Read In Dreams Online

Authors: J. Sterling

In Dreams (21 page)

BOOK: In Dreams
3.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Off night, I guess.”

“You feeling all right? You don’t necessarily look all right.” Danny asked, concerned.

“Oh yeah. Nothing a good night’s sleep won’t fix.”

“All right, bud. I believe you.”

“One more game?” Cooper asked and Danny racked the balls.

“So…things seem different between you and Coop,” Taylor noted.

“Today sort of changed things. I can’t explain it, but I feel different inside.”

“Like, you and my brother are going to break up?”

“At some point, yeah. I mean, this was a wake-up call. I can’t keep living the way I’ve been living.”

“I know it must be hard, but you’re doing the right thing.”

“Thanks. I know it’s the right thing to do, but my heart doesn’t like being logical.” Katherine grabbed onto a chair for balance as her eyes rolled back.

“Whoa. You okay there, cowgirl?” Taylor asked.

“Yeah, just a little dizzy. Plus, I’m really tired. I’m sure it’s nothing,” Katherine smiled to reassure her friend.

“I’ll go get the guys, you go sit down,” Taylor insisted and Katherine obliged.

Cooper refused to let Katherine out of his sight and in all honesty, she didn’t mind. It was the first time in ages her thoughts were only of him. She didn’t wish or want to be anywhere else.

She fell asleep on the couch in Cooper’s arms. He refused to let her spend the night alone after the traumatic day she’d had. When she woke up once during the night she smiled as she felt Cooper’s arms still wrapped securely around her.

They both startled awake to the sound of doors slamming shut and a car speeding away. They thought nothing of it and shook it off.

“Do you want to go get into your bed?” Cooper asked.

“I think so.” She started to get up, but Cooper didn’t budge. “Come with me please. I don’t want to sleep alone.” Cooper followed her into the bedroom and they both lay on top of the bed. He pulled the comforter over them as Katherine snuggled into his chest. They fell asleep in each other’s arms.

****

Katherine walked down the familiar sandy path toward the silhouette on the bench. The beach was dark and the moon hung in the sky above as if waiting to witness the heartbreak about to come. Austen stood and met her on the pathway. She started to speak, but he stopped her. He pulled her close and sang softly into her ear. They slow danced together by the light of the moon. Tears poured from her eyes and her heart felt like it had dropped to the sand below.

Austen tried to hold back his own tears, but failed. He knew why she had come and the pain of that realization was too much, even for him.

She broke the silence. “This is the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do.”

“I know.” He brushed her cheek and more tears fell.

“It hurts so much. I need you to know how painful this is.” She placed his hand above her heart. “I know we keep saying it’s the right thing to do, but wouldn’t it be easier?”

“Sometimes the right thing to do is the harder thing.” He leaned down to kiss her sweet lips. “I love you, Katherine. I always will.”

His words almost brought her to her knees. She thought they might give out on her at any moment and she’d tumble to the ground at his feet. “I don’t think I can do this, Austen.” She cried so hard that she had trouble breathing. She clenched at her stomach. “It hurts.” Her chest felt like it had caved in on her from the inside.

“I know, babe. I know.” He tried desperately to comfort her.

“I can’t. It’s too much. I can’t do it.” She wept in his arms. “Oh, God. I don’t want to live without you.”

The reality of saying goodbye to him forever was simply too much.

Austen knew Katherine needed him to be strong. He wiped at his tears and gained control of his voice. “I’ll never leave you. I’ll always be here, Katherine. We can’t keep doing this. You know why you came here tonight. You have to do it.”

Any sign of weakness and she’d convince them both that leaving was wrong. He was certain it wouldn’t take much effort on her part to make him change his mind.

She sniffed and let out a quick huff. “You’re right.” She looked into his clear blue eyes. “Do we just say goodbye then and walk away like nothing? Like it never mattered or happened?”

“Don’t say that. We both know it was the wrong time for us. But we matter. We will always matter.”

He kissed her again, his lips savoring the taste of hers. He knew it would be their last, so he made it count. There was more passion in that one kiss than in most people have in a lifetime.

“I will love you until the day I die,” she told him.

“Well, I’m already dead and I still love you. So I win,” he half smiled.

“That’s not funny.”

“I know.” He cupped her face again.

She looked at him with longing and took one last deep breath. “Goodbye, Austen.”

She gathered up all the courage she could muster and walked down the path, away from the beach. She knew if she didn’t leave now, she never would. Her legs tried to stop walking. Her heart begged her to stay. Her eyes willed her to turn around and look at him one last time. But there was no way she could see his face again and continue to leave. So she continued to stumble forward.

“Goodbye, Katherine.”

Austen stood and watched until she was out of sight. He wanted to run after her, stop her, scream at her to stay. But he knew all he could do was allow her to walk out of his life forever. Once he was sure she was gone, he fell to his knees in heart-wrenching pain and clutched his chest, sobbing her name.

Chapter Seventeen

Cooper woke to the sound of Katherine’s sobs. She cried in her sleep and tears streamed down her cheeks, soaking her pillow. He wanted to wake her, but he guessed where she was and who she was with. Out of respect, he let her continue sleeping. He watched her shake and cry. It hurt him to see her in such pain and he wanted to make it go away, but knew it wasn’t his place. He thought of her and Austen and assumed they were happy, laughing and loving. It made him sick to think about.

Then she opened her eyes.

He watched as she wiped the tears from her face. “Are you okay?” He wasn’t sure he wanted to hear her answer.

She looked at him and steadied her breathing, “I will be.”

“Did something happen?”

“I think I need to go for a walk.” She pushed away from his arms and out of the bed.

Cooper didn’t want her to wander around outside by herself. What if she was still weak and something happened to her? He started to get up when she stopped him, “I need to be by myself right now, Cooper.”

“Did you change your mind? About us?” He didn’t know if one night’s dream could change everything that had transpired between them.

She looked at him softly and reassured his worried heart. “No. I haven’t changed my mind. But I need to be alone for a bit.” She tried to stifle the sound of her aching heart, but it was obvious to him she was hurting.

“Bring this, please,” Cooper handed her a walkie-talkie.

She reached out to take the slick black device and rolled her eyes at him.

“You never know. You might feel light headed or something.”

“Okay, weirdo.” She closed the door behind her and headed into the chilly air.

****

Katherine looked for a place where she could sit and be alone with her thoughts. Being with Cooper so quickly after Austen was painful; she felt like she didn’t deserve either of them. Her heart ached as she grieved. She wanted to fall to her knees and scream at the very idea of never being able to talk to or feel Austen again. Her mind shifted between moments of extreme sadness and sheer happiness as she thought of all that she and Austen had shared. Her perspective altered to one of thankfulness. She knew it was rare to experience what she had and she felt genuinely blessed.

Peace and silence engulfed her. It was as if she had the entire lake to herself. She silently thanked Austen for all he had given her. She told him she loved him and that no one could ever replace what she felt for him in her heart. Her body filled with warmth as she closed her eyes and let the snow fall on her face.

Cooper’s image filtered into her thoughts. Thinking about him brought excited chills to her body. He had always deserved her heart and she was finally ready to give it to him. Well, most of it anyway. She would never have her whole heart to give.

She wiped away the lone teardrop that rested on her cheek and brushed the snow from her pants. With one last thought of Austen, she walked back toward the house…and Cooper. The walkie-talkie clicked and she let Cooper know she was on her way back.

He met her at the door with a steaming mug of tea. She threw her arms around his neck and kissed him carefully, trying not to spill. “Thank you for being so understanding about everything. I really appreciate it.”

He set the cup down and lifted her up into his arms. “So you’re still in love with me then?”

“Absolutely.”

He pressed his lips against hers and kissed her until she could barely breathe. “We should probably get going. I’ll go find Taylor and Danny.”

Katherine smiled and thanked him again. She headed into the room where she slept and her things were scattered all over the floor. She didn’t remember leaving it like that. She walked into the bathroom and it was more of the same. Bottles were strewn all across the countertop and along the floor. A confused look spread across her face as she bent down to pick everything up. “Maybe I did this last night and I don’t remember? Weird.”

Just then Cooper rushed in and asked her if she had seen Taylor or Danny. “No. Why? Can’t you find them?”

“No. They aren’t anywhere. Where would they have gone?”

“Maybe they went for a walk? Did you check outside?” Katherine shrugged.

“I’ll go look now. You didn’t see them when you were out there, did you?”

“No.” Then she remembered the eerie quiet, “I…didn’t see anyone.”

Cooper headed out of the bathroom and she heard a door slam. Katherine had a weird feeling that something wasn’t right. She walked into the kitchen and noticed a mess of plates and she searched her memory. Hadn’t they just cleaned the dishes last night after dinner? She swore they had. She heard the downstairs door slam as Cooper ran up the stairs.

“My Jeep isn’t here.”

“What?”

Cooper’s eyes were crazy and for the second time since she’d met him, he looked scared and unsure of himself. “The Jeep is gone and they aren’t here.”

“What is happening and why is it so cold, Cooper? I’m so cold all of a sudden.” He walked over to her and squeezed her tight.

“Jesus, Kat, you’re freezing.” He wrapped as much of his muscular body as he could around her small frame.

“Do you hear that?” They both stilled.

“Is that…crying?” Cooper strained to hear.

“It sounds like it, but where is it coming from?” Katherine ran from room to room, trying to get closer to the sound.

A faint beeping sound could also be heard. “What is that?”

“What’s going on? I’m scared.” She looked at Cooper and his face was chalky. “Cooper, your face. It’s so pale.”

“What do you mean?” He lifted his hand to touch his face, and collapsed to the ground.

Katherine screamed. She knelt next to his lifeless body and tried to shake him awake. She cried and screamed his name, but he wouldn’t come to. She put her head on his chest and sobbed, “Cooper, please wake up. Wake up.”

“He’s dying.” The voice cut through her cries like a knife. Her heart flipped out of her chest as she turned to see Austen standing above her. He didn’t look like himself and he didn’t seem happy to see her.

“Austen. What’s going on? What’s wrong with Cooper?” She looked down to see Cooper again, but he was gone.

“Where’d he go?” She screamed out his name, “Cooper? Cooper!!”

“He’s dying, Katherine. And so are you.” Austen spoke the words carefully and slowly.

“What? What do you mean? We survived the fall in the ice,” she struggled to recall. “Didn’t we?”

“At first, yes. But something happened to you both last night. Taylor and Danny drove you to the hospital.”

“But I felt fine.” She tried to put the pieces together. She replayed the events of the night and the day. Some thoughts were a blur, but others were crystal clear. “What about everything else then? Was it all a dream or did it really happen?”

“You mean, did you really tell me goodbye?”

She looked down at her feet before answering. “Yes. Was that real?”

“It was. But everything else…well, let’s just say you’re not awake right now.”

“What do you mean not awake?”

“You’re unconscious, Katherine.” Austen maintained his composure as he spoke every word to her without emotion.

“Unconscious? Like, a coma?”

“Precisely.”

“Cooper too?” she asked half-crazed.

“Cooper too.”

It was difficult for Katherine to see Austen and not be with him, but she had to force those thoughts from her mind. Her concern was more for Cooper than it was for herself and she had to focus on how to save him.

“Austen. We have to help him.”

“I’m not sure we can.”

The way he spoke irritated her. “Austen!” She got angry. “I’ve already lost you. I can’t lose Cooper too. I won’t be able to live through it!”

“I know. I’m not sure what I can do, but I’ll do whatever I can.”

The crying got louder. “What…is that?” Katherine closed her eyes tightly and when she opened them, she was in a hospital room looking down at her own body. Taylor sobbed as she held Kat’s limp hand. “Oh, Tay. I’m right here. Taylor!” Katherine yelled at her friend, but Taylor remained unmoved.

“She can’t hear you.” Austen refused to leave her side.

“Where did Cooper go? What happened to him? He was with me and now he’s gone.” Katherine knew what she and Cooper had shared was real. Even if it was only in a dream, it still happened. She had to find him. She ran out of her room and yelled for him down the hospital corridor.

“Cooper! Cooper where are you?” She clumsily crashed into every hospital room door looking for his body.

“Katherine?” She heard him yell her name, but he sounded so far away.

Austen stopped following her and stood at a distance to watch. “Katherine!” Cooper continued to yell until he was close enough for her to respond. He rounded a corner and practically ran into her. “There you are! How did we get here? Did something happen?”

BOOK: In Dreams
3.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Death of a Citizen by Donald Hamilton
Dreaming in Technicolor by Laura Jensen Walker
The Eye of Madness by Mimms, John D;
Shadow of Doubt by Norah McClintock
The Sheriff's Sweetheart by Laurie Kingery
Men and Wives by Ivy Compton-Burnett
Catboy by Eric Walters