck. Sitting down beside it, they began to pluck strands of grass to fill the back. Another little boy came to join them, and Eliot scooted over to give him room. He could tell Edward didn't much like having the new kid there. Including others in their games was the only thing they didn't always agree on. But Eliot handed Edward some extra grass and let him put it in. Edward smiled and Eliot felt him go okay again.

  Another little boy came over, and Eliot and Edward , sharing the same thought, got up together and ran, hand in hand, to their sandbox. Mommy had told them to stay clean for the party, but they knew she wouldn't really get mad. They picked up their shovels and began to dig.

  Then they heard Daddy calling. "Time to blow out your candles so we can cut this cake!"

  Together they ran to the big table set up on the lawn. Daddy tried to help them onto the bench, but they pushed aside his hands and did it themselves. They were big boys of three now.

  "Make a wish, then blow," Mommy said. "But don't tell anybody. If you tell, it won't come true."

  They looked at each other and both wished for a puppy. A little fuzzy black one. They took deep breaths and blew at the same time, successfully blowing out the three candles.

  "That means your wish will come true," Mommy said, leaning over to start cutting and serving the colorful cake.

  Eliot and Edward smiled at each other, deciding in the special way they could talk to each other, to name the puppy Sammie.

  The alarm clock buzzed raucously. Without opening his eyes, Eliot slapped the snooze button, still savoring the innocent happiness he felt in the dream. His mind burrowed back down, searching for that happiness again, unwilling to wake up and face reality.

  Edward had been with him before his parents were killed. Edward had been kind and loving, more than his best friend. Edward had been a part of himself, a good part. When had it changed, how had it gone wrong?

  You know. The thought came to him from inside his own head and from far away. The thought came from Edward.

  I don't know, Edward. Why can't it be like it was before?

  You were always the one who wanted to go off with other kids. The happiness he'd felt radiating from three-year old Edward was gone, replaced by vindictiveness, anger and a little sadness.

  We went everywhere together. Eliot felt a familiarity in his attempts to placate Edward, as if he'd done it many times.

  Not after Kay. You left me alone then. You refused to take me along, to even talk to me. The anger was rising. I couldn't go anywhere unless you took me, and you shut me out! You left me alone in prison. Well, guess what? I'm not in prison any more.

  Eliot's mind cringed, sinking deeper, trying to get away from the hatred of this person who'd once loved him. I took you to school with me so you could learn what I learned, he protested. And I played with you even when Mom and Dad got mad at me.

  Don't call those people Mom and Dad! Edward exploded. How could they be your Mom and Dad when they weren't mine, too? They hated me. They knew I was in prison, and they didn't care. You were all I had left, and they wanted to take you away from me. And you let them. You deserted me. Now you're going to be the one to find yourself all alone and in prison. Edward paused, and Eliot could feel him smile, but it wasn't a happy smile. You're thinking of Leanne. I've always known what you were thinking.

  He was right. Eliot had been thinking of Leanne, that if he had her, he'd never be alone, no matter where he had to go.

  You won't have her. You will be alone. She'll be dead.

  Chapter 21

  "Why?" Eliot woke himself, screaming the single, agonized word in concert with the alarm as it shrieked again.

  He slapped the clock, stopping the outside noise as a final thought from Edward floated into his mind: Because you love her.

  He shot bolt upright in bed, his heard pounding, sweat popping out on his forehead. In his dream he had been carrying on a conversation with Edward, his dissociated personality. His illness must be getting worse.

  He reached for the phone to call Leanne then changed his mind. She wasn't his doctor any longer. His relationship with her was purely personal, and he had nothing to tell her that wouldn't upset her.

  Emotionally he needed to talk to her, yet the thought of confessing more of his aberration chilled him as much as the dream. Leanne mattered to him—a lot. The voice in his head was right. Under other circumstances, he'd have said he loved her. What she thought about him mattered.

  So far she appeared to see him as separate from his problems. She kept a special caring for him in a compartment separate from her hatred for Edward. However, he didn't know how much further he could go without evoking her disgust.

  He should call Thurman and get a professional interpretation of this latest development. That was the logical thing to do.

  He dialed Thurman's number and told him briefly what had happened.

  "Can you come by this morning?" Thurman asked immediately even though it was obvious Eliot's call had awakened him. "I'd like to talk to you while this is still fresh."

  "I'll be there in half an hour."

  ***

  Thirty minutes later he sat tensely in Thurman's living room sipping coffee and describing his dreams as well as the events of the night before with Leanne—omitting, of course, their lovemaking. That was private and personal, between the two of them. It had nothing to do with Edward.

  "Do you think this birthday party was an actual memory?" Thurman asked.

  "Yes," Eliot answered. "I do. Which means Edward's been with me since before the accident that killed my parents."

  "But you felt only happy feelings in this drea
m."

  "Blissfully happy."

  "Hmmm. Edward seemed a little jealous of your relationships with other people even then."

  "A little, but it didn't seem to be a real problem. I preferred to be with him, too." He grinned wryly. "With myself."

  "And your mother—your birth mother—didn't have a problem with your having an imaginary friend?"

  "I was so young, maybe she didn't know. I didn't talk much until I was older...probably because I communicated mostly with Edward, and that didn't require speech. So maybe my birth parents never knew about Edward."

  Thurman nodded slowly. "That's possible. You said Edward told you your adoptive parents weren't your parents because they weren't his, and he uses the name Dalman instead of Kane. Did he seem to accept your real parents as his own?"

  Eliot focused, trying to pull more from the dream. "Yes, we both thought of them as Mommy and Daddy. He was as happy as me in the dream. Nothing seemed wrong with any aspect of our lives." He laughed self-consciously. "Of my life, I mean."

  "The problems, Edward's personality change, all occurred later, after you became involved in the real world and left your imaginary playmate behind?"

  "After I became involved with Kay. Yes, I guess I left him behind then. I didn't want to be humiliated again."

  Thurman sat quietly for a few minutes, apparently digesting the information. "For a while it would seem you successfully pushed him to the back of your mind. Then he returned. Why? What happened in your life that made you need him again?"

  "Nothing. My life, my career, everything was progressing along right on schedule. Nothing happened, nothing changed before Edward's appearance." He grimaced. "Now a lot of things have changed."

  "Maybe you wanted things to change."

 

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