Magnificent Folly (18 page)

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Authors: Iris Johansen

BOOK: Magnificent Folly
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“But he won’t let Andrew go,” Mariana said. “Or Andrew won’t let him go, we don’t know
which.” Her teeth pressed hard into her lower lip. “Andrew’s in a coma.”

Lily felt as if an iron hand were crushing her heart, stopping her blood from flowing. “Gunner,” she said desperately. “Can’t Gunner help?”

Quenby shook her head. “Andrew’s too deep.” She gazed squarely at Lily. “The vital signs of both men are weakening. They can’t last much longer unless something changes.”

“You’re telling me there’s no chance?” Lily whispered. “I won’t believe that. Andrew is so strong. He won’t give up. I won’t let him give up.”

“You can’t help him,” Mariana said dully as she turned away to look out the window again. “None of us can help him now. We’ve always been terrified this would happen to Andrew someday.”

They were giving up. She couldn’t believe it. Mariana and Quenby were two of the strongest women she had ever met. Didn’t they realize something had to be done? “The hell I can’t. Where is this therapy room?”

Quenby gestured to the double doors across
the room. “Gunner’s doing all he can, Lily. You’re not even a telepath. You can’t expect to—”

“So I’m not some kind of mind wizard. You’re all relying too much on this telepathy business. I can expect to do anything I damn well set out to do. I won’t let him go just because you say it’s telepathically impossible. To
hell
with telepathy.” Lily whirled on her heel and strode in the direction Quenby had indicated. “Do you think I’d let that slimebag take Andrew away from me?”

She pushed through the heavy double doors and was immediately assaulted by the smell of antiseptic. Kalom occupied a hospital bed on the far side of the room, but Lily hardly glanced at him. Her entire attention was focused on Andrew’s still form, lying in the bed closest to the door.

She gave a low cry as she caught sight of his face. “Dear heaven.”

Pain. His features were contorted in the same terrible grimace she’d seen on the faces of Kalom and Baharas the day Andrew and Gunner had rescued Cassie.

“You shouldn’t be here.” Gunner moved forward
from the corner of the room, where he’d been standing. “You can’t help him, Lily.”

“That’s what Quenby said.” Lily’s eyes glittered with unshed tears. “He’s hurting, isn’t he? That bastard is hurting him.”

“Yes.”

“And you can’t stop it?”

Gunner shook his head.

“All this psychic nonsense, all these superbrains running around the compound,” Lily said in wonder. “And none of you can help Andrew?”

“Lily—”

She made a motion with her hand. “Oh, I know what you’re going to say. Andrew told me that the Clanad’s powers didn’t make any difference. That in the end it was their humanity that mattered.” She moved toward Andrew’s bed. “Well, I don’t know anything about this telepathic business, but I won’t let Andrew go on hurting without trying to comfort him.”

She lay down on the bed beside Andrew, achingly conscious of how stiff he was, the muscles rigid and unyielding against her. She put her
arms around him and laid her cheek in the hollow of his shoulder. “Andrew.” She closed her eyes, her voice no louder than a breath. “I need you so. Don’t leave me.”

Andrew didn’t stir.

“Do you remember how you told me I had to forgive myself for failing? Well, that’s what you have to do too. If you can’t help him, accept it and forgive yourself.” Her fingers started to stroke the fair hair at his left temple. “I’ll make a deal with you. I’ll forgive myself if you’ll do the same for yourself. Okay?”

Bargains. Was it Andrew with whom she was trying to bargain or was it God? “You might as well come back, because I’m not going to let you die. I’m not letting you go anywhere without me ever again. Do you hear me?”

No answer.

She could feel Gunner’s sympathetic gaze on her, but she ignored it. She knew he thought her efforts were useless, that she was building a sand castle that would be swept away by forces beyond her control.

“I’m going to stay right here,” she whispered to Andrew. “And soon you’re going to open your eyes and smile at me. I’m going to stay right here and hold you and wait for you to come back.” She would not cry. She had to concentrate on sending all the love and confidence she had to Andrew. She had no time to weep, when all her strength had to be channeled toward Andrew. “Please stop hurting, love. I can’t bear it.”

Andrew didn’t answer.

But he
would
respond. She mustn’t give up hope. Andrew wouldn’t leave her to loneliness again. She had only to be patient and wait for him. She nestled closer, sharing her warmth, sharing her love. “Come back.…”

But it was not until over six hours later that Andrew’s condition underwent a change.

“Kalom’s dead, Lily!” Gunner’s voice cracked, lash-sharp, as he strode across the room, his gaze narrowed on Andrew’s face. “Just now. Get up. I have to check Andrew.”

Lily sat bolt upright, her eyes widening in horror. “Dead? But you said that could mean Andrew—”

“Yes, dammit.” Gunner’s voice gentled. “I’m sorry, Lily, but a survival is very rare in cases—”

Andrew opened his eyes!

“Thank God,” Gunner said thickly.

“Andrew,” Lily whispered.

“I failed.” Tears glittered in Andrew’s eyes. “I couldn’t keep him. I tried to tell him that everything could be different, but he wouldn’t listen.…”

Joy illuminated Lily’s face. “But you’re alive. He didn’t take you.”

“I failed.” Andrew’s eyes closed wearily. “So much pain and rage. He needed me, and I failed him.”

“It doesn’t matter,” Lily said fiercely. “For heaven’s sake, he wanted to kill you. He doesn’t matter.”

“He matters. Everyone matters. That’s what life is all about.…” His voice trailed off as his breathing deepened in the rhythm of sleep.

Lily’s alarmed glance flew to Gunner’s face.

“It’s all right. It’s only exhaustion.” He was smiling reassuringly. “He’ll probably sleep around the clock.”

“He’s safe?” she asked. She couldn’t believe it.

Gunner nodded. “He’s going to be fine.”

“Then I want him home, where I can take care of him. Will you arrange for an ambulance?” She glanced at Kalom’s still body lying on the bed across the room, and a shudder ran through her. How could Andrew feel anything but hatred for the man who had tried to kill him? “I don’t like it here.”

Gunner helped her from the bed. “That’s not a bad idea. Andrew’s not accustomed to failing, and it isn’t going to be easy for him to face the fact that he couldn’t help Kalom.”

“No one else would have tried. I don’t know why he did.”

“Yes, you do,” Gunner said quietly. “He told you. Everyone matters to Andrew.”

She nodded, and swallowed to ease the tightness in her throat as she glanced back at Andrew’s
face. Yes, she knew why Andrew had been compelled to try to help Kalom even if it meant endangering his own life. “I’ll go tell Quenby and Mariana he’s all right.” She turned to leave, and then abruptly swung back to face him. “I
did
help him, didn’t I?”

A warm smile lit Gunner’s face. “You bet. Andrew’s vital signs began to steady from the moment you lay down beside him. It surprised the hell out of me.”

“You shouldn’t have been surprised. I just used a universal panacea that’s been around a good deal longer than anything the Clanad’s come up with.” She grinned as she opened the door. “Andrew and I made a deal.”

Gunner was right. Andrew slept around the clock, woke for a few minutes, and then immediately fell asleep again.

“He’s sad again, isn’t he?” Cassie whispered, edging close to the bed to gaze down at him.

“Yes, something happened to make him very
sad, love.” Lily took Cassie’s hand and held it tightly as waves of emotion spiraled through her. He looked more like a weary little boy than the virile man she knew so well, yet the boy was every bit as lovable as the man. “But Andrew’s going to be fine. We’re going to make sure he is, aren’t we?”

Cassie nodded.

“And I know how,” Lily said as the idea suddenly occurred to her. “Will you help me?”

“If I can.”

“Oh, you can.” Lily propelled her from the bedroom and then down the stairs. “What I have in mind is definitely in your area of expertise. Call Mrs. Muggins and tell her we’ll need a car to take a drive into the desert.”

“The desert?”

“And we’ll need some tools.” Lily frowned in concentration. “Hurry, love. We may not have much time before he wakes up again.”

Cassie ran down the hall in search of Mrs. Muggins while Lily crossed to the telephone and
picked up the receiver to call Mariana, Quenby, and Gunner.

Andrew was standing on the balcony, framed against the scarlet-and-purple skies of the sunset, when Lily walked into the room. He immediately turned around when he heard the door open, and smiled at her. “I’m afraid I haven’t been too sociable lately,” he said lightly as he held out his hand to her. “Gunner was just here, and said I’ve been out of it for nearly two days.”

“You needed the rest.” She came onto the balcony and took the hand he held out, her gaze anxiously searching his face. His color was good, the lines of exhaustion gone, she noted with relief, but he appeared thinner. “Have you lost weight?”

He shrugged. “I usually lose a few pounds after one of these sessions. I’ll gain it back in a few days.”

“See that you do. No wonder Mariana gave you Muggins. You don’t take care of yourself.”

“That was no reason to inflict the ‘irresistible
force’ on my hapless head.” He lifted her hand to his lips and pressed a kiss on the palm. “But I promise I’ll eat every one of my vegetables at your command. Gunner tells me I owe you.”

“Gunner’s right,” she said crisply. “And I intend to collect.”

Surprise crossed his face. “With what kind of exchange?”

“Exchange is the right term. This is a two-way street, you know. I don’t want any more of this nonsense with creeps like Kalom. It’s bad enough that you risk your life with people who have essential worth. I won’t have you—” She found her voice was shaking, and was forced to stop to steady it. “I’d like to say, ‘Don’t ever do anything like that again,’ but I won’t. I know your work is too important to stop. All I ask is that you not take unnecessary risks. Okay?”

“Okay.” His long fingers traced the line of her cheekbone with infinite tenderness. “But you’re wrong about not trying to save people like Kalom, Lily. They need help more than the others.” His expression became wistful. “Can’t you
see how tragic they are? We all start out the same, clean and shining and new, but then ugly things twist and corrode some people until all that wonderful shining is buried.”

She gazed at him in helpless exasperation. She was back at square one. “And you have to be the one to scrape off the corrosion.”

He frowned. “I hoped you’d understand.”

“Oh, I understand. I wish I didn’t. I wish I could say, ‘Sorry, Andrew, this is going to be too much of a hassle. I think I’ll bow out.’” She shook her head. “But it doesn’t work that way.”

He stiffened warily. “Are you trying to tell me something?”

“I’m trying to tell you that I was probably better off with a five-star louse like Tait than with a man who’s single-handedly trying to save the whole bloody world.” She blinked hard to keep the tears from falling. “You’re not practical or sensible, and you believe in dreams and people that shine inside and—”

“People do shine,” Andrew interrupted. “You shine, Lily. Years ago, when I first saw you, I
thought you shone like silver, but now it’s more like burnished copper. Warm and deep and rich with—”

“See? You don’t even think like anyone else. You’d let me hurt you. You’d let
anyone
hurt you if you thought it would help that person.” She took a step back. “Well, no one will do it,” she said fiercely. “I won’t let that happen. Do you hear me? You’re not going to be a damn martyr. You’re going to live a long, long life, and you’re going to be happy. You’re going to be so damn happy—Stop laughing. I mean it.”

“I know.” He smiled at her, his eyes still sparkling with amusement. “That’s why I’m laughing. Pure, unadulterated relief. You had me scared for a minute, but, if I’m not mistaken, I do believe you’re trying to make a declaration.”

“A declaration? You want a declaration?” She took his hand and pulled him through the French doors leading to the bedroom, and then toward the door to the hall. “I’ll show you a declaration.”

TEN

“M
AY
I
ASK
where we’re going?” Andrew asked as she ushered him swiftly down the steps. “Merely as a point of curiosity, you understand. I’m quite willing to follow you to the ends of the earth.”

“The terrace,” Lily said tersely.

“And what awaits us on the terrace? A candlelight supper with a gypsy violinist? Or perhaps a single red rose lying beside my plate?”

“No.” She pulled him with her toward the terrace.

“What a disappointment. I was hoping for a romantic gesture at last from my pragmatic Lily.”

“You’re taking this all wrong. I’m very serious.”

He stopped her with a hand on her arm as she reached for the knob of the French door. She glanced up to meet his gaze and caught her breath. His eyes were glowing with a radiant joy. “I have to joke. I don’t know what else to do. This means too much to me, and I’ve wanted it for too long. I feel like soaring up to the sky like a bird or banging out ‘Chopsticks’ on Cassie’s piano or—”

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