Coming Into Focus
Part 2
Rebecca opened
the door, gently taking the gun out of Miss Parker's hand, and then closed and
locked it behind her.
“Parker?”
In time, Sydney
remembered to keep his voice low enough that it wouldn’t disturb Jarod, who
remained asleep.
“Sydney, what…?”
She turned to him and saw the Pretender. At the sight of him, her eyes lit up.
“Well, that certainly makes things easier.”
“I don’t think
so, Miss Parker.”
Miss Parker
turned and, for the first time, saw the woman who was standing and holding her
gun. She was about to speak when her eyes met the gaze of the other woman and
her normally ready tongue failed.
“You won’t take
him back, Miss Parker, because I won’t allow it. Not after what he’s been
through today.”
“And who are
you?”
“You already
know me.” Her eyes met Sydney's and he saw the amusement that she was holding
inside. “And the secret of who I am will all come back to you over the next few
hours.”
~*~*~
She sat
curled up in the corner of the dark area, her face in her hands, as the sobs
shook her body. She was frightened, not only of the darkness but of the fact
that her father might leave without her and she would have to spend the night
in this cold, lonely place. Still trembling slightly, she looked up when she
felt a hand on her arm.
“What’s
wrong?”
“I’m lost.”
“Not any
more.” The other figure moved forward slightly and was able to be seen in the
dim light cast by a room away to the right. “I just found you.”
“But I don’t
know…”
“Come with
me.”
Obediently
she followed this new person down a series of winding passages until they
reached the end of one. In the stronger light, she could see the girl’s brown
eyes and the gleam reflecting off her pale hair that hung over one shoulder.
“Your
father’s office is the second door to the right. He’s still there. He hasn’t
left yet, and nor has your mother.”
“Th…thank-you.”
“You’re welcome.”
The girl held the bars slightly open so that she could slip through the gap.
When she looked up, however, the face was gone.
Miss Parker jumped,
straightening herself in her chair. Looking up, she found that the other woman
was watching her, a hint of a smile on her face.
“So you remember
me now?”
“Sort of…”
“I admit that we
did only meet on a few occasions. Three, to be precise. That was the first.”
“How did you…?”
“Know?” The
woman laughed softly. “I just did.”
She looked over
her shoulder in time to see Jarod open his eyes and stood up so that she
blocked his view of Miss Parker. Sydney leaned forward with the same aim in
mind. “How are you feeling?”
“Better,” the
Pretender admitted.
“Jarod?”
He smiled at up
Rebecca as she spoke. “What is it?”
“There’s
somebody else here.”
“Who?”
Rebecca stepped
closer to the bed and prevented him from getting up as he saw Miss Parker
sitting in the chair.
“I’d say it was a
pleasure,” he commented drily as he gave up struggling against the pressure
that Rebecca was using to keep him on the bed. “But it isn’t.”
“Jarod, I…”
“Please, no
raging arguments.” Rebecca’s voice quelled the discussion. “We’re all here for
a reason and it would be good if, for the time being, we could all give the
impression that we get on. So if you two could just ignore the fact that you
haven’t been friends for a few years until it’s over, that would be handy.” She
paused. “Deal?”
She eyed Miss
Parker, who returned to the seat she’d stood up from when Jarod began
struggling. Turning, she looked at Jarod, who nodded slowly.
“Until what’s
over?” Sydney looked over at her sharply. “What are you talking about?”
She sighed.
“Just give it time. You’ll remember.”
She lay
huddled in the small corner of the room, her hands pressed to her stomach and
her eyes closed. A nearby vent opened, allowed cool air to brush past her and
she closed her eyes for a moment, enjoying the sensation. When it was gone,
however, the pain returned. It was only when she felt the hand on the side of
her face that she struggled to open her eyes.
“It won’t
last much longer.”
“It…hurts…”
“I know.” The
girl sat down beside her, brushing the long, blond hair away from her face.
“But it’ll be gone soon.”
“Are
you…sure?”
“Very.”
The stranger
reached forward and smoothed the brown hair.
“It’s not
going to be much longer, Miss Parker.”
“No, I’m…”
“From now on,
no. You’ll only use that name once more.”
“And who…?”
“I’m a
friend.”
“You!”
Rebecca lifted
an eyebrow as Miss Parker glared at her and spat her name.
“Not ‘me’ at
all. I was just getting in ahead of ‘Daddy’.” She leant forward. “His plan was
that, so that you would forget what I want you to remember, you would use only
that name, and never the one that your mother gave you.” Her lips twitched in
amusement. “Your father didn’t like me. The feeling was mutual. So I got a lot
of enjoyment out of doing that before he did.”
“I’ll bet,” the
brunette snarled.
Miss Parker got
up from the chair in which she had been sitting and walked over to the far side
of the room, staring out of the window.
“If you want
some privacy, that door,” she nodded at one that neither Sydney nor Jarod had
opened, “will take you into another bedroom. The outer door of it is also
locked,” she added, “so you needn’t bother trying to leave.” Miss Parker opened
the door and disappeared through it, slamming it behind her and Rebecca got to
her feet. “It’s lucky we’ve got no neighbours.”
“We don’t?”
She looked over
to where Jarod was watching her and shook her head. “This floor and those above
and below it are all empty and will stay that way. And, being on the tenth
floor, even Miss Parker won’t try to escape.”
Coming over, she
sat beside him and took her hands in his, glancing over to where Sydney was
lying on the other bed.
“What else is
there?”
She smiled a
little sadly. “Quite a lot.”
“For…” She could
see the fear in his eyes. “For me?”
“Not yet.” She reached
forward and touched the side of his face. “But I need your help. They need you.
That’s why we’re all here.” She paused. “Call it fate.”
He smiled
faintly. “I’d rather call it Rebecca.”
“I don’t
influence what happens, Jarod.” She spoke softly. “I just know it will.”
“Your curse.”
“Yes.” She
smiled. “I curse my abilities, just like you curse yours, but they can help
sometimes too.”
“They will.”
“I think they
already have.”
He nodded,
admitting the truth of her statement and then sat up straighter.
“Who comes
next?”
Rather than
responding, Rebecca stood up and walked over to the door, opening it to show
Miss Parker thrashing violently but silently in the throes of a nightmare.
She curled
herself up again, fighting to get away from the pain that was screwing inside
her and looked up to where the other girl sat, watching her.
“Just a few
seconds longer.”
“No…” Even as
she spoke, though, a warm flush passed through her and she felt the pain
replaced by a feeling of calm peace, seeing the girl beside seem to waver.
“What…?”
“I said it
would soon be over.” The hand on her face moved to the side of her head, gently
stroking the brown hair. “For now, it is.”
“It will…come
back…?” She could feel herself being carried away by the warmth that flowed
through her and struggled to stay focused. The girl bent down, her long hair
falling over her shoulder and almost touching her face.
“It’s all
right, Miss Parker. Just relax. Sleep now. You can face it when you wake up
again.”
Her eyelids
fluttered and then lifted to find the other woman shutting the door between the
two rooms and coming to sit on the bed. She could still feel the echo of that
pain and it seemed to leave her weak and helpless.
“Why…?”
“Not quite. The
questions you should be asking are what and who. The answers will come to you.”
Her touch this
time was not as confident as it had been when she had stroked Jarod's cheek but
provided the same sense of comfort and the woman reached up and covered the
hand with her own.
“Take it…away…”
“Not yet. Soon,
but not yet. And I won’t take it away. You will.”
“I can’t…” The
eyes began to fill. “I can’t…deal with it. The pain…was so…”
“It was very
bad. I know. But you have to face it.” She leaned it closer.
“We’ll help you,
Miss Parker. All of us.”
The woman’s
eyelids closed briefly before lifting again and trying to focus once more. The
blond woman could feel that the hand she held was trembling.
“Don’t…let me…sleep…”
“The dream won’t
come back yet. Relax now. You still have time now before it comes back again.”
“Really…?”
The dark-haired
woman didn’t wait for a response, but, trusting as she had trusted years earlier,
gave up and slipped back against the pillow, asleep immediately.
Rebecca walked
out of the room to find Sydney and Jarod in deep conversation on the far bed.
With a faint smile, she walked back out onto the balcony. When the door opened,
she looked around.
“How did you
sleep?”
“Probably better
if Miss Parker hadn’t slammed the door.”
“Can you deal
with going through it again?”
“I don’t have a
choice, do I?”
“No,” she
smiled. “Not really.”
“So there’s only
one answer I can give.” He paused. “Are the others…safe?”
“Yes.” She
looked out over the skyline. “Michelle and Nicholas are being looked after and
Broots and Debbie are a long way from the Centre.”
“Good.” He
watched her silently for a moment. “Tell me, Rebecca. Is he really alright
now?”
“Yes, Sydney.”
She turned back to him. “When Jarod gets back his strength, he will be better
than ever.”
“Who are
you?”
“My name’s
Rebecca.”
“And why are
you here?”
“To help
you.”
She shrank away
from the figure, who responded by leaning in closer. “You know that I won’t
hurt you.”
“It hurts
me.”
“I know it
does…”
“Rebecca…”
“Hello, Miss
Parker.” From the chair opposite, the blond woman smiled. “I told you that we
knew each other.”
“And why…?”
“Am I here now?
I could ask you the same question. But we’re both here to get rid of that.”
“Will
you…help…?”
Her voice was
hesitant, weak, but somehow the memory of that earlier time when they had met
was haunting her and she couldn’t escape it. She dreamily watched as Rebecca
got up and walked over to the bed, sitting once more beside her.
“Yes, Miss
Parker.” Her voice was soft and soothing. “Of course I’ll help.”
“Promise?”
Rebecca nodded.
“And Jarod and Sydney will help too.”
“No.” Suddenly
it was an effort to move. “Not them. Just you.”
“You need their
help, Miss Parker, just as much as you need mine.” She leaned forward. “They
wouldn’t be here otherwise.”
“I don’t…”
“You don’t want
them to see you like this, I know. But it will help later.” Placing one hand in
the familiar gesture, she used to other to collect both of Miss Parker's hands
and held them. “It will help everybody.”
~*~*~
Jarod stood in
the doorway and watched her as she curled up on the bed, moans coming from her
mouth. In concern, he looked over at Rebecca.
“What is it?
What’s causing that?”
“I can’t explain
it to you.”
He raised an
eyebrow. “You could at least try.”
“I have to
explain it to her first. But you’ll know at the same time.”
“Why can’t you
just give me a straightforward answer?”
She stood up and
walked past him into the other room. “I’m a psychic, Jarod. We don’t give
straightforward answers. We only receive vague feelings that need
clarification…”
“Not you.” He
grabbed her arm as she passed. “You told me that yourself.”
“That was a
mistake.”
“You don’t make
mistakes.”
“I made one.”
Her eyes became sad. “And I’ve paid for it for the whole of my life.”
“So you aren’t going
to make another one. You wouldn’t do it.” He took her arm and pulled her out
onto the balcony with him. “Why won’t you tell me?”
“You aren’t
ready to deal with it yet.”
“When will I
be?”
“When she is.”
“How do you…?”
“Please, Jarod.
Don’t ask a question that you’ll feel stupid for asking later. You already know
how I know.”
“It hurts
me.”
“I know it
does. And it hurts him, too.”
“Him?”
Rebecca
smiled. “A boy that you don’t know yet. He felt the same pain. But they made
him better and that will make you better.”
“I
don’t…understand.”
“I know you
don’t, Miss Parker.” She placed one hand on the clenched fist and used the
other to brush the hair out of the girl’s eyes. “But one day, you will. One
day, you’ll remember all this and finally understand.”
She lay, curled
up on the bed, gasping for air that somehow seemed denied to her and with both
hands clasping her stomach.
“Help me.”
Looking up, she saw a blurred shape in front of her that gradually revealed itself
to be Jarod. “Please.”
He sat next to
her, taking both hands in his but otherwise helpless.
“Miss Parker.”
Rebecca knelt in front of him, her face just on the edge of what Miss Parker
could properly focus on. “You have to work with me. If you relax, it will go
away.”
“No…”
“Parker, try to
concentrate.” Jarod's voice broke through the silence that followed the plea
and Rebecca looked up at him, amusement obvious in her eyes but not on the rest
of her face, before she turned back to the suffering woman.
“Miss Parker,
push against the pain. Push it away from you. It’s not yours. It’s only a
reflection of somebody else’s.”
“The…boy…”
“Yes. The boy.
The one you didn’t know. He felt it, too. He suffered, like you did.”
“Who…helped
him…?”
She smiled. “I
did. And then, when he was quiet, I came and helped you. Do you remember?”
“Yes…”
“Good.”
There was a
pause, during which time Sydney came and stood in the doorway watching
silently, with a syringe in one hand, ready, as Rebecca had warned him to be.
“Focus on that
boy, Miss Parker.”
“I don’t
know…who he was…”
“His name
doesn’t matter. That will come later. But you know his face. Can you remember
it?”
“Yes…”
“And you saw it
again, later.”
Miss Parker's vision
became increasingly blurry and Rebecca leaned further in so that she could
still be seen. “But, by the time you saw it again, you’d forgotten that day,
hadn’t you?”
“Yes…”
“And you never
remembered, until this moment, that you’d seen him before.”
Miss Parker's
head felt as though it weighed several tons and it was an enormous effort to
move it on the pillow.
“Good, Miss
Parker.” She glanced up and past Jarod to where Sydney was waiting. “And do you
remember the prick on your hand, just before you fell asleep in my arms?”
“Yes…”
“That’s going to
happen again now. But we’ll still be here. You’re still very safe, I promise
you.”
“No…”
“Parker.” Sydney
moved in closer. “This will help. Trust me. You do trust me, don’t you?”
“Yes.” The word
was almost inaudible but Sydney heard it and bent over her for a moment,
stepping back and allowing the sedative to do its work.
~*~*~
“How much
longer?”
There was a hint
of a smile on Rebecca’s face as she closed the dividing doors. “Can she keep going
or will it last?”
“Both.”
“She can keep
going until it ends.” Rebecca seated herself on the end of one of the beds and
looked across at Jarod. “She has a lot of inner strength and that was what kept
her going last time.”
“How old was
she?”
“Five. A year
younger than we were.”
“So it was at
the same time…”
“There was only
about an hour’s difference, yes.” Jarod nodded silently. “And how did she
cope?”
“In the same way
you did. She tried to ignore it, hoping that it would go away, and when it
didn’t, I found her.”
“Momma?”
“Hi, baby.”
The little
girl found herself lying in bed with her mother sitting beside her, one hand
lovingly touching her cheek. She struggled up but the pain stabbed through her
and she sank down again with a cry.
“It hurts.”
“I know,
baby. But it won’t hurt for long, I promise.”
“And…where
did…the girl go?”
The daughter
saw the confused expression on her mother’s face and felt a hint of frustration
that the woman couldn’t understand what she meant.
“Which girl,
baby?”
“The one who
found me…”
“You found me,”
the dark-eyed woman gasped.
“Yes.”
“And how…?”
“When you were
finally asleep, I crept into your mother’s office and left a note, telling her
what had happened and where you were.”
“You…told her.”
“She knew
already.” Rebecca smiled. “She had a connection like that once too.”
“With…who…?”
“Somebody you
never met. He died. Your friend didn’t.”
“No…”
“You know who
that is. That friend.”
“I…can’t…”
“You’re blocking
the knowledge, Miss Parker, but you do know.”
“No…” She weakly
shook her head on the pillow.
“Until you face
it, they won’t go away.”
“No, I…can’t…”
“You mean you
won’t. You won’t because he forced the knowledge out of you and made you forget
it. He forced you to forget everything about that very early time, even the
fact that you suffered so much.”
Rebecca got up
and began to pace the room, knowing that Miss Parker could still see her. “
He didn’t want
you remember this and he was frightened of what a connection like that with
somebody else could do. He’d seen what it did to your mother.”
“Daddy?”
“Yes, Miss
Parker.” She turned and watched her. “That’s why I never liked him, you see. I
saw what he was trying to do to you, out of fear for himself, and when I tried
to protect it – that link – he was furious.”
“Does he…?”
“He knows I’m
still alive. Not consciously, of course, but the feelings he has for me are
still there and they won’t die until I do.”
“Or he
might…die…”
She shook her head
sadly. “No, that’s one race he will win. And I can’t do a thing to prevent it.”
“And…Momma…?”
Rebecca smiled.
“She tried to protect it, too. She did everything she could to protect that
link.”
The pain was gone.
When she opened her eyes and saw the blue sky outside her window, she could
feel that it was gone. She was happier, more comfortable, but wondered how he
was. Was he still in pain?
“No, baby.
He’s feeling much better.”
“And…her…?”
She watched the
expression cross her mother’s face, a combination of anger and sadness.
“She’s…she
will be happier now.”
“You know who
she is.”
“She saved
your life, baby.” She watched her mother come closer and sit beside her. “Of
course I know now.”
“And will I
ever see her again?”
“We met once
more, after that day, Miss Parker. Do you remember that, too?”
“No…”
“We can remember
that day or remember who your friend was. Which one?”
“The…second
meeting…”
“We have to come
back to it.”
“I know.”
“I’m glad you
do.” Rebecca stood up. “So tell me. When was it?”
“After…” Miss
Parker's voice broke and she stared up numbly.
“Go on. Force it
out.”
“After Momma’s
funeral.”
“Good, Miss
Parker. And why?”
“Because…I was
unhappy.”
Rebecca returned
to her seat beside the bed, knowing that both Jarod and Sydney were listening
through the partly opened door.
“And where were
we?”
“In the Centre.”
She felt as though her heart was going to break and, as soon as Sydney left the room, she ran out of it. Without looking where she was going, she ran blindly, pushing through doors and running down staircases until finally there was nowhere left to run. She sank down on the floor and then looked up to find herself staring at an air vent cover. Memory provided a glimpse of the last time she had seen it and, standing, she looked up to find the same face staring back at her. The grate was slowly eased open and she crept inside.
“Hello, Miss
Parker.”
The tears
started again as that half-forgotten voice came out of the darkness.
“Rebecca,
I’ve missed you.”
“You don’t
even remember me properly, Miss Parker. How could you miss me?”
“What…?”
“You have
other friends now and your memory of me is so faint that it hardly exists anymore.
In a few years, it will vanish entirely.”
“No! No, it
won’t! I will remember! I promise, I’ll never forget you…”
The tears ran in
streams down her face and she held in the sobs that threatened to break free.
“Miss Parker,
can you remember what I said to you?”
Unable to speak,
she only nodded.
“And I was
right. You did forget.”
“Yes.”
“And you forgot
him.”
“It always comes
back…”
“To him.” A look
of amusement appeared on Rebecca’s face. “Because the two of you are connected
in ways that not even your father understood, much as he tried to.”
“But…you came
back…”
“I did. You
needed me. I felt it and came back. I came back to help you.”
“Why? I’d
forgotten you…you knew that.”
“Ah!” Rebecca placed
her hand on Miss Parker's cheek and brushed away the tears. “But I could never
forget you.”
~*~*~
“You’re still
afraid of me, Sydney. You always were.”
She looked over
at him as he sat staring out through the window.
“Rebecca,
that’s…”
“The truth. We
both know it, but you always denied the truth if you could.”
“Only if I
thought it was going to be painful.”
She laughed; a
short, sharp sound that died almost as soon as it began. “And that’s such a
wonderful basis of avoiding things, Sydney. If I felt the same way, I would
have killed myself long ago.”
“We’re very
different people.”
“The only
difference is that I know what’s going to happen and you don’t.”
”I could never
have dealt with that knowledge.”
“Jacob could.”
“Perhaps,” Sydney
admitted slowly.
“He had to. If
he hadn’t been able to deal with it, he wouldn’t have been able to deal with
me.”
“And…what now?”
the psychiatrist asked hesitantly.
“Now?” She
sighed heavily. “Now we wait. We wait until Miss Parker can face what happened
to her that day, and the earlier one.”
“And if she
can’t?”
“She will.”
Rebecca looked at him. “We both know she will.”
She could
feel his terror as he felt the hands coming closer, forcing the clear plastic tube
into his throat. She could feel every muscle tense as he tried to fight against
it and she could feel him choke as he tried to scream. It was as though she was
lying right next to him, watching and feeling what he felt, but not having to
actually go through it herself. And she felt the prick of the needle as he did,
looking over as his head slumped to one side, his brown eyes staring blindly
into her blue ones. She shuddered at the sight of the blankness that she saw
there, feeling sick at the sight of them, until mercifully a hand came down and
closed the lids, blocking them from sight. She closed her own eyes, only to
open them with a sob and find herself safely in the arms of the girl sitting
above her…
She looked up to
find his brown eyes staring into hers. She could see a look of concern, of
compassion there as he brushed her hair away from her face. With a tentative
hand, she reached up and covered his cheek with her hand. He covered it with
his own and smiled down at her.
“Jarod.”
“Yes, Miss
Parker.”
The other female
voice interrupted before the Pretender could speak. The two people looked up to
find her sitting in a chair at the end of the bed.
“It was Jarod.
That was the boy. And that was the thing that you felt – his injury and fear of
the surgery. You took those feelings then and they’re coming back to haunt you
now.”
“I don’t…”
“Understand? You
did once. Your mother explained it all to you, about the connections that
people make with one another. It was the only time you ever saw your mother
cry, Miss Parker. But you pushed that away, too. You pushed it so far away
that, when you were introduced to Jarod during the simulation on the 7th of
October, 1969, you couldn’t remember ever having seen him before.”
“No, I…”
“Are you going
to deny everything you’ve just been through? That was more real than any dream
you can ever remember having in your life. And then there’s me.”
She got up and
walked to the other side of the bed, sitting down.
“If you would deny
it all, then you have to deny me as well. Can you do that?”
The blond hair
reflected the light from the window and the brown eyes flashed in a way that
she couldn’t forget. Slowly, very slowly, Miss Parker shook her head.
“When you can
remember what your mother said about that connection, then you’ll understand.
And, once you understand, then it will be gone.”
“Promise?”
She leaned
forward, her hair almost touching the woman’s face. “I promise.”
The tears ran
down her face and she shook as the arms wrapped themselves around her, holding
her tightly as she cried and rocking her gently.
“It’s all
right, Miss Parker. He’s okay now. I promise.”
“Really?”
“You know I
wouldn’t lie to you.”
She lay there
for a long time, staring into the darkness, before she finally looked up again.
“But why?”
“There’s no
good reason for that, Miss Parker. None. And I won’t try to make one up for
you. It’s just what they do.”
“And…will he
die?”
“No, he
won’t. Right now, he’s getting fixed up.”
“An…operation?”
“Yes, Miss
Parker. He’s having an operation. But he’ll be a lot better when it’s over and
the pain will be gone.”
“And…for me?”
“When you
wake up, the pain will be gone, too. The pain will be gone and you’ll be safe.”
“You were scared,
Jarod,” the brunette murmured.
“And you felt
it, Miss Parker,” Rebecca stated quietly. “You felt his fear in the same way
that you could feel his pain. But you couldn’t understand it and didn’t know
what to do.”
“The pain…was
so…”
“Intense. And consuming.”
Jarod rested his head on one hand, the other covering Miss Parker's, and his
eyes darkened at the memory of the agony.
“But you both
pushed it away and forgot about it.”
“How?”
The question
came simultaneously from them both and they looked at her as she shook her
head.
“I don’t know.”
“How can you not
know?” Jarod got up from his chair and began to pace the room, watching her out
of the corner of his eye. “You know…”
“I don’t know
everything, Jarod. And some things don’t have a reason. Why is Raines the way
he is? Why does the Centre put money before lives? Why did Catherine and Jacob
have to die so early in life? There are no answers to these questions. They
just exist.”
“This is why it
all comes back to him,” Rebecca turned to Miss Parker and then glanced at
Jarod. “And why it all comes back to her. There’s a connection between you – a
strong connection. Even before you knew each other, it came into existence. But
various things got in the way and pushed it aside, the way they wanted.”
“The Centre.”
“They don’t like
what they can’t control – and they couldn’t control that.”
“Momma?”
“Yes, baby?”
“Who is he?”
“He’s a very
special boy.”
“And why do I
feel what he feels?”
“You have a bond,
a special connection that you share and that’s why you know what he’s feeling.”
“Does that
make me…special too?”
Her mother
hugged her and she felt a tear drop from her mother’s face onto her own. “It
makes you very special, baby.”
“And will I always
know…what he’s feeling?”
“If you stay
friends, baby, yes. And it’s very important that you do. The next time you feel
that, it might save your life, or his.”
“But if it
happens again, she’ll come back to us.”
Her mother’s
face became sad and a stream of tears followed the first. “Next time, she might
not be able to.”
“Your mother
thought I was dead.” Rebecca walked over to the window and stood, staring out
of it, her back to the other occupants. “Jacob’s set-up was very convincing and
everybody who saw me and it thought the same. Catherine was devastated that she
hadn’t been able to rescue me.” She smiled faintly. “Even Sydney believed I was
dead for a while.”
“Why only for a
while?”
Jarod looked up as
the man entered the room and sat in a chair at the end of the bed. “I was shown
the situation, along with the members of the Tower, from behind the glass. It
looked like she was…”
“Dead, Sydney.”
Rebecca looked around with a half-smile. “The word is dead.”
“I left the
Centre early that day.” Sydney ignored the interruption. “I found it hard to
accept that the child who told us you were dying,” he looked over at Jarod, his
face wearing an expression of pain, “could be dead herself. But that night, Jacob
came home late. He wasn’t alone.”
“It took us more
than half an hour to persuade Sydney that the scene had been set up.” Rebecca
smiled and walked over to sit beside the psychiatrist.
“But, when we
did, he helped us to find a family where I would be safe.”
“Safe from what?
They thought you were dead.”
“Your father
didn’t.” Rebecca gave a half-smile. “Your father was persuaded that it had
somehow all been fake. He tried to make Jacob tell him where I was – but then
the accident happened, and he had to stop asking.”
“And then?”
“Then…” Rebecca
paused and swallowed painfully. “Then I had to deal with the guilt of more than
thirty-five years. If I’d just been a little sooner…”
“But you said
yourself,” Jarod interrupted. “You don’t influence what happens, you just know
it will.”
“But I used
another word before, too.” She met his gaze. “Hope, remember? I hoped that
perhaps, if I appeared, I could change things somehow. And hope can be strong,
especially if you don’t want to confront what’s going to happen.”
She sat silently
for several moments while the others watched her, staring down at her hands.
Jarod could have believed he saw a tear in her eye but there was no trace when
she finally looked up.
“Your father,
Miss Parker, didn’t want you to have a bond of any sort with anybody at the
Centre other than him. He fought against it with everything he could think of
and finally found something that worked. He placed you in a part of the Centre
where you would have no knowledge of Jarod at all. He thought that distance and
time would do what nothing else had managed to. We’ve seen how right he was.”
“I didn’t want
to forget.”
Jarod looked
down to find her watching him and smiled at her. “Nobody wants to forget. It
just happens.”
“Do you blame
me?”
“No, Parker.” He
shook his head and smiled. “I don’t blame you at all. How could I? I always
knew it wasn’t your fault.”
As the two old
friends as they rediscovered their friendship, forgetful of the others in the
room, Rebecca stood up and held out one hand to Sydney. Silently the two left
the room, the psychiatrist taking one last glance over his shoulder before he
shut the door.
“Are you all
right, Sydney?”
“I remember what
you said.”
“The next
time I see you will be the last time, Sydney.”
“For you or
for me?”
“For both of
us.”
“The last time.”
She paused. “And are you scared?”
“No,” he
admitted. “I’m too tired to be scared.”
She led him to
the bed. “It won’t be long…or difficult.”
“And…what’s
waiting…afterwards?”
There was a
tender smile on her face as she helped him to sit down. “I only know about this
world, Sydney. Not the next.”
“And…you?”
“I’ve fulfilled
my purpose in life. There’s nothing left for me here now.”
“And will
they…?”
“They won’t know
anything until tomorrow.”
He nodded
slowly, sighing deeply before raising his head to look at her.
“And are you
sure?”
“Very sure.” Her
touch was gentle as she helped him to lie down, taking a seat next to him on
the bed and placing one hand on his. He sighed once and then looked up at her.
“Is there
anything I need to know?”
“That they both
loved you, Sydney. That’s the most important thing.”
He blinked
slowly several times, his gaze always coming to rest on her, but his vision
blurred until, finally unable to see anymore, he left his eyes closed. She
waited a moment and then leaned in close to his ear.
“I know you can
still hear me, Sydney. The other thing you need to know is that what we’ve done
over the last hours won’t be undone ever again. They value what they’ve
regained too much to let it go. We did what your brother wanted us to do, all
those years ago. And I know that he’s waiting for you.” She paused. “Go on,
Sydney.” Bending down, she kissed him gently on one cheek. “You can rest now.
You’ve earned it.”
There was a
brief moment of tension in the hand that she still held in hers and then an
expression of peace came into his face. She swallowed once to hide the emotion
that was building up inside her and then rose and moved over to the table.
Opening a small bag that lay out of sight on one chair, she extracted an
envelope and placed it on the table, one finger stroking it gently before she
left it there.
Crossing to the
door, she eased it open and peeped into the room. The two people lay together
on the bed, arms closely around each other and peacefully asleep. With a
decisive nod, she silently closed the door and then walked over to the window,
opening the curtain to look out over the moonlit city that stretched out far
below her. For the first time in her life, a tear escaped her eye and began to
trickle down her cheek. A second would have followed but she blinked it away
and walked over to the vacant bed, easing off her shoes and lying down on it.
Her figure was illuminated by the moonlight from the uncovered window and she
looked up to the shining disc in the sky. She blinked once and then all was
still.
~*~*~
They stood
together in the doorway the next morning, looking silently at the scene before them.
His arm was wrapped around her shoulders and hers around his waist. Neither
cried, although they would both wonder at that later. He relaxed his hold and
walked over to the beds, proving to himself that his eyes weren’t deceiving
him. It was by the first bed that he paused longest, looking down at Sydney
lying there, his expression peaceful. Jarod placed one gentle hand on the dead
man’s forehead for a moment, smoothing a stray hair, before drawing back.
A glance at
Rebecca’s face showed that she, too, had not suffered. Her eyes, like Sydney's,
were closed and her arms lay on either side of her slender frame. Looking back
towards his living companion, his eye was caught by the sight of the envelope
on the table and he crossed the room to pick it up. There was no introduction
and no date. He brought it to her and together they read it.
I believe
that I was born to bring the two of you back together again. I’ve lived for
more than forty years in this world and never felt whole unless I was helping
one or other of you. But that isn’t a reason for you to feel guilty. The only
guilt you should feel is that you ever allowed that connection to be broken in
the first place. If it should ever be broken again, it will be decimating the
memories of the two of us who lie here in front of you.
Sydney's last
wish – unspoken – was that he be buried alongside his brother. I know that you
will fulfill this and comfort those, including each other, whose lives will be
most disturbed by his passing. Rest assured that it was an easy and painless
one. If he could believe that you would not mourn too deeply, I believe he
would even have been happy.
My last wish
is that neither of you forget me. I know that Angelo never will, but other than
that, those who would remember me are gone and that leaves only the three of
you. He knows that I have died. He knew it a long time ago. My own passing was
also easy. I have fulfilled the purpose for which I was born. Not everybody can
be said to be so fortunate.
The next step
is up to you. The Centre has no knowledge of our location and, should you
choose, the two of you could vanish together and never be heard from again. But
I don’t think you will do that. Working together, you could destroy the Centre
completely, reveal all of the secrets and recover the past that they have
stolen from you. But whether you do it or not is up to you – and fate.
I hope that
one day we will be together again. My knowledge stops at all things earthly,
but I believe that love transcends death and both of you are very dear to me.
Thus I will wait for you both and we will finally get the chance, perhaps, to
know each other in a situation without pain. That hope sustains me. Let it
sustain you also.
My eternal
love,
Rebecca.