Chapter 1
November 22nd, 10:30 p.m., Savannah, GA
I sat hunched over, too wired and panicked to sleep but too upset to stay fully awake. I was drifting, day dreaming, wading in it; biting hard into a naked shoulder, running my hands and nails over a glistening back, somehow both new and familiar. I didn't know whose.
I heard a woman's voice, a million miles away, and ignored it. My eyes fluttered.
My Aunt Linda shook me.
"Dahlya, I'm going to search for something that resembles coffee, dear."
Arrrrgh.
"I don't know if the cafeteria is still open, but if it's not, I'm sure that they have one of those nasty vending machines somewhere in this hospital." Aunt Linda muttered as she walked away.
When my Aunt Linda left the waiting room she took the good air with her.
Here's the thing about me, I don't have many vices but the two that I do have are doozies. Many people keep emergency Oreos and Ho-ho's in their desk drawers and can eat an entire candy aisle when they're upset. For some there's solace at the bottom of a glass. Bars would close if people didn't need a few after a hard day. Could I just have one of these simple steam-release valves? Oh, no not me.
I have to buy shoes; lots and lots of shoes. Fun, unusual, designer high-healed pumps with little straps. My closet looks like I could give Imelda Marcos a run for her money. Which, okay, should be fine because there's no such thing as too many pairs of black sandals, right? Until I had my little breakdown and left California, I could even afford this habit.
But you can't go shoe shopping in a hospital, which brings me to my second worse-than-donuts vice: sex. Okay, maybe not sex per se, but romance, or fantasy, or mind-blinding need, which was what I was going for right now because my stress level had passed epic proportions an hour ago. If I didn't have my addictive ability to numb my brain with PG-13, okay sometimes R-rated, okay sometimes a little more than that, visions I probably would have passed out by now.
It's a good thing all the waiting room nurses were women because I was beginning to have a fit. I had been dreaming about a sweaty backside for God's sake. And being half out of it had been keeping me from screaming and going mad.
There weren't many people coming in and out of the waiting room but it was a true sign of how distressed I was when a homeless woman came in and I was about to hand her all the cash in my wallet for a pair of butt-ugly worn out Crocs.
I was fully awake now and it wasn't pretty. My breathing felt like a stabbing pain, laboring in and out with a shallow rasp.
Please don't die, please don't die, please don't die. I shook my head. Even though in my heart I knew it was useless, that it was like praying, sun, please don't rise tomorrow, I still repeated the prayer over and over again.
For the past five months part of me had been working hard every day to repress to repress the vision I had in June. Now it came flooding back to me in full force.
The sword fell off the wall swinging down, end over end. The blade got sharper and more deadly with each turn. Light caught gleaming edges creating quick bouncing beams as it barreled towards us. Rick and I were lying in bed, which might have been even stranger than the sword. Rick was asleep; I was awake. The whoosh of the heavy sword cutting through the air startled me. I screamed and instinctively tucked into a ball. It was enough for the downward slice to miss me by an inch. The weapon landed like an ax on Rick's neck, beheading him. Blood spurted all over, soaking my white nightgown, the white pillows, the top of my hair, my hands. Another gush erupted, splattering all over my face. The entire room filled with red.
Now, the hospital waiting room was a fist squeezing in on me. The phone message said he had cut off his toe. They wouldn't let us see him. I couldn't let myself think. I couldn't let my body feel. Part of me had turned to a small heavy stone. In my heart, I knew he was already dead.
Chapter 2
"Come on Dahl, Breathe." I whispered to myself. My throat was tightening in on itself dangerously. "Breathe," I whispered even more softly. "You can do it."
"One breath at a time." I heard the deepest, most resonant southern drawl tell me and all of sudden oxygen was rushing into me. I looked up at the longest, most perfect pair of thighs I've ever seen, beautifully sheathed in worn, washed, blue-until-it's-white denim.
I rubbed my face, using the palms of my hands against my eyelids, cheeks, forehead hoping that when I opened my eyes I'd be clear of any possible delusion. The thighs were still there.
"Now I'm hearing voices and seeing things," I muttered softly. I let my eyes trail upwards. A skinny waist. Broad chest covered by white T-shirt under a big, loose red flannel over shirt. I looked up at the face and did a double take. I blinked.
It was like my brain was one of those FBI facial recognition programs. I took the mental picture in my mind and aged it twenty years.
"You're not..."
"Uh-huh," he said and nodded.
They say before death your whole life flashes before your eyes. Well, choice moments sped before me, like clips from a movie on fast forward.
I've made the biggest mistake of my life, I thought.
My heart sprang up in joy and was shot down mid leap to flip and flounder like a fish suddenly smacked on the shore.
Soul mate.
I didn't believe in soul mates. But the word rammed into me like a freight train and stole my breath away. Jaws closed around me like a steel trap.
I closed my eyes for a second. I could see it now. I was soooo screwed.
I am going to forget about everything for a moment, I told myself.
"Your aunt called me to help. Want to tell me what happened?"
No.
I was having trouble holding it together. This better-than-any-shoe-sale man was a complication I definitely shouldn't have right now, yet desperately needed.
He had changed all right. I mean that body for one; and his face had aged. His hair, much shorter now, almost but not quite standing up short, but still black as midnight, or a raven's wing, or sin, except for this one huge silver streak from the front of his widow's peak to his right ear.
I just had to make sure I had the right guy. I mean, my neighbor, from the time I was a kid until he left for college and then who knows where, was skinny. This guy was well, in good shape for sure, and trim in the right places, but definitely not the lanky scrawny kid I remembered.
"Jason?"
"Ye-ah-esss," he said, drawing it out to three syllables and then smiling. "But no one's called me that in decades. Everyone calls me Jake."
"From your last name, Jacobson," I said. "Of course. I didn't know that you were back in Savannah."
"Just got back last night."
"I'm not sure why my aunt called you," I said gesturing around the hospital waiting room. "They're messing with us. It may even be too late to really..." My eyes started to fill and I looked up so the tears wouldn't spill over. "I'm not sure there's anything you can do."
"Hey," he said and did a deep knee bend. He leaned in toward me until our noses were only about four inches apart. "I'm a champion problem fixer. That's been my job description for the last twenty years. Your Aunt Linda is one of the smartest people I know. She wouldn't have called me if I couldn't help. Why don't you tell me what happened from the beginning and let's see what I can do."
"Rihh, kah, keh..." I couldn't get my voice to work. I took a deep breath. "Rick's phone message said that..." I almost broke down and had to start again. "It said that one of his guys ran over Rick's toe with a lawnmower. Now we can't see him. Something's not right."
Jake nodded.