A Glimpse of the Dream (24 page)

Read A Glimpse of the Dream Online

Authors: L. A. Fiore

“He helps you with playing chess and you’re okay with that? No barking at Mr. Clancy on how you don’t need his help? No, of course not, you save that for me. You went through hell and kept me at a distance, but did it ever even occur to you that I was in hell too? You had everyone here—the whole damn town—to help you through it. You left me broken and alone. You claim you don’t want this life for me, and yet you have no idea how bad the life you forced on me was. If not for Simon, I don’t think I’d be standing here right now.”

Pain washed over Kane’s face. Wiping at my eyes, bitterness fueled my next words. “I’d offer to help you home, but I don’t want to be mistaken again for a dog. You were my lap dog once, remember? It shouldn’t still hurt after all this time, and yet it does.” I started back up the stairs. “We got any of those bottles from the other night, Simon?”

I didn’t look back at Kane, but I knew he was still in the same spot looking in the direction he had last heard me. And in that moment I really just didn’t care what he was thinking.

“If I ever do this again, kill me. Just take a spoon and scoop out my brain.”

My head was in the toilet. I’d made it to my room before the entire contents of my stomach decided to rise up my throat.

“I’m not going to scoop out your aching brain, but I am going to so enjoy rubbing this in your face. I got video of you dancing. YouTube, baby.”

“Maybe it will help sales at the store.”

“Well, with the grace you exhibited sliding down the banister and landing quite soundly on your ass, I’m thinking no.” Simon stopped gently stroking my back. “Are you okay? That was pretty intense down there.”

“I honestly don’t know. I know he’s pushing me away because he’s afraid, but I really don’t want to hurt anymore. I’m so tired of hurting.” And then my stomach roiled. I was going to either vomit or turn myself completely inside out. And just taking a moment to visualize that—gross.

Long fingers threaded through my hair, holding it gently from my face, but they weren’t Simon’s fingers. Kane caressed my back as I dry heaved. He didn’t want my help, but he was willing to offer his own. What was that all about? I opened my mouth to ask that very question, but before I could speak, Kane asked, “Water?”

“Where’s Simon?”

“Went down to get you some aspirin.”

“Maybe the timing is wrong, but you need to tell me. If you really don’t want me here, I need to know. I thought you were going to try, but you aren’t trying, so are we really over?”

“It’s not that simple.”

“Explain it.”

“I want you here, Tea, want that so bad at times it nearly chokes me. I’m trying. You were right when you said I’ve been hiding. I have. It was easier to isolate myself, partly because I couldn’t find my way anywhere else, but also because being seen as Kane the Blind Man, rather than as just Kane, is hard.

“I want a life with you, and I know that to do that I need to step out of the shadows. Yet sometimes it’s just too easy to fall back on what’s familiar, to push away rather than pull close. And with all that being said, you have a home in Boston, a business, friends. How can I ask you to give all that up for me?”

“Who says I have to give them up?”

“I can barely make my way around here, finding my way in Boston . . . I’m not there yet and may never be.”

That hurt, but I moved past it. “There are options. It is possible to have your cake and eat it too. I’m willing to investigate those options. Simon is as well. If we’re on board to find a compromise than you need to be too. Maybe we are different, Kane, but I know it doesn’t matter, because you are the one for me. Your hesitation is really only yours.”

His head lowered so I couldn’t see his face. I knew he did it on purpose, but I couldn’t say why.

“Why won’t you let me help you?” I asked. “You will have to answer that question eventually.” His face lifted to mine. I didn’t have a clue what he was thinking.

And then my stomach pitched and the conversation was over.

Later, after copious amounts of water, I slid into bed. Simon had offered to stay with me, but it was late and he had done enough. My thoughts turned to Kane. I really had no idea what was going on in his head, but whatever it was, he really seemed to be struggling with what he seemed to want and what he thought he could have. I knew what I wanted. I wanted Kane. I was willing to fight for him, for us, and, at the same time, if he wasn’t willing to fight for me, I was prepared to let him go. And just the thought of that was devastating.

I was just slipping into sleep, when I felt my bed dip. At first I thought it was Simon, ignoring my suggestion that he sleep in his own room for the much deserved rest he had earned from babysitting me, but as soon as I felt the body pressed up against mine I knew it was Kane. His arm wrapped around my stomach and pulled me closer, the familiarity of the movement making my throat tighten. It had been far too long. “Love you, Tea,” he whispered in my ear.

For that night, it was all that mattered.

Waking in the morning, only I was in my bed. Perhaps Kane had never been there. Maybe I just imagined him in my drunken stupor. My head pounded, my stomach ached, and . . . so did my ass?

Climbing from bed, I didn’t bother dressing. I spotted Simon first as I entered the kitchen—sitting at the table stuffing his face with waffles. He greeted me with a big, stupid grin.

“Hey, sunshine. How you feeling?”

I wanted those waffles. I flicked him off.

“Rough night?” Mrs. T asked, but since she and Simon had become BFFs, I was certain she had had a play-by-play of my adventures.

“Not my best morning.”

“Can I get you something to eat?”

“Please. Bacon and sausage and fried eggs and a bucket, since I’ll probably not hold that down long.”

“Delightful,” she muttered as she started for the fridge.

It was my turn to smile. “That’s me, a real charmer.”

“How’s your ass?”

Narrowing my eyes at Simon, I asked, “Why did you ask me that?”

“You don’t remember your graceful slide down the banister last night?”

“I really did that?”

“Yep.”

“Well, that explains the pain in my ass. It’s not just you this time.”

“Cute.” Simon stuffed half a waffle in his mouth and chewed it with his mouth open, for my benefit.

“I’ll hurl on you,” I warned.

“I’m like a cat, you’ll never hit me.”

“Was Kane there last night?”

Mellowing, Simon said, “Yeah.”

“I thought he was a hallucination brought on by too many tequila shots.” And yet feeling as shitty as I did, a lightness filled me as I remembered our conversation. Kane was trying, was willing to try for us, and that was a step in the right direction.

At that moment, Mr. Sleazy walked into the kitchen. The sight of him at the house so early annoyed me, so much that I didn’t check myself and asked, “What the hell are you doing here?”

To say he was surprised at the hostility rolling off me was fair. “I’m working.”

“What exactly are you doing that requires you to be in the house as often as you are? Correct me if I’m wrong, but you are only updating an existing document, yes? You aren’t writing Mrs. Marks’s life story, or the sequel to
War and Peace
, so why are you here? Specifically, why are you here now at”—glancing at the clock, I saw it was only seven thirty in the morning—“this hour?”

His feathers were definitely ruffled. Guess he wasn’t used to being questioned. “I was given full access to the house.”

“For what purpose?”

“As I mentioned, I’m working on something else for Mrs. Marks, and I shouldn’t be saying this since it’s privileged, but she wants everything cataloged.”

“Why?”

“To sell.”

The clatter of the spoon against the floor was a good indication that the news came as much of a surprise to Mrs. T as it did me.

“She wants to sell her things?”

“Everything, including the house.”

“Really? And when did you discuss this?”

“Before her heart attack.”

“And was anyone else around when you discussed this?”

“Teagan, stop,” Simon interrupted. “She’s not feeling very well this morning. Please excuse her.”

Mr. Sleazy lifted his nose in the air, like a bad smell had just offended him. I knew I was the bad smell, but I didn’t care. He turned on his heel and left. My focus shifted to Simon.

“Why did you do that?”

“Confronting him isn’t the best way to handle the situation.”

“Meaning?”

“If he’s working something shady, give him enough rope to hang himself.”

Resting my head on my hand, I just stared at my friend. “You’re like Kojak.”

He flashed me his pearly whites. “Seriously, I’ll look into him, into his credentials. We’ll watch him. Mr. Clancy already is. If he’s up to something, he won’t get away with it.”

At that moment, Mrs. T placed my breakfast in front of me. “Sorry I didn’t help you with making it,” I said.

“You can help when you aren’t hungover.”

“Deal.”

And then I dug into my breakfast. As I suspected, I threw it all up a half an hour later.

Simon and I climbed from the boat on Kane’s island two days after my bender. He was looking back from where we came.

“You used to swim from there to here?”

Remembering the countless hours Kane had taken to teach me to swim brought a smile. “Yeah.”

“Impressive.”

Studying the house, I wondered who kept the place for Kane. Right as I thought that, the front door opened and out walked Mrs. T, which prompted me to ask, “Hi, Mrs. T. You tend to his house?”

“I buy his groceries when I’m in town if he hasn’t yet and work the gardens. The boxes and that garden near the door are lovely.”

“Thanks.”

“Kane does quite a bit on his own, but there are just some jobs that I can do so much faster and this way he’s free to pursue other things more exciting than cleaning toilets.”

It felt as if her last comment was a verbal hand slap, but I still asked, “Other things?”

“Yeah. He’s there now, the boatyard. Go see.”

A half an hour later, my heart swelled with joy to see Kane working on a beautiful boat, his fingers sure as he moved slowly up and down, sanding the long strip of teak. He was building his boat; even blind, he was building his boat. He hadn’t lost that dream.

Other books

A Greater Evil by Natasha Cooper
A Fine and Private Place by Ellery Queen
Hardening by Jamieson Wolf
There Be Dragons by Graham, Heather
Regret by Elana Johnson
Now Is the Hour by Tom Spanbauer
Crimson Vengeance by Wohl, Sheri Lewis
The Farewell Symphony by Edmund White