All rights reserved. No part of this novella may be reproduced without written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations with credit to M.J. Roberts. Copyright Β© M.J. Roberts 2015.
ALL CHARACTERS ARE OVER 18 YEARS OLD.
This story won first place in Literotica's
2015 Summer Lovin' contest
. If you like it, please make sure to give it the number of stars you think it deserves, to keep it on top of the top lists.
Thanks!
Dear Readers,
With every story I write, I try to add something to make it even better than the last. More romance, hotter sex, a character who battles his or her own inner demons the way we really do. Here's your chance to journey with two new people I hope you'll fall in love with.
Enjoy.
MJ
RISK YOUR HEART
The scarred man yanked a vicious-looking curved knife from his jacket and raised it high, aimed directly at me. I stopped breathing. A flash from oncoming headlights glinted off the knife as he prepared to strike. I wrenched open my car door and jumped out; we were moving at full speed.
The cold wind hit me first, an instant before the hard smack of the ground. I dropped and rolled. The impact on my back was so hard that my teeth clamped together, I tasted blood, but I didn't stop. I was up and running, barefoot, screaming with no sound, my pleading cries eaten up by the fierce winds.
The air itself taunted me, pressing me back as I hurled myself against it. I was running full out, my heart a thousand dogsleds trying to burst out of my chest, my sweat going from hot, to clammy, to cold in an instant, soaking me fast with my abject fear. I twisted to look behind me as I ran. I saw four more men, wearing white, Jason-like ski masks, and carrying long black wooden stakes raised high over their heads. I started to hyperventilate. I tripped.
I heard a voice from far away. The tone calm but firm. "Leah, you are perfectly safe. You are here in my office. Come back. You are perfectly safe."
My heart stopped beating for a second, and I jerked back with a gasp, jackknifing up to sitting so quickly I almost flew an inch off the couch. I put a hand to my chest.
Dr. Jeffington's kind face was drawn in concerned lines, his body leaning forward out of his chair. "Leah, look around you. You are right here, just where you started. Feel the couch under you," his voice was slow and soothing, almost medicinal. "Take some deep calming breaths."
My heartbeat was techno music on speed, and my eyes were like pinballs, my panicked gaze ricocheting from the paintings to the bookshelf to the desk, bouncing but not registering, until I focused on the sunlight streaming in through Dr. Jeff's window. The tree that had green leaves on it all spring looked as if some witch has sucked all its life juice from every cell and then cackled, a sad result from the late May/early June drought. I knew how it felt. Despite being freezing cold in most of my dream, I was sweating now.
I took a deep, steadying breath and held it, and then let it out very slowly. I let my hand drop from my chest. Reluctantly I looked at my therapist.
"Now, tell me what you saw in the dream," he said.
I shook my head. Tell him I was chased by faceless strange men, again? No thank you. You don't need a degree in psychology to read into that one.
"Leah, I can't help you if you don't talk to me. You were fine, and then you weren't. Why don't you start withβ"
I got up. "I think that's enough forβ"
"Leah, PTSD is normal in cases whereβ"
"βtoday," I said.
He sighed. "You are going to face your past some day, Leah. All of it."
"Gotta go," I said. I grabbed my purse, and walked out the door.
*
The Hershey's bar had melted in my purse, which was a total bummer because my post-therapy chocolate bar is the one weekly splurge that I allow myself. I sat in my black Ford Focus and banged my head against the wheel. I thought I might look like a blonde Muppet, moshing her head back and forth to Animal drumming or maybe banging my head to The Ramones' "My Brain is Hanging Upside Down".
I leaned back against the hot car seat, suddenly spent. I had one of those silver-colored windshield sunscreen thingies, but I had forgotten to stick it in the front window. I guess in the back of my mind I probably figured the car couldn't get that hot during a 50-minute therapy session. Wrong.
I thought about the dream, vision, whatever, again. Yes, it was awful, but I wasn't helpless. Maybe I wasn't just running away from something, maybe I was also running toward something.
The air conditioning in my car finally hit the point were it was blowing cool air, and I leaned toward the vent and peeled my shirt away from my chest at the neckline and flapped it back and forth in the air stream, enjoying the cool flow on the top of my breasts.
"It doesn't have to necessarily mean anything deep," I said to myself. "So, I have weird hypnosis sessions and freaky dreams. Steven King has freaky dreams too, and he's totally sane."
Somehow I didn't find that too reassuring.
I revved the car and carefully looked over my shoulder as I backed out of the parking space. I noticed I was checking my rearview mirror more than normal, as if I half expected zombies from The Walking Dead to acquire super speed and be able to run up to my car and grab on to the back bumper.
I pictured a bunch of them, in their torn clothes and gray make-up, hanging off the back of my Focus like an undead 'Just Married' streamer party favor. That made me smile.
I pictured the imaginary zombies losing grip, getting run over by the SUV behind me, and exploding into dust. That took the edge off. Imagination is good. I could probably beat these dreams just by thinking silly endings to them. Like Doc Jeff said, the answers to our problems had to come from within.
Whatever.
I canceled my therapy appointment for the next week, and the next. What can I say? I'm a coward. The temperature climbed to record highs, making me worried my air conditioner would break. As I spent most of my time at home in front of the computer, directly under the vent, the thought of an A/C failure was almost enough to give me a new set of nightmares.
I had a lot to be grateful for. Hershey bars, a great imagination, central air conditioning. I focused on that.
Ironically, as the temperatures outside got hotter, my dreamscapes got colder. I was often naked, or almost naked. When I ran in my nightmares I was so cold, my nipples stood out to sharp points that could cut glass as I tried to cover them, wrapping my arms around myself. My feet would slip on the sheer sheets of wet ice, my bare hands plunging into cold mixtures of ice and slush.