Dollenganger 06 My Sweet Audrina (31 page)

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Authors: V. C. Andrews

Tags: #Horror

BOOK: Dollenganger 06 My Sweet Audrina
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Screaming her rage, with pain twisting her face, Vera tried to punish Sylvia. . . but she'd sprained her ankle. "Oh, god. that moron! I'm going to talk to Papa about having her put away!"
Blinking my eyes and trying to pull myself back into focus, I picked myself up and out of habit pulled Sylvia into my arms. "No, Vera, not as long as I live will Sylvia be put away. Why don't you leave? I'll take over the housework and the cooking. We don't need you any longer."
She began to cry. "After all I've done to help you, and now you don't want me." She sobbed as if her heart were broken. "You're spoiled, Audrina, spoiled. If you had a backbone at all you'd have left this place a long time ago."
"I thank you for taking care of me, Vera, but from this day forward I'll do for myself."
One day in summer Arden came storming home from his office very early. He ran into our bedroom and yanked me from bed.
"Enough is enough!" he yelled. "I should have done this months ago! You cannot throw away your life and mine because you're not mature enough to face facts. Death is all around us, from the moment we're born we're on our way to our graves. But think of it this way, Audrina," he said as his voice softened and he pulled me into his embrace. "No one really ever dies. We are like the leaves of the trees; we bud out in the spring of our birth and fall off in the autumn of our lives, but we do come back. Just like the leaves of spring, we do live again."
For the first time since that awful day Billie fell, I really saw my husband's fatigue, the small lines etched around his tired, red-rimmed eyes. Eyes that had sunk deeper into his skull, like mine. He hadn't shaved, and that lent him a raffish, out-of-character look, like a stranger I didn't know and didn't love. I saw faults in his face I'd never noticed before.
Pulling away, I fell back on the bed and just lay there. He came to kneel, and bow his head on my breast, pleading for me to come back to him. "I love you, and day by day you are killing me. I lost my mother and my wife on the same day--and I still eat, still go to work, still carry on. But I can't continue to live this kind of life--if this can be called living."
Something in me cracked then. My arms slid around him and my fingers curled into his thick hair. "I love you, Arden. Don't lose patience. Keep holding on and I'll come your way . . I know I will, for I want to."
Almost crying, kissing me with a passion almost crazy, he finally drew away and smiled. "All right. I'm willing to wait--but not forever. Remember that."
Soon he was in the bathroom showering and Sylvia had risen from her place in the corner to stand at the foot of my bed. Pitifully she tried to focus her eyes. Her small hands reached for me pleadingly, begging me to come back to her, too. She had changed. I hardly knew her.
At twelve years of age, Sylvia had developed almost overnight (or while I wasn't looking) a woman's figure. Someone had brushed her hair and tied it back in a ponytail with an aqua satin ribbon that matched the lovely outfit I'd never seen before. Totally surprised, I stared at her beautiful young face, her shapely young body that the form-fitting cotton dress revealed. What a fool I was to have suspected Sylvia could harm anyone. She needed me. How could I have forgotten Sylvia in my apathy?
I stared at Sylvia, who had moved to the dimmest corner and crouched with her knees pulled up so the crotch of her panties showed. Pull your dress down, I thought, and watched her obey without any sense of power or surprise. A long time ago Sylvia and I had developed a rapport between us.
Mothers and aunts could die, daughters and sons, too, yet life went on and the sun still shone, the rain still fell, and the months came and went. Papa began to show more definite signs of aging as he also showed faint signs of mellowing.
I knew that Arden was seeing a great deal of Vera away from Whitefern. Even under my own roof I often glimpsed them in some room that was seldom used. I closed my mind and my eyes and pretended I didn't notice Arden's flushed face and the way Vera had to smooth down her tight sheath dress that seemed painted on. She smiled at me smugly, mockingly, telling me she'd won. Why didn't I care anymore?
Late one evening when I no longer expected to see Arden enter my room, he opened the door and came in to sit on the edge of my bed. To my utter amazement, he began to tug off his shoes, then his socks. I started to say something sarcastic about Vera, who'd been bitchy all day, but I said nothing.
"In case you're interested," he said in a stiff way, "I'm not going to touch you. I'd just like to sleep in this room again and feel you near me before I make up my mind what to do with my life. I'm not happy, Audrina. I don't think you're happy, either. I want you to know I've talked to Damian, and your father no longer embezzles money from his dormant accounts. He's honest now about old stock certificates that have great value. He was surprised I'd caught on and didn't deny anything. All he said was, 'I did it for a good cause.' "
He gave his information in an indifferent way, as if the words were spoken only to bridge the gap between us. Now that Arden was assistant vice president of my father's firm, he'd stopped talking of someday returning to his first love, architecture. He put away his draftsman's tools, the drawing table Billie had bought for him when he was sixteen, just as he put away the other dreams of his youth. I guess we all did the same thing. Fate dictated the paths we trod. Yet it hurt to see those things carried up into the attic, for so seldom did anything come back down.
I watched him put his creative ability away like something useless, and I felt disappointed to see he'd developed Papa's craving for money, for power and then more money.
Though I tried time and time again to find concrete evidence that he was Vera's lover, I guess I didn't really want to know, or easily enough I could have caught them.
And time, once so fast, then so slow, speeded up again from the very monotony of everydayness, and I was twenty-two. Another spring and summer would soon disappear into the void I'd created for myself.
Just for something to occupy myself with, I seriously began cultivating the rose garden Momma had started long ago. I bought books on how to grow roses, and attended garden club meetings, taking Sylvia with me and introducing her for the first time to outsiders. Though she said little, no one thought her anything but shy. (Or at least they pretended to think that.) I dressed Sylvia in pretty clothes and styled her hair becomingly. She was always frightened and seemed relieved to come home again and put on her old garments.
One hot Saturday in late May, I was down on my knees in Momma's rose garden, lightly scratching the ground with a hand rake before I added fertilizer. Tuberose bulbs were nearby, and soon I'd have them in the ground. Sylvia was inside the house taking a nap, and Vera had driven with Papa into town to shop for new clothes.
Suddenly a long shadow threw cool shade above me. I tipped back the brim of my straw hat and stared up at Arden, whom I'd believed was off playing golf with his buddies. A small part of me thought he and Vera could very well have arranged to meet in town.
"Why are you wasting your time out here and forgetting your music?" he asked harshly, kicking at the bag of fertilizer by my garden tools. "Anybody can grow flowers, Audrina. Not everyone has the potential to be a great musician."
"What happened to your dream of making all American cities beautiful?" I asked sarcastically, thinking that as soon as I won prizes with my new breeds of roses and tulips, I'd go on to cultivate orchids in a greenhouse I'd ordered. And once I was bored with orchids, I'd find another hobby to keep me going, until one day I, too, ended up in the Whitefern cemetery.
"You sound bitter, like your aunt," said Arden as he settled down beside me on the grass. "Don't we all have dreams when we're very young?" His voice and face took on a certain wistfulness. "I used to believe that you would never find anything as fascinating or absorbing as me. How wrong I was. No sooner did we marry than you were locking doors to keep me out. You don't need me like I thought you would. There you are on your knees with canvas gloves on your hands, and you keep that damned hat on your h to shade your face so I can't even see you. You don't lift your eyes to meet mine and you've stopped smiling when I come home. You treat me as if I've become a stuffy piece of furniture to clutter up the neatness of your days without me. Don't you love me anymore, Audrina?"
I went on feeding the roses, plotting the tulip I , thinking about the orchids, wondering how soon Sylvia would wake up. Arden reached to put his arms about me. "I love you," he said in such a solemn way I was alerted enough to stop what I was doing. His arms about me knocked off my wide-brimmed hat. "If you can't love me, Audrina, then let me go. Set me free to find someone who will love me as I want and need to be loved."
I forced myself to say indifferently, "Vera. . . ?"
"Yes," he bit out, "Vera. At least she isn't cold and unresponsive. She treats me like a man. I'm not a saint or a devil, Audrina, just a man who has desires you won't satisfy. I've tried for almost three years-- oh, how I've tried. But you won't yield and now I'm tired of trying. I want out. I'm going to divorce you and marry Vera unless you can love me physically as much as you love me in other ways."
I swiveled around on my knees to stare into his face. He really did love me, it was in his eyes. I saw love for me shining in his eyes, and a terrible sadness was there. Divorcing me and marrying Vera wouldn't make him truly happy. . not nearly as happy as my physical response would.
Confused thoughts raced through my mind. Puppy love, my aunt and father had called what I felt for Arden . . and they'd been right. Adolescent love that wanted nothing more than hugs, small kisses and hand-holding.
Now he was leaving me for Vera . and in the end he'd be just another Lamar Rensdale. Vera didn't love him. She'd never love any man more than she loved herself, or maybe because she couldn't love herself, she couldn't love anyone.
I shook my head, wondering if at last I was finally growing up. Was the mature side of me going to burgeon forth at this very moment? I felt a rising excitement and none of the fear I'd experienced on our wedding night. He could have gone and never said a word to warn me. He could have taken Vera and I wouldn't have contested our divorce, and he knew that. Still . . . he was giving me another chance. . he did love me . . . it wasn't pity . . . he did love me.
His eyes delved into mine as his hands gripped my shoulders and his voice filled with urgency, as if he sensed what was going on within me. "We can start all over," he said in an excited way. "This time we can start off right. Just you and me, without Sylvia in the next room for you to fret about. I have physical feelings for Vera, but I love you in all the sweet, romantic ways that seem silly with someone as unromantic as Vera. You touch my heart when I come home and I see you sitting near a window, staring out. I stand and I see the way the light falls through your hair and glows it a halo and your skin seems translucent, and I'm filled with wonder that you are my wife. Vera never makes me feel I have anyone special, only someone any man could have. I used to think when I was younger that when I won you, I won a princess who would love me forever, and happily we'd grow old together, and hand in hand we'd face old age without fear. But it hasn't worked out t t way. I can't go on this way, loving you but taking Vera in your place. You drain me dry, Audrina. You take my heart and wring it, forcing me to run to Vera for solace. When it's over, I find only physical
satisfaction but no spiritual sustenance. Only you can give me that. How can you expect me to go on wanting you when you don't want me in the same way? Love is like a fire that needs replenishing often, not just with tender smiles and light touches but with passion, too. Let's do it again, our honeymoon night, without doors between us to hide behind. Without si make love to me now. Right now. Out of doors, here where we are. Damian is in town. Vera is gone. Sylvia was in that I mned rocking chair singing to herself before I came out here, and she's likely to stay there until she falls asleep. . ."
He was touching my heart, caressing me with his eyes and stirring my blood on as he'd never done before. His amber eyes burned, even his hand seemed hot when
he
touched my face lightly. Quickly he withdrew his hand as if my flesh felt as hot as his.
"Darling, marriage needs to grow, become adventuresome . do something that you've never done before. I don't care what. Make love to me this time. Don't wait for me to start."
No, I thought, I couldn't do that. It was a man's duty to make the first overture. It would be cheap and unladylike to touch ' u first. But his eyes were imploring, lit up with desire. I didn't deserve him--he should leave me alone, for in the end I'd fail him. Still, I wanted him. Something was telling me to do as he said, regardless of what Papa had said about men and their evil desires that shamed the women who did as they wanted. Papa had brainwashed me long ago, I told myself . . . and this time I was going to override all the signals that flashed evil, dirty, nasty .
It wasn't easy to drown out all that shouted shame. I didn't even think I could initiate anything unless he kept on looking at me as he was now. He made himself vulnerable, put his hands behind his back and resisted his urges to touch me first. I fought the small voices instilled by Papa and his teachings. . . no, he was my husband, and I did love him, and he really did love me.
"I'm scared, Arden. . . so scared of losing you to Vera."
His eyes were warm, soft, encouraging me. Deep and passionate eyes that kept urging me to go ahead and it wouldn't be his lust, only my own desire, and for some reason it seemed to make a great difference. What I did would be what I wanted to do--and if it was evil, then let it
be
evil.
Arden needed me. He loved me and not Vera. Tentatively I cupped his face between my palms. He didn't move. His hands stayed behind his back. I kissed him lightly on his cheeks, his forehead, his chin, and, finally his lips. They stayed soft, but not too soft, and parted only a little. Again I kissed him, with more passion, and still he didn't respond. He was like some o ne I could do anything with and he'd never harm me. I dared another kiss that was deep and long, even as my hands curved around him and began to stroke his back right down to his buttocks. Something was comng alive in me as he allowed me to do what I wanted, without his doing anything to me or requesting or hinting.

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