~~The Walking Wounded~~ By Cara Swann [© 2000 by Cara Swann; all rights reserved] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ [Rating: General] Synopsis: A lonely woman becomes obsessed with the sorrowful man who moves next-door, believing she can help him heal from the tragic loss of his murdered wife and child. Only when her dreams seem to have come true does she finally realize the depth of his despair. 25,000 words/150 pages Reader response to: authoress1@juno.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CHAPTER ONE I always thought of him as the man who never smiled. He was grieving, it was said, but I couldn't fathom his grief, couldn't grasp the depth of his sorrow - and yet I found him hauntingly appealing; his sadness touched me. I'm Alison Kent, never married, twenty-three; my position at our family-owned newspaper, The Clarion, afforded me opportunity to lunch in Magnolia Park where I occasionally saw him on those lovely April days of 1988. Adam Hunter was often just beyond my bench, staring into the middle distance, preoccupied as he stood near a cypress tree. He was a man of dark features, tall and gaunt, rigid in his demeanor; the angular face, deep brown eyes and square chin, a grim set line to his lips, contributed to his sorrowful, stoic appearance. The hint of gray in his rich, thick black hair at his temples suggested worries had prematurely touched him. I knew more about him, perhaps, than he would have liked. Mayson is a small town in southern Louisiana, and as small towns go, it left little to mystery, everyone either related or known through friends and associates. But Adam had brought a certain mystique upon arrival in Mayson two months earlier. He owned the old Jamison mansion, his maternal grandparents' legacy to him, and he lived there alone, remaining aloof to the townspeople, inspiring gossip. I had gleaned a few facts about him: that he was thirty-five, widowed when his wife and small son were murdered in Atlanta, Georgia; that he was a former high school English teacher, now unemployed and living off his trust funds (a substantial inheritance from his grandparents), as well as residing in the Jamison mansion, now rundown and decrepit... but livable if you didn't mind a soggy roof, sagging porches and overgrown yards with tangled vines devouring the palm, cypress and live oak trees. I knew some of this through local talk, but some because I lived directly across the street from the Jamison house. My parents own the Clarion, and it is a given I will one day be publisher of our only weekly newspaper, so I remain at their house, having my own room upstairs. I take the newspaper business seriously though, went to college and earned a journalism degree, but never met that "special man" -- nor even been in love for that matter. After returning from college, I had opted to accept my mother's invitation to live at home. As the only child, yes maybe I was spoiled, but I tried not to let it make me overbearing. Our neighborhood is quietly picturesque and charming - Oak Street is lined by towering live oaks, mossy tendrils gently embracing limbs, wide, spacious lawns and homes intricately Victorian- styled, built before the turn of the century. Our house is an 1888 original, three-stories with Queen Anne features, a large turret over the side porch where my room is situated. There is an Eastlake porch all around the ground floor, supported by multi-Doric columns, stained glass windows in several areas - all vigilantly preserved by my mother, revered as her inheritance from my grandfather Hume, who made a fortune in the rice irrigation business. Naturally, mother had been upset by the deterioration of the Jamison home and was pleased to see Adam return - that is, until it became apparent he wasn't interested in restoring the home or even mowing the yards. My father was noncommittal, but I sensed he too was irritated that Adam Hunter didn't immediately set to work on that eye-sore directly in view of our porch. I had overheard them talking, and mother said, "Honestly, at least the caretaker kept the grounds in shape, but now..." "Marcia, the man is grieving." "I know he lost his wife and son, I understand, but that's no reason to let the place go to rot." "He might need time." My father then snapped his fingers, a gesture he often used at the newspaper to keep reporters on their toes. "Why don't we invite him to dinner?" Mother interjected, "Yes, and then discreetly inquire about his intentions for the house? You know our Historic Committee is willing to make suggestions..." I had retired to my room at that point, wondering how Adam Hunter would take the subtle intrusion of my parents. They were well-meaning, but sometimes pushy when it came to civic duties. I understood them, and could make allowances, but how would Adam handle this? Especially during the difficult time he was having? So there I sat, staring at Adam's stiff back that April day, when he turned toward me, grimaced and walked across the park, silently holding himself aloof. I watched as he turned toward Oak Street, crossing the sidewalk and disappearing among the shady oaks. He had flatly refused my parents' invitation, bluntly saying he preferred to be alone. I felt immensely sad for him; it was that vague, undefined air of grief, the stoic quality of suffering in solitude which gave him a mysterious persona. He created an insular world for himself, and this fostered intrigue - not just for others, but for myself as well. Curiosity is the bane of my existence, I suppose. I reluctantly returned to the newspaper; it was a short three-block walk, our building across from the pale brick post office and gray stucco grammar school. Like other small towns, the buildings were old and faded, but a few had been lavishly restored. City hall was erected in 1940; it's brick too, situated between two looming tan cement-covered brick buildings, gabled and dormered rooftops. Then there's St. Anthony's Church, red brick, ornate features, clock towers, the arched entranceway covered with climbing fig vines. Across the street is the First Baptist Church, smaller but impressive with fluted Ionic columns, portico and dome, a Greek Revival facade. Specialty shops are interspersed, canopied tops stretched out over the aging sidewalks. We own the corner building, once the only bank in Mayson, but converted to house the newspaper in early 1900 - when my paternal grandfather purchased it and founded Mayson's first and only newspaper. Our quarters are updated and modern; father had the entire structure, squat one-story white stucco, redone in 1970, and constantly improved it - central heat and air, carpeted and elegantly decorated interiors. Long narrow tinted glass windows fronted the street, creating a new, progressive image for The Clarion. I spent the afternoon copy editing the last articles before going to press. Since we had all week to get an edition out, there was plenty of time. However, the two young reporters, Sam Henry and Clark Howard, were novices and always waited till the last minute to put their stories in the computer. Therefore, I usually wound up staying in the office until eight or later the day before we went to press, Thursday. Both reporters were working as interns, on loan from the University of Southwestern Louisiana at Lafayette while they learned their craft for college credits. And both were brash, aggressive and had hit on me a dozen times, but I usually ignored them. Sam had crooned,"How about a late dinner, Alison? I get paid today, and can treat you." I had to admit it was tempting; he was a devilishly good-looking guy, sandy hair and blue eyes, tanned from weekends at the beach. But I declined, "No thanks, I still have a few things to finish up here." He winked broadly. "You are a real taskmaster, Alison, but I can forgive you. You resemble Mia Farrow, my dream girl." I gave him a cool look - which sent men a message of icy discouragement. It had killed many a boy's longing look in my college days, and it worked like a charm. He went scurrying off, saying, "Hope you at least like my piece..." It was imperative I keep a respectable distance from the young reporters; they were here temporarily, and not subject to long-term commitments. And frankly, I wasn't unhappy being single; it seemed my fate, and I could appreciate the significance of work, the demands of a career in a woman's life. Marriage would be demanding, and children, especially taxing. I didn't think I could handle all those at the same time, so I chose to devote myself to our family newspaper exclusively. It was late when I walked out of the building, but I knew the paper was now on its way to press, and I could relax. Outside, twilight hovered, a thin crescent moon etched against the skyline. Cooler, much cooler so I pulled on my sweater; the spring dress I had on was sheer, light material. Shivering, I began the ten-block walk home, passing the post office, the grammar school and turning down Magnolia Street, seeing the darkened park, benches empty, the landscape deserted, only white- washed tree trunks standing out against the gathering darkness. I was lulled into a peaceful mood, dreamy and contemplative as I walked the sidewalk, sheltered by the massive live oaks, their leafy branches crisscrossing over the street. I passed several gracious homes, thinking of our lifelong friends, their happy, settled lives...and then I came to the Jamison house. I started to cross the street, but stood rooted there, looking at a dark figure bent over a desk in the second-floor window. Adam appeared deep in concentration, and I vaguely wondered what he was thinking...when suddenly he looked up, then down to where I stood. He gazed steadily outside, no acknowledgement of my presence at all, those eyes looking perhaps into a wretched past. I wanted to lift my hand, somehow greet him, but I didn't dare. He seemed preoccupied, so inaccessible in his detached, impersonal gaze that I hurriedly turned away and rushed to our house. After a light meal my mother had left for me, I went to my room, and undressed, took a shower, then put on my robe. I sat before the open window, enjoying the magnolia blossoms, the sweet-scented honeysuckle entwined along our fence. I could see that Adam was gone, the Jamison house dark and hulking in spectral shadows. It seemed a shame the house was decaying, falling apart as perhaps Adam himself was...lost and alone. A sharp pang of compassion surprised me, and I quickly chastised myself. After all, he didn't need people feeling sorry for him. Pity was the least appreciated response to what he'd been through. But I suddenly realized it wasn't pity I felt for Adam Hunter...it was a strange, poignant empathy for his loss, his grief and pain. I had trouble breathing, as though a hand had covered my face; a suffocating awareness of Adam's devastation engulfed me. When I got into bed, the thought occurred to me that I was becoming too involved with a man who didn't know I existed, nor had any wish to. I again chastised myself, but couldn't entirely dismiss him as I fell asleep. * * * * Like on slow-motion film, I was running, running but I kept slipping and couldn't see too far ahead; foggy, so foggy, the fog moving in from the coast, enveloping and pervasive, distorting everything. I was shouting, "Wait, please wait..." He was ahead, and I glimpsed his back, stiff, the dark hair, his clothing - a suit of white melting into the fog. I ran faster, crying out, "Wait!" Slowly, he turned to face me and I saw the despair in his brown eyes, deep and penetrating, utterly devoid of hope. "Leave me alone, please I want to be alone." His voice had been hard, uncompromising. I begged, "Tell me how it is, please. Or talk to someone, anyone..." He stepped forward, inches from my face, and stated, "It's like trying to describe a color no one has ever seen before, the color of loss, of grief, of..." and the voice broke, he choked back a sob and then turned away resolutely. "I can understand, I can..." I said, moving toward him. He suddenly began to fade away, his image disappearing into the misty fog and I awoke, breathless and sweat-soaked. It had been a dream, a powerful, evocative dream! What did it mean? That I was being drawn helplessly into Adam's tragic existence? CHAPTER TWO I can't say I developed any insight from the dream, but I did restrict my trips to the park, ended my longing looks at the Jamison house, avoided it entirely, and delved into my work with a vengeance. For some time father had wanted to begin a new series of articles on the history of Mayson, so I volunteered to do it; the research would take most of my time, and I only put in a couple hours at the paper each day, instead poring over dusty stacks of ledgers in the courthouse, studying genealogical charts in the library and trying to piece together a dramatic but factual story of how Mayson came into existence. It wasn't easy, but I began to learn the ups and downs of settling our area - and was intrigued with the fascinating people of our past. Several weeks went by, and I had just gotten the rough draft of my first article down when I realized I needed something more substantial, maybe an interview with one of the elderly residents, some colorful comments to spice up the story. I questioned mother, and she told me Alice Wentworth was still alive, but confined to her home on Cedar Street. The Wentworths dated back to the earliest settlement, their ancestors establishing rice fields and christening the area with its richest resource in the early 18OOs. Of course, the Wentworth's elaborate plantation- style home and grounds were immaculately kept, and I was not surprised by the ostentatious antique furnishings, nor the feisty old lady introduced to me by her granddaughter. Mrs. Alice Wentworth had a keen mind at ninety, and told intricate details like how some of the first people in Mayson wanted to try cotton instead of rice, but had been persuaded by her grandfather to give rice a chance. The way she told it made it sound like a war almost broke out, so I took notes and jotted down her lively quotes. Just as I was about to leave, her weak blue eyes on me, she asked, "How is Adam Hunter doing, child?" "Oh, I wouldn't know. He lives across the street, but we never speak. He seems to want to be alone." She nodded, then looked at me again. "I knew his wife, Melonie. She was a Thurston, from a good, solid family over in Layfette. Adam married her, and they returned to his home, Atlanta. A beautiful, fragile girl, Melonie...so sweet, gentle and warm to everyone. We miss her, it was a pity what happened to her, being murdered like that, and the son, only three. I don't know what the world is coming to in this age, violent crime is ruining our cities." I felt that familiar pang of misery for Adam again, and wished she'd not begun this line of conversation. I was trying desperately to put him out of my mind. "Child, don't mind me, I get to rambling. But Adam, he needs to get out, unburden himself." She reached out a thin, trembling hand to me, touched my arm. "Such a tragedy...some have killed themselves without help." It was so honest, so direct coming from her that I heard myself say, "I'll check on him, if you wish?" She smiled, her wrinkled face relaxing into satisfaction. "Yes, that would be very kind of you. And let me know how he is." When I headed home, I felt like I'd been manipulated but couldn't really blame the old lady. She was right, someone did need to approach Adam - if nothing else out of neighborly concern for his well-being. He'd rebuffed my parents, but maybe I could reach him? At the very least, I could offer a sympathetic ear; if he refused, I'd done my duty and honored Alice Wentworth's plea. That night I told my parents I was going to walk over to Adam's house. They both gave me an encouraging nod, since their exasperation with the continuing deterioration of the house was an ongoing irritation. I was dressed casually, had on my jeans, t-shirt and sneakers, my long blond hair in a braid down my back, simple and unsophisticated. I walked out the door, and across the street; his house was dark, only a dim lamplight coming from a second-floor bedroom window. I approached the house warily, remembering the odd dream that had haunted me, and went up the stone steps, stood at the door. The doorbell was obviously broken, but I tried it anyhow. Nothing. I rapped on the solid wood door, and still got no response. Undaunted, I walked across the rickety porch and around to the side of the house. He was sitting in the small gazebo out back, his head held in his hands. The way he looked upset me, and I almost left - but recalled Alice Wentworth's plea. Quietly, I walked around the house, and went through the dew-damp grass, stopping just beyond a rose bush that had tangled itself around the gazebo lattice-work. I said softly, "Mr. Hunter?" His head jerked up, and he stiffened. "Yes?" "I'm sorry if I'm intruding, but I..." Usually at no loss for words, I found myself stammering, "Uh, I thought..." "Yes, out with it!" He stood, looming in the arched doorway, striking a pose of rigid impatience. "I'm Alison Kent and today I interviewed Alice Wentworth. She was wondering how you are coping..." I felt foolish, stood there with my face averted, pretending to study the yard. "Yes, I'm quite aware of who you are. I've seen you about, but I assure you, I'm..." He cleared his throat. "Tell Mrs. Wentworth..." There was a strange silence, full of unspoken sorrow perhaps, what he couldn't bring himself to speak about. I was afraid of interrupting his emotional reflection, but said softly, "I've seen you too, and I've been concerned about you. I know you've suffered a tragic, devastating loss and I thought..." "Oh, you know do you? How could you know how I feel? How angry I am, how violent I feel at times? How I'd like to find that cold-blooded killer and torture him, make him suffer for what he did to me, to my life and for taking the most precious, most gentle woman's life..." He abruptly turned his back to me, steadying himself on the gazebo with an outstretched hand. I swallowed hard, saying, "I can't know, but I can share what you will let me." "Why?" He glanced around at me, glaring. "Why would someone untouched by violence want to share such tragedy, such pain, such anger and agony?" His face was aflame with hate, anger and disbelief. I had to make him aware of my genuine caring. "Because I think you need to talk, to share what has happened to you or else..." He laughed, a derisive, harsh sound. "Or else I might just hang myself in the attic? Don't think I haven't been tempted!" "Please, you just need time, need to unburden this terrible, terrible tragedy to someone." Instinctively I moved closer, adding, "I would like to offer you friendship." It was as though a curtain lifted, and for one single moment I glimpsed the other Adam, the man who had loved life, had loved his wife, his son...but then, a self-protective shield came down and he snapped, "No! I would never bring such anguish to a woman untouched by horror." "But I am willing to listen, to care...to be your friend." He came very close, his breath on my face, his eyes locked into mine. "Go home. Don't come here again." Shattered, I turned and started to walk away when I felt his hand on my shoulder. His voice was husky, "I appreciate what you are trying to do, but I have to deal with this my own way, alone." * * * * I didn't sleep that night. I lay in my bed, thinking of Adam. Now I knew what I feared: I was physically attracted to him. I had felt the brief but potent attraction between us, and I'd nearly lost my usual composure. I tossed and turned, staring at the shadowy ceiling of my bedroom. When I finally allowed myself to get up, I was drawn to the window and sat staring at Adam's bedroom window across the way. He was in there, alone, suffering and unwilling to allow anyone to help him. But why? I couldn't fathom his reluctance to open up, to share his sorrow. He needed therapy, counseling. Perhaps I could convince him of that? I watched the rose-glow of dawn drench the skyline behind his crumbling mansion, afraid of what I was feeling for Adam. I had to get through to him somehow; I wanted him to heal, for I feared I was falling in love with him, and I couldn't have him if he remained tied to a past he could never overcome. CHAPTER THREE I wasn't the type to be overly concerned with appearance, although I'd established a style of dressing nicely for work - fashionable dresses and formal suits. Otherwise, I liked to wear jeans, blouses and sneakers. Now, having realized my attraction to Adam, I found myself plundering through the large walk-in closet in my bedroom, dismayed at the slouchy clothing I wore around home. I stood before the cheval mirror, studying myself intently: slender to the point of skinny, I was five- foot, nine-inches tall, with narrow hips, slightly rounded breasts and wide, square shoulders. I did have long, long legs, but I'd never been fond of short skirts or tight shorts to emphasize them. My hair was almost waist-length, what I considered my best asset, and it helped accentuate my oval face, wide forehead and high cheekbones. My blue eyes were nothing special, nor the average lips, not pouty or full. A straight, thin nose had earned me the dubious distinction of ascetic. With a sharp sigh, I acknowledged I wanted to be beautiful for Adam. I wanted to look special, entice him. This was a rare awakening - boys, men had never been important to me. I'd had my share of dates, but none were ever outstanding, none that made me desire them with a burning need, or that even made me think of sex a lot. I was a virgin, and sometimes thought I might die one. That morning in early May I sat in my room looking at how cheerfully cozy and yet imperial it was with the antique furniture of my great-great grandmother's cherry-wood poster bed, amorie, trunk, rolltop desk, wardrobe and chest, an Oriental rug my mother brought back from India, the lacy curtains at the long windows, my feminine environment of frilly bedspread, pillows, hand- embroidered knickknacks, even a few stuffed animals from childhood. I felt lucky. Lucky to have had this privileged, safe haven; it was what had made me secure because I always knew it was here, my inheritance. Mayson, I reflected, was a quiet hamlet, a town still safe and virtually crime-free; it had its drawbacks, but the security, the warmth and homey atmosphere literally permeated the whole place - from cool shady streets and gracious antebellum homes to the quaint cafes, specialty shops and aging downtown buildings. I'd been to Layfette, where I attended college, and although I'd lived on campus, I was aware of the city problems. New Orleans was another disturbing place, a charming city in many ways, but certainly dangerous. The traveling I'd done had been mostly in the Southeast; I had blindly closed my eyes to crime and danger when in large cities, thinking like everyone it would never touch my world. But now it had, because of Adam and the murder of his wife and child. I decided I had to do something constructive, so I put on my lavender silk dress, heels and braided my hair. Then I told my mother I would be at the library till noon. I rarely drove my Pontiac Fiero (an extravagant gift from my parents upon college graduation) but today I did. It was a whiz to the library, since we lived in the historic district of Mayson - downtown was only ten blocks from our door. The library was air conditioned and quietly inviting. I went to work, researching about crime, violent-crime victims and their reactions, the aftermath of what I perceived Adam to be going through. It was shocking, and I had to take it slow, so absorbing and disturbing was the information. Every word brought me closer to Adam, and his outburst last night; he seemed to be in the fifth stage of basic reactions - apathy alternating with angry outbursts. Before this, he'd probably experienced shock, denial, disbelief, fright, fear it would happen again, then self-blame, guilt and apathy. Someday, if he was fortunate, he'd reach a resolution of the suffering, maybe function normally. However, it was rare for that to happen, as most crime victims never did resolve their problems, according to the experts. I took some lengthy notes, reading about private counseling and survivors' groups, thinking this might be the answer. And yet, the more I learned the more I became anxious and worried about getting involved with Adam; from my research, it seemed that I'd be asking for trouble. When I went outside, it had begun to rain, the damp, earthy scent a whisper of renewed life. I drove to the newspaper, put in a perfunctory appearance and got things organized, then went home. My mother was out; she attended several women's clubs, mostly as a guest speaker representing the newspaper, so I had the rest of the afternoon alone. Over a quick lunch of tossed salad and ice tea, I thought about my first step. Should I be bold, or gentle? Or should I not interfere at all? That idea was dismissed; I had to help Adam - it was as necessary as breathing to me. He'd gotten into my heart somehow, and only by helping him heal could I have any hope of ending his solitary suffering, and give him the gift of loving. I went to my bedroom, freshened up by dabbing at my makeup, and taking my hair down. I noticed the new light in my eyes, and blushed. Just as I was about to step out the door, the phone rang. I started to leave but the answering machine picked up, and I heard Paula say, "Hi, this is your best friend, kiddo, when you gonna return my calls?" I hurried to get the phone. "Hi Paula! Sorry I haven't gotten back to you, but things have been hectic lately." She was my childhood friend, now married and living in the suburbs of Layfette. "Allie! Girl, you had me worried! I've been calling since last month!" "Sorry." "Look, how about lunch tomorrow? We can get together and gossip." True to her sunny nature, Paula could cheer me up and I needed her about now. "I suppose I could get away tomorrow, want to meet here?" "I thought maybe a shopping trip to Layfette, lunch at Cafe' des Artistes..." That seemed impossibly public; the Cafe was on Jefferson Street, tables on the sidewalk - a quaint restoration for downtown, but I said, "How about just lunch? I'm not sure I can get away more than a couple hours." "Sure, you name it." "Can you drive here? Mother will be out at the country club golfing..." "Fine, I'm looking forward to it!" We said our goodbyes, and I headed out the door, thinking of all the good and bad times shared with Paula. Her parents, the Lawrences, lived down the block, and we'd been a twosome since toddlers! Perhaps she could lend a listening ear for this dilemma with Adam? Boldly I went across the street, checking to make sure Adam's Nissan Sentra was parked in the driveway - it was, so I knocked loudly on the door. I heard the faint sound of classical music, something from Bach, melancholy and depressing. I stood there, anxiously pressing my lips together, distractedly brushing at my lavender silk dress. The music stopped abruptly, and I heard footsteps; the door opened and I almost gasped. I'd always seen Adam groomed and well-dressed; now he was disheveled, his black hair usually combed straight back off his forehead hung limply over his bloodshot eyes. Unshaven and unkempt, he glared at me. "What do you want now?" Taken aback, I stated, "I uh, just thought..." "Save it okay? I had enough of reporters back in Atlanta! Go get your story somewhere else, use somebody else's misery!" He started to slam the door in my face, but I wedged my foot in the door, jamming it open. "I am not here as a reporter, is that what you thought last night?" "Oh please, spare me the pretense. You reporters are all alike, anything for the story!" He ran a hand through his limp hair, grimacing. "Please leave." Belatedly I smelled liquor; he was drinking, and from the looks of him, hadn't slept. I said, "I am not here as a reporter, but as a friend. I think you need one about now, don't you?" He laughed that derisive laugh. "And you are going to be that friend? Miss, no offense, but I find you aggravating and annoying." I was cut to the core, but forced a brave smile. "Well now, at least you know I won't quit." He silently stared at me, his impassive expression preventing any sign of the suffering he was feeling. This was the most difficult thing I'd ever done, but I persisted, "Do you really intend to hole up here in this place forever, turn your back on the world?" "The world I've seen isn't worth living in." He moved back, leaving the door open. I slipped inside, and was immediately appalled by the dark, forbidding interior; the furnishings hadn't been changed in fifty years, still just as the elderly Jamisons had it when I was a child. Now it was dusty, musty and hardly clean, littered with odds and ends of his, clothing draped on the battered sofa, dirty glasses sitting on tables, a sour smell from the foul enclosed rooms overwhelming me. "You could use a maid, don't you think?" Adam slumped down on the sofa, his rumpled shirt and pants too large, his wide, thin shoulders like a clothes hanger holding up the slouchy outfit. "Lady, I don't owe you a thing. I'm not a rude man, but you are trying my patience." I noticed the tone of defeat, no longer the sarcastic, abrasive sound of anger. Quietly, I went to his side, and touched his arm. "Adam, I want very much to just listen, to offer you genuine friendship." "Why?" "Because I care, that's why. I've never been an interfering person, nor gossipy. I, in fact, don't even know exactly how your wife and son were murdered, nor have I attempted to find out. Instead, I have watched you from afar, and felt your pain. I tried to stay away, but little by little, I was drawn to you against my better judgement. Does that explain anything?" He looked up at me, an incredulous expression on his face. "No one can ever understand, ever...no matter how I explain, no matter how I try to tell about...about the loss, the mixture of feelings I can't rid myself of, no one seems to grasp the depth of unending misery." The vulnerability in his brown eyes brought me down beside him. "I can, I know I can." He turned his head away. "Even if you could, I don't want you to. You are innocent, happy and feel secure in the world. What I've experienced would ruin that, hurt you, turn you cold and empty, bitter." "Adam, if only..." His voice interrupted, "Please go away, before it's too late." For the first time in my life, I felt an overwhelming compassion mingled with sexual attraction so strong I couldn't resist it. I moved very close to him, put my hands on either side of his face, and brought him to me, our lips meeting in a slow kiss. He pulled back, saying, "It's wrong, I don't deserve this..." I put a finger over his lips. "My name is Alison, call me Allie." "Allie, please..." It was too late - he moved into my open arms as his head lay against me. I ran my hands through his hair, and murmured, "Let me love you, let me help you feel alive." We stood, and he led me up the stairs to the second-floor bedroom where I'd watched him sit at night. There was a long hall corridor, high-ceilings and then a vast bedroom, the mahogany furniture positioned in rigid order - but at least the windows were open, faded lace curtains stirred by a fresh breeze. He seemed to be almost hypnotized, staring at me with lustful longing as I undressed. It was bold I'd decided on, and bold it would be. I told him to lie back on the bed, and he did so as I kicked off my shoes, removed the silk dress, then my slip, my hose and panties...then my bra, walking brazenly toward him naked, never losing eye contact. He didn't protest, only groaned with desire as I came to him, slipping off his shirt, unbuckling his belt, lowering the zipper to find him ready. It was all new to me, the first time, but I didn't say that; I just instinctively joined him, there on the big bed, our bodies taking solace, igniting passion as a necessary healing medicine for the emptiness he'd lived with. I let him have me, and when he discovered I was a virgin, he pulled back, astonished. "Allie, I...I can't." "I want you to, I want it to be you, the first man." I guided him to me, my rising desire a craving beyond words, beyond verbal description. His reluctance faded and he explored my body, devouring me in hunger, at first gentle and then more demanding, almost angry as he took me, over and over, more driving and insistent. I felt consumed in his lust; every touch of him, the lean hardness of his sinewy body atop me, his lank hair on my face, his taste of liquor, the rough unshaven chin against my cheek...it didn't repulse me for I was healing him, and loving him, giving him what I felt could cure him, my whole being, my soul full of overflowing, unending love. When he cried out, and fell upon me, finished, I felt satisfied though I'd not experienced an orgasm. He whispered, "I'm sorry, it was too fast, but I...it has been six months." I murmured, "I love you Adam." He lifted himself on his elbows, gazing into my eyes. "You don't even know me, Allie." "But I do, I do. I know you and I love you." He sat up, pulling the sheet around himself and putting his head in his hands. "God, what have I done? I'm a disgrace, a lusting, selfish fool." I was naked, but I felt more exposed than in the flesh. I'd given him my soul, my body and my love. He looked at me, studying my face, my flushed body lying naked on the bed. "You are a fine woman, a fine person...but Allie, I can't love you, not ever." Stung, shocked by his words, I felt embarrassed and jumped up, pulling the bedspread around me. "I didn't ask for you to love me, did I? I only said I love you..." "It's because of Melonie, and Scotty; I failed them. I don't deserve love, and I'm not capable of loving again, either." He stared at me, now aloof and objective; it was as though we'd never touched, never shared the intimacy of sex. "You can't or won't?" I shot back, picking up my clothing piece by piece. He shrugged, saying, "I'm one of the walking wounded, we don't heal." There it was again, that piercing melancholy. I relented, and half-dressed, went to him, embracing him. "It doesn't have to be that way. You can heal, there's therapy, or survivors' groups..." He held up a hand, almost pushing me away. "I had therapy, back in Atlanta. The psychologist tried, but he didn't understand. Oh he said he understood, but how could he? He'd never felt this way..." I persisted, "What about other victims?" "I tried that too. There's plenty of victims in Atlanta, so I joined a group. It went nowhere - we all sat around crying in our beer, getting nothing resolved. You see, I have talked, I have tried to unburden myself but that still doesn't heal you." He slapped his chest. "The rage, the anger that is in here, trapped. Seeing that scum caught, that might help - but it wouldn't bring Melonie and Scotty back, no." "Do you want to tell me about it, what happened?" He edged away, defensive. "No, I don't. All I wanted, when I came here, was to be left alone in a place where crime wasn't so prevalent." I stood, and quickly finished dressing. "I came here to give you love. I won't stop." He just looked at me, hanging his head. "Go home, Allie. You don't need this kind of relationship, you're a beautiful young woman, and I'm a sorry soul to have taken advantage of you today." I went to him, kissed his forehead and smoothed back his sooty hair. "I won't give up on you, Adam. I love you." He sighed, restraining himself from touching me. "Please go." I left, confused and yet stupidly happy. Somehow, some way I could reach him, I had to - he was the love of my life. CHAPTER FOUR Perhaps I should have been ashamed, humilated? But I wasn't, and that in itself shocked me. I'd given myself to a man who seemed disinterested, even incapable of loving! That night, I sat mutely at the dining table, unable to eat, picking at the shrimp remoulade Maggie Cray had prepared. Maggie is our black Creole maid and cook, and has been with us since I was five. Mother noticed my lack of appetite, her blue eyes so like mine, staring quizzically. "Allie, no appetite?" I wiped my mouth with a napkin, pushing away the plate, looking at mother's neatly trimmed short blond hair, her perfectly poised demeanor. She had always been a very reserved, self-contained woman yet alluring in the tradition of Grace Kelly. Mother had limitless style, good taste and the polite mannerisms of aristocracy. As a child, I'd always wanted to be exactly like her -- detached, unattainable, a gracious 'Ice Princess.' To that end, I'd emulated her, taken social customs seriously and even allowed her to guide me, mold me in her image. I replied, "I'm just tired." My father, his long, narrow face flushed from the wine, adjusted his glasses and asked, "You're not working too hard on the historical piece, are you?" "No..." He continued in his commanding way: "Because I know you've been interviewing, researching...and it's not imperative this piece be completed by a deadline, although I was hoping to have it printed in its entirety before your mother and I go abroad for the summer." My parents spend three months, June, July and August, traveling overseas, so I would be in full charge of the newspaper during their absence. My father is publisher, and I was given the title of assistant publisher/copy editor, but we both knew the newspaper was his lifeblood, and he would never retire until bad health forced him to do so. At fifty, he is a robust, vigorous man, active in the community and a demanding taskmaker for new reporters. Yet he loves training, teaching the novice reporters who come to him for advice and encouragement. I sighed. "It's not the work. I love the newspaper." He nodded, his steel-gray hair highlighted by the chandelier light above the linen-covered table. "I know you do." Mother added, "But you must not overdo. The work should never come before your health." I looked at them, both proud of me, happy together for twenty-five years, and wondered what they'd think if they knew I'd seduced Adam? Mother would probably be aghast; father would bluff and scold, and in the end be terribly hurt by my wanton behavior. Our family standing (because of my mother's inheritance and my father's ownership of the newspaper) made us part of conventional, conservative society in Mayson. I could ruin them by my actions, and had always taken this obligation seriously - not to disgrace them, or our standing as a traditional, moral family. I pushed back my chair, stood. "I think I'll go to my room now, watch TV or read and rest." They nodded, and then began discussing their trip; it would soon be time to leave, only a few weeks till their departure. I mounted the stairs, thinking about Adam. He was lost, alone. Maybe I could never help him? And why should I continue this exercise in futility? In my room, I flicked on the TV, and flopped down on the bed, propping on elbows. An episode of 'Unsolved Mysteries' was on and I watched, fascinated. The reality based programs of late had riveted many to the set, and I was no exception. I listened to real-life horror stories: missing children, lost spouses, murder victims, random violence...the stuff of front page news. I was no stranger to that, since my work had once involved just such material. However Mayson rarely had these atrocities. My closest contact with such material was during my internship at a Layfette newspaper, and it had frankly been rough, not my choice. I loved writing though, and found the "fluff" of small-town news more to my liking - society happenings, local news of citizens, lifestyle pieces, births/deaths, religious events, marriages/engagements...nothing too dire or devastating, other than an occasional traffic accident or storm damage. At last, I turned off the TV, and went to stare out the open window. Adam's house was dark, his car gone. Had he left because of me? He rarely went out at night, so I wondered if our liasion earlier had driven him away? I sat in my bentwood rocker, letting the cool, damp air surround me. I could hear crickets, the singsong of katydids in the cypress trees outside, and was lulled into contemplation. Perhaps I'd tried to please my parents at the expense of my own individuality? In college, while other girls were dating, having mad, passionate love affairs, I was lost in books, studious. I dutifully came home regularly, attended the social events in Mayson, walked in the footsteps laid out by mother and father, continuing along a predestined course. Garden teas and polite, genteel conversation, country club gatherings, all part of our heritage. There is this time-warp in Mayson, like we are apart from the real world, caught in some noble, fine place, cultured, caring and carrying on the Old South traditions of restored ante-bellum plantations, time-worn, burnished antiques...nothing allowed to age, or depart from the past, families preserved by bloodlines just as material possessions, I reflected. Where some kids rebel, I'd wanted only to follow willingly the past traditional heritages of family, conservative morality and occupation. Now, having found myself engaged in a sexual situation with a man I'd barely gotten acquainted with, it tested my beliefs. I'd never felt organized religion had all the answers, but my attendance at the First Baptist Church was regular. I'd never thought myself a seductress but how else could I judge my uninhibited behavior? The air stirred, palms rattling below, and I realized I was changing, becoming different -- unknown even to myself. I couldn't deny the aching desire for Adam. I couldn't deny that I wanted him, loved him and couldn't bring myself to imagine not freeing him of the past. I went to bed, exhausted by the emotional crisis I seemed to be facing. * * * * I got up early, went to the newspaper and worked on my historical article. The Clarion came out on Friday, so Thursdays were a madhouse in the editorial office. I had to get a rough draft of my piece in the computer file today, Wednesday, or I'd be impossibly rushed tomorrow. I'd noticed Adam's car was still gone when I left for work, but it was parked beside the house when I returned at eleven. I yelled to Maggie, "How's it coming?" She stuck her head out the kitchen doorway. "Missy you and Paula will love this Mexican salad, just like you did as kids." I glanced at her proud, generous face; she was a joy, part of our family (having been widowed before she came to live with us) and I loved her dearly. "Thanks!" Upstairs, I changed into my jeans, red blouse and braided my hair again. Paula and I had always been casual, at ease with one another, and when I saw her drive up, sure enough she was wearing jeans too. She bounced up the steps, her usual lively self. I ran to open the door, and took in her vibrant, healthy looks; she had an outdoorsy, athletic appearance, although petite and somewhat "cute" with a pixie face and chin-length chestnut hair. "Come in," I exclaimed, embracing her. She laughed, pulling away slightly. "Hey, do I have news for you!" "What?" I asked, awed by her breathless exuberance. "Oh shoot, not now! Why spoil the suspense?" She winked, hurrying into the house, sniffing and yelling, "Where's that delicious scent coming from?" Maggie replied, "In here, and it's your favorite!" I followed as Paula swung into the kitchen, laughing and hugging Maggie, saying, "Oh no, not hot tamales too! I'm gonna get fat." I said, "Not with your routine, the advertising job, a husband, and all the sports you're into, tennis..." Paula moved apart from us, and pulled a serious face. "Look, I was gonna wait but why should I?" "Please tell us!" Maggie smoothed her apron, rolling her eyes. "Still the same Paula, that famous flair for the dramatic." Paula grinned widely, then stated, "I'm pregnant!" I was stunned, couldn't move. We'd both said we would probably never have children since we had similar backgrounds - the only child of wealthy, prominent parents in Mayson. We'd never been interested in parenting, or felt lonely because we had one another, having vowed we were sisters-in- spirit. I swallowed hard, finally managing, "Congratulations." Maggie was hugging Paula, happy about the announcement, but laughingly admonishing, "Why, you no more than a child yourself!" Paula giggled. "Please, I'm twenty-three going on forty." I was finding this unbelievable; she looked so happy, so radiant with energy, with...love. I said, "Come, let's sit down and you tell me all about it." We took our places outside on the patio, and she talked animatedly, jubilant, having planned this pregnancy for a year. As she talked on I felt letdown, slowly growing envious of her bubbly enthusiasm, her obvious pleasure at the promise of motherhood. When Maggie set the Mexican salad down, she smiled and said, "You are lucky, sweetie. Now, eat this -- it's my special salad with avocados, serrano chilis, jalapeno pepper and cliantro." Paula smacked her lips and dug in, mumbling, "So what's new with you, Allie? I've been hogging all the conversation." "Oh, nothing much." I didn't think I could bring myself to confide in her about Adam. Before, it had seemed possible, but now with her enraptured glow about parenthood what I was doing, what I was getting involved in seemed somehow an affront to her proper lifestyle. She was studying me above the rim of her glass, quietly pensive. "What gives? You look like you just lost your best friend, and I know it's not that cause here I sit." I smiled. "You could always cheer me up." "Well lordy, that long face you pull, that terrible cold shoulder - no wonder the boys in college worshipped the ground you walked on, but from afar. They dared not approach you for fear of getting the big chill." "What? Do you really think guys were interested, but afraid of approaching me?" I'd fostered that image, but was never really sure it had worked. Paula grimaced, flipping back a strand of loose hair. "You know they did. That boy, what was his name? Alfred... uh, what was his last name?" "Henderson." "Yeah, poor soul...he went around after you like a puppy, fetching this, fetching that and you never even gave him the time of day!" She giggled, tasting the tortilla chip dantily, then sipping her margarita. "You were a cool number." I took a sip of my margarita too, letting the cold liquid sooth the spicy taste of the salad. "I suppose he did seem smitten, but Alfred was so, oh, I don't know - sort of nerdy." "My Phillip is no pro football player, a lawyer you know, but he's good in bed." I felt myself blush; she could always embarrass me with her sexual frankness, and loved to do so. "For goodness sakes Allie when are you going to quit being so goody-goody?" The blush deepened, heating my face. She stopped eating, her fork midway to her mouth, and stared hard. Then her voice yelped, "My God, you've done it, you've fallen in love!" I could never successfully hide my feelings from her, but tried to hedge. "Not exactly." "What does that mean?" "It's a strange situation, not all that interesting actually," I said, sipping more of the margarita. Maggie came back out, set down the hot tamales and told us she was going to the market. As soon as she was out of sight, Paula whispered urgently, "Who is he?" "That, I cannot tell you - but he isn't someone you know anyhow," I lied, looking at the surrounding landscape, avoiding her eyes. She gulped, asking, "And just how far into this are you?" I felt myself go crimson again, and cursed my shirt- sleeve sensitivity. "Ah ha, that far! Jesus, it's about time Allie. Isn't sex great, better than a double-fudge sunday at the Dairy Queen?" I sighed distractedly - we were so different, but perhaps that was why our friendship had flourished all these years? Her savage bluntness, sense of humor, spontaneity, passionate warmth, as opposed to my reticence and calculated coolness. We talked about love, sex and then I asked more about her plans; she intended to quit work in the ninth month, be a full-time mom for at least a year, which I had trouble picturing. With her frenetic energy, she'd be a basketcase without a demanding career. When she was about to leave, I asked (with what I hoped was casual interest) if she remembered the old Jamison house, any of their relatives... "Sure, and it looks like hell over there, huh? Bet your folks are disgusted, I know mine are. Mom said if that lazy guy...what's his name?" "The one living there now?" "Yeah, if he didn't do something about the grounds she would get action whatever it takes." I agreed my parents hated the situation, and then asked, "Did you hear about him, his wife and son being murdered?" "He always was a snotty bastard, pardon my French." "Oh?" "I know him, sort of, Phillip does to. Adam Hunter, that's his name, married Melonie Thurston, and Phillip knew Melonie through his parents." "Really?" I inquired, absorbed. "Adam grew up in Atlanta, with his parents, but you knew that. He used to come to the Jamison's for a visit now and then, briefly." "I guess I'd forgotten." Of course, I hadn't; but he had visited so seldom that I hardly took notice when we were children. "Anyhow, Melonie was a gorgeous thing, I mean she was beautiful, won beauty pageants, and had boys falling all over her. Why she married that snoot I'll never know." I stood there, unable to reply. She hugged me, preparing to leave and adding, "Melonie and that little boy, killed like that right in front of him...well, even I feel sorry about that. No wonder he's probably falling apart." "It is horrible, but I never did know what happened." "Me either, exactly. Oh, Pillip told me about it, but I forget the details. I just remember Phil being pissed about the authorities never catching the killer." I changed the subject abruptly, fearing she'd see my anxiety. "You take good care of yourself, you're responsible for two now." She giggled. "Yeah, you bet. And by the way, we'll be getting together again soon - Aunt Mildred is giving me a lavish tea so I can get tons of baby things!" I agreed I would love to attend, then watched her get in her car and wave goodbye as she backed from the driveway. My eyes then fell on the shadowy form in the upstairs window of the Jamison house. Adam had been watching, no doubt. Puzzled, I resigned myself to the enigma of Adam Hunter...wondering uneasily where it would lead me. CHAPTER FIVE The next few days were uneventful. I worked steadily at the paper, helping my father prepare several advance layouts for when he would be gone. He told me if I wanted to take time off for a vacation (sometimes I went to the coast for a couple weeks during the summer) that Donald Web could be responsible. Don was the managing editor, and had been with us for ten years; he was certainly capable of the task, but to hear my father talk it seemed only he could keep things running smoothly. Nights, I couldn't refrain from staring at Adam's house; he had left, vanished. The following day after Paula's visit, Adam disappeared but he'd rehired the former gardner, and the grounds were slowly being cleared, the shrubs shaped and flowerbeds weeded, pleasing my parents immensely. When my monthly period arrived on schedule, I was somewhat relieved; having used no birth control with Adam, it had naturally occurred to me I could be pregnant. Contrary to being alarmed or worried though, I felt ambivalent, almost halfheartedly dreamy about having his child. Another child in his life might mend his wounds, but that was a poor reason for bringing a baby into the world. I didn't know if Adam would return or not; I realized he was avoiding me, and that I'd probably scared him away by the seduction. If I'd been more circumspect, I might have gained his platonic friendship. As it stood, I had lost him before I even had a chance to show him my honest caring. On the first day of June, I drove my parents to Baton Rouge for their flight; it was a dreary, rainy day. I found it distressing for them to leave during such bad weather, but they were eager to get going - this year they planned tours of Italy, France and then crossing to Australia, ending with a month in New Zealand where friends had invited them to stay. The drive back to Mayson was treacherous; a stormfront blanketed the region, and I was glad I had taken the Mercedes. My nerves were ragged, my hands having gripped the steering wheel throughout the long, perilous drive, so I was relieved to pull into the garage, and close the door behind me. Lightning still crackled, thunder drum-rolling behind it; the rain had slacked off, now a slow drizzle as I went inside, removing my raincoat, tossing down my purse, wiping back my damp hair. I went upstairs, ran a bath and slid into the warm, bubbly water, thinking this would help ease my stress. It felt wonderful, and I lay back, pondering about my obsession: Adam and his situation. I could have checked news files, gotten the exact details of the murder of his wife and son, but didn't want to do that. If I had advance knowledge of it, then I'd be prematurely judgemental. I wanted to hear Adam tell it, hear how it happened through his eyes alone. After the bath, I slipped on chambray shorts, loose t-shirt and walked to the bedroom window. My eyes went automatically to the Jamison's driveway, and I saw Adam's Nissan parked there. Incredibly, he was home. I bit my lips, suddenly feeling my spirits lift out of the low mood of late. Had he come back to stay? I was starving, and went to the kitchen. Maggie had left me a casserole in the oven, so I got some, heated it in the microwave, and poured milk. As I ate, I thought about what to do - should I apologize to Adam? Did I owe him an explanation, further contact to ease his discomfiture? I finished, put the dishes in the dishwasher and was about to go upstairs when the doorbell rang. I was astonished, since it was now near ten at night. Immediately I thought of my parents; something could have happened to their flight... I hurried to the door, nervously pulling it open. I almost gasped, because there stood Adam, his face expressionless. "Hello Allie, I'm sorry to bother you so late, but I saw you come in, alone." He grimaced, tugging at his tie; the white linen suit he wore was damp from the misty rain still falling. "That's fine, come in." I moved aside, gesturing with my arm. "My parents left today for Europe. Isn't this weather nasty?" He stepped into the foyer, looking around at the decor, commenting, "This is a fine job of maintainence, the interior matching the exquisite exterior perfectly." "Thank you, but I can't take credit. My mother feels obligated to protect the home from aging." I directed him into the formal living room, darkened by heavy velvet brocaded drapes. I quickly snapped on an ornate floorlamp, pointing to the antique Chippendale sofa. "Won't you have a seat?" He hesitated, rubbing his chin. "I really can't stay. I just felt...that I needed to talk to you a minute." I felt such deep compassion and empathy for him - melancholy still lingered in his face, his voice. But he was being formal, distant and polite; I couldn't risk alienating him by an emotional display, so I waited impassively. "Allie, I want you know that I appreciate what you were trying to do, and understand. It meant a lot to me, and I, well, I wanted to tell you that." He wouldn't meet my eyes, lowering his to the hardwood floor. I was aching to reach out to him, hold him, show him I loved him...for I did, with all my heart and soul. Yet I feared revealing the intensity of my emotions, and said quietly, "I am glad. I was afraid I'd caused you more distress when you left." He looked at me then, his sunken brown eyes searching my face, a hollow gauntness in his face betraying his anguish. "You are a fine woman, and I couldn't let you think I wasn't attracted to you, or that what we shared didn't touch me. It did, very much so. It's just that..." "No apology, please," I interrupted, turning my back to him; if I looked at his haggard face any longer I would be unable to resist touching him. "I'll go now..." "Are you staying in Mayson?" I asked, following him to the door. He had his hand on the doorknob, but looked at me again intently. "Yes, for now. I had business to take care of in Atlanta, that's where I've been." "The grounds are much improved," I said lamely, unable to take my eyes from his. "I plan to renovate the house, and hired a contractor to begin work soon." "Will you live there during that?" He ran a hand through his hair; the dark strands had fallen across his wide forehead, damp from the rain. He sighed. "I suppose I will, although it will be noisy." "The house should be an asset to the community, when finished." I closed my eyes, taking a deep breath. He asked, "Are you okay?" "Fine, it's just that..." "Yes?" He moved imperceptibly closer, and I found myself overcome by the physical attraction he aroused in me. "What?" He now inched closer; I was standing very near to him, close enough to feel his breath, smell his distinctly masculine cologne that rendered me weak from the memory of our past intimacy. "I...I had a long drive back from Baton Rouge today and I'm tired, I guess," I finally said, staring at him, our eyes locked. "Well I'll be going then, and let you get some rest." He started to turn, but I caught his arm, holding him back. "Please don't go." He looked down at me, the sadness and pain still evident in his eyes, the set of his lips. "I must. I can't let you do this..." "But Adam, I...I love you." There it was; I'd done it again, in spite of trying to control my feelings. The mere presence of him, the look of suffering and brooding misery in his face...and I lost control. "Please," I begged, "stay here with me tonight." He shook his head, saying, "Don't think I'm not tempted, I am. You are beautiful, sensual, so arousing to me. But even if I can forget it all for those precious moments, lose myself in passion, it isn't fair to you." "Let me decide that, Adam." I saw his indecision and rushed on, "Let me decide what is fair to me. I love you, and that's all that matters to me. If I can erase the sorrow, even for a second, it's worth it to me. I want to be with you." An onslaught of rain now battered the house, a strong wind buffeting the patio doors, the steady ticking of the big grandfather clock between thunder-rolls as we stood there silently staring at one another, measuring, guarded. Suddenly in one swift move, Adam lifted me in his arms and amazed me by his strength; he moaned, burying his head in my hair, saying, "God, it's all wrong but I can't resist you, Alison." "Don't try," I murmured, as he carried me up the stairs and I directed him to my bedroom. "We are alone, no one will bother us. Our live-in maid doesn't come back till next week, she's visiting relatives." He put me down, holding me against the length of him, lifting my face, kissing my lips and running his hands through my hair. "How lovely you are." I touched his hair, pushing back a strand off his face. "Adam, I love you so much. You're all I think of, and..." "Shh," he whispered, a finger upon my lips. He began to undress me, his hands going underneath my loose t-shirt, finding that I was braless, his breath quickening, his voice husky, "You are so wonderful, so willing..." Now I was overpowered by his nearness, drunk with his passionate embraces. I felt him move against me, the molding of our bodies together. "I need you, I do," he said, close to my ear, kissing, nibbling my neck, touching my skin, stroking and promising, "It'll be better for you this time, I'll go slow, easy..." I helped him out of his suit, tossing the clothing here and there carelessly, both of us now beyond words as we feverishly caressed, explored bodies. He had a muscular leanness, almost taut with tension, wide shoulders, his chest tangled with black hair, his long legs as firm as his torso. He kept touching me, laying me upon my bed, whispering, "Forgive me, please...I want you, I need you so much..." The rain pounded against the window and our desire mounted. We moved together, and this time, he was slow, agonizingly slow. He had me begging for mercy, but did not stop; instead, he made love to me all night long. Near dawn he fell asleep, and I watched him beside me, peaceful. It made me happy, knowing he was relaxed, not suffering, not thinking of the past. I felt gratified; I could help him overcome the sorrow. I already had through our passion. And surely love would follow? As a gray light filtered in through the curtains, I saw him slowly become fretful, as if dreaming...and he muttered in his restless sleep, "Melonie, oh Melonie..." CHAPTER SIX I wouldn't allow myself to be upset. I forced myself to pretend I hadn't heard him calling Melonie's name, and blocked it from my mind during the next week. Afteward, Adam had taken a shower, gotten dressed and casually told me he had to leave; the contractor was coming to look over the house, and he had to be there. He seemed distant, preoccupied and dismissed our night of sexual fervor as though it had not occurred, just like the first time. Initially, I'd been crushed, brooding over the way I gave myself to him, so vulnerable, so open to hurt. Yet I didn't, couldn't regret that time spent in his arms; it had transported us beyond pain, beyond death. Sex was salvation; it was the antidote to emptiness, dying and Adam's excruciating sorrow. I spent my days at the newspaper versing Sam Henry, the reporter we'd hired full-time, about special stories I wanted for the next edition. He was a quick study, and freed me to concentrate on my historical articles. Wednesday I decided to contact Alice Wentworth again to complete my research. She was glad to see me, and talked nonstop about the early days in Mayson. I was tape recording our conversation, and listened raptly to her stories of the fights between rural folk and the people who built Mayson, the town. She would laugh softly, and tell humorous highlights, especially savoring the constant battle of churches to rid the area of liquor, when rural folk thought it their right to celebrate in the raging Cajun style, not being inhibited by moral issues. When she'd wound down, I asked, "How did the Rice Festival get started?" She lay back in her thickly cushioned chair, and looked out the window at white-hot summery skies, then launched into an elaborate discussion - much more information than any official recorded material I could have found. At length, fearing I'd tire her I said, "I suppose that is enough for now. I can't tell you how I appreciate your time." Mrs. Wentworth looked at me, her faded blue eyes suddenly curious. "How is Adam doing?" I was taken off-guard, and stammered, "He's uh, doing fine, I suppose." "Have you seen him?" "Well yes..." "And is he seeking help?" She pinned me in a stare that was unnerving. "I think he's coping as best he can. He plans to renovate the Jamison house, and that will keep him busy." I had to control myself lest I betray the gravity of my feelings for Adam. "He inherited that from his grandparents, the Jamisons, and with considerable Thurston money, he should make it a showplace." "Thurston money? I don't understand..." "He must have received Melonie's share, since she was the only living heir. Her brother died very young, leukemia, and her parents were killed in a car accident several years ago." "Oh, that is tragic." I found it shattering - all that loss and pain, now multiplied by Melonie and Scotty's death. "It is, yes. I think Adam needs to stay busy, but was hoping he'd return to teaching. Years ago before her death, Frances, Melonie's mother, told me Adam was a gifted teacher, and could work wonders with troubled juveniles." "Maybe he will, in time." I secretly vowed to help him find that talent again, that gift for teaching. She smiled, closing her eyes. "I do believe I'm tired." "Again, thank you for your time." I left, my thoughts centered on Adam and his inheritance, the complexity of a man gifted but damaged, unable to live fully. * * * * Thursday was hot, humid and I spent it at the office, rushing to meet deadlines, overseeing the final copy editing, too busy for idle thoughts of Adam. He'd not attempted to see me again, and I was determined to curtail my curiosity - although his car was home, and the house occupied. Sam was engrossed in a rushed story on a fire that happened out in the county; no one was hurt, but a mobile home had been destroyed, leaving a family homeless. I told him to play up that angle, since ours was a family-orientated paper, mostly dealing with personal tragedies as opposed to cold facts. When he got it all in the computer, I read it and called him into my office. "You did an excellent job on this, Sam." He grinned boyishly. "Thanks." "I'll remember this, and I'm sure Don will agree you are developing a professional style." He sat on the edge of my desk, still grinning. "Alison, are you sure you wouldn't like to take in a late movie?" Oddly, his invitation didn't fall on deaf ears. What else did I have to do? Sit around and daydream about a man who was only interested in me sexually? I smiled, for once easing my icy facade. "No movie, but I might enjoy a burger with you when I finish here." He exclaimed, "Great!" "But first, I have to complete my article and get everything squared away." I glanced at the clock; it was past six, so I said, "Around eight?" "Sure, want me to wait?" Sam's tanned face was creased in smiling anticipation; his blond hair complimented clear blue eyes, and he had such boyish energy that I smiled eagerly. "No, how about picking me up at my house? You know where I live?" "Yeah, on Oak Street - that huge Victorian house?" "Right, see you then." I dismissed him, turning back to the computer screen, absorbed in my story. * * Once the paper was put to bed, I walked home in the growing darkness. The air was heavy with humidity, but cooler. I lifted my hair off my neck, walking slowly until I approached the Jamisons; the house was dark, solitary. I abruptly crossed the street to our house, hurrying now, brisk and determined not to wonder about Adam. He wasn't capable of a relationship now - I had to at least give him time. After a quick shower, I pulled on my jeans and waited for Sam. He arrived promptly in his Mustang and we drove to the local Dairy Queen, chatting and teasing one another with jokes. It was lighthearted fun, being with him, and I realized as we ate the burgers that I needed this; the somber sadness of Adam had cast a pall over me, and the change was wonderful. Back at the house, Sam kidded, "How about tomorrow night?" I laughed, gently touching his cheek. "Hey, let's not get carried away. I enjoy your friendship, Sam, but..." "I'm just a pest, huh?" He asked, staring soberly at me. "No, in fact I really loved our evening..." He peered at me closely. "Who is he, Alison? I hope he treats you good, cause you are special." I felt the blush, and looked toward our house, mumbling, "Oh there's no one..." "I know there is, so I won't try to steal you away, but if he ever lets you go..." I was touched, and looked back at his sincere expression. "Thanks, now why don't you walk me to the door?" We got out, and he walked up the drive with me, laughing and chatting idly about the newspaper. He was such fun, and on the porch I took his hand, said, "We'll do this again sometimes, as friends." "Sure, you can be fun, not so glum. We all think you never smile at the paper." I laughed. "I'm not that dedicated!" He grinned, dropped my hand. "I knew that. I know you can be light-hearted. See you Monday, okay?" "Yes." I watched him walk briskly to the Mustang, and wave as he backed out, then left in a squeal of tires. A light was on in Adam's bedroom; my eyes went there, and I saw him staring morosely down at me. Hurriedly I went inside and headed up the stairs. Why was I doing this to myself? The mere glimpse of Adam could make me ache for him - physically and emotionally. I slipped into my silk gown, pulled on a robe and sat at my window, brazenly daring him to resist me. I knew he could see me, outlined by the dim lamplight in my bedroom. The light in his bedroom went off, and I sighed with despair. Sex was the only weapon I had against his melancholy, and even that wasn't working! I got up from the Bentwood rocker, began pacing around the room, disappointed and unable to shake the sensual desire he always created within me. When I heard the doorbell, I was elated; I ran down the stairs, my hair flying behind me, and threw open the door to see Adam standing there, his eyes kindled with vibrancy. "Who is he, Allie? Tell me you've found someone, so I can be happy for you, know I'm not in your life, on your mind..." I was stunned; he was actually hoping I was dating Sam, distancing myself from him? I said, "No, no! Oh Adam, why can't you see I love you, only you?" He advanced into the foyer, grabbing me by the shoulders in a fierce grip, saying, "Forget me, I'm not worth the pain, the worry..." I cried, "I love you Adam, I love you!" "No you don't. You only need the sexual release and that's understandable. You're young, sexually awakened now, but that isn't love. I...can't...love you, ever." He jerked his hands away, and I staggered back against the wall, looking at his downcast face, his defeated stance. He started back to the door, but I grabbed him by the arm, begging, "Don't go, I want you here with me tonight." He groaned, an urgent, animal sound deep in his throat as he turned to me, stepping closer, but still hesitant. I studied his brown eyes, ablaze with lust, and the way his clothing, khaki slacks and pullover shirt, hung on his too-thin frame. I ached for him, and blurted out, "Please, don't go." "Allie, you deserve better. You deserve a man who can give you his heart." He nevertheless pulled me into his arms, and breathed into my hair, his hands straying to my gown, going instinctively to my breasts, touching tentatively. "Oh God," I murmured, pulling his head down as he touched my skin through the sheer material, then picking me up, carrying me to my room, all the while his muffled voice saying, "It's so wrong of me, wrong to take advantage of you..." I said, "I need you, I want you...that's all that matters here and now." He sat me on the bed, stared for a long time and then came to me willingly, openly.... CHAPTER SEVEN We didn't live in a vacuum, Adam and I, so I shouldn't have been surprised when rumors reached me of our being seen together. Neighbors, no doubt, had not missed us entering and leaving one another's houses. Paula, fortunately, was the one who gave that piece of news to me. She called, chatted amiably for a time, then stated, "You and Adam Hunter are an item, I hear." Aghast, I exclaimed, "Where'd you hear any such thing!" "From my mom. She hinted that Mrs. Palmer, her next door neighbor, had seen Adam going to your house late at night." I gulped, trying to be matter-of-fact, "Oh that, he came over to use the phone, his is being repaired." Silence. "I hardly know him," I lied, knowing she'd guessed my secretive involvement. "Look, you already told me there is someone in your life, Allie. It's Adam, and I know it...but girl, just be careful with him. He's had too much suffering in his life to be whole." "But people heal..." "Allie, victimization is a tough thing. Some people simply never are the same. They get caught up in the past, romanticize it, dwell on it, rage over fate, never let go..." "But Adam is capable of overcoming the tragic events," I defended hotly, forgetting how open I was being with her. "Is he, really? Why are you hiding your affair with him then? Why not be open, show the world he's coping?" I was mutely aware of her intuitive knowledge of our involvement, even perhaps Adam's darker demons, ashamed slightly about our sexual liaisons. She prompted, "Is he drinking, doing drugs? From what mom says, the man looks haggard. Allie, victims either recover or they continue to be victims of their past, escaping in liquor, drugs, sex." "Please that's enough!" I heard myself say, stung by her last remark, which was all too true. When we ended the conversation, I was emotionally drained, and had to acknowledge I was the topic of neighborhood gossip as well as a woman in love and obsessed with a man who couldn't love me in return, who was using me as an avenue of sexual escape instead of healing through genuine spiritual, emotional love. * * * * I avoided Adam, staying at the newspaper office as much as possible. I dated Sam, allowing him to cheer me, entertain me as the next month passed slowly. In the meantime, the Jamison house was being renovated; carpenters worked daily, the place noisy bedlam. I'd noticed Adam's car gone during the days, but home at night...yet he never phoned, never came over either. That suited me fine, and as July arrived, hot, humid and insufferably tropical as only Louisiana can be, I made arrangements to take three weeks of vacation in Pass Christian, at my parents' Mississippi seaside cottage. Don, the managing editor, was in charge of the paper lately; my mind was preoccupied and my historical piece took most of my attention anyhow. Sam promised to do the copy editing in my absence, and seemed disappointed I would be gone for three weeks. I felt I owed it to Adam to let him know I was leaving, so I phoned him the night before my departure. He answered on the fourth ring, snapping irritably, "Yes?" "Adam, it's me, Allie." He sighed, then asked reluctantly, "How have you been?" "I might ask the same of you, but I won't. I just wanted to call, let you know I'm going out of town a few weeks." "Oh?" "Yes, to Pass Christian. We have a cottage there, and I need the time away." A long silence at his end, but he finally said, "God, I'm sorry Alison. I'm so confused, so disgusted by having taken advantage of you." I could barely speak, but I whispered, "I could have stopped it, you know." "It's my fault though. I got so...caught up in the sex, like a drug...wrong." He coughed, then said, "Just a minute." I heard tinkling of ice in a glass, him swallowing and his voice slurring, "I don't er, think we should, er, be together...anymore." I knew he was drinking; I'd suspected it when he answered, but now I was sure. He'd replaced sexual escapism with liquor. What would be next? Slow suicide by drugs or a quick, violent death? Compassion and concern overshadowed good sense, and I said passionately, "I love you Adam!" "Yeah, so you say. I'm not worthy of anyone's love, least of all yours." "Why must you punish yourself? If only you'd let me share your grief, tell me what happened." He sighed again, saying flatly, "Alison, I hope you have a good trip. You need the time away from here to forget about me. I may soon return to Atlanta." Before I could protest, he hung up. I was shattered, heartbroken. * * * * The cottage at Pass Christian was musty, having been closed since the past summer. I spent several days cleaning, airing and getting it in livable shape. The caretaker had the grounds in excellent condition however - our yard swept down to the sea, and had a magnificent view of the ocean, a private, secluded beach. I loved the cottage, an A-frame with full-front windows, a rocked patio jutting out into the shade of palms and shrubs, great for evenings watching the sunset to the west. But I was moody, preferring to sleep till noon, lie on the beach suntanning till three and then bury myself in the cottage with a novel, trying to forget Adam during the dreamy, moon- drenched nights of salty, sea-scented air. My parents phoned on the Fourth of July, telling me they were having a wonderful time, asking again if I wished to join them, but I declined. I had wild ideas, plotting to hire a private investigator, get him to look into the murders back in Atlanta, search for the killer to end Adam's persistent wondering - give him at least a sense of retribution and perhaps closure. Then I'd chide myself for being so ridiculous; Adam had made it clear he didn't want to see me ever again - or my interference. By the second week in July, I was growing restless and depressed. I decided to take a tour of the historic district in Pass Christian, enjoying the grand Ossian Hall, a preserved antebellum mansion, then the Dixie White House, a remarkably authentic reminder of the Civil War. I returned to the cottage around five, pulling into the drive to find Adam's Nissan there. My heart seemed to go into my throat; I couldn't swallow, and I sat in my Fiero, gripping the steering wheel, calming myself. When I got out, I saw Adam sitting on the patio, wearing white cotton shirt and pants, both rolled up to reveal his darkly golden skin, looking healthy and fit compared to the last time I'd seen him. He waved, yelling, "Hi! Hope you don't mind my visiting?" I hurried to the patio, seeing him rise, stretch his arms overhead, yawning lazily. I exclaimed, "Adam! How long have you been here?" He grinned, his face clean-shaven and relaxed. "Not long, about an hour." I started up the three steps, but he came forward, caught my hand, assisting me to the door. "You don't mind?" His touch was warm, and I felt the familiar physical attraction but quickly squelched it. "No, but I'm sorry I was out. I went sightseeing." "Yes, this is a fabulous resort area, but lots of history here too." We went inside together, him talking about his trip, the rainstorm yesterday. I was incredulous - what was this all about? I listened to him, but couldn't contain my tumultuous emotional state, and finally blurted, "For God's sake, why are you here? You wanted me out of your life, now this?" He just looked at me, his brown eyes studying my face as I began to feel tears form, and stammered, "Please just go." He didn't say anything, but walked to me, put his hands on my shoulders. His face was mournful but his words were hopeful, "Allie, I want to apologize for my behavior." "You already have." "And I want to make it up to you. I want us to be friends, talk, get to know one another." He tipped my chin up, staring at me intently and I could see he was still attracted to me but he quickly added, "No sex, just conversation and companionship." I was astonished, but instantly felt happiness flowing through me, lighting my face. "Oh Adam, do you mean it?" "Yes." He nodded, letting me go and stepping back, adding, "You have a right to know why I'm so devastated, why I've been incapable of giving or healing." I was jubilant, thinking this was the real beginning for us. I prepared a chef salad, and we ate quietly, then later went for a walk on the moonlit beach. We held hands, didn't speak, just enjoyed the roaring waves coming ashore, the magnificent ocean spread out before us, endless and eerie underneath night skies, stars studded in the velvet black universe above. Once Adam stopped, peering up and gesturing to the stars, saying, "I used to stand out in the backyard, look up and speak to them, my stars. Only they, in their remoteness, were trusted enough to hear my misery. Only those glittering orbs that have for eons spun beyond our world, could keep such sorrowful secrets." I felt the poignant ache go through my heart, envelope it and almost squeeze the breath out of me; he was so alone, so lost and still I wanted to help, however he would allow me. Back in the cottage, he built a fire and we sat on large soft cushions before it, talking. Adam was hesitant, easing into the past, not daring to reveal it all at once. First his childhood in Atlanta, his wealthy, inaccessible parents who left him with various nannies, shipped him off to boarding school as soon as possible, the lost little boy who never felt loved, as though he were only an encumberance... He'd attended college, uncertain what he wanted to do in life, but determined to do something, anything meaningful, not become shallow and materialistic like his father, who was a businessman to the core. In his senior year, he'd signed up with the Peace Corps, upsetting his parents. Then he went abroad to work in underprivileged countries and was stunned at the poverty, the ignorance and the need for someone, anyone to care - which is what he did. He gave of himself, and felt needed, fulfilled. When his father died in an airline disaster, Adam came home to find his mother an emotional wreck. She couldn't cope, so he'd helped out, settled the financial affairs, kept the business afloat but his heart wasn't in it. The year he was twenty-eight, his mother died. As the only child, he inherited everything and was free to do as he wished, deciding he wanted to teach inner-city kids in Atlanta's public schools. At thirty, he was single and happy - that is, until he met Melonie Thurston. She was in Atlanta, promoting tourism in Louisiana, his grandparents' home state. As a representative of the state (she was Rice Queen, a beauty pageant winner) Melonie exuded grace, charm and genteel qualities of her family heritage, the Thurstons of Layfette, a bloodline of considerable prominence. Melonie had been speaking at a shopping mall, and Adam was in the crowd. He stood there, he said with remembered fondness, almost in a trance. She was unlike any woman he'd ever met - pale, delicate, with coppery hair, large doe-brown eyes and fragile, frail slenderness. Her Louisiana accent was like melted butter, and he felt himself attracted to her, physically and emotionally. Afterward, he hung back, asked for her autograph. She smiled at him, looking directly into his eyes as he supposed she had been told to do, but he surprised her by asking, "How about having dinner with me?" Naturally, it wasn't that easy - pageant rules forbid dating, or having a steady boyfriend. However, he was persistent and she finally consented to dinner, slipping away from her escorts. From their first moment together alone, they felt the mutual glow of love, and when her time as reigning Rice Queen was over, a few months later, she moved to Atlanta, and they soon set a date for their wedding. "It was like I'd found myself, like I could relax, be happy, forget how alone I'd always felt..." Adam said, staring into the fire, reflective. After long moments I asked, "And then, the baby?" He resumed talking, saying that Melonie wanted children more than anything, since she felt he would benefit by having them, due to his loneliness as an only child. Scotty was born when Melonie was twenty-five and Adam was thirty-two, only a little more than a year after they married. And of course, she'd been correct - Scotty was the perfect antidote to Adam's loneliness, bringing unbelievable joy, love and pleasure to them both. At this he stopped, held his head in his hands, groaned and said, "God, I'd give my life at this very moment to have them alive again." "I know you would," I said, sympathetic. He ran a hand over his face, sighing. "But they are gone, and I'll never be the same again, never." "No...but Adam, you are still alive," I said, touching his arm. He then began rapidly, curtly telling of that fatalistic day when he'd come home early, Melonie in the kitchen, cooking, Scotty in the yard, playing. They'd been chatting, laughing about the new Mutant Ninja Turtle swingset Scotty was wild about, when the doorbell rang. He went, thinking it was probably one of Melonie's many friends; she made them easily, and half their suburban neighborhood would drop in unannounced. But when he pulled back the door, it was a young boy, roughly about sixteen, his leather jacket, jeans and black, opague motorcycle helmet somehow disconcerting. Adam was about to ask what he wanted, when the boy pulled a gun, screaming for him to get inside. Adam was taken off-guard, and complied; the boy jerked off his helmet, and pushed him toward the kitchen, capturing Melonie unaware too. The boy was nervous. He had spiky red hair, bloodshot eyes and his gun wavered, but was a definite threat. He noticed Scotty outdoors, told them to get him inside. Adam realized the boy was wired, probably on crack-cocaine, and reasoning was impossible, although he tried. Once Scotty was inside, the boy told Melonie to hold him while he tied up Adam, using a rope he had in his jacket. Melonie watched nervously, afraid to move, holding Scotty tightly. When finished, the boy turned to the kitchen window, and that's when Melonie lunged at him, a butcher knife in her hand. But she was too small, no match for the wired boy who turned, fired point-blank at her chest. She whimpered, fell to the floor, and Scotty ran to her, crying. The boy panicked, shot Scotty and then turned the gun toward Adam but didn't pull the trigger for some reason. Instead he fled, leaving Adam facing his lifeless wife and son. Having heard the shots, neighbors called police, but they never found the boy. By now I was weeping openly and said, "Oh Adam, I'm so sorry." "I'd like to have gotten that little punk, killed him with my bare hands!" He was enraged, his eyes hate- filled and vengeful. "How could he have gotten away?" He shook his head. "I don't know, except there were so many kids in that neighborhood, maybe the boy just didn't look suspicious and rode right on past others on his motorcycle." "Why did he do it?" I asked helplessly. "I was told later that there had been some kids in a crackhouse, that one of them said they dared him to kill somebody, anybody - just to see what it felt like." "Oh my God," I moaned, unable to comprehend such senseless violence. "And the worst part is, I taught kids just like him, foolishly thinking I could make a difference." "But you didn't recognize this boy?" "No. Most of my troublemakers were black or Hispanic welfare kids. He was white, a punk-styled teen...but would fit right into a suburban setting, not looking suspicious...or deadly." I took his hand, touching his cheek. "I'm so glad you told me." He stood, looking remote now, controlled. His voice was hollow-sounding, "I'm beat, see you tomorrow." He turned, got his jacket and went out the door, never glancing back once. I sat there awhile, staring at the slowly dying fire. Adam had shut down emotionally, gone cold again right before my eyes. Knowing the tragedy, hearing about it, hadn't brought me any closer to helping him...or had it? CHAPTER EIGHT I spent a restless night, pondering the murders. It was disturbing, although certainly as common today as smog or polluted ocean beaches. Still, I knew that Adam, like myself, had never been victimized. His life, prior to the murders, had been privileged, safe and relatively ordinary. That he'd lost Melonie and Scotty, both at once in such a brutal way, had shattered his illusion of the world; therefore, he was going through a re-evaluation of his life, his beliefs, his very existence. That was understandable; however, the escapism he exhibited, sexually and through liquor, didn't fit. He seemed the kind of man who should have confronted his tragedy, worked through his grief and rage with counseling and then pulled himself together, carrying on bravely as a survivor, not becoming a lifetime victim. I finally slept near dawn, and awoke around ten, the muted light slanting through wood shutters on the bedroom windows. Adam said he was staying at the Ramada Inn near Long Beach, so I figured he was out on the municipal pier, fishing; he'd confessed a passion for that sport. I had invited him to stay with me, but he refused, strictly adhering to his self-imposed limitations of no intimate relations between us. After a brisk eye-opening shower, I pulled on a flowered sundress, drank orange juice, made toast, ate it and then went out on the patio to think about my latest problem. Last month my period had failed to come around, and I'd vaguely dismissed it as nerves, or emotional fatigue. Now, shadowed from bright sunshine underneath an umbrella on the cottage patio, I counted back to that second time Adam and I had spent the night together, and discovered, not surprisingly, that I could have become pregnant. I let my eyes close, halfway fearing I was, halfway hoping it was true. I couldn't justify a pregnancy, but then again, it might be the needed instrument to bring Adam out of his depression. The morning was steamy, the air thick with humidity. I went back inside, wondering what to do. Should I tell Adam of my suspicions, or verify it first? I looked at the clock, almost eleven, picked up the phone, and made an appointment in Gulfport for a pregnancy test. It was a long afternoon, waiting among other nervous women at a gynecologist I'd never seen before, then lying to him that I had been referred by my own doctor in Layfette. But when I finally had the results, I felt more optimistic than I had since meeting Adam. I was going to have his child, six weeks along already. Driving back to the cottage, I enjoyed the scenic oceanfront trip on US 90, idly daydreaming of the growing child within me. A girl or boy? Did it matter? Maybe Adam would prefer another boy - or would that seem as though he were trying to replace Scotty? My Fiero purred along, the afternoon dimming into a bleached red sunset as I whizzed through Long Beach and located the Ramada Inn. I was utterly caught up in my fantasy of our life, our future...visualizing Adam by my side, healed, whole, loving again. At the desk, I asked for his room number, then went directly there; the Nisson was parked in the lot, so I was in luck. Hesitantly, I stood in front of the door, smoothing my wrinkled turquoise jacket and skirt. I heard no noise from inside, but I knocked anyway, listening. Nothing. I leaned against the door, anxious. It was oddly quiet, and I wondered if Adam was out? Just then, I saw him coming down the walkway; he had an ice bucket, his face composed and turned toward the busy highway. Unnoticed, I watched him. He was wearing the same white cotton pants and shirt, sleeves rolled up to reveal his tan. I thought him attractive, handsome in a way difficult to pinpoint. He looked like any other average man, but those features of his - the dark hair combed straight back off his high forehead, sunken brown eyes in an angular face, a square chin - suggested more to me now for I suddenly wondered if our child would resemble him? "Allie," he said, looking up to see me staring at him when he was almost to the room. "Hi! Hope you don't mind me dropping in spontaneously?" I said, moving aside as he unlocked his door, gesturing me inside. "No, no...although I am a little surprised." He swept past me, and I got a whiff of liquor as he put the ice bucket down, avoiding my eyes. "If you have plans, I'll leave," I told him, fidgeting with my purse near the door. He was silent, making himself a quick mixed drink, adding more liquor than necessary; his shoulders were hunched, his face averted. "No, stay." I inched to a chair, sat down, wondering if I'd made a mistake coming here unannounced. He gulped the drink, his eyes meeting mine above the glass, glazed and uncertain. Then he said slowly, "Sorry, but ah, I need this." I stood abruptly, went to him and looked into his stricken eyes. "I suspected you were drinking long before now." He flinched, draining the glass, then putting it down with a thud on the table. "So?" "Adam, please don't do this. You must deal with your feelings, not try to drown them, escape your grief." I closed my eyes, breathing deeply, searching for inner strength, hoping to get through to him. He was taking me in his arms, pulling me against him, softly sighing, his voice a sob: "God Allie, I want to! But the pain, it never quits. Every day I get up, the sun is shining, the sky is blue but...as cliched as it sounds, I'm dead, dead to the world." I held him, his heart against mine, muffled sobs coming from his soul, his tears mingling on my face as he kissed me tenderly, liquor-sour breath from his lips. "Alison, you need to get away from me. Go now, I don't want to let you love me, cause you the pain I am feeling." "I want to share it, Adam!" I admonished, looking into his face. "I can't, I just can't feel any love for you. I feel sexual attraction, almost irrepressible, but that's lust, not love and you deserve so much more!" He jerked away, walked across the room, stood at the windows with his back to me. I was crushed, shaken again by his lack of emotional love for me. Was it true, or could he be denying it for fear of betraying Melonie's memory? He shook his head, saying, "I wish I could love you, I wish I could have hope that I'd be able to someday, or that what happened to Melonie and Scotty wouldn't ruin me forever." "You will heal Adam if you'll let yourself. It'll take time, but..." "No!" He shouted, swiveling to face me, his eyes burning bright. "No, I don't want to heal or forget! I want to remember, to suffer because I allowed it to happen. I was tied, but I didn't try, I didn't think the boy would do it. What a fool I was!" My heart twisted inside me; how he blamed himself! I spoke slowly, "Adam, it wasn't your fault. How could you have stopped him?" "Somehow, some way I know I could have, if I'd tried. It's that I didn't even try." He groaned, went to the bed and slumped down wearily. I wanted to tell him about the baby, but I couldn't; he was a man plagued by self-doubts, guilt and sorrow, and I had no right to compound his sense of obligation by my pregnancy. I went to the door, said, "I'm leaving now, like you asked me to." He looked up at me, and the haunted emptiness in his eyes was almost enough to bring me back to his side, but he said flatly, "I'm sorry for coming to you, for giving you false hope. It's just that for a moment, for a little while, I thought you could help me and I had to see you. Now I've hurt you again, and worse, just recounting that horror last night set me to drinking again." "I'll stay, if you want me to. I love you Adam, I can't help it." I stood motionless, waiting. He shook his head, running a hand through his hair, a few strands falling on his high forehead. "No, go. I need to be alone and I...I promise not to bother you again." So I left, drove back to the cottage in a daze of misery. What was I to do about the baby? That night I sat up late, staring into the firelight. Once I would have found comfort in spiritual guidance, and it occurred to me I hadn't been to church since Adam had come into my life. Maybe if I talked with Pastor Thomas, he could help me in this dilemma? I loved Adam, I did - and I knew I could never have an abortion, never! But should I think about giving the baby up to someone else for adoption? I didn't know the answer, but vowed to find a solution when I returned to Mayson in another week. CHAPTER NINE August arrived with a vicious heatwave. I was now having nausea and the hot, still mornings were miserable. I'd get up hungry but when I smelled Maggie's bacon wafting up the stairs, I'd feel bile rise in my throat, gag and run to the bathroom. So far, she'd not guestioned me, but I knew Maggie suspected my illness, my loss of weight was not entirely without reason. The newspaper kept me occupied and I put in at least four hours, usually between ten and two, trying to concentrate on copy editing, or writing a series of articles about next year's political prospectives in Mayson. It was boring, but held my attention; I tried to ignore the pregnancy, and stay busy. Sam had been wonderful. He was incredibly happy to see me return, and insisted we celebrate by having burgers, which I agreed to. He was lively, fun and diverted me from the fact that Adam had disappeared again. Nevertheless, workers were still clamoring over and around the Jamison house, methodically restoring it, taking their orders from a gruff carpenter/foreman out of New Orleans hired for the renovation. The project continued even in his absence, as though Adam had given the architect complete control. Nights I came home to quiet, the crew gone. But little by little, the house was turning into a masterpiece of reproduction - claiming the heritage of craftmanship and devotion to detail it rightly deserved. For that, I was grateful to Adam. From my bedroom window, I looked down at the scaffolds, strewn tools and assortment of machinery, but it would be worth the mess in the end. My visit with Pastor Thomas had been a fiasco. I'd attended church, hoping to feel the comfort, the peace that fine old cathedral once inspired. But the regular church members distracted me, one by one slyly glancing at me, accusing or overtly curious. Of course, they'd heard the gossip; they must be wonering if Adam and I were to become a couple, a proper couple that is, by religious standards. As I'd sat there Sunday morning, it occurred to me that I was being hypocritical. I had been totally unconcerned with "morals" when Adam and I were together, and further, I realized with a shock I didn't regret it, not a moment of it. I even felt proud of the child I was carrying. All the same, I did request counseling with Pastor Thomas but when I sat before him, I found his calculated warmth and grave facial expression didn't elicit my confidence. Instead, I saw a frozen smile on his wan, thin face, his piercing gaze somehow disconcerting. He looked like the cat outside a mouse hole, so I made up a foolish tale, then hurriedly escaped, seeing his dismay and disapproval. One day I drove to Layfette and had lunch with Paula; but just as I was about to confess my situation, she'd begun talking about her pregnancy, the nursery they were decorating. I decided not to cast a cloud over her carefree expectancy. By the middle of August, I drove back to Gulfport and kept an appointment with the doctor, making sure all was well healthwise. It was. Unfortunately I found that keeping this a secret was slowly eating me up inside. I needed desperately to talk to someone, but who? And then I remembered Alice Wentworth. She was receptive when I called, and was eagerly waiting to greet me when I arrived that late afternoon. It was necessary to wear a loose caftan, for I'd begun showing slightly. Alice pinned me with a stare, and asked, "What's wrong child?" Without formality, I walked to her bedside and sat down in a chair, started crying. "I'm in such a mess!" She fluffed her pillows, propped up and said, "Adam?" I gazed at her through tears. "How'd you know?" "I saw your compassion, your caring for him when we talked. That's why I urged you to help him, so whatever is wrong, it's partly my fault." I stood, took her feeble hand. "No, that's not true. I'm entirely to fault for..." She patted my hand, moving to let the comforter fall from her shoulders. The poster bed was covered with various sized pillows, and she said, "Please, hand me that satin blue pillow, dear." I quickly did so, helping her rise, giving her a vantage point to look at me. She was indeed weaker than when I'd interviewed her, but still had vestiges of the strong woman who had ruled her family. "Now, now dear," she said calmly, "tell me the problem." And I did, discreetly describing our sexual liaisons, Adam's inability to love, his insistence I not be in his life, ending with, "But I'm pregnant, and I don't know whether I should tell him or not. I don't want to burden him, or force a relationship after what he's been through. On the other hand..." Alice cleared her throat. "It's quite simple - you must tell him, because he is the father. Telling him doesn't necessarily mean marriage, or any responsibility on his part. It only means you respect his right to know." Her words released a bright sunburst inside me, freeing me to do what I'd wanted to all along. I gushed, "Do you really think so?" "Why, of course my dear. The father has a right to know about his child - but that doesn't obligate him. You must make the ultimate decision about the baby, if you keep it or not." "I don't know yet what I'll do. At first, I thought about adoption...but now..." I drifted off, thinking of my child, the tiny life inside me, so precious. Could I part with it? She smiled, her lined face creasing with understanding. "You'll know when the time comes, but for now, you must tell Adam." I thanked her profusely, and knew just looking into her faded blue eyes she would never tell another soul. Alice Wentworth is a true southern lady. * * * * Boldly, I confronted the workmen. They pointed out the foreman, a squarely built man, short and stocky, with red hair and sunburned skin. I asked him about Adam and he treated me with professional curtesy, told me Adam was in Atlanta, occasionally in touch for orders or any problems they might need to discuss pertaining to the renovation. However, it took me several nights of calling before I finally got Adam. He had an answering machine, but I usually just hung up when it clicked in. At last, near the end of August, I called late at night and he answered. "Adam?" "Who's this?" His voice was slurred, indistinct. "Adam, this is Allie. I need to discuss something with you." Silence. "Look, I know you don't wish to communicate with me, but this is important." He sighed. "Please, it's...too late." "Yes, more than you can know," I replied, disappointed that he was still drinking. The connection crackled with unsaid words; I held the phone tightly, wishing I was with him. He finally said, "Okay, what is it?" "Not on the phone, I need to see you." "God Allie, that would be wrong. You need to forget about me..." "After this one last time, I will if that's still what you wish. But first, I have to talk to you, in person." "Shit," he muttered, half to himself. I heard ice clinking against glass, and him moving around, then saying, "I'll fly down this weekend, but can only stay one day." "Fine." "I'm working on selling this place here in Atlanta, but the realtors are having a hard time. No one wants to live in a house where cold-blooded murder was committed." I felt so helpless, so far away from him in that moment. My voice choked, then I managed, "I still love you, I always will." "Please don't Allie." His voice was heavy with liquor, slow and deliberate, "I don't want you, I don't, I won't hurt you." "We'll talk more this weekend." "Yeah, but...Allie, I've made arrangements to move to Birmingham, Alabama. A complete change." "That might be a good idea. Will you teach again?" He coughed, said slowly, "I don't know, but I have to go now. Talk to you Saturday." And he hung up, the dead phone in my hand as lifeless as he had sounded. CHAPTER TEN Saturday was scorching, nearly unbearable as only the last of August can be in Louisiana. I couldn't endure being outdoors, instead staying inside where it was cool, waiting for Adam to arrive. I knew he would call, probably take a room at the downtown hotel. Looking out my bedroom window, I realized his house was a shambles, impossible for him to stay there. It was a long, long day. Around noon, Maggie called me to lunch; I ate ravenously. She had been quiet, but I could tell she had guessed what was wrong with me. As I lifted a glass of milk, she pulled back a chair and sat at the kitchen table with me. Her thick molasses voice said, "Your folks gonna be here in a few days." "Yes," I replied, sipping the milk and sensing an impending lecture. "What you gonna do, sweet pea?" Her pet name for me, uttered with butter softness and concern, made me almost cry. "I don't know. Is it that obvious?" She placed her hands on the table, looking at me with big brown eyes. "Yes, it is. You be carrying a child, and need to keep your nerves settled." I swallowed hard, flinching. "I know, and I am going to handle this with courage." "Child, why'nt you talk to me, I don't judge." "Maggie, I know you don't. It's just that I am undecided about uh, the father." "That Adam Hunter, ain't it?" She leaned forward, watching my reaction. "Yes, I suppose you saw us..." "No I didn't, but I see you staring out the windows, looking at his house so sad and all." "Oh Maggie, I love him desperately!" She stood, came and put her arms around me from the back, soothing, "I know, I know sweet pea. How's he feel?" "I don't think he really knows. The loss of his wife and son...tragic and not that long ago, he's still devastated." "Listen Allie, love ain't no good less you both feeling it." She patted my shoulder, stroking my hair. "He's coming in today, and I plan to tell him about the baby." "You gonna keep it?" "Yes, regardless of how he feels. I won't destroy a life," I said loudly, hearing my fiercely protective words. "That's my girl," Maggie murmured, helping me up and adding, "That Adam, he a fool if he don't love you." Well, she is biased. Maggie is part of our family, almost a maternal figure to me since she'd been with us so long. I gave her a weak smile, and went to my bedroom, took a nap and awoke to the ringing phone. Adam was direct and to the point - he said he was exhausted, and would meet wherever I wished. I suggested a nice restaurant dowtown in a couple of hours; he wasn't thrilled by my choice, but agreed. I was a bundle of nerves, choosing a classy dress to wear, getting my bath, being especially particular about my appearance. When ready, I looked in the cheval mirror: my creamy white feminine dress had a V-neck wrap front, lavished with cotton lace lapels leading to a double-buttoned dropped waist and padded shoulders that made me appear slender. I had on white pumps, satiny hose and wore pearls at my neck, matching ear-rings. I'd pulled my hair up in a sophisticated chignon, applied a touch of lavender eyeshadow and pink lip gloss. I looked healthy, glowing almost. I drove through the misty twilight, caught up in the sun setting behind stately mansions, the overhanging cypress and live oak limbs. The scene was reminiscent of the Old South, a bygone Louisiana, the faintly mystical aura of what-once-had-been on these streets: horse-drawn carriages, gaslights, top hats and evening gowns, ladies and gentlemen on their way to civic events a century before. Downtown, I passed the now silent, dark Clarion office, saw the post office, the grammar school and drove on down to the building that housed JADE, our finest restaurant in Mayson. I drove around to the back, pulled into the parking lot and spotted Adam's Nissan. I parked, got out and admired the aging building, which had been meticulously restored by several owners. In the stylish architecture of the 18OOs, it was two-story brick and stucco, with lavish scrollwork at the corners, and around long, narrow windows. Now painted rust and brown, it was warmly inviting. I entered the doorway, waiting till Jannie, the young hostess, came toward me, saying, "Hi Allie!" "Hi," I said, then asked, "Is Adam Hunter seated?" "Yes, right over there by the window. Are you meeting him?" Her perky face held barely concealed curiosity. "Yes, I am." She smiled, leading me through the cool, quietly muffled interior; plants hung from the high ceiling, paddle fans whirled gently; indirect lighting and plush carpeting lent a subdued atmosphere...a masterpiece of exquisite restoration with modern features blended elegantly. Adam had on a three-piece pinstripe suit, and seemed uncomfortable as I approached. But his face was ravaged, circles beneath his eyes, tight lines about his mouth. He managed to say pleasantly, "Good to see you, Alison." I sat down as he held my chair at the linen-covered table. Several patrons, older couples I knew well, were watching us. This was a place frequented by my parents' friends, but I wanted to be here when I told Adam about the pregnancy. He couldn't afford to insist on an abortion, or cause a scene in this public place with familiar faces nearby. Jannie handed us a menu, discreetly saying she'd send a waiter for our orders. I hardly heard her, unable to face Adam's obvious distress. He sat down, and I looked out the long window to a tree-lined street, the stoplight at the corner, a few cars driving slowly by. "So Alison...why this public meeting?" His voice was thin, anxious. I felt my face flush. I fidgeted with my hands, finally putting them in my lap, holding still. "I wanted us to meet like this, out in the open." He reached for his water, his hand shaking badly, causing the ice to clink. He took a long sip, then asked, "I suppose you think I'm being a first-rate heel?" "No, but people are talking. Those times you came to my house, when I went to you." "And if we make it public, then there's no reason for speculation, is that it?" He set the glass down, staring at me. I was drawn into his brown eyes, engulfed by the anquish, the smoldering sensuality of his steady, measuring gaze. He grimaced, still frowning and puzzled. "Adam, it's not only that. I have some news for you, and thought it best we were among others when you hear it." "I see." He looked away, out the darkened window, our reflections etched as though in stone on the glass. He sighed, asking, "And what is the news?" "Let's order first, eat and then I'll tell you." "Fine." He searched for the waiter, motioned and the man came to our table. It was a delicious meal, excellent wine and lavish dessert. We both only picked at the food though, so at last I wiped my mouth with the napkin, lay it down and said, "Adam, the times we were together..." "Yes?" He leaned back in his chair, scrutinizing me. "I...we uh, neither of us used any birth control." "Oh God," he groaned, his face going white. "You don't mean...?" "I'm sorry, but in a way, I'm not sorry. It's just that I've had time to consider the options, and you haven't." I said determindedly, "I plan to have the baby, regardless of how you feel or your wishes." He was shocked, his pale face a portrait of confusion, slowly turning into something like wonder, amazement. "But Allie..." I held up my hand, said, "I'm not asking you for anything, not a single thing. But as the father, you did have a right to know, that's all." "My God, a...child. I never, it didn't occur to me, I have been so wrapped up in my own morbid misery. I nodded, secretly pleased at his reaction. Maybe, just maybe there was a chance... He was suddenly calling for the check, helping me up and escorting me gently, gallantly out of the restaurant, smiling at Jannie! And then we were outside, melting in the sultry Louisiana summer night. Adam led me to the parking lot, avoiding glances from others leaving. I walked with him, hope beating like a bird's wings in my chest. At his car he said, "Please, let's go for a drive?" I was willing, and slipped inside, silently glowing with inner warmth, watching as we drove down the familiar streets, turning onto Cedar Highway, heading out past the Interstate, on beyond into flat low-lying countryside. The moon rode the horizon, stars glittered in a black velvet sky. Adam had put in a tape of Mozart, and we didn't speak. It was like a dream, one I'd been having since seeing him alone and suffering in Magnolia Park five months earlier. Occasionally I thought I glimpsed a half- smile on his face. Adam drove about twenty miles, then pulled into the old Clifford Bayou; it was deserted, eerie in the moonlight, cypresses draped with moss, flat, murky backwater where alligators could be seen in daylight. He parked in a generously secluded spot, away from the highway. It was utterly quiet when he turned off the motor; I could see the distinct flicker of fireflies among the mossy tendrils. Then Adam said, "Alison, I never meant for this to happen." "I know, I didn't either," which was partly untrue, since I'd more or less realized it could from the beginning and done nothing to prevent it. "God!" He had his head in his hands, his hair falling on his forehead. I moved nearer, asking, "Have I hurt you?" "No, I just don't know what to think. In my gut, I feel responsible and deep down, a bit...in awe...and grateful." "Oh Adam," I murmured, "this could be wonderful. A child is so innocent, so easy to love." "Don't!" he snapped, flinching when I touched his sleeve. "Don't think I can love, I can't, ever!" Crushed, I pleaded, "How do you know? How do you know what you'd feel if you held a helpless baby of yours?" Unbelievably, he turned, took me in his arms, kissing my forehead. "Allie, you are so innocent, so optimistic...a wonderful woman. If I can't love you, how can I expect myself to love our child?" "You must allow yourself to love again. You've got to forgive yourself for what happened, stop blaming it all on yourself." I placed my hands on either side of his face, aching with love, with mingled compassion and yearning. "It isn't fair! God, we had it all, and then just like that," he snapped his fingers, "gone!" "Please," I begged, pressing myself against him, "let me help you." "No!" He pulled back, staring down into my face, groaning, "God forgive me, but even now I want you." "I'm yours, forever. Adam, I love you." And there it was, my helplessness when near him, my vulnerable, open heart nakedly in need. He claimed me then, his hungry mouth coming down upon mine, devouring, seeking, searching. We forgot all else as our clothing came off, our bodies tangling in the heat of passion, lost to anything but the intensity of sexual desire. When it was over, Adam talked a great deal, saying what he feared, what he couldn't feel, and that in spite of it he wanted to know his child, help me with my pregnancy. Although I loved him with every fiber of my being, this upset me. He still felt reluctance, was unable to say he loved me so I continually told him it wasn't his obligation. I had money; I had a family who would understand. In the end though, he asked me to marry him. Maybe I was foolish, but I accepted. I wanted him so badly, needed him and loved him...how could I have refused? CHAPTER ELEVEN My parents were stunned when I told them, the night I picked them up at the Baton Rouge Airport. Mother turned ashen, couldn't speak; father was more composed, and managed, with considerable effort, to ask, "Adam Hunter, you mean the man living in the Jamison house across the street?" He was driving, mother beside him, me in the backseat of the Mercedes. "Yes, and you won't believe how good the house is turning out. He has given me permission to hire an interior decorator, do the inside however I wish. We plan to live there after we're married." Mother was struggling to stay her cool, level-headed self, but blurted, "Alison, you hardly know the man! And such a tragic background." I said calmly, "Yes, the murders were terrible, and Adam's been hurt, hurt deeply. I want to help him get over it, go on with his life." "Are you sure you know what you're getting into young lady?" My father inquired, glancing at me. "I know it won't be easy, but I think with time, Adam will learn to be a survivor, not a victim of his past." There was an awkward silence, the Mercedes sailing along the flat interstate, headlights of oncoming cars piercing us, rhythmic night traveling. Mother cleared her throat, said, "We had a lovely time in Australia, and New Zealand. I wish you'd come over, we could have..." "I had plenty to do here, and I did take three weeks off, went down to the cottage at Pass Christian." "Did you visit Uncle Rich?" "No," I answered my father, "I didn't. I did phone him and Aunt Martha said his arthritis was acting up." "Poor Rich, he's suffered with that for the past fifteen years." I was fond of my aunt and uncle; they owned considerable land in Pass Christian, Rich being my father's eldest brother, now eighty. Mother ventured softly, "When do you want the wedding...there's lots to do, arrangements..." I had dreaded this, but replied firmly, "We are going to New Orleans, get married there, probably around September 15th. No church wedding here, I'm sorry." Dead silence. "I was the one to suggest it, not Adam," I quickly added, looking at their tight expressions. "Even so Allie, I need to be involved in some way, maybe a bridal tea?" I listened to my mother ramble on, stating the social connections, the obligation to other women in her clubs, returned favors, etc. and all the while thinking how I'd lost my faith, my belief in religion, my trust in God and felt no responsibility about social obligations...so unlike myself. It wasn't Adam who'd changed me exactly, it was my awakening to love, to sexual desire and the sense that certain conventional standards no longer applied to myself. "I know you mean well," I told my mother, "but let me do this my way, okay?" Father interrupted, "Will you continue at the paper?" "I want to take a year off, stay with Adam, maybe travel and then, I'll be back to work." He nodded, shrugging. "I want you to be happy, sweet pea." That touched me, so I declared, "I missed you two!" They said they'd missed me and home, then launched into a travelogue of their trip. * * * * Time whizzed by. Adam made a few trips back to Atlanta, settling his financial affairs there, and also visiting his parents, telling them the news of our wedding. In the meantime, I tried to hide my pregnancy but couldn't deceive my mother. When she finally confronted me, I confessed in tears what had happened; she was very understanding, and surprised me by saying that at least I hadn't opted for an abortion. I think she was secretly delighted to have a grandchild on the way. While Adam was in town, we tried to see each other every night, dining out, going to public places together, giving the nosy citizens their due, showing that we were "properly" courting. Our marriage would come as no shock, although I'm sure some would calculate our child was conceived beforehand. The day before our scheduled trip to New Orleans, I got together with Paula and told her all about our situation. We confided like the dear friends we are, laughing about it easily, speculating about our children growing up as buddies. I was ready and waiting for the departure, anxious and unable to sleep that night. Around midnight, I got up, paced the room, aware it was my last hours of being single... but I was more than willing to be Adam's wife, at last falling asleep with him on my mind and in my dreams. * * * * New Orleans is bawdy, capricious, fun-loving and austerely authentic all at the same time, like a frenzied carnival or stupendous, outrageous spectacle. It is saturated with blatant sexuality on Bourbon Street yet old-fashioned and grandly historic in the marvelously preserved French Quarter, a bounty for honeymooners, and we were no exception. Our wedding took place at a quaint chapel. Adam knew of this small rustic church outside the city, a Parson who married many couples either going to New Orleans or coming from the city. It was very private, just us and the minister, his wife and her sister as the witness - but sincerely moving in its utter simplicity. Adam remained optimistic, seemingly brighter and hopeful since the night of his proposal. I had every reason to believe it would work out, that his melancholy was gone, forever banished by our relationship, and our child. We spent our first night in extravagance, registered at the Hilton, and Adam's sexual appetite had not dampened; it was exciting, stimulating for a wedding night, not hampered by my pregnancy. Then we toured the city, seeking those special places for lovers, riding in a horse-drawn carriage, or on the famous streetcars, viewing the sidewalk artists' work, getting our portrait done by a talented artist; then dining at the finer restaurants, sampling the nightlife till all hours. I was waltzing in slow motion to the dream that had come true, Adam and myself married, celebrating the child I carried. I was, in fact, so convinced of his happiness that I failed to realize the sadness behind his cheerful facade, and only when I found him weeping uncontrollably the last night did I suddenly feel jolted out of the fantasy I was enjoying. I'd gone down to the lobby, asked if we had any messages, and returned to the room instead of going to the gift shop as I'd told him I would. When I came through the door, I stopped, hearing sobs from the inner chamber; the suite was two rooms, outer quarters for lounging. I went to the doorway, peered in quietly. Adam was sitting on the edge of the bed, his head cradled between his hands - a defeated gesture I'd witnessed often - and he was crying openly. My first instinct was to run to him, comfort him, but I restrained myself, watching as he cursed, "Why, why...shit why can't I feel love like I pretend, dammit!" I felt weak, dizzy; he'd only been pretending? Bracing against the door, I couldn't pull myself away, watched as he started pacing angrily, shaking almost with rage. His face was twisted, red and flushed with emotional anguish; he flopped back on the bed, exhausted by his outburst. I knew then, at that moment, he didn't love me, not really. It was his sense of honor, his sense of moral obligation for our child...that was why he'd married me and that only! I couldn't face him, so I slipped away, hurried back through the hotel, out onto the crowded streets, losing myself among the outrageous, irreverent people in the city. What would I do? Could I live with him, knowing he was incapable of love, or ever getting over his dead wife and son? I hadn't helped Adam heal; I'd only burdened him with my emotions, my craving for him, captured him by pregnancy. I was deeply ashamed, felt humiliated by what I'd done! I ran blindly, not seeing those around me, not caring where I went... It was near ten, and I kept going, rounding corners, walking fast, oblivious to my direction... I didn't even realize I'd gotten to Bourbon Street, until a slick-haired man, his face pencil-thin, beady vulture-eyes riveted on me, asked harshly, "Lady, wanna see a sex-show?" I was taken aback, looked at his face, smelling his foul breath as he stood close to me. My voice quavered, "No... I mean, I..." The night throbbed with steamy vulgarity. People swayed from liquor, their eyes glazed with lust from being in proximity to strippers, raunchy, suggestive music, sexual appetites unleashed on the street... "I'm sorry, I must have gotten turned around," I said, edging away from the sleazy man barking strip shows outside a tawdry joint. Just then I felt a hard grip on my shoulders from behind, and when I started to turn, a jab of something sharp in my lower back. "Do like I say lady, and you won't get hurt, hear?" I felt myself propelled backwards, backwards and being forced into a dark, smelly, dirty alleyway. I was afraid if I screamed he would kill me, so I went along fearfully with my unknown assailant... Epilogue I was brutally raped that night. I lost the baby, and I very nearly lost my life - in some ways, I did lose my life. It's been several months now, a cold, damp January day outside my window here at Cypress, a mental insitution. I sit here, staring vacantly. I should talk to the counselor, instead of writing this down - but I can't speak, haven't since the rape. Adam comes to see me, and he still has death haunting his eyes, as I do now. We just look at each other, him begging me to talk, move, touch him or in any way communicate I am alive. But you see, I'm dead in my soul, my heart stone-cold and I can't give him that false hope. My parents, seeming to have aged a decade, come and visit too. They have this tiny spark in them still, the hope of me recovering. They, you see, have been untouched by violence and can't conceive of it at all, no matter how they try to understand. Just like me with Adam. I thought, oh I thought I understood Adam's grief, his pain, his emptiness and could help him cope. What a fool I was...what a selfish, conceited fool I was! I no more understood his loss than a blind person can understand light! Now...yes now I do understand. I know all too well the rage that gnaws like a vulture at your gut. I know the shock, disbelief and then the overwhelming emptiness that obliterates your feelings forever, a black hand smothering you unto death with grief and loss. I was raped, stabbed repeatedly and if a passerby hadn't come to my rescue in that alleway, I'd have died. The authorities, of course, never found the man who attacked me. It doesn't matter anymore, not really. You see, I'm already dead, lost to the world anyhow. I can't feel love again, not like before, not even when Adam comes here, when he cries, when he says that we might overcome this together. But his eyes betray him, still bleak and spiritless. No. It won't happen, because like so many in today's society, I've become a statistic, one of the walking wounded. But my scar is deeper, darker than most because it has robbed me of dignity, my body violated by rape, my very being repulsed by any man's touch - ruined and ravaged, lost to this confinement where I'll never speak, never feel again... I'm dead, just not buried yet. --The End--