Read Waters Fall Online

Authors: Becky Doughty

Waters Fall (20 page)

BOOK: Waters Fall
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24

 

 

Nora lay on her side, her back to Jake whose body
was curved possessively around hers. She could hear his breathing begin to slow as he slipped into the heavy sleep of a spent man. She didn't dare move for fear she'd wake him.

She wasn't afraid of him; not anymore. She no longer had any reason to be. Maybe he'd forced himself on her, but she didn't really resist. Her body ached, though, in places where it shouldn't, not after love-making. His behavior this morning was reminiscent of his drinking days when he'd come home intoxicated, and demand his conjugal rights. Granted, he'd never been quite so rough with her, but she didn't think it was because he was a kinder, gentler Jake back then. No, he'd just been too drunk to be anything but sloppy, and she
’d been too miserable to refuse him. This time, however, she was fairly certain that to resist would have only made things worse for her.

She still wasn't afraid. He didn't mean to hurt
her, she knew that, not physically, anyway. He just wanted to break her on the inside the way she'd broken him. The things he called her, the words he used while having his way with her, even the way he pushed her physically without causing any real damage, it was all evidence that he didn't want her bleeding on the outside. She understood. That was why she didn’t stop him. Maybe pain would fill the dead, emptiness in her heart, at least for a while.

She didn't want to think about anything; divorce, children, guilt, or the apologies that he was certain to heap on her head when he came to his senses. He would attack her character, all the while beating himself up for forcing his way on her, for wanting to be with her at all. She would watch him with empty eyes, fully knowing what to expect, because he was so predictable. He would rant and rave at her, asking her why, why, why, and she would say nothing, knowing there was no way he could, or would, even try to understand her actions.

If she stayed, he would do it all again and again, and she would let him, knowing it was his way of staking his claim on her, of proving his manhood to her, to himself, and in some sick way, to Tristan. He would apologize after, she would hold him, and tell him she understood. Because she did. The sudden clarity that had opened her eyes to her own destructive behavior, gave her a strange and removed sensitivity to what Jake must be going through.

Eventually, if they chose not to divorce, living together might be possible again. It might get easier, but this would always be between them, always lurking in the shadows of the photo albums, the family videos, the memories.

She eased her body out from under his heavy arm and scooped up her scattered clothing off the floor. Her left inner thigh was already beginning to shadow, and she winced when she touched the teeth marks above one collarbone. The skin wasn't broken, but it was raised and red. This was no teenage love-bite she was now sporting.

“Jerk,” she muttered almost inaudibly. “How am I supposed to cover that up?”

She crossed the hall to the bathroom and turned on the shower. There was no amount of hot water that could wash off the way she felt, but it might help her relax enough to take stock of the situation. She had a long day ahead of her, and she still didn't know where to begin. “If nothing else, maybe I can wash the whore smell off of me. Jerk,” she said again.

By the time she was done in the bathroom, she was feeling irritable and cantankerous, rather than calmer and more collected, but at least she
’d made a few decisions about the immediate future.

Jake was back in the living room pacing the floor, and that irritated her. He had changed his clothes, but he still looked rumpled and out of sorts
… and that irritated her, too. He waited until she had crossed the room to the kitchen before he spoke.

“I made fresh coffee.” It sounded almost like a peace offering, but she didn't acknowledge it, or him. She filled the tea kettle instead, and put it on a burner to boil. She desperately wanted another cup of coffee, but she wouldn't admit that right now for the world.

“What time do you have to be at your presentation today?”

“I don't,” she replied. “There isn't one.”

“Oh. What happened?” Jake stood with his thumbs hooked into his pants, looking like a little boy who was pretending to be brave and unaffected by the bully's unkindness.

“Nothing happened. There just isn't one.”

“As in, there never was one, or it's been canceled?” A slight edge crept into his voice.

“There never was one.” There wasn’t any reason to lie to him. He knew the worst, and now the details seemed insignificant to her. He obviously felt differently.

“What do you mean? So this was all a set-up? You
lied
about it so you could spend the weekend with your lover? Where were you planning on going? What if I'd asked questions? Like which development you were going to be at?” His voice became louder and louder. “How did you expect to get away with it?”

As if echoing his emotions, the tea kettle began to
whistle, softly at first, then more shrilly as steamy water sputtered out the top of the spout. She didn't move until he shouted, “Would you get that stupid thing? Can't you hear it?”

Nora turned the burner off, poured the hot water over a couple of mint teabags in her porcelain teapot, and readied a cup and saucer for when it had steeped the way she liked it. She stood at the counter watching the steam puff cheerfully out of the teapot spout, trying to be objective and honest with herself.

Was she purposefully goading him? Was she intentionally antagonizing him, trying to get a reaction out of him, so that he would be the bad guy? She snorted softly and shook her head.
I don't care
, she thought.
I don't care that I'm the bad guy.

In fact, the more she thought about it, the more she realized how freeing it was to shoulder the blame for the failure of their marriage. She was so accustomed to being responsible for making everything succeed, that the cloak of blame settled comfortably around her, like an old friend. If she was responsible for her actions, then she would be responsible for the repercussions as well.

“I'm going to find a place of my own, Jake,”

“You're not taking the kids,” he cut in, crossing his arms. She could see his chest rising and falling, his breathing fast.

“I'm not taking the kids. But I'm going to say this once, and just once, so listen carefully.” She didn't miss the flush that crept up his neck from beneath his shirt. “If you so much as have a sip of wine-vinegar dressing, and I find out about it, you will have hell to pay. I will not have you endangering their lives. Is there any part of what I just said that you don't understand to be a threat
and
a promise?”

“Got it loud and clear, Nor. Anything else?” Sarcasm dripped from every word. The morning's debacle in the bedroom, and the guilt he must have felt, were apparently forgotten, and Nora was relieved. She didn't want to hear his apologies. She came around the counter and sat down at the dining table, her hot teacup held between both hands. She
looked across the back of the couch at her husband, making sure he was listening to her.

“I will still take them to and from school every day. We will come home in the afternoons, I will feed them, help them with homework, spend the evening with them in some semblance of normalcy, and after they're in bed, I will go to my own place to sleep. I will be back in the mornings to get them up and make them breakfast. Until school is out, my new place, wherever I end up staying, will be my new workshop as far as they are concerned. I will not, nor will you, ruin the last of this school year with our sordid affairs.”


Your
sordid affair. I’m not the one who screwed around.”

“Excellent. Glad you’re on board.” Nora rolled her eyes,
then took a sip of the strong tea. The mint would help settle her stomach, she hoped. “When school is over, we’ll tell them what our plans are, because hopefully, by then, we’ll actually have more permanent plans to tell them about.”

“Wow. You've got this whole thing figured out, haven't you? Did you come up with all of this in the shower?” Jake sneered at her. “Did you find a place to live while you were in there, too?”

“Grow up, Jake. Someone has to figure things out in this family, and it never
has
been you, so why are you acting so surprised? Yes, I came up with all of that in the shower. And yes, it's the way things are going to be. If the kids ask questions, we'll just deal with them as carefully as we can.”

“You mean, lie to them.” It wasn't a question. Nora rolled her eyes again.

“Call it what you want. There are some things better left unsaid until the right time.”

“Like the fact that you're screwing another man? What's the matter,
Nor? You worried about how that will go over with our precious children?” He was kicking the corner of the sofa without realizing it:
thunk, thunk, thunk
.

“Just don't make this any harder on them than it needs to be. You can say your mean little things to me, you can call me
names, you can rape me if you need to, but don't take it out on them.”

“I did
not
r—rape you, Nora!” He practically choked over the word. “I might have been a little rough, but I did
not
force you to do anything you didn't want to do.”

“Call it what you want, Jake,” she said, tugging at the neckline of her top so that he couldn’t miss the marks he’d left at the base of her neck. “Just keep your attacks between us, you understand? This has nothing to do with the kids.”

“I can't believe that you're accusing me of r—rape—raping you!” He could hardly get the word out, but he was staring at her shoulder, his cheeks flushed with guilt. “You came in here all proud and... and
alluring.
” He drew the word out to emphasize his distaste.

You baited me;
seduced
me! What did you expect would happen?”

“Like I said, Jake.
Call it what you want.” Nora stared down into her nearly empty cup. Even knowing how blind he sometimes was, she couldn't believe he really thought she’d set out to seduce him. Because she didn't scream bloody murder when he pinned her to the door? Because she clamped her mouth shut around the pain as he shoved her, twisted her, bent her in ways she didn't know she could bend? Because she didn't cry when he bit her, squeezed her, forced his way inside her unreceptive body? Because of this, he assumed she
wanted
him?

Jake charged across the room, gripped the edge of the table with one hand, and leaned forward so that he was looking down his nose at her. She took note of the rage he wanted her to see, as well as the fear and shame he was trying desperately to mask behind his snarl. He pointed a finger in her face.
“I'll tell you what I call it. I call it just rewards. I got what I wanted—a long, overdue release—and you got what you wanted—some wild and crazy sex with a complete stranger. You've never met this side of me before, doll, so you'd better pay attention. Don't, for one second, think that you're calling the shots around here.” He pounded his fist on the table to emphasize his point. “I'm not the one walking away.” He jabbed his finger at her again, nearly taking one of her eyes out. She closed them, just in case, but didn't flinch. “
You
,” he growled, “are the bad guy this time, Nora.

She almost smiled as she heard her own guilty verdict being spoken aloud. But she
was
going to call the shots around here. And he was just going to have to deal with it.

“Do you have a better plan then?”

“Yeah. How about this? You tell our kids the truth about yourself, then get on with your sorry life. I'll pick up the pieces of their broken hearts.”

“And you'll put a roof over their heads?” She snorted softly. “You'll make sure there's hot water for their showers, and bread in the cupboard and milk in the refrigerator for their cereal? You'll pay the phone bill so the school can call you when you forget to pick them up? You'll mow the lawn without having to be reminded every week, like a child?” She looked pointedly out the window at the scraggly back yard. “Are you actually going to go out and get a real job,
Jakey?”

“Ah. The claws are out.” He straightened and crossed his arms over his chest again.

“Why don't you sit down. Maybe we can talk this over like adults.”

“Hm.
I think not. I don't really feel like sharing a table with an adulteress.”

“You and Jesus, huh?”
She put a finger to her lips and furrowed her eyebrows. “Wait a minute. That's not how I remember the story. There was something about being without sin and throwing the first stone.” Nora shook her head and shrugged her shoulders.  “I must have misunderstood what I was reading.”

“Shut up, Nora.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

25

 

 

J
ake sat on the sofa all morning, getting up only to
refill his coffee, then to urinate it out again. His stomach ached, and the high doses of caffeine and coffee bean oils did nothing to settle it, but he found strange pleasure in the self-inflicted discomfort. It was better than dealing with the pain in his chest, he decided, as he brewed another pot around noon.

Nora had been gone for over an hour now. She took only her purse, so he knew that even if she found something right away, she'd be back for her things. Besides, what was she going to do about Leslie and Felix? Her ridiculous plan didn't address weekends when the kids were home all day and up late at night. Did that mean she'd be sticking around the house all weekend long? And if so, where did she plan on sleeping? He shivered at the thought of her in their bed beside him, his body betraying him while his mind was repulsed by the thought of being with her.

He couldn't help thinking of this morning—he’d been going back to it over and over. Yes, his anger had gotten the best of him, and yes, he'd been forceful with her, but how could she accuse him of rape?

“She reciprocated, I know she did. It wasn't like she just lay there.” He dropped his head in his hands, running his fingers through the hair at his temples. “I didn't force her. Things just got a little rough.” He felt like he was arguing with himself. “She certainly didn’t seem to mind.”

He shuddered, imagining Nora giving herself to someone else in the same way. Responding. Going back for more. Coming home to him. Responding to him. Then going back…. How long? Days? Weeks? Months? It couldn’t be years. It wasn’t possible.

The countless late nights at the office when she didn't come home until two or three in the morning.
Mornings when she'd left dressed in loose, flowing dresses, or jeans and t-shirts, quite a departure from her normal classic attire of suits or blazers. Then there were the long weekends she'd taken. They were rare because of the kids, only two that he could remember, but both were home conventions she insisted she needed to attend.

How convenient for her that he trusted her.

How convenient for her that she was such a good liar.

Granted, her first trip away, he hadn
’t been so innocent himself. She'd made arrangements for the kids to go to her mom's house, and he'd spent the first night in front of the television. Before he made any concerted effort to be careful, he was watching a late night show that was beyond borderline pornography. With no one around to hold him accountable, he'd watched the whole thing, indulging in self-gratification at its basest. When the show was over, he called Nora, hoping to have an intimate phone call with her in order to ease his guilty conscience, but she didn't pick up. He even left two sexy voice mails asking her to call him back. She never did, and he'd gone to bed feeling both alone and lonely, and called her back in the morning, leaving another message apologizing for his inappropriate requests.

She, on the other hand, was apparently participating in things about which he was only fantasizing, and now it made him cringe as he considered what a pathetic loser he'd been.
When she returned home, he assumed her air of discomfort and stand-offish attitude were because she’d guessed the reason behind his sick phone calls. Now he knew better.

The next time she'd gone away, however, he'd been a model husband and father. Jake went out and bought new sheets, putting them on their bed himself. He and the kids spent all day Saturday cleaning up both the front and back yards,
then he bought two dozen roses and divided them into vases throughout the house. They were a soft, velvety coral-pink that made him think of her lips. The night she came home, he'd scattered rose petals on her pillow, and had a bottle of her favorite Moscato chilling in the fridge. But she was late. The disappointed kids were already asleep in their beds, and Jake was nodding off on the sofa, a half-full cup of coffee in his hand. When she stumbled through the door with her things, the noise startled him awake, and he had spilled the remains of his mug all over the carpet.  She was obviously exhausted, and now thinking back on the night, it occurred to him that she looked like she'd been crying. By the time he cleaned up his spill, however, Nora was sound asleep, the petals in a pile on her bedside table.

The amber bottle with its elegant label was still somewhere in the back of the fridge, he was pretty sure. Well, he decided, that would be the first thing to go. He would take great pleasure in destroying the evidence of his ignorance and stupidity.

He found it lying on its side behind the large milk and juice jugs on the bottom shelf. Taking it out to the garage with him, he pulled out a locked case at the back of the highest cupboard, and lifted out his dad's old Browning 20-gauge shotgun. It had a brutal recoil from some mishap his dad had with it, something he'd always intended to get adjusted so he could use it, and someday train his kids with it. Well, today, he’d just have to deal with a bruised shoulder. He had some shooting to do, and he couldn’t wait for a gunsmith to pamper him.

It was a beauty, his daddy
’s gun. It felt manly just to hold it in his hands. Weighing in at just a little over six pounds, it bumped solidly up against his shoulder. It had been a long time since he'd fired this baby off, but it would be well-worth the effort it would take to get it ready.

He'd get only one chance. The neighbors would call the police if he took more than one shot. People's ears might only perk up at the sound of one loud blast, but two or three would have them picking up their phones.

When the gun went off the first time, the kickback was considerably stronger than he remembered, and he clutched his shoulder as pain shot through his collarbone and down his arm. It took several minutes to recover enough to realize he’d completely missed the bottle he'd set on the low wall separating Nora's flower garden from the lawn, but one of her rose bushes lay on its side, shredded by the blast. Lucky for him, he'd thought to put an extra slug in his pocket. He reloaded, relishing the sound of oiled metal sliding over metal, took aim, and pulled the trigger. Let the cops come. Let them arrest him. He didn't care. This time, the butt of the gun skittered off the top of his shoulder and slammed into his jaw just below his ear. He dropped the gun, cupping the side of his face, bent over double, in so much pain his vision blurred.

“Argh!”
He growled against his fist as he straightened up to see if he'd been successful this time. The remains of the bottle were scattered all over the yard, and he’d taken the tops off a few more of Nora’s bushes, but he realized too late that the kids would not be able to play out here until he cleaned up the worst of the glass. The flowerbed, on the other hand, was her problem, and he was looking forward to seeing her face when she noticed the devastation he’d wrought.

“You're an idiot, Jake.” He clutched at his throbbing right shoulder; he was seriously hurting and wondered if he'd broken something. He needed an icepack and quickly. The glass would have to wait. “At least I hit it,” he grunted.

Back on the sofa, ice packed around his pulsing collarbone and swollen jaw, he let himself sink into the pain he was feeling. Why was destruction the way to deal with this? Even injured, all he wanted to do was go out and destroy something else. He thought about methodically breaking each piece of the pink Depression glass she'd been collecting since before they were married. He considered driving down to her office and downloading a virus onto her computer. He even contemplated accidentally driving her car off a bridge, but he couldn't think of one close enough to make it worth his while.

What he really wanted to do was to find out where this guy lived, and beat every last ounce of manhood out of him. He
’d even be willing to take another hit to the shoulder if he could use the gun. He was sure it was that Tristan guy he'd caught her on the phone with yesterday—was it just yesterday?—and if he could find out anything about him, the Browning might just get a little more use. At least he knew he could actually hit his target.

The police never showed up, and Jake finally fell asleep after giving in and taking something for the pain.

~ ~ ~

The tiny cottage was a gift, one she knew she didn't
deserve. The little stream running along the edge of the river rock patio made her think of water sprites and pixie hollows, and she was able to lay aside her cloak of guilt and her longing for what she couldn’t have when she sat beside it, her feet dangling in the chilled water.

Whoever had lived here before her had spent some time in the little yard. There were perennials under the trees, rose bushes in the flowerbed under the kitchen window, and a honeysuckle vine twining with a star-flowered jasmine grew up and over the tiny entryway, forming a lacy arch leading to the front door.

It was really just a box; one large room, a tiny bathroom, and a galley kitchenette that looked out onto the patio. By using folding panels and furniture groupings, she was able to convert the one room into several designated areas, and it suddenly became a miniature home. It was perfect in every way.

Oh, she knew it was temporary. They couldn't do this forever. At least she couldn't. She was having a difficult time falling asleep at night, and the early mornings were beginning to take their toll on her. Yesterday she didn't get to the house until after Leslie was up and in the shower. Jake, much to her surprise, had covered for her.

Every time she saw Jake, he seemed different to her. Sometimes he was moody, angry, and said incredibly horrible things to her. Sometimes he seemed distant and unaffected by her presence. Still other times he couldn't stop touching her; the back of his knuckles following the curve of her shoulder, his fingertips smoothing the hair away from her cheek, his body brushing against hers as he passed by. Sometimes he even rested his hand on her low back as they walked together.

They spent very little time alone, and they never spoke of important things. Their conversations revolved around the daily activities of their children, meals, and the house. They didn't even discuss work, although it was pretty obvious they were both busy. Jake seemed to have tapped into a new source for referrals, and was heading out the door on most mornings, just as she was leaving with the kids. She didn't ask for details, and he didn't offer any. The bank account, still jointly-owned, reflected his increased income, and she was honestly happy for him.

School would be out in two weeks, and Nora felt the pressure of anticipation. She knew the day was coming when they would sit down with Leslie and Felix and tell them the truth—or at least a version of the truth she and Jake thought the kids could handle—and life would permanently change for their little family. She dreaded it and longed for it at the same time, afraid of what was to come, but needing closure, too.

Tristan called repeatedly the first several days. She finally agreed to meet with him somewhere public so they could talk.

“I miss you, my Isolde. You're breaking my heart.” The words sounded cliché to her ears, but the pain in his voice seemed very real. He sounded terrible, and she was overwhelmed by guilt for all the lives her choices were affecting so terribly.

They met at a busy sandwich shop about halfway between their homes. He didn't wait for an invitation. Cupping her face in his hands, he bent and kissed her sweetly, intimately, thoroughly.

She pulled away while she could still stand upright. “Please don't do this, Tristan. Please. I can't take it.”

“Come back to my place. I don't want to do this here. I thought I could, but it's not right asking me to behave like you're a stranger, knowing how we feel about each other. Let's get out of here.”

Nora knew it wasn’t fair—none of this was fair to anyone, anymore—but she also knew exactly what would happen if she went back to his place. She couldn’t let things pick up where they'd left off. “I can't. I don't trust myself. I don't trust you.”

“You can trust me. I love you, Isolde. I need you.” He pulled her close again and bent his head to whisper against her hair. “Just let me touch you. Let me hold you; kiss you the way you need to be kissed. I’m aching for you.”

The whole public setting thing backfired horribly. Tristan’s powers of persuasion had her faltering, wavering, and then giving in all together. He wouldn't stop touching her and looking at her like he might devour her.

Once on his own turf, he quite literally swept her off her feet, destroying any last vestiges of her defenses, and she cried bitter tears of defeat, mingled with sweet relief, as she lay in his arms at the end of the evening. It was where she wanted to be more than anything in that moment. She felt covered by his big body, both physically and emotionally, and she was having a hard time remembering why she'd left him in the first place.

“Why are you crying now, my Isolde?” He murmured softly against her hair. “Although I admit I'm almost afraid to ask.”

She turned in his arms to face him, smiled sadly, and wiped the tears from her face.
“I missed you, Tristan.”

“And I missed you.” He replied matter-of-factly. “You're not leaving again, you know.” He ran his fingertips along her hairline, down the column of her neck, following the curve of her collarbone. Suddenly his fingers stilled.

BOOK: Waters Fall
8.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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