Born, Darkly: Chapter 7
Born, Darkly (Darkly, Madly Duet Book 1)
Breaking glass. Twisting metal. Grinding against asphalt. The smell of leaking gas.
I relax my eyelids, trying not to force the memory. âItâs blackness after that,â I say, lacing my fingers together on my lap. âCan I open my eyes now?â
I hear Sadie draw in a deep breath. âLetâs try a little longer. Practice your breathing technique. Let the blackness settle over you.â
With a resigned nod, I fill my lungs. Hold my breath for five seconds, then expel the breath. I do this three times. Each intake sends a sharp pain into my lower back. My hands clench into fists as I release another lungful, freeing a curse.
I open my eyes. âThe painâs too much today.â I flex my fingers to work out the stress. âIâm sorry you came all this way.â
She tilts her head. âIâm not. No matter if we resolve anything in this session or not, I still get to visit my friend.â Her smile is warm yet practiced. This doesnât bother me, because it doesnât mean she feels the opposite of what sheâs saying. Sadie isnât able to experience feelings the way the average person does.
Back in college, we discovered early on that Sadie had sociopathic tendencies, which resulted from a kidnapping she suffered as a young adult. She was tortured for days, and then she witnessed her abductorâs death during her rescue. Sheâs been able to channel this incident into a passionate career as a criminal behavioral analyst.
Only those closest to her know that her practiced mannerisms are a performance to fit in with society. Itâs also why I requested she be here today, to help me work through some residual complications from my own past that I was never able to confront. Or rather, refused to confront. Sadieâs candor and insight might be uncomfortable for me, but she may also give me the push I need.
âYouâve gotten really good at that emotions thing,â I say, smiling. âBut you donât need the farce with me. You know this.â
Her features relax into their natural state. âI do it so often now, I donât realize it. A reflex. Like Iâm a real human being or something.â She laughs.
I nearly reach out to her, but decide to pull my string from my pocket instead. Sadie is one of the only people I trust enough to let my guard down. âYouâre as real as they come.â
Her expression shifts, more serious as she seizes a change in topic. âYour most recent patient,â she says, âtell me about him.â
I cock an eyebrow. âNice pivot.â She shrugs, unapologetic. âWell, since I canât discuss our sessionsâ¦what do you want to know?â I tighten the string around my finger.
âHow youâre handling it, and why suddenly after all these years youâre thinking about the surgery.â
âCause and effect.â I unwind the string. âItâs that simple, isnât it?â
âIt is.â
I bury my thread in my pocket and cup my hands together, concealing the scar along my palm thatâs started to throb. âIâm experiencing countertransference,â I admit.
Sadie doesnât react. Countertransference is a normal occurrence in our field. âSo this is the real reason for why Iâm here.â
âI am considering the surgeryâ¦but I also need to know if I should discontinue this particular patientâs sessions.â
Sadie sits forward, and I notice for the first time that sheâs wearing a V-neck, allowing me a glimpse of the scar along her collarbone. Something sheâs hidden since the day we met. âAre you irritated during the sessions?â
I shake my head. âNo.â
âIs your back pain distracting? Could the pain be the outside source for projected emotions on your patient? Are you agitated? Anxious?â
Again, I shake my head. âI wish it was that simple. Iâve dealt with that before.â I pause, mentally arranging the words before Iâm able to voice them. âIâm attracted to him.â But itâs more than thatâ¦
Thereâs no judgment in Sadieâs green eyes. âIs it purely physical?â
I lick my lips. âItâs physicalâ¦and emotional, in part. Grayson is intelligent. Self-aware. Intense.â I inhale deeply. âHe might be the first patient I actually believe I can help rehabilitate.â
âAnd you want that for him.â
âOf course.â Thoughts on our last session spring up. âHeâs a manipulator. And I know the danger with manipulators, but I witnessed a breakthrough during our last meeting. I just need to work through what Iâm experiencing, because Iâm afraid without me heâll be sentenced to death.â
Sadie leans back. Sheâs seated in my chair. Iâm the patient today. âYou said afraid. Fear is a strong emotion. What else are you afraid of?â
I give my head a quick shake, a mock laugh held at the base of my throat. I know these tactics, I know the process, and yet it doesnât make being in the hot seat any easier. âYou want to know if thereâs any correlation between my thoughts of surgery and my patient being on death row?â
She ticks her head to the side in a half shrug. âIs there?â
I pull my bottom lip between my teeth. âI donât think there is. The reasons for why Iâve put the surgery off have nothing to do with how Iâm reacting to my patient.â
âLondon, weâve never fully addressed your survivorâs guilt,â she says. âAre you taking any steps to finally confront it?â
âIâm considering the surgery, arenât I?â I glance at the fish tank. âSorry. Iâm snappy today.â
âNo, youâre right. It is a major step to finally confront the fact that you are not responsible for your fatherâs death.â
Like a slap to the face, her words smack hard and fast. My reflexive response is just as sharp. âI have never admitted that I blame myselfââ
âYouâve refused surgery that will correct your L-five and L-three injuries since the accident,â she presses. âYou live with the pain daily because you were driving the car that night. It doesnât take a professional to see the guilt you suffer, that you force yourself to suffer, London. And now that a patient, who you believe can make progress for the better, is about to be sentenced to death, you want to suffer that guilt, also. Youâre projecting your shame onto a patient whoâif you donât saveâyou will bear the guilt for his death. Do you want to risk your career because you refuse to deal with this guilt? Have you ever asked yourself why you feel this need to seek mercy for murderers in the first place?â
Brutal honesty. The reason why I allowed Sadie into my mind. I wipe the perspiration from my forehead. When I look at my hand, I glimpse the inked key beneath the layer of makeup. My temples pound in sync to my increasing heartbeat.
âI need a break.â I stand and head toward the mini-fridge to grab a bottle of water. I take a long pull before I bring a bottle back for Sadie.
She accepts and sets the water on the floor. âToo deep for a reentry session?â
I huff a laugh. Then more serious, I look into her supportive gaze. âI killed my father.â
Iâve never said those words out loud.
Sadie doesnât flinch. âThe car wreck killed your father.â
I nod, even though I know better. âI identify with him,â I say. That Iâm referring to Grayson is understood. âMy patient is the Angel of Maine. He kills ruthlessly. Without mercy, though his moniker suggests otherwise. And thereâs not a bone in my body that can find fault with his logic. All his victims were deserving of punishment. And I identify with him, because Iâm glad theyâre dead.â
Silence falls between us, the quiet growing too loud until I canât stand staring at the floor any longer. I glance up. Sadieâs expression still harbors no hint of judgment, and somehow, that makes this worse.
âI know.â I clear my bangs from my vision. âI need to stop the sessions with him.â
âNo,â she says, shocking me. âYou need to delve deeper, trusting yourself to explore both transference and countertransference for you and your patient.â
My brow furrows. âPsychoanalysis? I thought you agreed long ago I was not good with Freudian methods.â
âYouâre terrible with them.â Her smile is sincere. âBut it would be a shame to allow a challenge to deter you from a great discovery just because of a little fear.â
âChallenge myself,â I repeat, hearing the fear distinctly in my voice. âIs that doctorâs orders?â
Her dark eyebrows raise. âIn fact, it is. You donât need me to tell you what to do, or give you permission. If your patient is sentenced to death, you have to accept it, and accept that it is not a reflection on you or your life. The danger isnât whether or not youâre developing personal feelings for your patient. That can be remedied. A few sessions together and weâll resolve them and youâll go on with your career.â
I hang on to her last words, waiting for the other shoe to drop. Thereâs always a downside.
She leans in close. âThe danger is in discovering the why. There are certain doors our minds close to protect us. Whether itâs blacked out memories or denialââ her gaze doesnât waver ââweâve chained those doors closed for a reason. Once you break the locks, thereâs no going back. You may have to accept a new reality for yourself, and that can be dangerous.â
I knew in asking Sadie here I wouldnât be able to continue to hide the truth. Sheâs mastered her abilities. âIâm scared that Iâve already begun the process.â
She reaches across to take my hand, and I let her. Itâs the kind of comfort you offer someone when theyâve lost a loved oneâthe pure desolation of oneâs soul. Although Sadie is here with me, Iâm embarking on this journey alone.
Iâm not afraid of what lies beyond the blackness. I know whatâs there lurking, waiting. Threatening. Iâm afraid that once I set the truth free, Iâll lose the last of my humanity.
âTell me what happened before the wreck. Let me be your anchor.â Sadieâs hand closes over mine, holding on to me tighter.
Her question lashes out like a whip, cracking the seams of time, and the past bleeds into the present. First, a hazy red at the corners, then the blood covers my memories.
So much blood.
If Sadie knew the truthâif she knew the whole storyâthen her advice to pursue a deeper connection with my disturbed patient may be different. Beneath my professional obligations, a voice whispers from the dark recesses of my mind. A warning. To protect myself, I have to escape Grayson.
Heâs a danger.
I swallow hard. Once I begin, I donât stop until I have no breath left to tell another soul. âHe wore a key around his neckâ¦â