Coming into Focus
Part 1
He could feel the
tube being pushed, firmly and steadily, down his throat and his tongue fought
to keep the foreign object away. Perspiration ran down the sides of his face
and a hand clutched firmly at his chin, holding his lower jaw open. His lips
were dry from the exertions and each breath came painfully from his open mouth.
Swinging his head frantically from side to side, he struggled to get away from
the hands that were holding him down and the other hands that were trying to
force the plastic past his palate and down into his oesophagus, rough edges
scraping at the inside of his mouth. Suddenly the second pair of hands pulled
the tube away and he felt fingers come into hard contact with his cheek,
forcing his head sharply off to the right. As he opened his mouth to gasp at
the pain, the hands took the opportunity to force the tube down further than it
had gone before. He gagged, but it didn’t help. The small prick on the back of
his hand went almost unnoticed but he slowly and gradually felt a warm and
slightly sickening sensation begin to sweep over his body. The limited view he
had had began to dim and blur and, for a moment, he fought against the strong
anaesthetic. It was to no avail. His consciousness was swept away.
Jarod’s hands
clutched feverishly at his throat as his eyes flew open and he stared at the
ceiling, gasping for breath. For several moments he lay, panting, on top of the
blankets, before slowly pulling himself into an upright position. Looking
around, he could see that his bags were still in the corner of the room where
he had placed them the night before as he had entered and thrown himself onto
the bed in exhaustion. He hadn’t slept in almost six days, struggling to
complete a pretend that had, for some reason, been more work that usual. His
weariness had almost caused him to drive off the road and into a tree but he
had forced himself to keep going until he had reached the hotel and made his
way into the room. Lying on the bed, it had swept over him and that dream had
come…
In his mind, he
could still feel it: the strength, superior to his own, that held him in place
as they forced the tube down his throat. He felt the bile rise in the back of
his throat as the feelings rushed in on him again and he barely made it to the
bathroom door before he began to retch, his empty stomach twisting painfully
inside him as he gagged. Slowly, painfully, he sank to the floor in front of
the ceramic bowl, his mouth now so dry that the first attempt at swallowing was
agony. Reaching up to the sink, he leaned against it to pull himself to his
feet and dampened a cloth that he wiped against his mouth before sponging his face
with it, enjoying the trail of cool moisture that it left behind. Turning, he
pressed his back to the wall, the leather of his jacket creating sufficient
friction to prevent him from sliding back down to the floor. Using what little
strength he could muster, Jarod pushed himself off the tiles and staggered over
to the bed, dropping limply down onto it. Gradually, his arms hardly moving, he
managed to slip out of the jacket and left it lying on the floor in front of
him.
Slowly, very
slowly, the weariness began ebbing back. He struggled against it, not wanting
to return to the agonising dream in the way that he knew he would inevitably
have to. For several long minutes, he sat there, his eyes fixed to a point on
the floor until, to ease the burning sensation that he could feel behind his
eyelids, he allowed them to slip closed. Feeling himself sway, he used an arm
to keep his body upright, forcing his eyes open once again. Numbly he noticed
that his head had dropped forward and he was looking no longer at the carpet
but now down at his legs. Once more his eyelids slipped shut and, gradually,
the arm holding him up began to buckle at the elbow. Unwilling to yield, he
fought again, trying to convince himself to get up and walk around, but the
temptation to sleep was too great. He could almost have believed, as he finally
gave in, that gentle hands supported his head down onto the pillow, but he was
asleep before he could look around.
He awoke to find
himself in a small, dark room that he instantly recognised. His throat seemed
as if it were on fire and he lifted his head from the pillow on which he lay,
sitting up only to sway as he swung his feet over the edge of the bed. He
allowed his tongue to run over his lips, trying to moisten the dry skin.
Sliding forward, he put weight first on one foot and then on the other,
eventually making the effort and standing, one hand outstretched to use the
wall as a means of support. He swayed again and felt his knees slowly begin to
buckle. Before he could sit back down on the bed, he found himself lying on the
floor and, with a sigh, he allowed his eyes to slip closed once again. The door
opened but he had no strength to see who had come in. Hands lifted him back up
onto the bed and placed his head on the pillow. The blanket that had been
covering him before he threw it aside was now replaced. The prick in the back
of his hand was repeated, but this time he didn’t bother to fight, yielding
quickly to the sedative.
Jarod's eyes
flickered open and he stared up at the ceiling once more, his gaze taking in
each crack and cobweb without consciously registering in his mind that they
were there. Slowly he raised himself on his elbows and looked around the room.
Almost nothing was different from the previous time except for himself and the
way he felt. Reaching out with one hand, he took his jacket from where it lay
on the chair that sat beside the bed and pulled his phone out of the inner
pocket. His fingers still trembled as he brought up the pre-programmed number
and connected the call.
“This is…”
“When was I
force-fed?”
“Jarod? What are
you talking about?”
“You know,
Sydney.”
Some of the
strength came back into his voice as he got up off the bed and slowly began to
pace the length of the room.
“Jarod, I don’t know
what you mean. You were never…”
“I was.”
The voice was
soft but Sydney, sitting in his chair behind his desk, could detect the pain in
the tones.
“That never
happened, I promise you. I wouldn’t have allowed it.”
“It did, Sydney.
It must have. I remember…”
Suddenly there
came a stabbing pain in Jarod's stomach – an agony that made him drop the phone
and double over with a cry, falling to his knees. He gasped once before passing
out, lying face down on the floor.
“Jarod? Jarod,
answer me! Jarod!”
The voice rang
thinly from the device that lay on the carpet, the unconscious man lying next
to it, his fingers only inches from the handset. Soft footsteps came across the
floor and knelt down, picking up the phone.
“All right,
Sydney,” a female voice soothed. “He’s safe now.”
Before the
frantic psychiatrist could respond, the call was disconnected.
~*~*~
“You still don’t
remember me?”
“No.”
The woman
sitting on the chair smiled grimly as she watched the pale-faced figure who lay
on the bed, his eyes closed and chest rising and falling irregularly. “You
should, Sydney. Even though you only saw me once, I would have thought that
that was often enough. He will remember.”
“Jarod?”
“Of course.”
“Is he…?”
“He’s still
unconscious, for the moment. He’ll be coming around soon, though.”
“How do you…?”
She slipped
forward in the chair. “You really don’t remember, do you?” Her tone contained a
hint of incredulity. “He nearly died and yet you blocked it all out.”
There was a
pause.
“I didn’t want
to remember.”
“But you do
now.”
“Yes.” It was
little more than a whisper.
“Good.” She sat
back in her seat, satisfied. “That’s fortunate because he’s going to need you.”
“Rebecca,” he
paused, working out what he wanted to say, “how did you know?”
She laughed
softly and hung up.
Sitting there,
she watched him sleep. The pain had diminished and his time of unconsciousness
had been brief, replaced immediately with a period of very deep sleep.
Occasionally he moaned, tossing his head from side to side on the pillow and,
when this happened, an expression of sympathy would appear on her face. Once
she went into the bathroom, dampened the cloth on the sink and, returning,
gently washed his hot face with it. After getting him up onto the bed, she had
removed his shoes and loosened his belt. Other than that, however, she left him
alone. Most of the time she simply sat and watched him, her mind travelling
back through the years to the time when, briefly, they had met. She wondered if
he really would remember her. She, of course, had never forgotten him. She had
had no chance. How could she?
~*~*~
Jarod felt the
soft, cool material on his face before he was properly awake and moaned softly as
he felt it passing his lips. Gently it was lifted away from his face and he
opened his eyes to the darkened room. Several drops were squeezed onto his lips
and he gratefully swallowed, trying to discern shapes in the dark. He felt a
hand on the side of his face and, reaching up, caught it clumsily. A white
shape appeared in his blurred vision and slowly came closer, revealing itself
to be a woman with long, blond hair.
“All right,
Jarod. You’re safe now. I’m here.”
His lips moved,
but no sound came from them. The face smiled and looked away for a moment. He
tried to move, but a stab of pain shot through him and he arched his back,
trying to escape from it. A second pale form appeared on his other side; this
one was familiar, a firm, warm hand covering his.
“It’s okay,
Jarod.”
“S…” His lips
shaped the letter but no sound came. The first figure nodded.
“Yes, Jarod.
It’s Sydney. But he’s not here to hurt you. We want to help.”
“Jarod, I’m
going to give you something for the pain.”
The prick on the
back of his hand was reminiscent of his dreams but he had no strength or desire
to recall them. Still feeling the comforting hand on his cheek, he relaxed with
a grateful sigh.
Rebecca looked
up at the psychiatrist with a small smile. “Good timing.”
“Fortunately.”
Sydney recapped the needle.
“He would only
have passed out again. He was close to it when you appeared in the doorway.”
She slid off the bed and returned to the chair, looking up at him and examining
his features. “You haven’t changed.”
“You have.” He
snapped his bag shut and took the seat opposite her. “I wouldn’t have known you
at all…”
“…if you hadn’t
heard my voice. Face it Sydney, you couldn’t forget that. At least, not one
particular phrase of it.”
“No,” he admitted,
slowly looking over to the bed. “That I could never forget.”
“And yet,” her
lips twitched in amusement, “you didn’t recognise me at first. What would your
brother say?”
“Thirty-six
years is a long time, Rebecca,” Sydney reminded her. “Even he…”
“He would have
remembered.” She nodded to herself. “And Jarod will, too. He’s slowly
remembering what happened that day. It’s only a matter of time before he
remembers me too.”
“You haven’t
lost your abilities, then.”
“They’ve been
enhanced. You know that.” She looked at him. “If they weren’t, how would I have
known where to come?”
He nodded,
acknowledging the truth of her statement. “When did you get here?”
”Yesterday,
about an hour before he did.”
“And?”
She stood up and
began to pace the room. “What do you mean, ‘and’? And nothing. I didn’t let him
know that I was here until he collapsed.”
“Why didn’t you
do something before that?” Sydney stared at her. “He could have suffered
permanent damage!”
”No. That
wouldn’t have happened.” She stepped over to the bed and looked down at the
man, his flushed cheeks and deep, regular breathing softening her hard
expression. “He’s only reliving the agony, not the cause of it. For that reason
he couldn’t suffer anything apart from what he has now – fever and pain.”
“And you
wouldn’t have done anything about that earlier?”
“And have the
events of that day haunt his dreams for the rest of his life?” Knowing that her
argument was unanswerable, she turned away and walked over to the window,
slipping between the closed curtains to step out onto the darkness of the
balcony.
The pain was the
worst. It had gnawed away at him all day, making him feel sick to his stomach
and forcing him to send his meals away uneaten. He hadn’t felt scared for a long
time but now he was. A book that Sydney had loaned him about sickness for a
simulation had mentioned feelings like what he had, but he was scared of the
idea of an operation and didn’t want to have one. That was why he wasn’t going
to tell anybody about this and he tried to hide his pain from the cameras. In
bed, he was unable to find a cool spot on the pillow to rest his hot head and,
turning his face to the wall, he allowed several tears to slip down his cheeks.
A sharper stab made him arch backwards, as if he could throw off the pain, but
that only made it worse and he hid a moan in his pillow. He was slipping in and
out of sleep when the door of his room opened and the lights were turned on.
Voices and faces came into his confused and feverish mind as from a great
distance, but he was really aware of only one thing – a gentle, small hand on
his cheek as the pain began to fade away.
Rebecca slipped
back into the room, the open curtain briefly allowing light into the room
before it once again became dark. Walking over, she switched on a small lamp
that stood on a table on the far side of the room and looked around. As she had
expected, Jarod still slept on one bed and Sydney was now lying on the other.
It was, she thought as she walked over and sat on the edge of Jarod's bed, only
going to be a few more seconds…
Jarod turned
onto his side and curled up with a soft moan, his hands clutching at his
stomach. The pain was stabbing at him again and he couldn’t get away from it,
no matter what he did. The cool hand on his face distracted him for a moment
but, as he opened his eyes, the world appeared to waver in front of him and he
closed them again.
“Jarod.”
The voice was
softly spoken in his ear and, forcing his eyes open once more, he tried to
focus on her face.
“It’s all right,
Jarod. Relax.”
“It hurts…” The
voice was the whimper of a very small boy and he clutched at the hand she
slipped into his.
“I know, Jarod,”
she soothed. “Just try to relax and it will go away.”
“I…I can’t…”
“You can,
Jarod.” She smiled. “Focus on my voice. Can you remember it?”
With an effort,
he shook his head. “I’ve…never seen…”
“You have,
Jarod.” To keep him focused on her, she constantly repeated his name and kept
her sentences short. “You’ve seen me once before. You heard my voice then, too,
Jarod. Try to remember.”
“No…”
“Yes, Jarod.”
She leaned in closer, her hair almost touching his face as it fell over her
shoulder. “You can remember. I know you can.”
The face was
that of a small girl with long, honey-coloured hair and eyes that were dark
like his own. She sat beside him, one hand firmly wrapped in his and the other
gently touching his cheek.
“Who…are
you…?”
His voice was
weak from pain and fever and she bent down so that he could focus properly on
her.
“I’m a
friend.”
“Why…are
you…?”
“I’m here
because you’re sick, Jarod.”
“You
know…my…”
“Your name.
Yes, I do. And I know a lot of other things about you, too.” She smiled and the
movement caused her hair to slip over her shoulder so that it almost touched
his face.
“My name’s
Rebecca.”
“Rebecca…”
His eyes slowly
opened again and came to focus, once more, on her face. With a sluggish gaze,
he looked up at her. She smiled. “I knew you’d remember me, Jarod.”
“Why…are you…?”
“I’m here to
help you.”
A faint smile
appeared on his face but, as he tried to move, he winced.
“Try to relax,
Jarod. If you relax, it will help.”
“I…can’t…”
“You can.” She moved
her hand, gently stroking the side of his head in slow, calm movements. Her
voice, too, became slower and softer. “That’s it. A little more.” She slipped
her hand out of his grasp and straightened his legs so that they were flat on
the mattress and he was lying on his back.
“That’s better.
Now, close your eyes.”
She watched as
he did so, pain making him as docile as a child.
“You have to
relax, Jarod. Breathe with me. In. And then slowly out.” She picked up his hand
again and held it to her chest. “And in again. That’s right. And out, very
slowly. Good. And in, deeply and slowly. And out.” She continued to stroke the
side of his face, knowing that his own weakness would not enable him to stay
awake. He sighed once and then relaxed, his lips parting slightly. Gently she
eased his hand out of hers, placing it on his stomach, and looked up to find
Sydney watching her.
“He remembers,”
the psychiatrist stated.
“I knew he
would. Did you doubt it?”
“He was only
six.”
“So was I.”
Sydney sat up. “But
you have an advantage.”
“If you want to
call it that.” Her lips twisted bitterly as she came over and sat down beside
him. “I don’t.”
“You always
called it your curse.”
“I still do.”
“Why, Rebecca?
Most people would call second sight a wonderful gift.”
There was a hint
of a smile on her face as she looked up at him. “’Second sight’, Sydney? You’re
as romantic as your brother. Why not just call it psychic power and be done
with it?”
“Because it’s more
than that, with you. The knowledge goes deeper.”
“The Centre
fostered it. They always intended to use it…”
“They never got
the chance.”
“They don’t
deserve the chance.
“No,” Sydney
agreed softly, his mind going back over some of the things he knew had happened
to her. “Perhaps they don’t.”
“Perhaps?” She
turned and stared at him angrily for a moment before getting up again. “I’ll
pretend I didn’t hear that.”
~*~*~
Sydney awoke to
hear the murmur of voices on the other side of the room. He looked over to see
Rebecca kneeling down on the side of the bed and Jarod lying on his side,
watching her. He sat up as the Pretender gasped with pain and drew his legs up.
Going over to his case, Sydney drew out the syringe from the day before,
affixed a new needle and filled it once more with sedative. Approaching the
bed, however, he paused as Rebecca shook her head at him.
“Take it away,
please!” the Pretender gasped. “Take the pain…”
”No, Jarod.” She
tossed her hair back over her shoulder and looked down at him, one hand still
resting on the side of his face. “You have to do it this time.”
“I…I can’t!” His
voice was once more than of a small boy, begging.
“Jarod, you
aren’t trying. You have to work with me here.”
“No…”
She lifted his
head slightly with one hand; the movement making him open eyes that he had
closed in defeat. They filled with tears that slipped down onto her hand and
then the bed. Rebecca leaned over him, her eyes revealing her determination.
“You hid your sickness,
Jarod, and your pain. Do you remember?”
His eyes rolled
up to her face, his voice a harsh rasp. “How…do you know…?”
Her smile
contained a hint of bitterness. “I was trained to know.” She glanced up to meet
Sydney's eye and the smile faded before she looked back at the suffering man.
“And what happened next, Jarod?”
“You were
there…”
“Yes, I was.”
She turned the pillow and lowered his head gently onto it, wiping away the
tears. “And what happened then?”
”Somebody…gave
me something…”
“An injection.”
She nodded. “And then…”
“No!” His
whisper was full of pain. “I didn’t want it.”
“You were
scared.”
His eyes were
squeezed tightly shut but he nodded. “I didn’t want it.” His voice was a
whimper. “I didn’t want an operation.”
“But you needed
one. You knew that.” She picked up the damp cloth that lay on the table and
wiped the perspiration away from his face with it. “You knew, but you were too
scared to tell anybody.”
“Yes…” Jarod
gasped, as tears soaked the pillow.
She nodded. “But
do you remember why you needed one? It wasn’t appendicitis, like they thought
it was. Can you remember what it was?”
“No…” He closed
his eyes and turned away from her, gasping for breath. “No, I don’t want to
know. I don’t want to have to remember this.” He looked up at Sydney, his
expression pleading. “Make it go away. The pain. Make it stop. Please.”
Sydney looked
over at Rebecca, his face wearing a similar expression to the one that Jarod’s face
wore. She straightened up and, with a sigh, nodded. Sydney got up and walked
over to the bed, bending down and slipping the needle into the back of the
Pretender’s hand. Jarod closed his eyes with a soft groan, and then opened them
once more to look at the woman who was staring blankly out of the window,
before the sedative took effect.
“It isn’t
helping,” she murmured.
Sydney pulled a
blanket over Jarod's shoulders and then looked up at her.
“What isn’t
helping?”
“All the
injections. The sleep. Until he remembers what caused the problem in the first
place, he won’t get over this.”
The psychiatrist
sat down and looked up at her. “And what did?”
She turned, her
mouth slightly open in shock. “You don’t know?”
“When I got the
results of the surgery, they said they found some bleeding but couldn’t locate
the source. It had stopped by the time they opened him up.”
Rebecca nodded.
“They would say that. Or he would. I have to assume that, although Dr Raines
didn’t carry out the surgery, he ‘helped’ to write the report.”
“What are you
talking about, Rebecca? Raines had no contact…”
“You were told
that Jarod was slightly unwell and that he should have a day away from his
simulations, yes?”
The doctor
nodded.
“He had a day
away from the simulations, alright. He had a tube shoved down his throat so
that they could look at his insides!”
“What?!” Sydney
leaped out of his chair in shock and stared at her.
“Raines was
writing a dissemination on the functions of the human digestive system. He had
the wonderful idea that perhaps those of a pretender might be different from
those of other people, so he hauled that poor boy out of his room, got people
to hold him down and tried to push a tube down his throat that would protect
the camera. When Jarod fought, he was anaesthetized.”
Wordlessly,
Sydney sat down next to the unconscious figure of the pretender and began to
gently and protectively stroke his hair. Rebecca continued.
“Once Raines finally
got the camera into his throat, he found that all he could see was blood.
Jarod's movements, and also the rough edges of the tube, had scraped the sides
of his esophagus, almost from his mouth to his stomach. Raines yanked out the
tube, made sure that Jarod would still be asleep for a while and had him taken
back to his room. When he woke up at one point and got out of bed, he was put
back into it and sedated again. He suffered the whole of the next day without
anybody noticing until that night.”
Rebecca walked
over and picked up the cloth from the table, holding it in her hands for a
moment before walking into the bathroom and rinsing it out. Coming back, she
continued.
“I was asleep in
my room when this image of a boy in agony flashed into my mind. I climbed up
into the air vent above my bed and crawled along the passageway until I could
see into his room. His face was red and he was sweating badly, moaning in his
sleep like he was earlier.” She glanced at the sleeping man for a moment, her
face showing sympathy once more. “When I saw him, it hit me that he could
actually die unless I did something, so I crawled further along until I came to
a cover that I knew from experience was loose. I got out, ran along the hallway
to Jacob’s office and came in.”
“And then you
told us that Jarod was dying.” Sydney spoke softly and looked up at her, tears
in his eyes. “How did you know his name?”
“Jacob thought
it a lot. He still regretted his involvement in the kidnapping. That was why he
tried to get him out.”
Sydney nodded
silently.
“Five days ago,
I knew that Jarod was about to begin reliving it all. It took me all that time
to get here.”
“And will he…?”
“If he lets
himself remember – and right now, he’s too scared to do that – he will get over
it, yes. But, like I said, sedating him all the time isn’t really helping. It’s
making him dream with no way of waking up from it, and it’s also prolonging the
inevitable.”
“Did Raines find
out what you’d done?”
Rebecca nodded.
“That was the day that your brother decided to get me out of the Centre. I
looked,” she paused for a moment. “I looked almost exactly like Catherine
Parker did after Mr. Raines was finished with her, four years later.” She
looked up at him. “You saw me, Sydney. Not then, but earlier.”
“I
don’t…remember.”
“You will.” She
looked sadly down again.
“And were you
injured?”
“A few broken
bones. Nothing that didn’t heal.”
“Except your
mind.”
She sat down on
a chair and stared at him. “What do you mean?”
“My brother and I
used to talk about the two of you.” Sydney smiled. “One of the things that
Jacob could never get over was how…unbitter you always were. I know that you
were only a child.“ He forestalled her comments and continued to speak. “You,
like Jarod, were mature at a young age. Because you’d spent longer in the
Centre by the time you met him, you were even ‘older’ than he was.”
“Girls mature
faster than boys. Miss Parker said that to him.”
“She was right,
and she was more mature than Jarod. But you were even more so. Jacob used to
say that, if you ever became bitter or angry, somebody specific would cause it
and it would affect your whole outlook on life. And I think it did.”
“Maybe he was
right.”
“Maybe?” Sydney
glanced from Jarod to the woman sitting opposite him. “Rebecca, even the day we
saved Jarod, you weren’t bitter towards the man who did it. Since then,
though…”
“It’s been forty
years, Sydney. Forty years since Jacob told the Tower I’d died and smuggled me
out of the Centre. Even you’ve become bitter in that time.”
“Still, with me
it’s different; it’s taken time. You’ve been like this for so long that you
don’t even notice it anymore.”
“I thought I was
the psychic one.” She tried to smile but failed.
“You are.” He
stretched out a hand and touched her face in the same way she touched Jarod's.
“But I’m the psychiatrist.”
He could feel
himself tense as soon as the door of his room opened and it wasn’t Sydney who
walked through it. He lay on the bed for a moment before forcing himself up and
off it, standing in the middle of the room.
“Are you
ready?” the stranger demanded.
“I’m not…”
The boy looked over at the pile of clothes that sat on the chair.
“It doesn’t
matter. You don’t need to be dressed today.” Jarod felt the hand in the middle of
his back that pushed him towards the door. “Just come with me.”
The room was
big, white and empty, with only a table standing in the middle of it. “You’re
going to be very useful to me today, Jarod. You might even make me famous.”
The boy could
feel himself beginning to tremble as the man laughed. He backed away slowly
until he was pressed up against the table. Then he was picked up and held down
on it…
“No. No. Oh,
God, no!” The last three words were almost a scream as Jarod sat upright,
panting heavily and one hand pressed against his chest.
“It’s all right,
Jarod. It’s over.” Sydney sat down on the bed next to him and wiped the cool
cloth against his face.
“No, Sydney.”
The Pretender’s face was white and he still gasped for breath. “It’s not.” He
felt the arm that the psychiatrist put around him and leaned against it for a
moment, grateful for the support. “It’s not over.”
“I’m glad you
can see that, Jarod.”
He looked up to
find Rebecca leaning against the wall, watching him, with her arms folded on
her chest. “It’s important that you realize we have to confront that while
you’re awake and not just in your dreams.”
“You confront
it,” Jarod growled and turned away. “Just tell me what you see.”
She raised one
eyebrow. “I’ve already seen it.” She came over and sat in front of him. “I saw
it happen. I even saw the parts you won’t ever remember.”
“Lucky you,” he
snarled.
She half-smiled
at Sydney. “He must be feeling better. He couldn’t have been angry with me
yesterday.” She reached forward and touched his hand. “If we don’t deal with
this, it will only get worse.”
Jarod thought
back over the pain he’d experienced and suppressed a shudder only with
difficulty. “It couldn’t get worse.”
“Oh yes, it could.
A lot worse.” Her face was serious now, almost sad. “But I don’t want you to
have to go through that, either.”
The Pretender
turned away, refusing to look at her and Sydney looked at him in concern.
“She’s only trying to help you, Jarod. We both are.”
“Sydney,”
Rebecca looked up at him, “Would you mind giving us some time alone?” She
reached into her pocket and pulled out some money. “Go down and get Jarod some
ice-cream or something.”
She smiled,
seeing the glance of amazement that Jarod sent in her direction as Sydney got
up off the bed, nodding in agreement.
“I won’t be too
long.”
“Take your
time.” She stood up also. “We’ll both be here when you get back.”
~*~*~
“What do you
really want?”
Jarod's voice
was still a growl as he sat back against the head of the bed, too weak to be
able to get up, however much he wanted to.
“I want to know
what you remember.” She sat opposite him, both her hands supporting her chin as
she leaned forward, her elbows resting on his knees. “And I want to help you.”
“You’d help me a
lot more,” he turned his head to look at the wall, “if you’d go away and leave
me alone.”
“You wouldn’t
have wanted me to do that when you were six, when you were lying in bed in that
room, sick, scared and alone. You wanted me then.”
“Then isn’t
now.”
“Isn’t it?” She
sat back in her chair. “You’re feeling the same pain that you were then. The
only difference is that you’re a few feet taller – and a lot heavier,” she
smiled.
“How do you…?”
Her head tilted slightly
to one side. “Who do you think was the first person in your room that day?
Sydney?”
“It was you,
but…”
“And who was the
first person in your room when you passed out? Sydney?”
“You.”
She smiled
again. “You see. Things aren’t that different. And if you refuse to deal with
this now, it will come to haunt you again.” Her voice softened. “You were so
terrified of that operation, weren’t you Jarod? The pain was terrible – it was
agony – but you were so scared of the things you’d read about operations that
you were willing to put up with it rather than have one. Even though it nearly
killed you.”
“I don’t want…”
“But you have
to, Jarod. We both know that you couldn’t live through this again.”
He down at his
hands, one finger lightly tracing the two flowering bruises where the needle
had injected the sedative.
“We – the three
of us, Sydney, Jacob and I – came into your room to find you slipping in and
out of consciousness, with a fever that would have left you dead in the
morning. You were in absolute agony and couldn’t speak. Then Sydney gave you
something to make you sleep and they took you to the infirmary.”
She paused,
waiting for him to interrupt, but he stayed silent.
“I was taken
back to my room but, a few hours later, knew that you needed me. I got up into
the vents and went down to where you were. Your room looked like the one where
you found Faith, curtains and all. I crept in and held your hand until you woke
up.”
“We…met,” he
murmured, studying his hands with intensity.
“If you want to
put it like that, yes. But I’d known you for so long before that day that it
didn’t seem like it to me.”
“How did you
know me?”
“How do you know
how to be a doctor, a pilot or a lawyer? The same way I knew about you.” She paused.
“We aren’t that different.”
“And then?” he
mumbled uncomfortably.
“You were taken
away for the surgery. You didn’t want to,” she added, smiling gently, “but you
were too weak and sedated to fight them.” She looked up at him, the smile
replaced with a look of sadness. “And what came next?”
“You tell me.”
She nodded. “You
wanted me badly when you woke up from the operation, but I never came and you
were so angry with me. I felt your anger that night, and I felt as you cried
yourself to sleep, and I was so sorry.” She smiled gently at him and he
couldn’t help smiling back. “I was the only other person you knew apart from
Sydney at the Centre and you kept waiting for me to come. But somebody else
came instead.” She leaned forward. “And you remember who that was.”
“Timmy.”
His voice was
faint and she knew that she had broken down the defenses he’d been building up
against her.
“I sent Timmy to
you, Jarod.”
“You what?” He
stared at her in shock.
“I wanted very
badly to come and see you but I couldn’t. So I asked Timmy to go instead. And
he did.”
“And why didn’t
you…?”
“Because I was
in the room right next door.”
“You were…why?”
He straightened
his back against the wall behind the bed and looked at her. She refused to meet
his eye but spoke while looking down at the floor.
“When you were
about to come back from the surgery, I went back into the room to wait for you,
but there was somebody else there, waiting for me. I hoped it was Jacob or
Sydney…”
“But it wasn’t?”
“No. It was Dr
Raines.”
“But, just a
minute.” Jarod leaned forward and stared at her. “You know all about all sorts
of things – so how could you not know…?”
“I never said
that I knew it was Sydney or his brother. I just said I hoped it was.”
“You knew what
he would do?”
“I know what
everybody will do. That’s my curse.”
“So he…” Jarod
stopped, suddenly feeling sick, “he beat you?”
“Something like
that.”
“Then what?”
She looked up to
meet his gaze, but quickly dropped her eyes again. “It won’t help you to know
that.”
“It will.” He
looked at her sharply. “If I know what you went through…”
“You can
simulate it and make yourself feel guilty about it.”
Jarod shrugged
slightly. “Maybe, maybe not.”
She sighed and
pushed her hair back over her shoulder. “You could find out later anyway, so I
might as well tell you.” She swallowed painfully and one hand went
unconsciously to the back of her hand in a movement that imitated his.
“I’m sure you remember
what Raines did to Timmy in 1970, to try and enhance his potential.”
Jarod nodded
silently.
“He developed
that treatment in 1965, on me.”
“What?”
“He wanted to
wipe the memory of you from my mind. He thought that that type of treatment would
be effective. So he tried it.”
“But it failed.”
“Spectacularly.”
She gave a twisted, slightly bitter smile. “But it enhanced the abilities I
already had. They used to be that of a normal psychic – vague feelings about
things that could be easily interpreted. They became stronger, until I could
tell you not only what a person was feeling but also where they were and how
they would react to it. And I could predict it some time in advance.”
“And then…?”
“Then?” She
looked up. “I was unconscious for hours. Unconscious, that was, to all outward
appearances. But I could still feel. That’s how I knew you were angry with me.”
She paused. “Jacob used the occasion to prove to the Tower that I was dead. I
was ‘released’ – really released, not just hidden away on SL-27 – and Raines
got a smack on the wrist, the same way he always does.” She smiled again at the
memory. “I used to have the same sort of relationship with Jacob that you have
with his brother, but that ended when he had the car accident.”
“You knew?”
“I watched it
happen – once in my mind and then in front of me, when I was just that little
bit too late to do anything about it.” She looked up at him, all emotion gone
from her face. “I swore I’d never be too late again, ever.” Her head went up and
she looked over at him. “And I wasn’t.”
There was a
period of silence, during which Jarod saw Rebecca’s lips tremble slightly
before they firmed into a straight line. She looked up at him again, meeting
his gaze steadily.
“Jacob placed me
with a family he knew, where he hoped I’d be safe. Every few weeks, he would
come and visit me. Then the accident happened, and I visited him.”
“How often?”
“As often as I
could.” She paused. “He was always like a father to me and I had to see him. Not
even Raines would have been able to keep me away.”
“When were
you…?”
“Brought to the
Centre? When I was three weeks old. I was taken out of my dead mother’s arms
and adopted by them, officially.”
“But now they
think you’re dead.”
She smiled faintly.
“Hmm, sort of.”
He looked at
her, one eyebrow raised. “Explain, please.”
Her smile
broadened and she nodded. “I have every intention of explaining. She never told
you, but I met Miss Parker, too, some time before you did. Actually, she
probably can’t remember me at all. She’s blocked a lot of those times out,
except for the things you remind her of.”
“Any others?”
“Angelo knows,
of course.”
Jarod nodded.
“He knows everything.”
“I think that’s
about right. That, presumably, is why you ask him for help so often.”
“Is that all?”
“Not quite.” She
got up from the chair and walked over to the window.
“Sydney knew. At
least,” she corrected herself. “He knew subconsciously but the time when you
were sick was terrible for him and he’s blocked a lot of it out. He didn’t even
recognize my voice when I talked to him the first time.”
“Neither did I.”
She looked at
him out of the corner of her eye. “That’s hardly a great surprise, really, when
you think about what you were going through.”
~*~*~
“And that brings
us back to the real discussion that we need to have now.”
“Sydney will be
back soon.
“Not soon enough
to let you get out of it.” She came and sat down in front of him on the bed,
feeling him stiffen. “Actually, he only just left. He’s been standing outside
the door and listening the whole time to make sure I wasn’t being horrible to
you.”
“You couldn’t…”
The words were out before Jarod could stop them and Rebecca smiled as she took
his hand.
“Then you know
I’m only doing this for your good.” She stroked his hand gently and glanced at
him. “Even though it’s hard.”
He leaned back
stiffly against the wall and looked at her. “So why…?”
“You know why.
When you remember what he did, the pain will go.”
Jarod felt
something sink and then tighten in his stomach until he felt as if he was about
to be sick, although he knew now that it was all in his mind. His eyes pleaded
with her when he looked up again. “Help me.” The words were whispered.
“I’ll be here,
Jarod. But you have to remember on your own, otherwise it won’t work properly.”
She leaned forward and brushed his lips with her finger. “You have to get over
the mental blocks you’ve made about that day. But they can’t hurt you any
more.” She placed her hands on his shoulders and forced him to look at her.
“And that’s the part I’m here to help you remember.”
~*~*~
His eyes were
closed and his hand was wrapped in hers. She was no longer sitting on the bed
but had pulled a chair up close beside it and was watching silently as the
tears began to slip from under his closed lids.
“Jarod.”
Her soft voice
broke through the memory he was reliving and slowly his eyes opened and he
looked up at her.
“I’m scared.”
“I know.” Her voice
was soothing. “But you still have to face it.”
“Why?”
“Because
otherwise you can’t overcome it.”
He nodded,
feeling the sense of her words but still fighting against their meaning.
“You remembered
what Raines did. Now you need to go further.”
“When?”
“The next day.”
He allowed his
eyelids to fall shut again, seeing the room he had had then at the Centre, and
began to speak even before he realized. “I woke up in my room the next morning,
wondering if I would see Sydney when the door opened. It was…a relief that it
was him.”
“Just a relief,
Jarod?”
“No,” he
admitted softly. “More.”
She nodded,
satisfied. “And then?”
“I managed to
get rid of my breakfast by hiding it under the bed and I told Sydney that I
wasn’t hungry at lunchtime and wanted to keep working.”
“And did you?”
He shook his
head. “No. When he left, I lay down on the floor and tried…not to cry.” Jarod
paused, a tear that had eased out from between his eyelids slowly making its way
down his temple. “After lunch, we kept working. But it was hard. I was so hot.
I couldn’t see things properly and I made mistakes.”
“And what
happened once you finished work?”
“I was taken
back to my room…and I lay on my bed and tried to hide how bad I felt from the
cameras.”
She nodded. “And
do you remember what happened next?”
His eyes opened
and he looked at her frankly. “Only that you were there.”
“And who else?”
“Sydney…and
Jacob.”
“And how did
that feel?”
He paused for a
moment. “Safe.” The word was a whisper and she saw the smile that curled his
lips.
“And that was
when you connected Raines with pain and Sydney with safety, and when you began
to be terrified of one and attach yourself to the other.”
After a moment,
he nodded. She smiled and sat back on the bed next to him.
“And are you
still angry with me?”
“You know the
answer.”
“Yes,” she
nodded. “I do.” Stretching out one hand, she again placed it on his cheek. “You
can sleep now.”
“Without
dreaming?”
“Perhaps,” she
smiled. “But dreams aren’t always bad.”
“All mine are.”
“All?” She
raised an eyebrow. “I don’t believe that.”
She watched as
he yawned and then slid slightly further down the bed. His eyes, when he looked
at her, were already drowsy. “Stay with me?”
“I’m not going
anywhere.”
“Good.” He
sighed, rolled onto his side and closed his eyes.
~*~*~
Sydney
cautiously opened the door and stepped into the room, stopping short when he
saw that both Rebecca and Jarod appeared to be asleep. The illusion was
shattered, however, when she raised her head and stood up.
“Is
everything…?”
Despite himself,
his voice betrayed his nervousness and Rebecca smiled. “It’s fine, Sydney. It
wasn’t easy – but he’s okay. He was tired at the end of the discussion and fell
asleep. That’s all.”
The psychiatrist
placed the bag down on the table and, walking over to the bed, sat down in the
chair beside it and looked closely at the Pretender.
“He
looks…better.”
She nodded. “He is.”
She looked at him. “What did Miss Parker say?”
He opened his
mouth to speak and she jumped in again.
“Please, Sydney,
you can’t lie to me. I know that Miss Parker called your phone while you were
shopping. Don’t insult either my intelligence or my knowledge by trying to deny
it.”
“All right,” he
said calmly. “She did call but I didn’t tell her where we were.”
“You might as
well have.”
“What do you
mean?”
“She’s outside
the door, right now.”