Shades of Twilight (Page 49)

Roanna hoped’ that she would be able to get some sleep herself.

If wishes were horses … Several hours later, she glanced at the lighted dial of her clock and saw the hour hand creeping toward the two. Her eyes felt grainy from lack of sleep, and her mind was so dulled by fatigue she could barely think, but sleep was as far away as it had ever been.

She’d endured a lot of nights like this, waiting through the endless darkness for morning to come. All of the books on insomnia advised the sufferer to get out of bed, not to make the bed the site of their frustration. Roanna had already developed that habit, so the book hadn’t helped any. Sometimes she read to pass the hours, sometimes she played endless card games for one, but for the most part she would sit in the darkness and wait.

That was what she was doing now, because she was too tired for anything else. She sat curled in a huge, overstuffed easy chair, large enough for two. The chair had been a Christmas present to herself five years ago, and she didn’t know what she would do without it. When she did manage to doze off, as likely or not it was in the chair. In winter she would wrap up in her softest, thickest afghan and watch the night slowly creep past her windows, but this was summer and she wore only a thin, sleeveless nightgown, though the hem was tucked over her bare feet. She’d opened the French doors so she could hear the comforting sounds of the warm night. A thunderstorm was passing by in the distance; she could see the flashes of lightning, revealing dark purple clouds, but the storm was so far away that the thunder, when she heard it, was only a faint rumble.

If she had to be awake, summer nights were the best. And between insomnia and the other, she preferred insomnia. When she slept, she never knew where she would wake up.

She didn’t think she’d ever left the house. She’d always been inside, and her feet were never dirty, but still it frightened her to think of herself roaming around unknowing. She’d read about sleepwalkers, too. People could evidently negotiate stairs, drive, even carry on a conversation while still asleep. That wasn’t much comfort, because she didn’t want to do any of that. She wanted to wake up exactly where she’d been when she went to sleep. If anyone had ever seen her on her nocturnal strolls, they hadn’t mentioned it. She didn’t think she did it every time she slept, but of course she had no way of knowing and she didn’t want to alert the family to her problem. They did know she was troubled with insomnia, so perhaps if anyone did see her outside her room in the middle of the night, apparently perfectly awake, they assumed she was having trouble sleeping and forgot about it.

If it became known that she walked in her sleep … She didn’t like to think ill of people, without proof, but she didn’t think she would trust several members of the household if they knew she was so vulnerable. The possibility for mischief was too great, especially with Corliss. In some ways Corliss reminded Roanna a lot of Jessie, though the relationship was only that of second cousin, which meant they didn’t share a lot of genetic material. Jessie had been cooler of thought but hotter of temper. Corliss didn’t plan, she acted on impulse, and she wasn’t prone to temper tantrums. For the most part she seemed restless and unhappy, and liked to make other people unhappy. Whatever it was she wanted out of life, she hadn’t gotten it.

Roanna didn’t think Webb would get along with Corliss at all.

Thinking of Webb brought her back full circle to how she had begun the day, not that her thoughts had been off of him for long at any one time.

She didn’t know what to think. She was no good at analyzing a man-woman relationship, because she’d never had one. All she knew was that Webb had been angry, and a little drunk. If he hadn’t been drinking he probably wouldn’t have put the pressure on her that he had, but the fact remained that she had fallen into bed with him without the slightest resistance. The circumstances had been humiliating, but that secret little part of her had reveled in the opportunity.

She wasn’t sorry she’d done it. If nothing good ever happened to her for the rest of her life, at least she’d lain in Webb’s arms and known what it was like to make love with him. The pain had been more severe than she’d imagined, but it hadn’t been able to overshadow the joy she’d felt, and ultimately the satisfaction.

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The tequila might account for the first time, and maybe the second, but what about the other times? Surely he’d sobered by the third time he’d reached for her, in the middle of the night, and the fourth, just before dawn. She still ached from his lovemaking, with a tenderness deep inside her body that she cherished because it reminded her of those moments.

He hadn’t been a selfish lover. He might have been angry, but still he had satisfied her, sometimes more than once, before allowing himself release. His hands and mouth had been tender on her body, careful not to add to the pain she’d already experienced just in accepting him.

But then he’d slipped out of bed and left her alone in the cheap little motel, as if she were a coyote woman. Wasn’t that what the wild, drinking crowd called a woman who was so ugly that, when a man woke up and looked over at her asleep on his arm, he gnawed off his own arm rather than wake her up? At least Webb had left a note. At least he had come back, and she hadn’t been forced to get back to her rental car as best she could.

He’d said she acted like a whore for Lucinda. He’d said that she’d been a bother to him all her life, and that hurt more than the other comment. No matter what, she had always managed to hold on to the thought of those years before Jessie’s death as the sweet years, because she’d had him as a friend and hero. The awful night Jessie had been killed, she’d realized that he felt sorry for her and that had nearly killed her, but still the sweet memories had been there. Now she was mortified to think she’d been fooling herself from the beginning. Kindness wasn’t the same as love, patience wasn’t the same as caring.