Fall (The Ragnarok Prophesies) (19 page)

BOOK: Fall (The Ragnarok Prophesies)
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Fenrir looked on with pride as Dace picked up a chain and clasped it around his own neck.

When I woke screaming from those nightmares, Dace didn’t come to comfort me. I heard him pacing outside my door every time, but he never once crossed the threshold. He never once asked me not to go, either.

Every time he looked at me and then turned away without speaking, the chasm between us grew. It kept growing, wider and wider, until I was no longer sure we could ever bridge it. And still, I hesitated to go, praying Dace would change his mind and try to stop me. I kept praying until, finally, I could take no more.

I sat in Dr. Guerin’s office on the third day, shivering in my paper gown. Dace and my Dad sat on metal chairs, both of them staring off into the distance, lost in their own thoughts and waking nightmares.

“Miss Jacobs,” Dr. Guerin said, sweeping into the sterile exam room with my chart in hand. His lab coat flapped about him like in one of those hospital dramas playing on repeat on
TNT
. He was nowhere near as good looking as Dr. McSexy, or whatever the gossip magazines called the young doctors on those shows. Dr. Guerin was pushing seventy and had the bushiest eyebrows I’d ever seen. He was also rail thin and about four inches shorter than me.

“Morning,” I mumbled, shifting this way and that on the exam table. The thin paper crinkled beneath me, but I couldn’t find a warm spot.

“Alex, Dace,” he said, nodding to my dad and Dace without looking in their direction. He scanned my chart before setting it on the edge of the sink to rub his hands together briskly.

I didn’t bother telling him that wouldn’t help. No matter how much friction he got going between his palms, they still felt ice cold when he lifted my gown to examine my now healed wounds. It wasn’t his fault though.

If love was flame, fear was ice.

Dace and my Dad both murmured their greetings.

“How are you feeling, Ari?” Dr. Guerin asked. He motioned for me to lie back on the table.

I eased myself down, wincing when my back came in contact with the cold metal through the thin paper sheet beneath me. “A lot better,” I said.

“Any pain?”

“Not really.”

He gave a nod, pushing gently on my abdomen, prodding at the jagged scars where Hati sank his teeth into my flesh, and poking at the places where the surgery team stitched me back together beneath fluorescent lights and Dr. Guerin’s own watchful eyes.

Dace and my dad both looked away. Even though the scars appeared months old now, neither of them could face them yet.

“Any tenderness?”

“A little.”

“Headaches?”

“I’m still having them,” I admitted. Sometimes, my head hurt so badly I wanted to claw my eyes out. I didn’t tell anyone that, though. I lied to them, told them it wasn’t bad. So often, I lied to keep Dace from knowing how bad things really were. I knew it didn’t really work, that he felt everything, but I lied anyway. That hurt, too.

Dr. Guerin nodded again, and pulled my gown back down. “Any continued muscle weakness?” he asked, grabbing my chart to jot notes.

“Sometimes,” I said.

“Is it any better?”

“Yeah. It’s a little better.” My legs cooperated more and more often, but I still felt weak. I still felt powerless. More and more, I began to understand why Dace gave in to the hatred he felt. Hatred was powerful, and, when you were terrified, haunted, and hunted by monsters larger than life, even corrosive power was better than no power at all.

“She’s fallen three times this week,” Dace said softly.

I didn’t know he kept count. He hadn’t told me.

Dr. Guerin stopped jotting and glanced up at me, one bushy brow arched.

“Three times,” I said, sitting back up on the bed and clutching the paper sheet around me.

“And how many last week?” he asked.

I looked to Dace.

“Six,” he said without looking up from the tiles at his feet.

Dr. Guerin nodded again. “Any bruising or tearing around your incisions from your falls? Any pain?”

“Nope.”

He arched that brow once more, surprise in his wise eyes. “None?”

“I trip more than fall,” I explained.

“Oh?”

“Dace catches her,” Dad said, shifting forward in his chair.

“Every time?” Dr. Guerin looked at Dace.

He still didn’t look at me when he answered. “Always.”

I wanted to cry all over again.

No matter how wide the chasm between us grew, when I stumbled, Dace caught me, every time. He was so complicated, so confusing, and so beautiful, my heart hurt.

Dad smiled at me weakly when Dace rose to his feet and crossed to the window, his back to us. Dad didn’t know what was going on, but he wasn’t blind. He knew things were different between us. Everyone did, though no one seemed willing to ask what happened. I wouldn’t have had an answer even if they did. I felt like a fraud, handing out fake smiles and false platitudes while my insides became brittle and began to crack and break.

In the course of days, my entire life became a lie, and it was killing me slowly.

I desperately wanted to take back our argument, and tell Dace I didn’t mean it. But I couldn’t. No matter how much his silence hurt, I refused to be the girl who backed down because she couldn’t deal with the alternative. The one too cowardly to stand up for what was right simply because it hurt. And no matter how much it hurt for Dace to agree to let me go, I
was
right.

I think Dace knew it too, even if he couldn’t, or wouldn’t, admit it.

“Well then.” Dr. Guerin shook his head, obviously not sure how to respond.

I wanted to welcome him to the club.

“You’re healing exceptionally well,” he said, glancing down at my chart again. “Your wounds look good, and your incisions have healed nicely. Let’s give things a few more days and see how it goes. If the falls or headaches continue, or get worse, we’ll get you in for another CT and talk about more physical therapy, but, for now, everything looks good physically. How’s that sound to you, Ari?”

“Fine with me.” I did not want to do more physical therapy unless there was no way around it. There weren’t enough hours in the day for me to waste even one with therapy, no matter if it helped or not.

“Good.” He looked up from my chart for a minute. “Emotionally, how do you feel?”

“Um…” The question caught me off guard, and I didn’t know how to respond. I wasn’t about to tell him the truth though, that the only thing holding me together was a hope and a prayer and those were both fading fast.

“Are you sleeping?” he prompted.

“Yeah.” Not so much.

“Nightmares?”

“Every night,” Dace whispered before I could lie.

“Ari?”

“Every night,” I muttered.

Dr. Guerin’s pen scratched across the paper in my file. “Any anxiety? Difficulty concentrating? Intrusive, upsetting memories or detachment from the people in your life?”

Dace shifted in his chair, his emotions pricking at me even with those damn walls in place.

Dr. Guerin ran down the list of questions that led to a shrink and little cups of pills if the answers weren’t satisfactory. I shook my head in response to each question. I was anxious. I did have painful memories. But not anything like Dr. Guerin was looking for. I didn’t need a shrink. I needed Dace.

I was no longer sure I had him though.

“Any thoughts of suicide or loss of interest in normal activities?”

“No.”

“Have you remembered anything from your attack?”

“Bits and pieces, but not much.”

Dr. Guerin nodded as if he expected the answer. “Well, I don’t think you’re suffering from any serious post-traumatic stress.”

I could have told him that.

“You did, however, experience a pretty severe trauma. It’s natural for your psyche to take some time to process that. As your memory of the trauma returns, you may begin to experience anxiety, flashbacks, and even depression. That’s not uncommon in animal attack cases like yours. If the nightmares continue, or the effects are bothersome or get worse, I’d like to get you in to talk to a trauma counselor.” He slid a brochure out of my file and handed it to Dad. “This is a list of signs and symptoms of post-traumatic stress to look for. If she begins to experience any of these, it’s crucial you call me immediately so we can get her in to talk to someone.”

Were all men hardwired to talk about women as if they weren’t in the room?

“Of course,” Dad said, glancing down at the brochure in his hands. The grim expression on his face made me feel guilty. He hated telling lies as much as I did, but, like me, he’d tell a thousand more if it kept anyone from looking too deeply. I think his concerns were a little more standard than mine, though. He didn’t want me sold to science or hunted down as some mutant monster.

Me? I just didn’t want anyone else to get hurt. I wanted the people around me to go on living their lives in complete oblivion of the clock counting down in the background, unaware the end of the world loomed over their heads. Unaware a giant wolf lived chained to a rock beneath their feet, ready to unleash hell upon the world. If Dace and I couldn’t live in happy oblivion, at least the people around us could.

“I’ll let you get dressed,” Dr. Guerin said. “I’d like to see you back in a month unless you have any concerns before then, okay?”

“Okay. Thanks, Dr. Guerin.”

He patted me on the hand, a grandfatherly smile on his face. “I wish half my patients had your recovery time.”

I gave him a tight smile.

Dad and Dace turned, exiting the room behind him so I could dress. I sat where I was for a minute, staring at the poster on the far wall. It advertised some kind of surgical procedure I knew nothing about and had that generic image of a man and his intestines printed on it, with an oversimplified explanation of what the procedure entailed.

Would a doctor approach saving someone’s soul the same way he would surgery? If Dr. Guerin was in my shoes, if he had to find a way to save Dace’s life, what would he do?

I dressed slowly as I mulled the question.

When surgeons had a chill that wouldn’t go away, a new sense of urgency brushing up their spines… what did they do?

They operated, before they lost the patient.

Is that what I was doing wrong then? Stalling? Waiting for some other option to appear on the horizon when there wasn’t one? No matter how much Dace rejected my nightmare vision of him, hatred and fear pushed him a little closer to that ledge every day. As much as I couldn’t accept that nightmare, he couldn’t accept that saving me no matter the cost wasn’t right.

How could it be wrong to risk your life to save someone you love?

Because we weren’t normal, that’s why. Because we were broken, and we couldn’t duct tape ourselves back together, hold hands, and then skip off into the sunset like normal couples when destiny had other things in store for us. We were fading, and I was so determined our bond would be enough to save us regardless of how broken we were that I deluded myself.

Dace would never back down.

Wanting something badly enough didn’t make it happen, and people didn’t get to slay dragons and live happily ever after when they were broken. I was so stupid for believing that about Dace and me when nothing about any of this was that easy.

Did I really expect reality to change just because I wanted it to?

I spent hours poring over Norse mythology, and very few of those myths ended happily ever after. Why did I expect Dace and me to be the exception to that rule?

We weren’t the exception. How could we be when all we did was hurt one another?

Sometimes, no matter how much you wished things could be different, they couldn’t.

Maybe we were cursed after all.

Dace and I didn’t talk on the drive home, and I stopped hoping he’d open his mouth and say something, say anything, to me. He didn’t. There was nothing left to say anyway. He’d already made his choice… and it wasn’t me.

The first exit sign for Beebe appeared in the distance.

“You guys hungry?” Dad asked.

I shook my head. The thought of food made me want to vomit.

“Dace?”

“No.”

Dad caught my gaze in the rearview mirror and gave me a tight smile.

I tried to smile back, but couldn’t. I moved my gaze along instead, choosing to stare out the window as we exited the freeway. The snow had melted over the last few days, leaving the town a sodden, dirty mess. I always forgot that part of snowfall. When it was over, and the blanket of soft white disappeared again, the world looked dirtier, as if reality stained everything below in stark, vivid detail. Tree branches and grass drooped and withered. The slush remaining in spots alongside the roadways, in driveways, parking lots, and yards were uninviting black and brown lumps.

The world was tainted.

Don’t go alone.

Dace’s voice in my head when there’d been nothing but silence for two agonizing days shattered me. I bit the inside of my cheek hard to keep from sobbing.

I know
…. He sighed.
I know this is my fault. I pushed you into this, and I won’t ask you to stay now. I won’t put you in that position. Just, please, don’t go alone.

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