Facets. Part 24

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"I can't trust you."

His eyes drilled her. "It was the wine, Pam. We both had too much."

"I had too much. You planned it that way."

"No. I was enjoying myself. I had more than I should have, and then when I saw you lying like that on the bed-"

"Don't," she interrupted, cringing. "Don't say it. It's sick."



At the last word, his jaw clenched. "There could be an argument made," he said slowly, "as to which one of us is sick. You've been leading me on ever since I mentioned this trip. You've been playing up to me-"

"I have not!"

"-looking sweet and s.e.xy. You may be seventeen, but you acted like twenty-five tonight. The way you were writhing when I was trying to get you ready for bed was indecent. Is there a problem that I don't know about, Pam?"

She was aghast. "I don't have any problem. You're the one-"

"Your mother was like that. She came on to me too."

"You lie!" Pam cried.

"No. She was a hungry b.i.t.c.h."

"Don't say that."

"Ask her, if you don't believe me."

Pam's stomach was churning, pus.h.i.+ng her anger up and out. "I can't ask her and you know it! She's too fragile. And anyway, it's not true. It's one more thing your sick mind has dreamed up." Her voice shook. "You're the one with the problem, John. You've always had a problem, but this time you've gone too far. I'm not forgetting what happened tonight. What you tried was disgusting. It was immoral and illegal. It was sick. As soon as I get back to Boston, I'm going to report you-"

"To who?" he asked, but he didn't look particularly upset, which made her madder.

"To the police. To Bob Grossman. To my guidance counselor."

"I don't think so."

"Why not?" she asked indignantly.

"Because given your age and the mental instability on your mother's side, they'll never believe you. They'll think you're a hysterical young girl, las.h.i.+ng out at the brother who is trying to keep you on track. They'll think you need psychiatric help. You'll be taken for a fool."

Pam swallowed hard and shook her head. "They'll listen to me."

"But you haven't got any proof, Pam. There are no bruises on your body. And you're still a virgin."

"How do you know that?"

"Precisely." He gave a silky smile. "I don't know for sure, but a doctor will. If you've given it away, we'll know that it wasn't to me. But I'll want to know who you did give it to, so I'll go to your school. I'll question your friends and their parents. I'll make a lot of noise about my 'wronged' sister. Mmmm, I'll relish playing the role of the injured brother. It would add a nice twist to the image."

"You're sick," Pam whispered, but despair was creeping up on her fast. She was a virgin, of course, so John's threat was empty. By virtue of the same fact, though, no one would believe what he'd tried to do. He was right: she didn't have any proof. And much as she wanted to think differently, his credibility was greater than hers. People would believe what he said.

She was back to square one, without any idea of what to do. The problem was temporarily alleviated when all that had been churning in her stomach came up. She ran to the bathroom in time to be violently sick and stayed there until John appeared at the door.

"Go to bed, Pam," he said in a coldly familiar voice. "And don't worry. I won't touch you. You're pretty unappealing this way."

By the time she mustered the strength to turn her head, he had disappeared into his own room and shut the door.

Chapter 14.

PAM BARELY SLEPT THAT NIGHT. Although she bolted her door, she didn't trust that John wouldn't find a way in. And even apart from that fear was the memory of what he'd done. No sooner did she doze off than the image of his hand on her flesh jolted her awake. She was alternately nauseated, shaky, and tearful. By the time she boarded the plane for Boston the next morning, she felt as though she'd been through the wringer. Back in the townhouse, she was pale and wan and had little to say about the trip.

After watching her silently suffer through a kitchen dinner she barely touched, Marcy finally spoke up. "What happened down there?"

Pam's eyes shot to hers. "Down where?"

"In Palm Beach."

Pam shrugged and looked away. "It was a disappointing trip. That's all."

But Marcy's voice held quiet conviction. "It was more than that." She was still for a long minute. "He touched you."

Pam didn't take the time to wonder how she knew. Her head came up again along with a quick denial. "He didn't do anything."

"But he tried." Marcy was still for another long minute, then her voice rose in remorse. "I should'a known. I should'a warned you."

"He didn't do anything."

"B'cause you fought him off."

Pam shrank into herself.

For one who rarely did anything with great speed, Marcy was surprisingly fast into the chair beside her. "Talk about it, Pammy. You can't keep it inside."

"It's ugly."

"The good Lord knows I've seen ugly before. Jarvis taught me all I had to know about that."

Pam's eyes widened. "He hit you, but he didn't-"

"He tried. More'n once. That was another reason your daddy wanted me out of there."

"Oh, Marcy," Pam whispered, feeling sick, "I didn't know."

"There was no need for you to know then. But you know now, so you know I know what you're feeling." She took her hand. "Tell me."

Needing to confide in someone, Pam did. At the end, she said pleadingly, "Did I ask for it? I went out of my way to be nice because it felt so good to be a family. He was pleased, so I was pleased. Did I go too far? Did I lead him on?"

"No."

"I didn't mean to."

"You didn't lead him on!"

"He's my brother. I'd never do something like that with my own brother. I've never done it with anyone." But she wanted to. She wanted to do it with Cutter, and each time she was with him she felt the pull more. Now she couldn't even tell him about John. He'd be livid. "What am I going to do, Marcy? I can't sleep. I can't eat. I feel sick."

Marcy stroked her hand. "When is he coming back?"

"I don't know. We didn't talk this morning. He just handed me my ticket and looked at me like I was dirt."

"He's trying to make you feel to blame for what happened, but you're not, Pammy. He is. There's something wrong with that man."

His words kept crowding her mind. "He said I was like my mother. He said she came on to him, too. Did you ever see her do that?"

"I never saw anything," Marcy said immediately.

"When I threatened to tell what he did, he said no one would believe me, and he's right. I don't have any proof. But I can't stay here anymore, Marcy. I can't live in the same house with him." She had been agonizing over the problem for hours. "I'd move up to Timiny Cove and live there, but he'd never allow it."

"You should be here with your friends at school."

Pam wanted that. She had two more months to go in her junior year, then her whole senior year. It wasn't the time to transfer. "I'll have to board. The dean will let me do it if there's s.p.a.ce." When Marcy looked stricken, she hurried on. "I don't want to. I'll miss you. If there were any other solution, I'd take it, but there isn't one. John would never let me live in an apartment. I can't just move in with a friend and her family without explanations, and I can't make the explanations."

"The school will ask."

"I'll say I want to try out dorm living before I go to college."

"Will John fight you?"

Pam had asked herself that more than once, and each time she felt stymied. "I can't prove what he did. He didn't get far enough-"

"Thank the good Lord."

"And it only happened once. If I make noise about it, he can say I'm mentally unbalanced." She raised her chin a notch. "But if I make noise, he'll feel it. People will wonder. It'll embarra.s.s all of us, but if John gives me trouble, so help me, I'll do it. He makes a big thing of his image. If he wants to protect it, he'll let me move into the dorm."

John returned two days later. By then, Pam had spoken with the school, found a place in the dorm, and made arrangements to move in at the end of spring break, given John's approval. He gave it, but not without a parting shot. "The same rules apply," he sneered. "Honor roll, or else."

For a brief minute, Pam considered countering with a threat of her own. She ached to call his bluff. But she couldn't. Marcy's well-being was at stake, as was the house in Timiny Cove. Tarnis.h.i.+ng John's image was nothing compared to the loss of either of those.

The days that followed were long and tense. John seemed to take pleasure being around her, eyeing her in his scornful way, knowing that his presence was a threat. She couldn't move into the dorm until the Sunday night before cla.s.ses resumed. Meanwhile, she was stuck at home.

She spent a good deal of time trying to persuade Marcy to look for another job. "Daddy hired you for me as much as for the house. If I won't be here, what's the point of your staying? You could be doing the same work for someone far more reasonable than John."

"He pays me well, Pam. I couldn't match that somewhere else."

"Would it be so terrible to take less money?"

"I need it."

"For your mother?"

Marcy nodded. "Things are real bad between her and Jarvis. I give her everything I can."

Judging from what she saw, Pam believed that. Marcy lived simply. She bought few clothes, cut her own hair, and most often spent her days off babysitting for the three-year-old son of the housekeeper who worked around the corner. "I could help."

Marcy shook her head. "You don't have extra money."

"I do too. I don't need all I have."

"I won't take your money!"

"Then let me make some calls. Someone must need help-either my friends' parents or one of my mother's old friends. Maybe the pay wouldn't be so bad."

"But the freedom wouldn't be the same. I get up to Timiny Cove one or two times a month to tend to the house. John pays me, but I get to go home, too, and he lets me use the car. He even helps out with the medical bills at my ma's. I can't afford to quit, Pammy."

That was pretty much what John had told Pam, and it angered her. Cutter was right: John bought people; he gave them what they badly needed, then held the threat of withdrawal over their heads. She wanted only the best for Marcy, but the day when she could guarantee it herself was a long way off.

Everything good seemed a long way off. Pam brooded on that during the nighttime hours when she lay awake with her eyes on the bedroom door. She felt constrained and defenseless. If she were older, she'd be safe. She'd have money to use at her own discretion. She'd come and go at will. She'd be free of John.

If she were older, she'd have Cutter. She would be in a position to offer him a place in the company, and he'd do well. He was too smart not to. He could wear a tie and jacket as well as the next man.

She thought about that a lot. She pictured him dressed up, driving a sports car, pouring scotch into a gla.s.s in the waterfront apartment he might have if he was working in Boston. She pictured him approaching her, looking urbane and s.e.xy-but the image was superimposed by one of him in his cabin in Timiny Cove, wearing nothing but jeans, his hair rumpled, his jaw shadowed. Urbanity couldn't improve on his s.e.x appeal, she decided. Thoughts of him just as she'd always known him made her feel restless and achy inside.

Still, she resisted going to Maine. Being with Cutter, wanting him badly but knowing that he wouldn't even kiss her, was agony. So she stayed home during that first weekend after her return from Palm Beach, and kept busy getting ready to move into the dorm. By the second weekend, though, she had done everything there was to do, and she was on edge. She was tense from the minute John walked in the door to the minute he left, and she hadn't once slept the night through.

So, early Sat.u.r.day morning she left for Timiny Cove. Cutter was out when she reached his place. She pictured him buying food or browsing for books or getting a haircut. In a way, she was glad to be alone. She was dead tired.

Climbing into his bed, she pulled the sheets and blankets up to her neck and, wrapped in his scent, was asleep in minutes.

For a time, her sleep was deep and dreamless. Then, as had happened every night since Palm Beach, the nightmare of John's a.s.sault brought her awake with a cry. It was a minute before she realized that she wasn't in Boston, another before she realized that the man whose arms flanked her shaking body wasn't John.

"Cutter," she whispered. Sitting up, she threw her arms around his neck and held on tight. "G.o.d, I was dreaming awful things."

He hugged her close, ran a soothing hand over her back. Slowly she stopped trembling, but still she clung to him. For the first time in days, she felt secure.

"It's been so long," he said, voicing her thoughts in a low, gritty tone. His arms tightened around her.

"Three weeks."

"I missed you."

"Me too."

His mouth brushed her forehead, nudging her face away from his neck. "You were sleeping soundly. You look tired."

She nodded and closed her eyes against his chin. Seconds later, she nestled closer. If she'd been able to dig her way inside him and curl up there, she would have.

Facets. Part 24

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Facets. Part 24 summary

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