Tab Bennett and the Inbetween (22 page)

 

“Thanks. It means a lot to me.”

 

 “Do you need anything?”

 

“No. Thanks. George is taking care of me...and I’m fine. I will be fine.”

 

She wished me a speedy recovery and told me again that I should call her if there was anything she could do.

 

“I’m such a liar,” I said as I flipped my phone closed.

 

George laughed, “Such a bad liar. You might as well have told her. She’ll probably guess anyway.”

 

Personally, I found it extremely unlikely that she would.

 

 

 
Chapter Fourteen
 

 

 

 

 

George and I were both on edge. I had a lot on my mind and I knew from the flashes I got direct from George’s head that he was equally preoccupied by his own thoughts, which were mostly the bleak, worried kind.

 

“Stop reading my mind,” George said.

 

I pointed to the magazine in my lap. “I’m not. I’m reading.”

 

He looked me accusingly. “Then why haven’t you turned the page in the last fifteen minutes?”

 

I turned the page, ripping it a little in my haste. “There. Happy now?”

 

He threw himself back down on the sofa, muttering something under his breath as he whipped through the channels.

 

“It doesn’t work like that anyway. I can’t just flip into your thoughts and start looking around whenever I want. Things just come to me. I don’t go looking for them.” As I spoke he turned the television’s volume way up. “Like I want to read your stupid mind anyway,” I yelled in conclusion.

 

He said “I’m going to take a nap,” but he was thinking
maybe if I pretend to sleep she’ll leave me alone.

 

“You want me to leave you alone? Fine. I’ll leave you alone.” I threw the magazine at him and stormed out of the sitting room. “Now you’re alone.”

 

 “I told you to stop reading my mind,” he yelled after me. “And don’t you dare go outside.”

 

Without meaning to, George had uncovered the reason I didn’t tell my family and my small but devoted team of fiancés about the whole minding reading thing the minute it started happening. I didn’t want everyone I knew to feel uncomfortable and worried around me, always on their guard, always wondering what private things I might be pulling from their brains. Everyone has their secrets, you know? And everyone wants to keep it that way.

 

I went to Alex’s room, moving restlessly from bed to chair to desk before I decided to take a shower, hoping it would help me relax a little. And it did; some of the tension slipped away along with the suds. I was rinsing the shampoo out of my hair and wondering what I would make for dinner when I heard the bathroom door open.

 

For just a second I felt terrible for George. He was going to find me that way, naked and dead in the shower – and after bickering with me too. It would be awful. Francis would never forgive him.

 

“George?” I called tentatively.

 

“No, it’s me.” My pulse sped at the sound of Alex’s voice, the enchantment buzzing to life. “I’ve come home to you.”

 

I took a deep breath and I peeked out from behind the shower curtain.

 

“Hi.”

 

“Shall I join you? I could wash your back.” He smiled, his deep blue eyes full of fire but whether it was from lust or the fever he obviously had, I really can’t say.

 

“Yeah, I seriously doubt that. You look awful.” Aside from two scarlet stripes flushing his cheeks, his face was pale. His skin looked clammy. “Go sit down, I’ll be right out.”

 

Without opening the curtain, I reached out and grabbed my towel. I squeezed the water out of my hair and stepped out in the steamy bathroom. He was still standing there. Only he looked a little weaker.

 

 “I can’t carry you to the bed. If you fall I’m going to leave you there until morning.”

 

He ignored me. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything as beautiful as you.”

 

I snorted. “I think you might be delirious.”

 

He swayed on his feet as I pushed him gently towards the bed. “I’m completely lucid. And you are beautiful but stubborn. Just say thank you. Didn’t Bennett teach you how to take a compliment?” He stumbled a few times on the way over but we made it to the bed in one piece. He dropped down onto the mattress with a thud.

 

“I can’t believe they sent you here like this,” I mumbled as I pulled on some panties and a t-shirt.

 

“The healer said I was fine to travel but I think I may have pulled something during transport.”

 

He didn’t seem fine to me. I felt his forehead; he was burning up. The heavy wool sweater and jeans he was wearing weren’t doing him any favors. I had to get him out of his clothes.

 

“Listen to me. We have to get you undressed. Are you listening? Your fever is very high and I think being all bundled up is making it worse. Can you help me? Just lift up your arms,” I said.

 

He stared at me blankly for a minute and then he laughed. “Are you going to undress me?”

 

“Arms up.” I was determined to keep it businesslike. To ignore that I was, in fact, undressing him. It wasn’t easy to ignore. I felt tingly the moment I touched him. I didn’t know how I would feel once he was naked. Imaging made me blush.

 

“Lift your arms,” I said impatiently. He lifted them in the air and I pulled the gray sweater and the t-shirt he had on under it up over his head. I pulled his socks and shoes off too, throwing them behind me.

 

“I’ve thought about you undressing me a lot and this is not what I pictured when I thought about you undressing me.” His words slurred together and he leaned back a little, bracing himself against the mattress.

 

“Join the club,” I muttered as I tried not to think about him thinking about me undressing him.

 

Seeing him, even in that state, after a long break, made the enchantment more intense. It felt like the first day I met him, the desire to touch him, to be touched by him was that sharp. Sadly—or maybe luckily—he was three percent weaker than a kitten.

 

“I’ll be right back,” I told him as I went to the bathroom in search of aspirin for his fever and something I could use to clean the wound on his side. It looked like the bandage would need to be replaced too.

 

“I thought I’d be able to return the favor, at the very least,” he called from the bed. “But I can’t even unbutton my own pants, let alone yours.”

 

“Don’t talk,” I said, kneeling down at the edge of the bed. I handed him two aspirin and a glass of water that he drank gratefully. “I have to change your bandage. I’m sorry if it hurts.”

 

I removed it as gently as I could but we both winced when it came off. The partially healed wound on his side was long and red and angry looking. I leaned over, touching him with my fingertips. He jerked away.

 

“It looks infected.” And gross, but I didn’t mention that.

 

“It looks worse than it feels,” he said, collapsing back onto the bed.

 

“For your sake I hope you’re telling the truth.” I cleaned the cut with peroxide, dabbing at it carefully, then I covered it with Neosporin just to be on the safe side.

 

Alex yawned as I rebandaged his side. “Francis is very bossy,” he said. “That ingrate told me I was slowing them down. And I was like; excuse me for getting stabbed while attempting to save the kingdom, so sorry to slow you down.” That sounded more like me than him. It made me laugh.

 

As soon as I was done he pulled the covers over himself and rolled carefully onto his good side. I sat beside him, running my fingers through his hair.

 

“Tab?”

 

“Yes?”

 

“Thanks for coming for me.”

 

I pictured him lying in that beautiful field. Dying there. Even though I knew he was safe, it still made sick to think about it. I managed a squeaky, “No problem.”

 

“I really didn’t want to die without seeing you completely naked and I would have if you didn’t come.” He sighed happily. “Tab?”

 

I couldn’t take much more. I was either going to cry or jump on top of him. He was in no state to handle either. I needed a minute away from him to clear my head. “I’m going to get George. He needs to know you’re here. Maybe he can help.”

 

“You already helped. I’m good as new.” He reached out and grabbed my hand.

 

“I think maybe George should have a look anyway. I’ll be right back.”

 

“Please don’t leave me.” He sounded pitiful and sick, like a scared little boy. I sat down on the edge of the bed just as he shot up, wincing at the pull to his side. He put his hands on my shoulders. He looked at me, his eyes unfocused and hazy. The butterflies in my stomach were on red alert. “George is doing a shit job of protecting you.”

 

The unexpected curse made me laugh. It sounded all wrong coming from his beautiful mouth. I wanted to kiss him. I put my hand on his shoulder and gently nudged him back down to the bed. “Don’t be silly. I’m alive aren’t I?”

 

He looked confused. “But I got in the house. I came up to your room and surprised you in the shower. If I wanted to kill you, you’d be dead now and George hasn’t even come in to check on you. There will be repercussions for his lack of care.” Funny how he could go from sounding like sick little boy to an annoyed king in just a couple of sentences.

 

“Calm down, now. George has done an excellent job and I don’t want to hear otherwise. You know, his room is right over there, on the other side of the bathroom. I’ll bet he heard you and me talking when you came in and decided to give us some privacy. He’s rooting for you, you know? He keeps telling me to forget Robbin and fall in love with you.”

 

“That’s a good idea,” he purred. “Are you going to take his advice?”

 

“Maybe. Now please, lie down. You need to rest.”

 

He rested his hand against my cheek and smiled at me, all sleepy and rumpled and delicious. “Will you lie down with me?” Even sick and a little delirious, he was so damned appealing. I should have resisted; a smarter woman would have. But I never claimed to be smart. I climbed in next to him, let him spoon up against me and wrap his arm around my waist. Once we were settled together there was a sigh of contentment, but I honestly can’t say if it came from him or me.

 

“That’s better,” he said.

 

And he was right, it was better. An ache I wasn’t aware I’d been feeling suddenly went away. The feeling of peace and contentment that I experienced in my vision of him, before I realized he was bleeding out that is, came and settled around us.

 

“I feel that feeling you feel right now too. It’s our Homecoming. It means we belong together.” He yawned, already half asleep. “And it’s just us, just you and me without a magical assist. You can’t enchant a Homecoming. It either is or is not.”

 

“Don’t push your luck,” I said even though I was wondering what it would be like if I gave in to the enchantment and let it make me love him. It would be easier than fighting it all the time. And we would be happy. Eventually I would forget that it wasn’t my idea to be with him; I would forget Robbin too, the enchantment would see to that.

 

“Did I thank you for saving my life?” His voice was as soft as velvet.

 

“I’m pretty sure you did.” He inched closer to me and buried his face in my hair.

 

“Thank you again,” he said; his warm breath tickling my ear. “Did I say how much I really want to have sex with you before I die?”

 

“You mentioned that. Close your eyes now. It’s very late.”

 

In the next second he was snoring lightly in my ear. I tried to get up but every time I moved away from him, he’d whimper and reach for me. Then he’d snuggle closer. I didn’t have the heart to leave him. I didn’t want to.

 

He slept fitfully, mumbling and calling for me and for Robbin throughout the night. I didn’t understand most of what he said but our names were crystal clear. I would have given anything to know what he was dreaming about but Alex’s fevered brain kept me out and I didn’t know how to force my way in.

 

What’s the use of reading minds if you can’t do it all the time? I’ll tell you, no use at all. 

 

His fever was high; I could feel it in the heat coming off his body. He needed a doctor but it wasn’t like I could just call the family physician and have him come over to inspect what was clearly a sword-sized slice in my sleep over guest. Francis should have taken care of this in the Inbetween. I’d make George go get someone who could help.

Other books

ColorMeBad by Olivia Waite
Requiem by Jamie McGuire
Caribou Crossing by Susan Fox
Caught Up by Amir Abrams
ARC: The Buried Life by Carrie Patel
The Death Trust by David Rollins
Face/Mask by Boutros, Gabriel