Harkham's Case (Harkam's #1) (11 page)

BOOK: Harkham's Case (Harkam's #1)
12.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Teenage boys—well, not you, obviously—but most of them only tell girls what they have to, so they can have sex with them. Since I don’t do that, they either try harder and lie more, or they avoid me. I prefer the latter. But with you, I know that’s not your intention so I don’t have to worry you’ve got a hidden agenda.” She turned up the music a little.

Did this mean she was done talking about it? Or was he boring her?

“You listen to me.” He waited for a response, but none came. “I don’t understand you.”

“You shouldn’t try. It’s a waste of time. And you have too many other things you should spend your time on.” She turned her head and looked at him with so much clarity his breathing stopped. “Someone as talented as you is meant for great things. I can’t wait to see your potential unlocked. And I’ll be the first to say I knew you when you first came to Phoenix.”

“Can you tell me where you live? I only need the address,” he said, unsure of how to respond to all the things she said. Some emotion was overwhelming him, swelling in his chest and manifesting itself in his eyes. She believed in him and thought he was talented. But what was he good at, other than counting stuff?

“Can you tell me what you want to do when you graduate?”

“I . . . I can do that, if you tell me where to drive.” Numbers. They were back. He was tense. This whole conversation was so new to him.

He kicked off his shoes really fast.

“Make yourself comfortable,” she said, chuckling while looking at his feet.

“Sorry. If I can count on my toes while you’re talking to me, it’ll be better.”

“You can do both at the same time? I’m impressed. I can barely cook and listen to music at the same time.” She chuckled. “I burn rice every single time, so salads have become a better way to go . . .”

“They have those—”

“I know, I know . . . Don’t ask. It’s a sensitive topic in my house.”

His face dropped, and his hands were clammy. “I want to make sure to say the right things in your house so I’m welcome there.”

She grinned. “If you avoid the topic of food, you’ll be fine.”

“What if I get hungry? Can I ask for something to eat? Or what if I get thirsty?” He squeezed the steering wheel and fisted back and forth, making the wheel creak a little.

“What is rule number one?”

“I can do any damn thing I want at your house.” He wrinkled his nose. This didn’t make sense. He could do whatever he wished, yet he couldn’t talk about food? So far, the majority of what he had talked to her about in the past was soda and donuts and how much he craved them. Didn’t that fall under the category of food? She never told him to stop before or made any faces when he did that.

What was he supposed to do now?

He pressed his lips together to keep from saying something dopey.

“Yes! Exactly. Open the fridge, find something to munch on. I don’t care.” She settled her hands on her thighs, and it was really distracting. Did she have to put her hands
there
? His eyes really wanted to stay there, but he needed to watch the road. She sighed, then said, “Might as well make yourself at home. Every other man that comes into the house does.”

“Mari, I need your hand.”
Before I stop driving so I can stare at your thighs for the next hour . . .

She offered it without a word.

He squeezed it, and in that moment, he was able to let go of the numbers he had shoved into his toes and ignore the bulge in his pants that liked her thighs and breasts quite a bit. Almost as much as his brain did, because it liked to show him random images of them throughout the day when he least expected it.

“Thank you for your hand.” He released a breath, and his back relaxed into his seat.

“Thank you for listening. You’re not the only one that no one listens to.”

Maybe it was because they were distracted by her beautiful body, too.

“If I ever stop listening to you, it’ll be because I’ve contracted a disease that takes away my hearing. I promise.” He gave her a look that said he was serious.

“Same goes for me, only . . .” She scratched her chin with her free hand.

“Only what?” His hand tightened on hers. She wouldn’t try to take it away, would she? That would be the worst torment ever.

“Only, when I stop listening sometimes, it means that I care too much, and the person has hurt me. It’s like my brain just shuts down or something.” She blinked but stared straight ahead out the window with a blank look on her face.

Was she seeing numbers right now? That’s how he was told he looked when he went into a number trance.

“Mari, that’s a good thing. It means you love that person. If someone can hurt you, it’s not because you’re letting them. That’s a lie when people say that, because I don’t let people hurt me, but it happens all the time. It happens because I fall in love with them or I give them some of my heart as a friend.” His chest echoed with those past pains, but when she looked at him with a sadness in her eyes, it doubled in intensity.

“Good point. And exactly my problem.” She sighed, and her shoulders moved down about an inch when she was done doing it. “I don’t want to love anyone anymore, because I’m sick of hurting. I’m done with that.”

“No, you’re not.” He wanted to tell his brain to shut up, but he simply couldn’t.

“Yes, I am.” She blinked and stared at him the way she had a moment ago out the front windshield.

“No. You’re
not
. You’re here with me, and I can tell you care. So I can hurt you.” He dropped his head to peer closely into her eyes. “If that’s wrong, then I don’t want to be right. For the first time.”

She didn’t answer. Her hand shook in his.

“And you don’t have to worry with me, because there’s no way I’m going to hurt you. I couldn’t do that. My insides would kill me with a thousand numbers if I did that.”

Her eyes flashed with understanding for a moment. “Doesn’t matter anyway.” She sort of shrugged, but it looked more like she wanted to roll out of the seat.

“Why? Did I already hurt you?” His heart lurched toward her and stole his breath away. “I didn’t mean to.”

“No, no. That’s not what I meant.” Her voice was filled with a smile, but her face was nothing but somber.

“Then what? Tell me. I have to know, because I like you. I’m your friend. Someday you’ll be my girlfriend, so I need to know more about you and how you think.”

She pushed herself with her legs so she was sitting upright. After clearing her throat, she said, “Adam . . . We’re never going to date. I’m not the dating type. I’ve done things.
Bad
things. And I won’t mix you up in my life. It would be the worst thing you could do.”

“Well, I’m the eraser of bad things for you. It’s my secret power. When you hold my hand, you erase my numbers. When I hold yours—I erase your bad things and your past. All you can do when you’re with me is think of me.” His hands tingled with truth. He knew this was what they did for each other.

No one told him this. He didn’t learn it in a book. He learned it in his heart. Well, and her eyes told him.

“Adam, I . . .” She dropped her gaze to their hands.

“I’ll protect you from all those bad things. My numbers—that’s their new job now. To be guardians of you. You’ll see. Those bad things will be like smoke—burned away by my touch.” He took a deep breath, and his heart was so warm, he wondered if
it
was smoking.

“The way you talk is like a Shakespearean dream sometimes. I keep thinking I’m going to wake up as a fairy or something.” Her eyes glistened with unshed tears.

“Maybe you will. That would be good for you. Then you could be with real green grass and real blue water. And we could enjoy it together. I could be the man that walks you to the places you want to go.” He smiled at her.

She beamed back. “Thanks, hon, but I doubt you could do that for me. No one can.”

“Of course not.” He blew out. “Not yet anyway.”

“Why is that?” She wiggled into her seat. Was she snuggling into it so she could be ready for whatever he might want to say?

“Because we have to kiss again first. Then you’ll know . . .”

She held her breath for a second and went a little stiff. “Know what?”

“Why I get so sore, and why you want to help me with it. Then I can help you with everything else, and you’ll want me to.” He grinned so big, his ears lifted.

Wasn’t that kind of fairy-like?

Yes, definitely. He would find that magical place for her—and soon.

She needed the real green and real blue, and the real man that went along with it—
him
.

Chapter 6

 

Adam was less confused now—probably because he had a few safe topics he could discuss at length.

Shakespearean dreams, grass, water, kisses and how they were supposed to help each other.

All of it was good.

And so was his driving. He found her house easily. It wasn’t hard once her house numbers were clear in his head. He pulled into the driveway and followed her instructions implicitly of where to park, how to leave the car, and where to wait while she checked something inside first.

He heard her hollering for her mom, and then she came out a few minutes later.

“C’mon. It’s empty.” She waved him in.

He ran. It was amazing he was able to avoid knocking her over when he flew through the door.

Her house smelled like heaven. There were earthy notes in the air. A little patchouli and cedar maybe? It was nice.

“Go anywhere you want. I’m gonna go put my stuff away and change, then I’m gonna get something to eat,” she told him.

She left the room. Ordinarily that would send him into a tornado of numbers, but Mari told him exactly where she’d be and what she was doing. There were plans, and even though he was ignorant of where her room was, the house was small enough he was certain he could find it with ease.

Adam opened her fridge, hoping to find soda. Nope. A bunch of bottled waters, some leftovers, condiments, lots of fresh produce in the crispers, but nothing with sugar in it. Not even any juice.

There was, however, some jelly, so he managed to put together a peanut butter and jelly.

Kid food. Oh well. He was eating
here
, not at home—Mari would never tease him about that.

He almost swallowed it whole before she joined him.

“Good for you. I’m glad you found something you like,” she said as she stepped around him.

He looked her up and down slowly. She was wearing another tank top, some loose cotton shorts and her hair was slung back in a ponytail.

Soreness? Throbbing pains!

Uhhh . . . How was he going to keep this hidden if she sat by him on the couch?

Was there a blanket on her furniture he could borrow?

He took the last few remnants of his food, grabbed a bottled water while she was in the fridge assembling something for herself and raced to the couch before she saw.

Once on the cushions, he decided to lay on the couch on his stomach. The last of his sandwich was crammed in his mouth.

“I hope you don’t mind sci-fi, because I usually watch something like
Doctor Who
or
Torchwood
when I get home if my mom’s not here. She hates those shows, so I have to do it when she’s gone.” Mari picked up his legs with one hand, sat down and set them on her lap.

The movement and friction made him sorer than ever. But it was fine—it was hidden.

Her couch was upholstered in really soft suede. He ran his hand back and forth over it, creating fun patterns and enjoying the texture.

She turned on the TV and then the DVD player with a big remote.


Torchwood
it is,” she mumbled. Her mouth was full of an orange slice.

The episode took all of his concentration, relieving his soreness. There was a man named Captain Jack being covered with concrete. He screamed as this happened to him, but Mari seemed unconcerned as it played out.

She was engrossed in the show almost as much as he was. It was harder to focus now because she was done eating, and her hands drew lazy circles on the backs of his calves and ankles.

The soreness returned in moments, and his gut was so tight he could feel bile backed up in his throat. His legs were covered in flashes of warmth from the heat of her hands, followed by icy goose bumps prickling his skin.

This was definitely the best day of his life. Nobody ever touched him down there or this much. He wanted to make her promise to touch him like this every day.

Instead, he kept his eyes glued to the TV.

A big construction machine was hauling a large slab of concrete on the show. Seconds later, the slab was dropped over the side of a huge cliff. Adam realized that man, Captain Jack, had been encased in the concrete. He gasped when it exploded on impact.

Some of Captain Jack’s friends who were trying to free him jumped into a car and raced down to the bottom of the cliff. Captain Jack inhaled with a scary high squeal and then was breathing.

Other books

Sin noticias de Gurb by Eduardo Mendoza
The Girl and the Genie by Lilly, E. M.
A Tale of Two Pretties by Lisi Harrison
Safe Passage by Loreth Anne White
Apocalypse Island by Hall, Mark Edward
The Official Essex Sisters Companion Guide by Jody Gayle with Eloisa James
The Music Lesson by Katharine Weber
Deon Meyer by Dead Before Dying (html)
We Are Called to Rise by Laura McBride
Three Rings and a Rose by Mia Ashlinn