Pleasures of the Night
Pleasures of the Night
Silvia Day
Chapter 1
Lyssa Bates glanced at the cat-shaped clock on the wall with its ticking tail and second-hand whiskers. It was finally nearing five o’clock. Almost time to start the weekend, and she couldn’t wait.
Exhausted, she ran her hands through her long hair and yawned. It seemed she never got recharged enough, no matter how long she rested. Her days off passed in a blur of kicked-off sheets and buckets of coffee. Her social life had slowed to a drip as her time spent in bed grew longer and longer. None of the prescription insomnia medications helped. It wasn’t that she couldn’t sleep. In fact, she couldn’t seem to stop sleeping.
She just wasn’t getting any rest.
Standing, she held her arms above her head and stretched. Every sinew in her body protested. Flames from scented candles flickered on the tops of her metal filing cabinets, covering the medicinal odors of her clinic with the smell of sugar cookies. But the yummy scent failed to entice her hunger as it was meant to do. She was losing weight and growing weaker. Her doctor was prepared to send her to a sleep clinic to monitor her REM patterns, and she was about to agree. He said her lifelong lack of dream recollection was a mental manifestation of a physical malady, one he just hadn’t pinpointed yet. Lyssa was just grateful that he didn’t prescribe a straitjacket.
“That was your last patient, so you can go home if you want.”
Turning, Lyssa managed a smile for Stacey, her receptionist, who stood in the office doorway.
“You look like shit, Doc. Are you coming down with something?”
“Hell if I know,” Lyssa muttered. “I’ve been feeling under the weather for at least a month now.”
She had actually been “sickly” most of her life, which was one of the reasons she had turned to medicine for a career. Now she spent as much time as her energy level would allow in her cheery clinic with its creamy marble floors and soft Victorian decor. Behind Stacey, the narrow wainscoted hallway led to the waiting area decorated with cooing lovebirds in antique cages. It was cozy and warm, a place where Lyssa enjoyed spending time. When she wasn’t so damn tired.
Stacey leaned against the doorjamb and wrinkled her nose. Dressed in scrubs with cartoon animals on them, she looked cute and bubbly, which suited her personality. “God, I hate being sick. I hope you feel better soon. Your first patient on Monday is a Lab who just needs boosters. I’ll reschedule them, if you want. Give you an extra hour to decide if you feel up to coming in or not.”
“I love you,” Lyssa said with a grateful smile.
“Nah, you just need someone to take care of you. Like a boyfriend. Man, the way the single guys look at you when they come in here…” Stacey whistled. “Half the time I think they bought dogs just to come see you.”
“Didn’t you just say I looked like shit?”
“Girl talk. You’d look better on your deathbed than most women do on their best day. These guys don’t remember their pets’ checkups because of the reminder postcards. Trust me.”
Lyssa rolled her eyes. “I just gave you a raise. What do you want now?”
“For you to go home. I’ll close up with Mike.”
“I won’t argue with that.” She was dead on her feet, and although the clinic was still filled with the soothing cacophony of barking dogs, Mike’s whirring grooming tools, and talking birds, everything was gradually winding down for the evening. “Let me put these charts away and I’ll—”
“No way. If I let you start doing my job, what’ll you need me for?” Stacey strode over, scooped up the files from the mahogany desktop, and moved out to the hallway. “See ya Monday, Doc.”
Shaking her head with a smile, Lyssa retrieved her purse and fished out her keys before she exited the back of her clinic to the staff parking area. Her black BMW Roadster waited in the nearly empty lot. It was a beautiful day, both sunny and warm, and she lowered the top before heading home. During the twenty-minute drive, she guzzled the cold leftover coffee in her cup holder and blared the radio, trying to stay awake long enough to keep from killing herself or someone else on the highway.
Her sleek car wove easily through the slight traffic in her small Southern California town. An impulse buy when she had finally acknowledged she was destined to die young, the Roadster was a purchase she’d never regretted.
Over the last four years she had made a lot of similarly drastic changes, like moving to the Temecula Valley and leaving a hugely successful veterinary practice in San Diego behind. She’d thought her chronic fatigue was due to her stressful work schedule and outrageous cost-of-living, and for the first few years after the move, she had felt much better. Lately, however, her health seemed worse than ever.