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Chapters Eleven through Fourteen |
Chapter 11 - Alexis Unhinged Many weeks later and early one morning Dave was driving his bread truck toward the Price Chopper when he heard Princeâs âTake me with Uâ begin to play on his phone. He had just bought that ringtone and set it to Alexisâs number, so he knew it had to be her. The song had only cost him two bucks. Back then if he knew how much heâd be smiling every time he heard it play. he would have paid so much more. âWhatâs up, my beautiful bebe?â he said cheerfully, answering her call. She was hysterical. She was shouting, swearing and sobbing in a frenzy. He couldnât understand her, she was in such a panic. As he wheeled his truck into an abandoned parking lot and said, âAlexis, I canât make out anything youâre saying. Please, slow down. Are you hurt?â âNo,â she said, but then everything else she said after that was just another string of unintelligible stuff, although he thought he caught a âwhere are you?â in the middle of her babbling, alarming diatribe. âIâm working, covering a route,â he said. âIâm in my truck, in a parking lot, off of Rt. 11 in Livingston.â She murmured, âThank God.â He heard she was still crying, but she was calming down some. He parked and then turned off the truck. âWhatâs wrong?â he asked. She couldnât manage anything other than some crying for a time, but she seemed to be gathering a hold on herself more, so he waited. Eventually she said, âListen, you have to listen to me carefully. You have to do exactly what I tell you. You have to do it without question, even though itâs going to sound weird and fucked up. Got that? No questions. Youâre going to just do it. Understand? No questions.â His forehead crinkled. He thought about this. He said, âOK.â âYou canât ride your motorcycle today,â she said. âWhen you are done delivering today, you come straight over to my apartment. In your car. Do not ride your motorcycle here. Do not ride your bike at all today. If you ride your bike before I see you, we are through. Done. Is that clear?â âThatâs clear, â he said. âBut why?â Alexis screamed at him so loudly it startled him and he almost dropped his phone. âI just said no fucking questions!â She yelled. âWhat are you, a fucking idiot? Why is this simple concept so fucking hard to understand?â She started crying and ranting and, once again, it was getting hard for him to understand her. âAlexis,â he said, but she kept going. âAlexis,â he said again, but she ignored him. âAlexis!â he said firmly and this was the closest he had ever come to raising his voice at her. She did not stop crying, but she did stop talking. âI got it,â he said. âThe minute Iâm done working, Iâm coming straight to your place. In my car. And I wonât ride my bike until I see you. Iâm not riding it today. And I donât have any questions for you as to why.â Her crying lessened a little and she said, âSay it again, so I know you got it straight.â He said, âWhen Iâm done with work today, Iâm going directly to your apartment, in my car. I wonât be riding my bike today. I wonât be touching my bike today. I wonât even be thinking about my motorcycle today, except to remind myself that I wonât be riding it today.â She chuckled and he heard her blow an audible breath in relief. He knew she could be explosive, but he had never experienced her being so absolutely unhinged she wasnât coherent. She was calming down now though, and this was good. âYou forgot one part,â she said. He ran through what she had said. It took him a couple seconds, then he had it, âIf I do, we are through.â She was quiet for a bit, then she started weeping again. But it sounded like it was a helpful type crying now, so he went with it. âIf I ride my bike today, if I put my sorry ass on my bike, youâre kicking said sorry ass to the curb,â he said. âI will not ride my bike with my feet, I will not ride my bike on a street,â he continued with Dr. Seuss type rhythm. Her sobs seemed more controlled. âIâm sorry,â she said. âItâs just really important, no, absolutely crucial, that you donât.â He thought about all this. He said, âYouâre right, you know.â âAbout what?â she asked. âIt isnât a hard or complicated thing youâre asking me,â He said. âIt is really quite an easy thing, now that I think about it.â This, maybe, was a misstep, because this got her bawling again, but he thought he heard that in addition to her crying, that she was laughing a little too. âIâd ask if youâre in bed and what youâre wearing, but I have to remember my instructions. No fucking questions!â he mock shouted, imitating her. She definitely laughed at this. She was getting it together. She said, âIâm home. Iâm skipping class today and Iâm going to cancel my house cleans. Iâll be here when you get here, and I promise Iâll answer all your questions when you get here.â âOK,â he said. âIâm going to ask you a question now? Are you good?â âNot good, but Iâm better,â she said. âOK,â he said. âIâll finish up early by cutting every corner. I think I can be there by four, does that work for you?â âYes,â she said. Chapter 12 - Alexis Loves Dave Dave pulled into Alexisâs apartment buildingâs parking lot (in his car, needless to say) at a quarter past three. He had tried like hell to get there earlier, so she wouldnât worry, but this was the earliest he could make it. He saw her pull her curtain open to see whoâs car it was. Sheâd been listening and watching for him. He went up her steps and she met him at the door. Once inside, she hugged him like a python and she started crying again. She cried for a long time. He just held her, waiting her out. Eventually she let go of him. She told him to sit down, which he did. She didnât sit though. Instead, she started to pace the room. âWhy donât you sit down too?â he suggested. She shook her head no. She looked bad, and it was pretty much impossible for Alexis to look bad. Her hair was greasy and her eyes were all puffy and red. It was obvious she had been crying more during the day. He chided himself, he made the wrong call. He should have nixed all the deliveries and driven the truck directly here when she called. âSo whatâs going on?â he asked. She stopped pacing and closed her eyes. She looked like she was in pain. She didnât know what to say or how to begin. She just stood there. absolutely still, with her eyes closed. Then she opened them, looked straight at him and said, âI had a dream about you last night.â He was already leaping ahead. This was making sense, but he stayed quiet. She continued, âIt was nighttime in the dream. Dark, and it was raining. But I saw you. You were lying in a ditch off a road.â She started to sob in such agony it jarred him. âYou were bloody and dying and your mangled motorcycle was lying next to you.â He nodded his head. âI get it,â he said. âYou had a nightmare about me.â âNo, you donât get it. Nobody ever gets it,â she said. She closed her eyes. âIt wasnât just a fucking dream. Itâs going to happen.â He was completely puzzled by this. âWhy do you think that?â he asked. She opened her eyes and the tears flowed down. But her mouth was clenched hard, like she was very angry too. She tried to speak, but couldnât. She just stood there, with her tears streaming down. She held up three fingers, that was all she could manage at the moment. She tried to speak, but couldnât. âAlexis, I think I should call Dr. Magil,â he said, reaching for his phone. âNo!â she fired out immediately, almost like a growl. She flung herself at him and grabbed his hand, hard. âNo! Heâs the absolutely last person who should hear any of this.â âAny of what?â he asked. She was crouched before him with a wild, desperate look in her eyes. âAny of the truth,â she said. âHe already knows about all this. He thinks theyâre delusions. All of the psychologists, psychiatrists and fucking shrinks Iâve ever had have all said my dreams are delusions. Theyâre not. And they arenât the only ones. Everyone else thinks Iâm totally fucked up, too. Nobody has ever believed me.â âThey all think your dreams are delusional?â he asked. She nodded her head yes. âBut you donât think they are?â he asked. She shook her head no. âWhy not?â he asked. âBecause theyâve come true,â she said. âThree times before last night Iâve had nightmares about someone dying, like the one I had about you last night. They all ended up happening just like I dreamed. Just like I saw they would.â He sat stunned by this at first. But then his mind went back to their meeting with Dr. Magil. This must be her problem that she wouldnât talk about with him. This was why she was in therapy. His mind was trying to figure all this out. âSo, what happened to you last night, thatâs happened to you before? Three times before?â he asked. Alexis got up and started pacing the room again. âYes,â she said. âWith who?â he asked. âThe first dream I had was of my grandfather when I was six. I saw him lying at the bottom of his stairs in his house, dead. Three days later my grandmother found him there in the morning dead, with his neck broken. He had fallen down the stairs the night before. Just like I saw he would.â He, again, was stunned. âThe second dream?â he asked. âMy father, when I was eleven,â she said. âI dreamed of him bleeding out in his humvee in Iraq after it hit a mine in the road, seven days before it actually happened.â He was going to ask about the last one, but she beat him to the punch. âThe third one was about my first boyfriend, Brandon. I saw him, in my dream, commit suicide by drug overdose. That one was sweet because I had two whole weeks with him, before he actually did it.â He sunk back into the couch. He didnât know what to say to all this. He just watched her with heartfelt concern as she paced her living room like a caged animal. âPlease, donât look at me that way,â she said and he lowered his eyes to the floor. âLike Iâm crazy. Do you know how many people have looked at me that way in my life?â âNo,â he said quietly. âWell, I donât know exactly how many either, but I can tell you one thing for sure,â she said. âIt was all of them.â âSo, you think Iâm going to die riding my bike?â he asked. âThatâs what I saw, so itâs not think so, itâs know so,â she said. âThe dream I had of you was exactly like the dreams I had of my grandfather, my father, and of Brandon. Theyâre different from my regular dreams. Theyâre vivid and crystal clear. They donât contain anything fantastic in them. No dinosaurs, no flying monkeys, none of that shit. And they donât fade. I remember every detail, every color, every aspect of all three of them. I remember all three of them clearly, to this day. They are etched in my mind. And they arenât fucking pretty pictures either. My dream of you was exactly like those first three I had. You, bloody and dying in a ditch, next to your motorcycle, alone, during a rainy night. I see it right now, just as clear as I saw it last night when I was sleeping.â He was running through this. His mind went back to the nobody believing her part. âDid you tell anyone about any of those dreams, before these events happened?â he asked. Alexis went ballistic and yelled, âOh, here we fucking go again! Do you know how many times Iâve been down this fucking road?â âNo,â he said quietly. âBut I never have with you, so please, do it once more for me.â His words seemed to reach her. She gathered herself and said, âI told both of my parents of my dream about my grandfather, days before it happened.â âSo I donât understand, why donât they believe you? They should believe you, if they heard you say these things were going to happen, before they happened,â he said. âWell my fatherâs currently fucking dead, so he doesnât believe much of anything,â she lashed out. âOK, why didnât they believe you? After you called it beforehand,â he said. âThey chalked it up to being an educated guess, instead of a premonition. My grandfather had fallen before. In fact, he fell down those same stairs a year before, before the second fall that killed him. Iâll never forgive my parents for dismissing me. I told them. I told them! I fucking told them! I told them to call my grandparents before it happened, but they wouldnât. Then, after my grandfather had died, they said I shouldnât talk openly about it. They said it would just make the family look weird and crazy. But I honestly think at the time they thought I hadnât seen it as it actually happened. They thought I just got âlucky,â so to fucking speak.â âAnd your fatherâs death? Did you tell anyone about that before it happened?â he asked. âAgain, I told both my father and my mother. I told my mother first. She told me to keep it to myself, so I wouldnât worry him. But I was frantic with fear. So the next time I talked to my dad on the phone, I told him. I described to him exactly what I had seen. He said for me not to worry. He told me it was only a dream. One week later, he was dead.â âWell your mother should be able to vouch for you then, right?â he said. âMy mother is bat-shit crazy,â she said. âSheâs worse than me, if you can even fathom that. When my father died, she mentally snapped. Completely. She canât vouch for shit now.â âAnd Brandon?â he asked.. Alexis got completely berserkly animated at this question. She threw herself at his feet with a crazed look in her eyes. She raved, âOh, this is my favorite part! I love this part of my story so fucking much. Who did I tell that I dreamed of Brandon, sitting in his squalid bedroom, finishing off the last touches on his suicide note before he injected himself over and over again with H, weeks before it actually happened? Who do YOU think I told?â she said as she jabbed him in the chest hard with her finger. He said quietly, âYou told him.â âYes! Yes! Fucking Bingo! Yes!â she shouted. âI told him I saw him drugging himself to death, just like Iâm telling you now youâre going to die from a bike accident. But I didnât just tell him. Oh, I had wised up by that point. I wasnât a dopey little girl anymore. I had learned a thing or two, by then. Guess who else? Câmon, this is a fun game! Guess who else I told! Iâll give you a hint. There is no wrong answer here! Câmon Dave! No fucking guesses?!â she asked loudly . âI donât know,â Dave said, sitting stone still. âEveryone! Everyone! Everyone!â she erupted at the top of her lungs. âHis friends, my friends, his parents! I told everyone! I grabbed every fucking stranger I ran into on the street and told them my boyfriend was going to kill himself!â âSo why didnât anyone believe you then? You told them all that Brandon was going to commit suicide, and then he did,â he said. âBecause, just like with my grandfather, in everyoneâs minds there wasnât anything fucking prophetic about that at all,â she said. âBrandon was a fuckinâ junkie. Just like I was. Just like I am now, even though Iâm not using. Thatâs what we junkies do. We die from overdoses. Intentional or not. Self-inflicted or not. The cops, his parents, and some of his friends actually tried to blame and pin his death on me. It was my fault. I put the idea in his head. I told him what I saw, and it looked so fucking good to him, he decided to put it into action. Or I convinced him to do it. Or whatever. But Iâm telling you, when I told him first, before anyone else, when we were alone, I saw that look in his eyes, that I had seen what he was thinking about doing. He was already thinking about doing that, I didnât put the idea in his head!. He knew I saw what he was thinking about doing. I saw it in his eyes, but he lied to me. He told me he wasnât contemplating suicide at all.â âHave you had any other dreams, where you saw someone in trouble, or dying, and they didnât come true,â he asked. âNo,â she said. âJust those three and they all came to happen. Unless, you count the one I had of you, last night.â âDo you have other types of dreams?â he asked. âLike, I donât know, where something good happens to somebody, before it actually happens?â Alexis laughed crazily and got up from below him. âThat would be pretty fucking nice, wouldnât it?â she said. âBut no, all of mine have all been the horrifying variety.â She walked over to her window. Now she seemed unsure how to proceed and she looked thoughtful. Everything up until now that she had told him had come pouring out quickly, because she had said all of these things to her myriad of therapists many times before. But her next words were more tentative, as if she were searching for them. She said, âActually, a few months ago, I had a dream. In some ways it was like those first three. It was vivid and I remember it clearly. So in that way it was like those first three, and like yours. But it wasnât plausible. Unrealistic and surreal things in them happened. It was weird. In that way, it was more dream-like. And I was the only one in it...really.â âWas it bad? Did you die in it?â he asked. She shook her head and said, âIt was bad, but no, I didnât die in it.â He was about to ask her something else, but she cut him off. âThatâs enough about that dream for now. One psychotic, psychic crisis at a time here. Believe it or not, we are doing you right now, not me. You think Iâm the one in trouble? You think Iâm the one in danger? Youâre a dead man and you donât even know it. You donât believe me, do you?â He answered, âAlexis, honestly, I donât. Nobody can foresee things like that for certain. But I do believe it when you say you did have those dreams first, dreams of your grandfather, your father and of your boyfriend before they died. But, I attribute them to your intelligence. I think you have a lot of common sense, but not a sixth sense. Itâs you just being perceptive, and not using some kind of clairvoyance that you have when you dream.â She slumped defeatedly and closed her eyes in abject pain. After a time she said, âYou know, Dr. Magil has all these fun theories about me. He says my dreams, my delusions, are a specific mixture of delusional types. They have elements of persecution, grandiosity, and the bizarre. But only some from each. The dude loves me...as a patient. Iâm a potential goldmine. I think he wants to write a treatise on me, you know, si he can become world famous in the field of psychology for treating the most fascinatingly fucked up patient ever to walk the planet. See? Yet, more delusions of grandeur on my part. I could go on and on. He thinks that I make up the dreams as false memories, to deal with the traumatic loss of male father figures in my life. Men that I have deeply loved, and then lost.â Dave smiled and said, âDid you just tell me, for the first time ever, that you love me?â She froze, as if she suddenly realized what she had just owned up too. She walked over to him as he was still grinning. When she got close to him she reached out and slapped him hard across the face. âYou think this is a fucking joke?â she wailed while sobbing. âYou think this is a game?â âYes, you stupid mother fucker. Iâve fallen in love with you.â She grabbed his jacket and shook him. âYes, God dammit, I love you! I tried to fight it all the way, right from the fucking start. Iâve fallen in love with you. Congratufuckinglations! You pulled it off, completely and thoroughly. I love you! Are you fucking happy with yourself?!â He felt his face, hoping her slap wouldnât leave a mark. He said, âActually, I am, but I wish you had told me in a more traditional manner. You know maybe with a kiss, or something sweet like that,â he said. Alexis, who started pacing frantically around her living room again, through her sobs said, âIâll tell you again some other time that way. Iâll do it sometime soon. I promise. Time is ticking.â âItâs a date,â he said. She laughed, just for an instant, but then true to what seemed to be her new default move for the day, reverted back to anguished crying. Her body was heaving and she was gasping for breath. She kept clutching her chest and she seemed to him to be in a lot of physical (as well as mental) pain. She was becoming unsteady on her feet. Now she staggered from the exhaustion of it all. Dave said, âAlexis, come over here, sit with me here on the couch. Please, Iâm begging you.â Reluctantly, she did. Now that he finally understood what was traumatizing her, he knew the next thing to do was try to allay her fears, as quickly as he could. âListen, even if I donât believe you, there are still precautions I can take to ease your mind,â he said. âLike what?â she asked. âWell, you said it was dark when I died,â he said. âNight time, right? And raining? Well, it wasnât either one of those things today. So I could have ridden my bike this afternoon with no worries, right?â âI was already thinking of that when I called you this morning,â she said. âI looked out the window and saw a small, wispy cloud in the sky. That was fucking close enough for my taste. I can see where youâre going with this, and youâre going to the wrong place. Itâs going to come down to the bike. Youâre going to have to pick your bike or me. You canât ride your bike and have me. I never liked the looks of that thing from the start. Youâre going to have to pick. And I donât want to hear any - itâs daytime and sunny out bullshit I wonât play that game. And no temporary storing the bike for a while, either. You get rid of it, forever. And you never ride again, ever. Iâll definitely understand if you pick the bike over me. I mean just look at me,â she continued as she comically waved one hand up and down her wracked, shaking body while using her other hand to draw an imaginary circle around her emotionally ravaged face. âWhat man wouldnât choose all this beauty over a completely glorious, kick ass motorcycle? Is there really a choice to be made? You know when youâre dead, Iâll be stuck with the thought that if I was actually beautiful and pretty, then maybe I could have saved your life. I know itâs going to be dump city for me. Iâm just praying when you pick your bike over me, it will take a little of the sting out of the pain for me when you die from it. But who am I trying to kid? I know it wonât, not one bit.â He was quiet for a time, deep in thought. Eventually he said, âYou know that bike was the only joy and release I had in my life, before I met you.â She shook her head. âNo, I didnât,â she said. She closed her eyes in abject pain and smiled very sadly, âI understand what youâre saying. I get it. I lose, as I shouldâŚâ âActually, youâre not getting it at all,â he said. He pulled out his cell phone and dialed a number. âWhat are you doing?â she asked. âAlexis, sshh, geez,â he said as he smiled. âCanât you see Iâm trying to make a call here?â After a moment he said, âHey, Walt, this is Dave. You got a few minutes?......Good, listen, Iâm getting rid of my bike. Iâm selling it. I know youâve been drooling over it in our parking lot for the past few months, so I thought Iâd give you first crack at itâŚ...For you, a grand and a halfâŚ..No, thereâs nothing wrong with itâŚ..(he laughed), No, Iâm not drunkâŚ..I got the latest numbers from your route and youâre killing it. The receivers and store managers donât despise you, you donât sleep in the truck on the clock, you donât steal product from us, and you havenât wrecked a truck yet. Around Marconnelliâs that makes you top notch. So, I have no problem offering you a sweetheart deal on my bikeâŚâŚâŚ...Well, weâll figure something out. I can take it out of your future pay in installments if you wantâŚ...OK, one more thing. Youâll have to figure out a way to get it, I canât ride it over to your houseâŚâŚ.Well, hereâs the thing, I had a close call on it and now Iâm scared of riding it. Actually, come to think of it, there is one thing wrong with it. I pissed and shit my pants on it, so the seatâs a little compromisedâŚâŚ....(He laughed a lot), Yes, I fully understand youâll be telling all the guys that tomorrow........Yeah, I could come by and pick you up in my car to get it, that worksâŚâŚ Tomorrow after work sounds fine......All right, weâll work the rest out tomorrow during the dayâŚâŚ.Alright, sounds goodâŚ..See you tomorrow bright and entirely too earlyâŚâŚ.You got it, bye.â Then he hung up his phone. âProblem solved,â Dave said, looking pleased with himself as he settled deeper into Alexisâs couch. He groaned, then said casually, âWhew, what a day. My shoulder is killing me. I pulled it taking loaded trays off the truck at Value-Mart by hand. I should have used the truckâs ramp. Thatâs what I get for rushing. Haste makes waste. Would you rub it for me later? Nice and gentle like.â Alexis was flabbergasted. That had happened so quickly. She couldnât think of a thing to say and she just stared at him dumbfounded. âWhat? Itâs just five minutes of massaging, thatâs all Iâm asking,â he said rather off-handedly. She didnât fight her tears any longer and wept unabashedly. She could feel the anguished, vicious, pain slowly leaving her body as it was replaced by a warm sensation of relief - relief unlike any she had ever felt in her life. For a time she said nothing, and just looked at him while soaking up the perfect, subtle sweetness of his being. She said, âI want to be there tomorrow, when all of that happens with the bike.â âMy, my, arenât we a suspicious girl? You donât trust me?â he asked. âGetting there quickly. But I trust my eyes more,â she said, while still crying. But now they were silent tears and she relished them because their release felt so wonderful. âSure, you can come with,â he said as he smiled. âIâll pick you up before I go get Walt. It will be fun. Iâll get a little more you time in. Thatâs my fav. Nothing beats riding around town with a pretty girl, right? Plus, you can intercede on my behalf if Walt starts ragging on me again. You might be able to kick my ass, but letâs see what you can do when you take on someone your own size.â He held his arms open to her. She curled into him and said, âI canât believe you just did that for me.â âDid what for you?â he said trying to sound stupidly confused. âOh, weâre still on the bike thing topic,â he said, feigning understanding. âYou said it was you or the bike, right? Thatâs a no brainer. I pick you. You didnât see that one coming, did you? Ha-ha, get it?â She laughed, slid her arms around him and hugged him, hard. Really hard. âYouâre sleeping here tonight,â she said. âIâm not letting you out of my sight till that bike is gone.â âHmmm, you donât have to ask me twice,â he growled. They sat for a while, saying nothing. Alexis had stopped crying and was getting the first peace sheâd had since daybreak. Daveâs stomach rumbled loud. âAre you hungry?â she asked and she started to get up, but Dave pulled her back to him. âYeah I am, but just stay here with me for a bit. You can make me a snacky-poo later. Right now I need a little snuggle-wuggle time. Itâs soothing. It sure does beat getting slapped and shaken like a rag doll by you,â he said. âIâm so sorry about that,â she said. âThat will definitely be added to my exhaustive list of things Iâm ashamed of. Iâm fucking nuts.â âI know youâre nuts, nuts about me that is!â he exclaimed. He settled deep into thought and after a time he said, âHey, you know when your dream last night doesnât come true, youâll finally be able to put that cruel issue to bed.â He felt Alexis freeze up for just a second, thinking about what he said. She said, âI didnât even consider that. That would be so nice, but a long time will have to pass before Iâm sure it wonât happen.â âNot necessarily,â he said. âSay tomorrow I slip in the shower and crack my head, or I have an aneurysm, or I get electrocuted while trying to wiggle a stuck, burnt bagel from out of a toaster with a fork, and I die. Youâd be proved wrong, right?â âThatâs a very comforting thought,â she murmured into his chest. She was getting drowsy. Dave said nothing more and just held her for a long time. Eventually he tried to sneak out from under her, but this roused her. She went to get up, but he told her to stay on the couch. He told her he was just getting up to use the bathroom. He said heâd be right back. He got up, put her favorite blanket on her and went into the kitchen and watched her with concern until she fell back to sleep on her couch. Carefully he turned on the radio with the volume on low, for cover noise. This didnât wake her, so he quietly started looking around her kitchen, seeing what he could make for them to eat while she slept. The next day Dave picked her up in his car after work and they went to Waltâs house. They picked up Walt and they all went to his house (or rather Daveâs motherâs house, as he still lived with her) and Walt rode what was now his bike home. It was done. Days went by, then a week, and then a month. At first Alexis had been texting and calling him constantly. But as more time passed, she grew more at ease. Eventually, she stopped worrying completely. She was happy and giddy and in love. She was happier than sheâd ever been in her life. She was never happier to have been proven wrong. Chapter 13 - The Screams of Alexis Dave didnât know it, but two months to the day that Alexis had her nightmare of him, was this day. He was driving to her apartment. It was late, all day long he had run into just about every possible snag a bread man can run into. It was already getting dark. The drizzly, misty, spritzing afternoon had finally made up its mind and kicked up into actual rain. He turned onto River Road which was a windy, curvy bitch of a road. He was rounding a tight, blind curve when his carâs lights lit up a body in the road. He torqued his steering wheel, just barely missing that person in the road. Luckily, no one was coming the other way so the other lane was free, but his car fishtailed on the slick road and he had to quickly counter steer to straighten his vehicle. By the time he finally got control of his car and back into his lane, he was a good piece down the road. He quickly brought his car to stop, off the road and onto the shoulder. He flung open his car door and looked back to the body in the road. He saw the man raise his arm a little. He was hurt, but alive. He threw his gear shift into park, quickly opened his door, and then took off on foot toward him. Another car was approaching. He yelled out to them to slow down, but he knew theyâd never hear him. The rain was pouring down now. The carâs lightâs were approaching fast. That car was going to plow right into the prone man. He reached the man in the road and grabbed his leather jacket by its front. He was just starting to drag him to the shoulder of the road when the approaching car rounded the corner. He yelled out again for them to stop, but they never heard him. The carâs headlights finally swung around far enough to light him up. The driver locked up his brakes, but the pavement was wet and the car was booking. Dave threw the hurt man of the road but this left him vulnerable. The car slammed into him and flung him off the road. He landed hard. The pain was searing. He couldnât see anything at first, but then his eyes adjusted and the first thing he saw was a motorcycle. Just a few feet from where he was. He got it instantly. It was the other manâs bike. He had lost control of his bike when rounding that curve. When he hit the pavement, he had stayed pretty much put, but the bike, which was heavier and had more momentum, carried further. All the way down and into this ditch off the road. Dave saw that the bike, while it certainly wasnât his, did look a lot like his all mangled up, especially in the rain, and especially in the dark. He heard shouts from above. Other cars were stopping on the road and people were getting out. He tried to stand, but he found that he couldnât move at all. Hazily, he realized that his phone in his pocket was playing âTake me with U.â âAhh, that would be my beautiful girl,â he thought. He wished he could move his arm to answer it. That she was calling him made him feel good. He loved her so much. He decided that was the first thing he was going to tell her when he saw her. The pain heâd previously felt was slowly going away. He knew it was because he was thinking of her, and she was thinking of him. He was going to see her shortly, thatâs where he was going before...before...before whatever had happened to him. He couldnât remember. Funny, he thought, while it was somewhat hard to see just a little bit ago, now it was so dark he couldnât see a thing. That felt good too. Then that darkness, that deep, different, warm darkness that was taking the last of his pain away, washed over him completely. Alexis was terrified. She looked nowhere other than out her apartment window for Dave. But all she saw was a rainy, dark parking lot. She was texting him like mad. She called his cell phone over and over again. He was always super good about getting back to her in a timely manner. He was two hours late from when he said heâd be there and she was distraught almost to the point of madness. Finally she heard his phoneâs familiar click sound it made whenever he answered one of her calls. She immediately wailed, âOh, thank God! Iâve been worried sick about you! Where are you?â! There was silence on the other end. She froze rigid from fear. âDave?â she sobbed. âAlexisâŚ.this is Rachel.â She screamed. She screamed the way only a woman can scream when she has lost a husband, a child, or anyone they love above all else. She screamed, the way a woman screams when she knows her mind and her soul will never be the same again. Alexis screamed knowing her dreams always have, and always will, come true. Chapter 14 - Alexis Dreams of Dave Months later, Alexis sat on her couch with her TV on, although she was not watching it. She turned it off and laid down on her couch and wept in misery. She felt a strange weight at her feet, as if someone had just sat down there. She looked up and saw Dave. He smiled at her and said, âHowâs my beautiful girl?â âIâm awful,â she said. âEveryday Iâm in pain. I canât go on anymore. I miss you so much. I canât think straight. My heart hurts all the time.â He looked at her in sympathy and said, âIâm sorry, Doll. Iâm sorry, I had to leave you. Come over here and snuggle against me.â She laid upon his chest and said, âWhere have you been?â âFar away,â he said, stroking her hair. âIâm so tired,â she said. âI miss you everyday. Iâm coming with you.â âYou canât,â he said. She slapped his hand away from her hair, grabbed the other one he had wrapped around her and threw it off. She pushed herself away from him. âWhat do you mean I canât?!â she cried. Dave chuckled and said, âIâm glad to see you havenât changed a bit. But, you canât come with me. Not now anyway. Not for some time. But eventually weâll be together and when that happens, it will be for a very long time.â She was still furious and so she said, âI want to come now. I donât want to wait. Itâs not fucking fair. Iâm coming too. Iâm done here.â Dave shook his head. He said, âYouâre needed here. You have a gift. A gift that youâre going to use to help others. You need to stay for a while. You have things to do.â She said, âI donât give a shit about helping anyone else. I need to take care of myself and what good has my so called gift ever fucking done for me?â âIt hasnât done you any good, and it isnât going to do you any good, and Iâm sorry about that,â he said. âBut it is going to help many others immensely. Things are going to be different. People are going to start listening to you. But Alexis, help me now. Come over here and be next to me. Iâve missed you as much as youâve missed me.â Alexis crinkled her forehead and asked, âWhere the fuck have you been exactly? Are you telling me youâre in heaven?â âNo, no Iâm not,â said Dave. âYouâd have to be with me for that to happen, Doll.â She smiled despite herself and said, âAnd I see you havenât changed a bit either. Still as fucking smooth as a babyâs butt.â âPlease, Alexis. Iâm begging you, lay with me close. I donât have much time here,â said Dave. She acquiesced and curled up back into him. After a while she said, âHow much time do I get with you now?â He said, âUntil you wake.â They lay together quietly, and she felt better than she had felt since he had gone. But she was sad nonetheless. Eventually she asked, âHow do I know Iâll get to see you again?â Dave smiled and said, âBecause right now youâre dreaming. And tomorrow youâll remember this dream. Youâll remember it all vividly. Every detail. Every color. Every aspect. It will be etched in your mind.â Alexis smiled, knowing that what he said had to be true. But that would be tomorrow and this was now, so she just enjoyed laying upon Daveâs chest and she tried her very hardest not to wake up. |