I suppose I should have been glad that I hadn't fallen into the desperate ocean of destructiveness the night before, but I felt anything but happy. Actually, it seemed I wasn't feeling much of anything at all, and that wasn't really a good sign. It was as if I was dryly watching myself from afar; I could see what I was doing, I just couldn't feel it.
I sat where I had been sitting most of the night, on my bed, staring out the window. I could see the sun coloring the sky in yellow and orange hues, the beautiful colors of dawn, something that usually filled me with a sense of hope. A stray thought, that perhaps I needed to worry a bit about my lack of response to the beauty of nature, the way I liked it, through a window, blew swiftly through my mind, but there was just no energy left in me to catch that thought and run with it.
I didn't like the numbness I was stuck in, because it reminded me of those painful weeks of slow healing where I didn't care if I lived or died. I would have died then, if not for Rose. Rose, the kindest of friends, I should get going, if not for my own sake I should do it for her. And Sean. And the rest of the people I loved. Had I ever told them I loved them? Or showed them?
Just getting up was a true accomplishment, every one of my movements were slow and it seemed as if I was stuck in maple syrup, a taste- and colorless type with a strange sour smell to it. Or, come to think of it, the smell was coming from me. It was the sickening smell of someone who had spent too many hours sweating in complete fear, stuck in a living nightmare.
Showering meant I would have to remove my clothes and then put new clothes on, and that was way more effort than I felt up to. I decided to conserve what little energy I had for the two important things that I needed to get on with; to give the evidence box to Sean and to make sure that all of my friends were protected by taking them to my "safe house", one of the smaller buildings at the country seat that housed the Delilah Institute. And yeah, if I still had some strength left after that I'd drag myself over to William's to see if he could pull me up from the deep hole I'd managed to push myself into.
One thing at a time though... I whispered to myself as I reached for my phone. I dialed Sean's number and was sent to his answering services straight away. I tried calling once more, then a few more times. I stared at my phone in shock, Sean never shut his phone off. And if he hadn't shut it off, perhaps that meant... that someone else had shut his phone off for him. And that someone might be there... with them... hurting them.
I moved as fast as I could, which was too slowly and too clumsily for my taste, but after a lot of stumbling and cursing I managed to get a gun out of my safe and a knife out of an office drawer. I hesitated slightly, wondering if I should leave the evidence box where it was, but then grabbed it and walked out to my car.
I drove as fast as I dared to Gabriella's house but parked on the other side of a small hill, out of sight. I tucked my weapons in my pants and took a deep breath before I dragged my unwilling body straight out into mother nature. I made myself small and tried to walk as soundlessly as possible. God, I hated walking in the woods, there was always something dry to step on, and it was always straight under one or both of my feet.
I reached the house and walked around it, scanning the surrounding area. Nothing seemed out of place, except for a pair of boots that were lying down by the lake. Sean's and Gabriella's cars were both parked in the driveway, and there were no strange sounds, as far as I could tell, I was a city girl after all and there was a lot of confusing background noise. I walked up to the house and started looking in through the windows, to see if should try to storm the house, somehow, or if I should just knock on the door. The kitchen was well organized, clean and empty, the room beside the kitchen was... not empty, not empty at all.
I stared in disbelief at the tight little love-knot I saw in front of me, Rose and Sean in each other's arms. Bitter anger instantly hit me when I realized Sean had probably shut his off phone so he could stay the night with Rose without being disturbed. I ran to the door and knocked as hard as I could, and when a sleepy Gabriella opened the door I said something about having to see her nephew, to which she replied that he was sleeping in his car. I shook my head and told her he was in the house with my friend and then I ran past her to get to the lovebirds.
I threw the door open and stepped into the room prepared to tell them a few truths when my senses started sending me information about them. There was a distinct wet swamp smell in the room, Rose's hair was a matted, tousled mess, they were both fully dressed, and they were hanging on to each other as if their lives depended on it. I fell down into a chair that was standing just by the door of the room and tried to calm myself. It was good that I was no longer a lifeless zombie, but I had to use my sudden burst of energy in a better way than exploding in a useless temper tantrum. And I had to tell them why I was there.
"I've been trying to reach you on the phone, Sean," I said, slowly "and when the tenth call went directly to the answering services I started to get a bit worried. I'm happy you're taking care of my friend, but since I'm still worried about the whereabouts of the devil-husband, it would have been nice to know that you were all still alive. On top of that I had something really important to tell you about our investigations, so... that's why I... you know... barged right in here... without knocking. I'm both sorry and not..."
"My phone got drenched in the lake last night," Sean answered, turning his puppy eyes on me "I'm sorry, I should have let you know... but I..."
Lake water explained the heavy "eau de mud puddle" smell in the air, but why would he and his phone have been anywhere near the lake? I looked at them and sorted through everything I could read about my two friends. Rose had been in the water, at least that's what her hair told me. Sean had also been in the water, because wherever Sean went, his phone went. Sean hadn't had time to remove his clothes or his phone. And then there were those boots tossed carelessly by the lake.
I stood up abruptly as the answer hit me; Rose had been in the water, and if Sean had been in the water with his clothes on it was probably not because they had been occupied with romantic midnight swimming. I knew the vacuum that could follow in the footsteps of great emotional strain, but I hadn't thought Rose would get sucked into it, because she had the support of two loving friends. She wouldn't have been the first person to stumble on the famous finish line, but I'd rather die than allow her to hurt herself. I stifled a string of curses and pushed back the scream that made the back of my throat cramp up.
"Rose, take a walk with me, please..." I said, my voice surprisingly calm.
We walked out of the house and I steered Rose towards the forest. I would have preferred to walk down to the lake, but I didn't want to bring her there, I didn't want to remind her of the feelings that had pushed her to do what I suspected... no, pretty much knew, she had done.
My strength was running out again and I sat down and leaned against a tree. I tried to concentrate my thoughts on what I needed to tell her instead of what I wanted to ask her; it was so easy to start asking the why's, why did she do it, why now, why couldn't she trust her friends to help her make it alright. But the why's wouldn't make anything better, they would just make guilt grow inside her along with all of the other strong feelings she was probably fighting.
"We've found the films, and I've looked at them," I said softly, and I could hear my voice breaking "and there are a few scenes where your husband can be clearly identified, so it's safe to say that he's royally screwed. It worries me that none of my resources have been able to find him though, it makes me think that he's protected by someone smart enough to know how to cover his tracks. We're still looking though..."
I carefully studied her to see how she reacted to my information about the films and the sad fact that I hadn't been able to find anything even though I had scoured the city in all the ways I knew how to. She sighed and nodded, but her body was tense and she wore a worried expression on her face.
"Sarah and Susan are protected by a team of security experts, but I own a house just a few miles away, and I would like to bring all of you there, just for safety's sake." I said, starting out slow but ending with a few too quick words "It's the most well-protected place that I know of and I need to know that you're all ok, because all this worrying is almost breaking me apart."