The problems began in his senior year of college when Danny started to receiving acceptances for medical schools. Danny understood the importance of applying to a number of schools, but planned only to go to UCLA. He would never leave Christie.
Christie gave hints. Then one evening she let it all out.
"Danny, do you want children of your own?" she asked while they were eating dinner.
"Nope," he said, slicing his steak. He had cooked, so the meal was simple.
"You sure?"
"Yep."
"But..."
"Why don't you get pregnant and I can help you raise it? There are sperm donors."
She pressed her lips together, but didn't say anything. She scored one for Danny, because he knew that was something she wanted to do.
"What about falling in love?" she asked. "Have you ever thought about meeting someone, a stranger, and it being love at first sight?"
He eyed her for a second. "You tired of me?"
"No, of course not," she said quickly. "It's just there are experiences you've never had."
"You've never had them, either. You've never had a planned pregnancy with a husband. You've never dated anyone you wanted to date. Have you fallen in love with someone at first sight?"
"No. I haven't." It was true. And now that she'd had Danny, she probably never would.
She decided to be blunt. "Danny, you need a normal life. Someday you're going to look back and regret all you didn't have because you were tied to me."
"I need you, Christie." He pointed his fork at her plate. "You're not eating, and I slaved over this meal. You always skip meals when you're upset over something. Cook them. Don't eat them."
"Danny, I want you to go away for medical school. We need to break this off so you can lead a normal life."
He slowly put down his knife and fork and stared at her. "You don't mean that."
"I do. I've known this had to happen since the first night we slept together."
"But you love me. How can you say these things?"
"It's because I love you. I want you to be happy and content with your life, and you won't be in the long run if we continue to live like this. It's best if we break it off now. And you going away to medical school would be a good way to do it."
"I am happy and content with my life. I was so happy I could burst, until about sixty seconds ago." He stood, leaving his plate half full of food. "We're not having this discussion," he said angrily. "We're staying together."
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That night he made love to her frantically, hands gripping her fiercely, driving into her hard. It hurt a little, but she welcomed the pain as a kind of penance for what she did to him and would continue to do. Afterward, Danny held Christie in an almost crushing hold. His kisses were passionate, desperate.
"You belong to me," he said again and again. "You're mine."
She shivered. It was what Steve used to say, but his fingers had dug into her flesh when he said it, leaving bruises. Danny was more gentle even in his current desperation.
"Danny--"
"Listen. I belong to you, too. I'm yours. This is not about two people having sex. It never was." He squeezed her in his death grip again. "I'm yours, and I know that if I left it would destroy you. Admit it. Admit that it would hurt you if I left."
She held back a sigh, and her silence was her answer. It was going to tear her apart, but she was determined.
"I endured twenty years with a sadist," she said quietly, "and it didn't destroy me. I lived through that relationship because I never gave up my determination to survive."
"Admit it!"
She finally said, "It will be extremely painful, but in the end you will have a full, happy life, and that will make it worthwhile to me."
"Gah! When are you going to stop sacrificing yourself for the sake of others? It drives me crazy. You're like the strongest person I know, except when it comes to your own needs." He let go of her and rolled onto his back. She hadn't seen him so emotional since the day Steve beat her in the entryway. "If you can't see to your own self," he said more calmly, "then know that this is not what I wish. I think what you're trying to do would kill me. And what really pisses me off is you're not even considering my side of this. You think that because you're the mother, you must know best. I'll tell you something, Christie. You're not my mother anymore."
She ignored this. "You're very young still. You'll come to see what I mean in time. Just think, Danny, of all the lies and deception we already have to do. Someday the family is going to start to ask when you're going to get married. Think how they'll look at you if you live with your mother for the rest of your life."
"I don't care! I wouldn't be living with them. I'd be with you!" He got out of bed and stood over her. He gave a big sigh. "You're wrong, Christie. I just hope I can convince you of that before you ruin everything. You're going to ruin your own life, not just mine."
Christie sat up to sit at the edge of the bed and turned on the light. The sudden sight of him, naked and beautiful in the glow of the lamplight, took her breath away as it sometimes did. She felt a prickling at the back of her eyes. She squeezed them shut hard for a second to fight it. When she opened them she said, "My hopes were destroyed when I was fifteen. What I want no longer matters. I'm only thinking of what's best for you."
"You matter, Christie!" He took her by the shoulders, so frustrated he wanted to shake her. He felt a flush of shame at the panicked look in her eyes, remembering the way Steve treated her. He clutched her to him, both to reassure her and so he wouldn't have to see it.
"We have a few weeks before I have to respond," he said quietly. "We'll think of something. Now let's lie down. I really need you right now."
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Christie and Danny argued intermittently over the next several weeks. The make-up sex became less and less frequent until they hardly made love at all. Their final fight came on the day Danny could no longer put off his reply to Stanford and still keep his place. He had already replied to UCLA, although he didn't tell Christie that. They were both hard-headed and stubborn, but Christie held all the power. She refrained from using it until there was no other choice.
"I'm not going," Danny said for the zillionth time, and the fifth time that morning alone. They were both late for work because of arguing.
"Then I'm kicking you out of the nest, Danny. Go find someplace else to live. Go find some other way to put yourself through medical school."
"You really mean that?"
"Yes."
He simply stood there for a long minute, then said quietly, "Then I'm going to Stanford. Not because of the money. I don't want your money. It's because I don't want to be anywhere near you."