Eyes Wide Open: Chapter 7
Eyes Wide Open: The Blackstone Affair, Book 3
âWhat could cause her pills not to work right? Brynne told me sheâs been on them for several years. Explain this to me,â I demanded.
Freddy looked at me sympathetically. âRelax, mate. Itâs not the end of the world. She wonât be forced into anything. We live in 2012. There are options.â
âOh, fuck!â The idea that she could be pregnant was enough to process at the moment, but even thinking about what Fred might be suggesting was even worse. âA termination, you mean?â
âYes. Sheâs within her rights, and it is one option. Adoption is another,â he said softly.
I flopped down into a chair, set my elbows on my knees and leaned my forehead on my hands. I just sat there and breathed. As much as I was in shock, I knew that terminating the pregnancy was out of the question. Out of the fucking realm of possibility. No way would I allow my child to be killed or have it hushed away. I just hoped that Brynne felt the same way I did. What if she doesnât?
âWell, you two need to have a talk and then she should have a test to confirm. If you want me to do one and speak to her I will, but youâre going to have to go there first, E, and discuss it together.â
I nodded into my hands and hauled arse up from the chair. Fred clapped a hand on my back in support. âBut how? If sheâs taking her pills, why would this happen?â I persisted. Maybe in some far reaches of my pathetic attempt at denial I hoped a bell would ring proclaiming it was time to wake up.
Freddy smiled and shook his head at me. âThings change, other medications can diminish the effects of contraception, condoms blow out, people get drunk and have a go, they get illnesses that alter their bodyâs ability to metabolize the drugs, and most important, nothing is one hundred percent effective. The only thing is celibacy.â He gave me a look. âCondoms?â
I shook my head and looked down at the floor.
âAhh, well then, if youâve made deposits in the bank, my man, it can happen very easily.â
I winced. âHow do I go upstairs to her and tell her I think Iâve knocked her up and she needs to have a test? How?!â
Freddy went to the wet bar, poured me a vodka double and handed it over.
I gulped it down and he slapped me on the back a second time.
âI donât think youâre going to have to go upstairs to do it,â Fred said.
I snapped my head up to ask him what he meant, and felt my knees go weak again.
Zara and Brynne walked into the room, hand in hand and smiling wide. She looked so happy . . . and beautiful . . . and . . . pregnant.
âOh, hi.â I smiled at Ethan and wondered why he looked at me like Iâd grown a second head. âWhat are you guys gossiping about in here? Man talk?â
Ethan chuckled nervously and looked a little pale. He looked terrified, actually. Now thatâs very weird.
âIs everything okay? Did you get a call from Neil?â I asked, starting to feel uneasy myself. âDid he find out who sent that text last night?â I put my free hand up to my neck and tried to still the panic suddenly rising up.
The thing with Ethan is he grounds us. Heâs the sure one, exuding confidence at every turn. He makes me feel safe, so seeing him look like he did right then . . . worried . . . well, it scared the shit out of me.
He came right over and pulled me close up against his chest. âNo. Nothing like that.â He kissed me on the forehead and held my face, looking much more like the Ethan I know and love. âHeâs still working on your phone.â He shook his head. âDonât even think about that damn text, okay? Are you thirsty? Would you like some water? How about you sit down and get off your feet.â He led us over to the couch and practically shoved me down onto it.
âUm . . . okay.â I shook my head and narrowed my eyes at him, mouthing, âWhat the hell?â
âNothing, baby. You just look tired. How was your nap?â His voice sounded strange.
I frowned back at him. âMy nap was great, but I didnât sleep a terribly long time.â Zara crawled onto my lap and I began smoothing over her long curls. âWhile you were off having ice cream I got a tour of Hallborough and some pictures of Mallertonâs portrait of Sir Jeremy and his Georgina for Gaby . . . and sent them off.â
âThatâs nice,â Ethan said, dragging a hand through his hair.
âYeah . . . it was nice.â I looked over at Freddy and got a strange vibe from him too. Weâd had a great conversation earlier while the rest of them were gone, and heâd given me a tour of the house. Now he looked like he just wanted to get the hell out of the room. âWhat is going on? Why are you both acting so weird?â
Ethan shrugged and held his hands up in helplessness. âBaby . . .â
Freddy came over to where I was and held out his hands for Zara. âCome with Daddy, little one. Uncle Ethan wants to talk to Brynne.â
âOh, okay,â I said, reluctantly handing her over. âI wanted to hear all about your trip to get ice cream with Uncle Ethan.â I made a sad face at Zara.
âThe ice cream was nice,â she said from up in her fatherâs arms. âMummy told Uncle Ethan she would bet the house that you is very preggers and going to be parents whether you likes it or not.â She smiled sweetly. âI shared with Rags so Uncle Ethan and Mum could yell about your preggers.â
Several things happened all at once. I was on my feet instead of the couch, but had no idea how I got there. I could see myself standing up, right in the middle of Hallboroughâs beautiful Georgian drawing room with its elegant furniture and paintings and rugs. I could see Ethanâs handsome face and the afternoon sun filtering in through the tall windows. And all those particles swirling in the airâthe kind that are usually invisible, but when the sunlight hits just right, you can see them lazily floating, suspended as if by magic. Come to think of it, I was floating too. The ceiling held me back from drifting away into the sky and probably farther into outer space. I would have kept floating away. I know I would have if it werenât for the ceiling.
Ethan cursed and stumbled toward me. I kept hearing my name. Over and over I heard my name called. I could see everything. I was standing there. Ethan was flying toward me. Freddy was running out of the room so fast with Zara it looked like a blur of movie footage that was sped up. The room suddenly felt warm; no, it felt hot. Like an oven. I looked down from the ceiling at Ethan rushing toward the âmeâ standing in the drawing room. He reached out his arms, but then everything slowed down. Real slow. Ethan kept moving but his speed reduced even further. I didnât think heâd ever reach me. I blinked and tried to make sense of what Zara had said. Freddy had already taken her out of the room, though, so I couldnât ask her about it. I even heard her little voice ask Freddy, âDaddy, whatâs preggers?â
âI love you.â I woke up to those words coming from Ethanâs lips. I was back on the couch, but this time I was lying down. Ethan was on his knees on the floor stroking over my head and hair with a whole lot of concern in his eyes. âYouâre back . . .â Ethan closed his eyes then opened them again. He looked pretty shaken up, probably a lot like I felt. Get in line, buddy. That was an out-of-body experience I just had. I could check that one off my life list now.
I remembered.
And the weight of the knowledge compressed my chest until I gasped in a huge breath and struggled to sit up. Ethan kept me down and shushed me. The urge to flee was great. It was as if my subconscious knew that panicking wouldnât help a bit, but like with an addiction you do it anyway even though you know itâll only make things worse.
I shook my head at him. âIâm not, Ethan. Iâm not pregnant. I take my pills and Iâve never missed a day . . .â
He just kept stroking my hair with one hand, resting his other on my shoulder.
He was afraid I was going to run. I know Ethan and I can see how he thinks sometimes. He was holding me down on that couch so I couldnât leave him, or run away, or take off, or bolt. You are a very wise man, Ethan Blackstone.
Because that is exactly what I wanted to do.
âRemember what I just said to you, Brynne.â His voice was hard but also vulnerable. I could hear the worry in it.
âThat you love me?â
He nodded slowly, never taking his hands off me.
âBut I am not pregnant,â I insisted. âLet me up.â
âBrynne, you need to have a test and then weâll know for certain. Hannah and Fred think you could be . . .â he trailed off, his voice so unsure. âHannah helped me get some pregnancy kits from the chemistâs for you to . . .â
I pushed at him hard. âLet me go!â
âBrynne . . . baby, please just listenââ
âLet. Me. Go. Now!â
He backed off. I sat up and folded my arms beneath my breasts. I felt so hot and thirsty and just plain old wrong at the moment I couldnât be a very good judge of much of anything.
âDonât freak, okay? We need to discuss this like adults.â His jaw ticked from the grinding of teeth.
âYeah,â I sneered at him. âDiscuss. That wouldâve been a good idea before you talked to your sister and Freddy about me. Ethan!? Why would you do that? Why?â
âI didnât. I had no idea. Hannah brought it up to me and then Fred got involved. They think you could be pregnant. Sick last night, napping all the time, and . . . other stuff.â
âWhat other stuff?â
Ethan looked like he would rather swallow a mouthful of glass than have this discussion with me right now.
He grimaced. âWould you just take the test?â
âNo! I wonât just take a test because you and your family think I should! What other stuff?!â The irrationality I knew I shouldnât be allowing in was getting the old security guard wave-through. Welcome to HorrorLand, please park in lot Youâre-Royally-Fucked and make your way to the main gate, where youâll be greeted by your worst nightmare.
He brought both hands up to my chest, cupped a breast in each and squeezed. I winced from the pain and the panic pumped up another notch. I remembered this kind of pain from before. Iâd felt it before. Noooooo!
I pushed his hands away sharply. âYou talked about that with them?! Oh my God!â
âIt wasnât like that, Brynne. I didnât talk about you. Hannah just assumed some things and when I asked for an explanation she told me about . . . symptoms.â He lowered his voice. âYou have all those symptoms. Youâre getting sick and taking naps and they hurt . . .â He gestured at my chest and trailed off, the wariness in his voice making me feel like a bitch again. I knew I could dish out bitchiness in spades when the occasion called for it. This could be considered one of those times.
I leaned forward and buried my hands in my hair and just sat there, staring down at the floor and tried to process. Ethan let me be, which was a damn good thing because I wanted to lash out and bite like a trapped animal would do. Symptoms . . . My periods are never much and Iâve missed them completely before. My doctor assured me it was normal with the particular kind of birth control pill I take so Iâd never worried about it. Truthfully, though, Iâd not needed to worry because when you arenât having sex with anyone, you donât have to worry youâll get pregnant! Before Ethan, sex was sporadic and always protected. I wasnât fool enough to let a guy go without a condom when we didnât know each other very well. So why did I with Ethan, dumbass? Hell, Ethan had only used a condom one time. Once. Lots and lots of opportunities for the little swimmers to find a way in. Again, Iâm a huge enormous dumbass.
Being sick the night before had felt very odd, because as soon as I puked it was like nothing was wrong with me at all. The same thing happened at breakfast this morning. I was really hungry, and then when the food came I just wanted toast. Come to think of it, my stomach felt weak right now. That late lunch of a roast beef sandwich was not settling in well. My breasts did hurt. Iâd taken naps the last two days.
Everything illuminated and came together in a flash of understanding and terrible anxiety. Why was Ethan so calm? He must be appalled too if this was true.
âIt canât be true. It just canât,â I said to no one in particular.
âRemember what I said, Brynne,â he said with an edge.
I reached out with my hand and he grabbed it, too overwhelmed to really answer him. What could I say to him anyway? Sorry, my birth control pills malfunctioned? Iâm a fucked-up mess and always have been, I might as well get knocked up so I can screw up my life some more? Or, I know this is complicating your stressful life, Ethan, Iâm really, really sorry about that, but weâre pregnant.
I swallowed convulsively. Watery saliva began pooling in my throat. More came, and then more, and I knew I would be horribly sick again. I struggled to manage the effects of the nausea that overtook me so suddenly.
I lost.
Lurching up, I ran for the closest bathroom, my mind desperately trying to remember the floor plan of this huge labyrinth of a house. My hand over my mouth, I stumbled into the powder room just off the solarium and flung myself over the toilet. I puked my guts out until there was nothing left to come up.
I wanted to run away.
Iâd been here for the second time in less than twenty-four hours with my girl and it sucked. Especially for her. Talking seemed like a pointless exercise, so I didnât. I just held her hair and let her go to work on expelling the contents of her stomach. I wet a cloth with cold water from the sink and handed it to her. She took it from me, pressed it over her whole face and groaned. I felt completely helpless. You did this to her and she hates you for it.
Fred tapped on the open door. âHouse call,â he said kindly.
âCan you give her something, Fred?â
Brynne took the cloth away from her face, looking pale and about ready to cry. Fred smiled at her. âI can give you an anti-nausea but itâll just be symptomatic.â
âPlease,â she answered, nodding her head.
âWhat does that mean, just symptomatic?â I asked.
Fred spoke to Brynne. âMy dear, I donât feel comfortable doing a treatment on you if we donât have a confirmation. Are you ready to try a test?â He spoke gently. âThen weâll know for sure and you and E can decide whatâs best for the two of you. We really need that test first, though.â He gave a quick nod.
âOkay.â That was all she said and she spoke to Fred without even looking at me. She seemed rather cold and sort of detached, like we were strangers now. That hurt. I desperately wanted her to look me in the eyes, but she wouldnât. She just held the wet cloth to her face and kept her eyes locked on the wall.
Fred set the two test kits down on the sink counter. Hannah had helped me choose them in the village earlier, because I sure as hell didnât know what I was doing. After that conversation with my sister, sheâd convinced me I needed to buy some pregnancy tests. This was surreal. It really was. Here we three were standing around in a bathroom trying to pretend this was standard operating procedure when, in fact, it was totally fucked up. My Brynne at metaphorical gunpoint practically being forced into a surprise pregnancy test, and with me knowing about her past and the other time she was impregnated.
FUCK! I wanted to punch the wall again but didnât dare in this place. These walls were worth too damn much.
Lots of crazy thoughts flooded my brain. What if she hates me for knocking her up? What if this breaks us? What if she wants a termination? What if she isnât even pregnant after all and this scares her off? I was terrified but I still wanted to know. Now. I needed some answers.
âRight,â Fred said, âweâll talk in a bit and work on getting you to feeling better, my dear.â He eased out of the small room to leave but turned back to say something else. And there was Brynne standing stiffly with downcast eyes like a cornered animal. It broke my heart to witness. It really fuckinâ did. âBrynne, weâre here to help and support in any way that we can. I mean that and I know that Hannah does too.â
âThank you,â she answered in a small voice.
With Fred gone it was just the two of us. Brynne didnât move, she just stood there. It was awkward. I wanted to touch her but was afraid to.
âBrynne?â
She lifted her eyes and swallowed, looking miserable and pale. The second I moved toward her she backed up a step and held up her hand to keep me away. âIâI need to be alone . . .â Her bottom lip trembled as she choked out the words. So different from when it turned up in a sexy smile. Brynne usually smiled a lot more than I did. Her whole face lit up when she did it. Whenever she smiled, it made me want to smile in return. She made me want a lot of things Iâd never cared about before too. But she wasnât smiling now. She was scared to death.
It killed me to see her like this. âBaby, remember what I said.â I stepped out of the bathroom but I didnât want to. I wanted to be right beside her when she found out. I didnât want to leave her alone. I wanted her in my arms telling me she loved me and that we could do this. I needed that from her right now, and I knew I wouldnât be getting it.
She met my gaze as she started to shut the door slowly. âDonât forget,â I said just before it closed and I was facing an elegant carved door instead of my girl, who was struggling on the other side of it.
Time passed slowly as I waited for her to come out. My dread grew exponentially as the minutes ticked away. I checked my mobile for messages and responded to some of them when I got to a text from Neil: Have news on Fielding. MP rpt.
I dialed and waited for the connection, staring at the bathroom door and wondering what was happening inside. My mind went on full alert as I transferred into protection mode.
âBoss.â
âA missing person? Fielding is missing? Please tell me thatâs not true.â
Neil sighed. âYeah, report was filed just a few days ago by his parents, who live somewhere in the Northeast; Pennsylvania, I think. Last confirmed contact was the thirtieth of May. According to the report, he didnât show for work. His apartment checks out. Passport left behind and no evidence of a hasty flight. The consulate of course has no record of travel outside of the U.S.â
âFuck, thatâs not nice news, mate.â
âI know. The possibilities are endless. His father suspects foul play, and has said so in interviews to the papers.â
âI bet Oakleyâs camp loves the press.â I said sarcastically.
âNo accusation, though. Senator Oakley is not mentioned, so the connection hasnât been made between Montrose and Fielding to Lance Oakley.â
âSo letâs extrapolate this. Congressman Woodsonâs plane goes down the beginning of April. Oakleyâs name starts popping up as a replacement almost immediately. Montrose gets in a bar fight and takes multiple stab wounds to the neck and chest on April twenty-fourth. The motherfucker dies two days later in hospital. Suspect unknown. Tom Bennett contacts me and I take over here on the third of May with Brynne at the Andersen Gallery. Fieldingâs last sighting was the end of May. Everythingâs quiet for a month. Text from ArmyOps17 to Brynneâs mobile last night, the twenty-ninth of June.â
âYeah.â
âWhatâs your gut telling you about Fielding? Youâve seen the reports.â
âI think heâs dead in a shallow grave somewhere or maybe in the Pacific feeding the fish.â
âConnected to Oakley, you think?â
âHard to know. Justin Fielding had a drug problem. Cocaine, apparently.â
One of the reasons Neil and I worked so well together was our thought processes were so in tune. Neil wasnât a babbler. He said what was needed and didnât pad the conversation with useless crap. Just the facts. And his instincts were dead-on, so when he said he didnât know, that meant things were still falling into place.
âOkay then. We have two of our video perps out of the picture, one dead and one confirmed missing. The third is on active duty in Iraq and a very improbable suspect. The text came from inside the UK and from someone who saw the video at some point in time because they knew the song that was on the original.â
âThatâs about right.â
âHow do you feel about a little trip out to California?â
âI could do that. Can work on my tan and kill two birds with one stone.â
âAll right then. Have Frances set you up for early next week. I canât have you gone until Iâm back in town.â
âHow is Brynne feeling? Better, I hope.â Neil asked in a soft voice.
I groaned into the phone and grasped at what to answer. Iâm saying fucking nothing!
âUm . . . sheâs still feeling ill. Fredâs helping her though.â I rushed out a quick good-bye and ended our call fast. I could talk about work all day long, but personal stuff was not something I had any experience with, nor did I have a desire to start discussing.
I checked my watch and headed for the door. Twenty minutes had passed since sheâd closed the door on me. Seemed like ages ago now. I rapped my knuckles a couple of times. âBrynne? May I come in?â
Nothing.
I rattled the handle and called her name again, louder this time.
Silence.
I pressed my ear to the door and listened. I couldnât hear a thing going on inside the bathroom and started imagining the roomâs layout. It is, after all, part of my training to understand the structure of buildings and the fastest way to exit them. Sometimes when things come to you in sudden clarity it is truly frightening. This was one of those times. The solarium abutted the bathroom on the other side of the house.
I knew then. I knew it before the text came through a moment later on my mobile from her: I hav to . . . so sry. WATERLOO