The Cure for Dreaming (18 page)

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Authors: Cat Winters

BOOK: The Cure for Dreaming
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“I think . . .” He scratched the back of his neck, repositioned himself in his chair, took a swig of beer, and hesitated far too long. “I think volatile subjects are best avoided in fine dining establishments, Olivia. Let me call over a waiter and order you a nice meal, and then we'll talk about a lighter subject more suitable for a sweet little thing like you.”

“But—”

“Waiter.” He waved over a short server with large ears, who was just darting back to the kitchen. “We're ready to order.”

The waiter scuttled over to our sides and asked what we wanted.

Before I could open my mouth, Percy told the fellow, “The young lady and I will have the salmon and a salad and a loaf of fresh bread, and could you cook the fish a little more than you normally would? So that the ends are charred and crunchy.”

“Could mine be cooked the regular way?” I asked the waiter.

“Oh, you'll like it my way, Olivia.” Percy handed the fellow our menus. “It's the only way to eat it.”

“I don't even like salmon all that much . . .”

But the waiter was gone; my opinion hung in the air,
unacknowledged, while Percy dove into a story about his travels.

“Did I tell you we spend our summers down at the beach in California?”

“Yes.” I cleared my throat. “You said so when you told me about Nanette.”

“I'm a crackerjack swimmer, I've discovered. I've swum nearly a mile off the coast and never once tired from the waves smacking me around.”

Percy yammered on, and my heart shriveled into a disappointed little prune. I didn't have to witness his true feelings by seeing any dangerous curved teeth or predatory gleam in his eyes.

I heard it in his voice, clear as church bells—and I'd probably even heard it and ignored it on Halloween night.

Percy thought me inferior.

y the light of a streetlamp outside the restaurant, I found two tickets to Henry's Saturday matinee show stuffed inside the thumb of my glove. On the back of one of the tickets was scrawled a smudged note, yet I could still make out the message:

Come to the side door of the theater after the show if you're able. I want you to meet Genevieve.

I heard approaching hooves and looked up to find Percy driving his black buggy around the bend from the side street
where he'd parked it. I crammed the tickets into the far reaches of the glove and slid the white leather over my hand, scraping my thumb on a rough edge.

Percy brought the buggy to a stop along the curb next to me and hopped out to the sidewalk. “You're blushing again. It seems you're always blushing.”

I shrugged. “I'm just warm.”

“It's freezing out here.”

“The food warmed me up.”

“Or the company, perhaps.” He smiled and took my hand to help me into the seat above, but I didn't respond, which I'm sure made me seem like an unfeeling lump of stone.

The ride home started off uneventfully, and the message in my glove kept me from paying attention to our route. In fact, I didn't actually notice our surroundings until Percy directed the horse and buggy down the South Park Blocks, where wide expanses of moonlit grass separated the east and west sides of the street.

Strange, vaporous wisps of air rose off the damp park ground and drifted into the trees like steam rising from a pot—or spirits escaping graves. I'd seen such mist before; the effect wasn't one of my illusions, just a mixture of atmospheric warmth and cold and moisture. The sight unsettled me, though. Between the ghostly fog and Mandolin's footfalls across the soundless neighborhood, I felt like Ichabod Crane venturing through the depths of Sleepy Hollow upon the back of trusty Gunpowder.

“Why are you taking this route?” I asked, staring at the empty path that lay ahead.

“To stretch out the time and make it seem as if we didn't desert Sadie's party.” Percy stole a glance at me. “I'm keeping you out of trouble, my pet.”

“Oh. Thank you.” I toyed with the little pieces of paper wedged beside my thumb. “But I'd prefer not to be called your pet, if you don't mind. It makes me feel like a cocker spaniel.”

Percy didn't answer.

We came upon the corner of Park and Main, and he gave Mandolin's reins a firm pull. “Whoa, boy.”

I stiffened. “Why are you slowing down?”

“Whoa, Mandolin.”

The buggy came to a swaying stop alongside the rising mist. Cold air sliced across my cheeks. My shriveled prune of a heart pounded back to life with throbbing intensity.

“Why did you stop?” I asked. “We're still three blocks away.”

Percy shifted his knees toward me, the upper half of his face masked by shadows, his eyes a knife slash of yellow. “Olivia . . .” His arm slid behind me, across the back of the leather seat. “I really want to kiss you.” He leaned in close, and his sour Eiderling Beer breath flooded my nose.

“I . . . um”—I inched away—“I don't . . .”

“There's no need to be so nervous.” He cupped my cheek with one soft-gloved hand. “I'll be gentle.”

“I don't—”

“Do you want to play
Dracula
?” He lifted an eyebrow. “Would that make it more fun?”

My mouth went dry; I shook my head. “No! H-h-how do you mean?”

“I know you're a good little thing, but you have to admit”—his left hand found the crook of my waist, below my coat—“a girl who's read
Dracula
as many times as you have must be aching for the touch of a pair of lips against her neck.” With that, he nestled his ice block of a cheek against my face. His breath tickled its way inside my ear. “Do you want to see what it feels like if I place my mouth against your bare skin? Do you want to be my”—he kissed my earlobe— “Mina?”

I closed my eyes and found my thoughts racing back to the Percy Acklen who had waved me down in the theater lobby with the lights glinting off his cuff links. I remembered those green-brown eyes and the mischief on his lips and the way we'd commiserated about our fathers before darting through the rain to my house.

“I d-d-d . . .” My teeth chattered. “I don't want to be with someone who thinks I'm inferior to him.”

“I don't think that.” His breath cooled the upper regions of my neck, below my ear.

“I don't even like salmon very much, but you never even asked me what I wanted before you ordered for me.”

“Olivia . . .” He slid his bottom lip across an inch of my throat—not a kiss, per se, but a tease that gave me unpleasant
shivers. “You're making too much of everything. Just have some fun. Play with me. Close your eyes and play.”

“I don't—”

“Just play.” He licked my neck, which almost made me laugh, if it weren't also kind of awful, but then he cupped his full mouth—wet and soft and warmer than the rest of him—around my neck and sank his teeth against my flesh. Blood rushed through my veins until I seemed to be made of nothing but blood and a pounding pulse—racing, anxious, beating, beating, beating blood he would taste if his teeth bit down any harder. His hand shifted to my posterior and gave a firm squeeze—
his grabby hands! Just as Frannie said!
Every part of him pressed down on me. His mouth, his fingers, his chest. I couldn't breathe.

I pushed him away, and his head smacked the buggy's overhang.

“Ouch!” He rubbed the top of his skull. “What did you do that for?”

“Did you ever grab my friend Frannie's backside?”

“What? Who the hell is Frannie?”

“Frannie Harrison. She goes to our school.”

“Jesus, Olivia.” He lunged toward me again. “Just close your eyes and let me kiss you. You owe me for what happened in class.”

“But . . .” I gasped. “You said . . .”

He grabbed the back of my neck and squished his mouth
against mine. His lips were sloppy and wet, and the beer taste was so obnoxious, I gagged on the fumes.

“All is well!” I pushed him off, and his head clunked the buggy a second time.

His visage changed—oh, God, how it changed. His eyes sank into the blackened recesses of a gaunt and anemic face. His canines lengthened into the grotesque tusks of a wild boar.

“Why do you keep saying that all is well?” he asked, and his mouth seeped my blood.

“Oh, God!” I snatched his scarf from his shoulders and jumped off the buggy.

“Hey! Where are you going? And why'd you take my scarf?”

“I'm saving both our hides, you idiot.” I wrapped the yarn around my bare neck and fled down the street. “My father will see your tooth marks if I don't wear your rotten scarf.”

I heard the snap of reins behind me and the galloping rhythm of Mandolin taking off after me with the rattling buggy. I cut through side yards, even though the shortcut meant soaking my shoes and skirts with mud. My pulse hammered in my ears. My breathing turned ragged, but I pushed onward across the rain-soaked grass and dirt.

Percy was already parking the buggy by the time I sprinted up my own brick path. Our house's tall front windows stared me down—gawking eyes observing my frenzied arrival in the dark. I turned the doorknob but found it locked.

“No, no, no. You can't be locked. You can't be locked!”

I twisted the knob and banged on the door. My struggle to get inside allowed Percy to hustle up beside me mere seconds before my father swung open the door.

Father widened his eyes at my sweaty hair and muddied shoes. “What happened?”

“She fell out of the buggy,” said my escort, who looked like Percy again.

“She fell out?”

I gasped. “All is—”

“She leaned over too far, trying to look at something”— Percy took my arm as if I were an invalid—“and tumbled into the grass. She muddied her dress, but I don't think she's hurt, sir. Naturally, I'll let you, a physician of sorts, make the final diagnosis.”

I moved to enter the house, but Father blocked my entrance with his arms.

He nodded toward my neck. “The scarf, Olivia.”

A wave of nausea rolled through me. “I—I—I beg your pardon?”

“Isn't that young Mr. Acklen's scarf you're wearing?” he asked.

“Y-y-yes.”

“Shouldn't you be returning it to him before he leaves?”

I glanced back at Percy, who had gone pale again, although in a frightened way—an
I'm about to get dissected by dental tools
sort of way—with quivering lips and watery eyes.

“Um . . .” He stammered, “Well . . . th-th-there's no need for her to return it to me right now. She got cold out here and should keep warming up. I don't want her catching her death of pneumonia.”

“Oh. Thank you.” Father dropped his arms from the doorway. “How very thoughtful.”

I leapt inside the house. “Good night.”

Father shut the door, but before he could ask details about Sadie's party, I launched myself up the staircase, closed myself in my room, and unwound Percy's scarf until the crimson wool lay in a coiled heap upon the floor. With my head tipped to the right, I approached my oval mirror.

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