Earthbound (12 page)

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Authors: Aprilynne Pike

BOOK: Earthbound
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I glance up and Reese is scrutinizing me. I hear some kind of sports game playing on the plasma in the adjoining room and wish Jay would come in. Disrupt this strange playacting with Reese. We’re both dancing our routine of deception, and neither of us wants the other to find out. So we dance. We laugh. We smile.

Not that it would be any more real with Jay, I remember, and the soup I’ve just eaten turns sour in my stomach.

Does he know?

His words from yesterday echo in my mind:
I tell Reese everything.
But does Reese return the favor?

I’ll have to hide from both of them.
I hate the thought.

“Tavia,” Reese says quietly, “do you remember the business trip I told you about?”

“Yeah, sure,” I say, developing a sudden interest in my bowl.

“I was hoping to leave tomorrow,” she says hesitantly, and I’m gripping the spoon so hard my fingertips are white. “But if you need me to stay—”

“No,” I blurt, too loudly, panic jolting through me.

“I can,” she rushes to assure me, but I hear a desperation in her voice and know it’s the last thing she wants to do.

“No,” I repeat, calmer. “I won’t forget to eat, I promise. I just … I was reading at the library and lost track of time, that’s all.” And it’s kind of true; I absolutely lost track of time.

And space.

And sanity.

She opens her mouth to speak, as if to correct herself and let me know what her actual concern is. But she changes her mind and only nods. “It’s an important trip,” she says. “It’ll take a couple of days max.”

“Where are you going?” I ask, and my throat freezes up as I wait for the answer.

She hesitates, then says, “Phoenix. Client there who I need to see personally.”

I confess to being rather shocked that she told me the truth. Kind of the truth.

What’s really in Phoenix?
Something that affects
me
or she wouldn’t have brought it up when she was on the phone with Elizabeth.

I don’t know anyone in Phoenix. But …

“I’ll be fine,” I say, forcing a smile. “And Jay will be here.”

Reese’s eyes turn to the half circle of a head she and I can just see over the top of the couch and her eyes soften. I don’t know exactly what roles they’re playing, but I can read in her eyes that she actually loves Jay. Somehow, that makes me feel better. Two people who love each other couldn’t mean me harm. Not really.

I convince myself it’s a good argument even though I know it’s completely crazy.

Not crazy.

Just irrational.

“Please go,” I say, startling Reese’s attention back to me. She doesn’t look quite convinced and I pull out my final ammunition. “I don’t want to be an inconvenience.” I lower my eyelids as I speak. It used to be the truth—and it embarrassed me as fully as I’m feigning now. I’ve always thought myself an inconvenience to them.

I’m not. I’m some kind of project, which is worse. But tonight I’ll make it work in my favor.

Reese nods and her warm fingers cover mine the way they often have in the last eight months.

All those times in the hospital.

It makes me want to throw up.

“Okay, I’ll go.” She pauses and I know there’s more.

I wad up my linen napkin and toss it onto the table beside me. “What?”

“Dr. Stanley wants to see you tomorrow.”

My mouth dries up and I blurt, “Why?” before I can stop myself.

“She called this afternoon and told me she wants to follow up with what you talked about today.” I can tell Reese is trying to pick her words carefully. Not to let me know that she knows
everything
I talked to Elizabeth about today.

I look down at my bowl, trying to get a grip on my anger. I know the truth; they don’t trust me to behave—or maybe
survive
—while Reese is gone. They want to babysit me.

Maybe I need it.

“Whenever you want. She’ll make time for you.”

“But—”

“It can be fast—she just wants to touch base.”

I say nothing.

And nothing.

Until finally Reese has to ask. “Will you go, Tave?”

I still. There’s something in her question. A wisp of emotion; I’ve heard it before. It screams to me that she cares.
Really
cares.

But I don’t dare believe it.

“Whatever,” I mutter. “I don’t have anything else to do.” We may as well both lie.

I plead a headache and dutifully swallow the two white pills Reese places in my palm. She says they’re Tylenol and I see the little words stamped into the tablets, but part of my mind wonders what else they could be.

Paranoia.

I fight it. I will
not
go down that road.

But when I drag myself upstairs and into my room, my legs tremble and I can only hold back the urge to run for a few steps before the flight impulse kicks in and I launch myself onto my bed, cursing under my breath when the bed frame bellows an earsplitting creak in protest.

I’ve been sitting in my dark room staring at my ceiling for a good half hour when I hear Reese shush Jay as they tiptoe by my room. I’m never going to get a better chance than this. I peek out the crack in my door, and as soon as they’re out of sight, I follow them, my feet silent on the runner carpet.

Their door is open just an inch or two and loud voices sound from inside as hangers audibly slide along the metal closet rod.

“I’ll take a cab—if Daniel calls … tell him I’m ill.”

“We should tell Tave first,” Jay says, sounding weirdly serious.

“I can’t. I can’t—” Her voice breaks off, and even after everything that’s happened the last few days, I’m shocked to realize she’s crying! Strong, nearly emotionless Reese. “You do
not
understand what it was like last time. I won’t put her or myself through that again. I have to be sure before we do this. I have to
know
it’s him.”

“Sammi—”

“Don’t,
Jay
,” she hisses.

“Samantha.” The word is a whisper, but Reese doesn’t retort. “Come here.”

When he speaks again, his words are muffled, and in my mind’s eye he’s holding her, his face buried against her neck.

“Whatever you need,” he says. “Just tell me what to do.”

My hands are shaking as I back away and flee to my bedroom.
Tell me what to do.
The same words Benson said to me a few hours ago. I don’t like the comparison.

I rub my eyes with the heels of my hands, trying not to cry. I’m so sick of being helpless in my own life. No one will tell me anything; I’m trying to figure everything out on my own with only half the information I need. I hate this!

I blink into the darkness as a thought occurs to me.

Forget this waiting-for-Quinn crap. I know where he lives—tomorrow I’ll go to
him
.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

M
y lungs ache—I can’t breathe.

Wake up!

Wake up!

Finally the dusky gray of sunrise pierces through my eyelids and I sit straight up, gasping for air. My head spins and an ache lingers in my chest as I suck in breaths as fast as I can.

The drowning dream again. Again I was flailing about in desperation, reaching out for things.

But it makes a little more sense now; I’m reaching for things I
made
. Just like the ChapStick and pencil and water. I’m trying to save myself—to survive. My brain figured it out before I did.

I blink away the murky blackness of the water and my room swims into focus, illuminated by the just-rising sun. My nightgown is damp with sweat, but I’m so cold I can’t feel my toes or fingers. I stagger to the bathroom and scalding water pours over my trembling limbs for several minutes before I can feel all my digits.

Then I remember. Reese is leaving today.

Samantha.
I raise my face to the steaming shower and try to let the water wash Jay’s voice away.

Downstairs, Reese and Jay are having coffee: Reese getting ready for the cab to take her to the airport, Jay to go to a normal day of work.

Despite the storm last night, the day is bright and clear, the sun shining. Perfect—I’m going on a
long
walk today.

I hide upstairs, waiting for both of them to clear out. It’s cowardly, I know, but I’m going to need all my courage to deal with everything else in my life. Finally I hear the clack of the front door and that unmistakable thud of the dead bolt turning.

They’re gone.

I tiptoe to the end of the hallway and pull the edge of the curtain back with a tentative finger, watching them share a goodbye kiss—
that
makes me feel conflicted all over again—before Jay heads up the street on foot and the yellow cab rolls in the other direction.

My chest loosens and I breathe easily for the first time since … I don’t even know.

When I’m dressed and ready, I go downstairs and see a pot of coffee with two or three cups still warm in the bottom. I grit my teeth against the thought that it was a considerate gesture. I switch off the burner plate and wish that switching off my brain—or better yet, my problems—was so easy.

But a note on the refrigerator incinerates that wish.

Dr. Stanley, 10:00. Don’t forget!

As if I could.

When I reach for my house key, my hand pauses at the sight of Reese’s key chain hanging innocently beside it.

I reach out a finger to touch the enormous key ring—Reese has more keys than my old high school janitor, I swear—and my fingers begin to tremble as all sorts of possibilities race through my mind.

Terrifying possibilities.

I don’t take the keys.

Not yet.

As I stand on the porch, a cold wind cuts through my hoodie and I almost unlock the door again to grab a windbreaker. Despite the clear, sunny sky, the wind is unusually frigid. But it’s not that far, and as I make my way down the sidewalk, I realize the bitter wind is eating away at the fog that has enveloped my thoughts all morning.

Better
than coffee.

I almost pull up short when I see Sunglasses Guy again. Once is nothing, twice could be a coincidence. Three times? I don’t think so. And I am nowhere
near
Park Street or Elizabeth’s office. He’s just standing there, leaning against the sign for the rarely used bus stop about two houses down, but I’m not fooled. He’s watching me.

I act like I haven’t noticed him even as my heart races, the beats pounding in my head, blocking out the rush of the wind. But I can’t bring myself to actually walk past him, an arm’s length away, so after a quick glance I cross the street and watch him out of the corner of my eye, each of us pretending not to see the other.

As I round a corner, someone falls into step with me, but I’m so distracted wondering how long it’s going to be before Sunglasses Guy is on my trail again that it takes a good thirty seconds before I realize it’s Quinn, rather dashing in all dark gray and black.

“Quinn!” I gasp, stopping completely as I feel my pulse pounding in my fingertips. “I was coming to find you.”

“Walk with me,” Quinn says out of the side of his mouth, as though he doesn’t want anyone to notice he’s talking to me.

Resentment flares—like I’m the embarrassing girlfriend or something—but I shove it away and hurry to catch up. “Quinn, I have to talk to you about—”

“’Tis trouble,” he interrupts.

“Excuse me?” I ask.
’Tis? What the hell?

“They’ve discovered us.” He pauses and looks over at me for the first time. “You know it.”

I swallow hard and nod, his words confirming my suspicions. I don’t actually know for sure who
they
are—Reese and Jay? The people they’re hiding me from? Sunglasses Guy? But
someone
has definitely found me.

“We must go to Camden. We’ve no cause to wait any longer.”

I clench my teeth, not wanting to be mad at him but hating the way he jerks me around. Jerks my emotions. But I’m helpless to resist. And I resent that.

Not that I’m giving up. “You said you’d bring something. Something to help me understand.” I want to stop, to put my hands on my hips and refuse to walk anywhere else with him until he gives me answers, but a quick glance over my shoulder shows me a distant smudge of black that I’m pretty sure is Sunglasses Guy and I don’t want to take the chance that he’ll catch up.

In fact, I’d rather
quicken
my pace.

“Camden. Everything waits in Camden.”


What
is in Camden? Where
is
Camden?” I snap, the tension of Quinn’s mystery act and the fact that I’m
being followed
not a very happy-making combination.

“I’ll meet you there,” he says, as though I hadn’t said anything.

“Why can’t you just
talk
to me?” I ask, exasperated.

He says nothing, only lengthens his stride. “Tell no one,” he hisses.

“Quinn!” I reach for his arm as he turns from the quiet neighborhood street onto a busy boardwalk in the touristy zone, but at the last second he skirts out of reach. I try to follow, but there are people in my way now, though he weaves through them nimbly. My bad leg twinges, as if in warning. I’m not sure I could have caught him even with two good legs.

I curse under my breath. Curse myself, Quinn, my heart and its wild beating. Why can’t he just stay in one place? Or, at the very least, give me a straight answer? In
regular
English. I guess he’s left me in a better place than the empty street we were on, as it’s hard to lose a tail in a nonexistent crowd, but it wasn’t what I wanted! He knows something and I have to find out what it is. I have a suspicion—a
rational
one, under the circumstances—that my safety hangs in the balance, and he runs away. Jerk.

Still, based on the direction he took off in, I’m pretty sure he’s going to the same place
I
was headed before I ran into him. And I am not letting him get away this time. Today
someone
is going to tell me
something
.

I take a circuitous route and after about six turns, I’m pretty sure I’ve lost Sunglasses Guy. I go straight for a few blocks, glancing behind me every hundred feet or so, but no tail in sight. I let myself breathe just a little easier and get back on track. It takes another ten minutes to reach my ultimate destination, but finally I see the specialty food store that started the whole fiasco my life has become.

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