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Safe Haven(30)

By:Nicholas Sparks


     



 

She shouldn't have run  away. It broke his heart because he loved her more than life and he'd  always taken care of her. He bought her a house and a refrigerator and a  washer and dryer and new furniture. The house had always been clean,  but now the sink was full of dishes and his hamper was overflowing.

He  knew he should clean the house but he didn't have the energy. Instead,  he went to the kitchen and pulled a bottle of vodka from the freezer.  There were four bottles left; a week ago, there'd been twelve. He knew  he was drinking too much. He knew he should eat better and stop drinking  but all he wanted to do was take the bottle and sit on the couch and  drink. Vodka was good because it didn't make your breath smell, and in  the mornings, no one would know he was nursing a hangover.

He  poured a glass of vodka, finished it, and poured another before walking  through the empty house. His heart ached because Erin wasn't here and if  she suddenly showed up at the door, he knew he'd apologize for hitting  her and they'd work things out and then they'd make love in the bedroom.  He wanted to hold her and whisper how much he adored her, but he knew  she wasn't coming back, and even though he loved her, she made him so  angry sometimes. A wife didn't just leave. A wife didn't just walk away  from a marriage. He wanted to hit and kick and slap her and pull her  hair for being so stupid. For being so damn selfish. He wanted to show  her it was pointless to run away.


He drank a third and fourth glass of vodka.

It  was all so confusing. The house was a wreck. There was an empty pizza  box on the floor of the living room and the casing around the bathroom  door was splintered and cracked. The door would no longer close all the  way. He'd kicked it in after she'd locked it, trying to get away from  him. He'd been holding her by the hair as he punched her in the kitchen  and she'd run to the bathroom and he'd chased her through the house and  kicked the door in. But now he couldn't remember what they'd been  fighting about.

He couldn't remember much about that night. He  couldn't remember breaking two of her fingers, even though it was  obvious that he had. But he wouldn't let her go to the hospital for a  week, not until the bruises on her face could be covered by makeup, and  she'd had to cook and clean one-handed. He bought her flowers and  apologized and told her that he loved her and promised it would never  happen again, and after she got the cast off, he'd taken her into Boston  for a dinner at Petroni's. It was expensive and he'd smiled across the  table at her. Afterward, they'd gone to a movie and on the way home he  remembered thinking about how much he loved her and how lucky he was to  have someone like her as his wife.





21





Alex  had stayed with Katie until after midnight, listening as she'd told the  story of her prior life. When she was too spent and exhausted to talk  anymore, he put his arms around her and kissed her good night. On his  drive home, he thought that he had never met anyone braver or stronger  or more resourceful.

They spent much of the next couple of weeks  together-or as much as they could, anyway. Between the hours he worked  at the store and her shifts at Ivan's, it wasn't usually more than a few  hours a day, but he anticipated his visits to her place with a sense of  excitement he hadn't felt in years. Sometimes, Kristen and Josh went  with him. Other times, Joyce would shoo him out the door with a wink,  urging him to have himself a good time before he headed over.

They  seldom spent time at his house and when they did, it was only for short  periods. In his mind, he wanted to believe it was because of the kids,  that he wanted to take things slowly, but part of him realized it also  had to do with Carly. Though he knew he loved Katie-and he grew more  certain with every passing day-he wasn't sure he was ready for that just  yet. Katie seemed to understand his reluctance and didn't seem to mind,  if only because it was easier to be alone at her place.

Even so,  they'd yet to make love. Though he often found himself imagining how  wonderful it would be, especially in those moments before sleep, he knew  Katie wasn't ready for that. They both seemed to realize it would  signal a change in their relationship, a hopeful permanence of sorts.  For now, it was enough to kiss her, to feel her arms wrapped around him.  He loved the scent of jasmine shampoo in her hair and the way her hand  nestled so perfectly in his; the way their every touch was charged with  delicious anticipation, as if they were somehow saving themselves for  each other. He hadn't slept with anyone since his wife had died, and now  he felt that in some way he had unknowingly been waiting for Katie.         

     



 

He  took pleasure in showing her around the area. They walked the  waterfront and past the historic homes, examining the architecture, and  one weekend he took her to the Orton Plantation Gardens, where they  wandered among a thousand blooming rosebushes. Afterward, they went to  lunch at a small oceanfront bistro at Caswell Beach, where they held  hands across the table like teenagers.

Since their dinner at her  house, she hadn't broached her past again, and he didn't bring it up. He  knew she was still working things out in her mind: how much she'd told  him already and how much there still was to tell, whether or not she  could trust him, how much it mattered that she was still married, and  what would happen if Kevin somehow found her here. When he sensed she  was brooding over such things, he would remind her gently that no matter  what happened, her secret would always be safe with him. He would never  tell anyone.


Watching her, he would sometimes be overcome  with an overwhelming rage at Kevin Tierney. Such men's instincts to  victimize and torture were as foreign to him as the ability to breathe  underwater or fly; more than anything, he wanted revenge. He wanted  justice. He wanted Kevin to experience Katie's anguish and terror, the  unending bouts of brutal physical pain. During his time in the army,  he'd killed one man, a soldier strung out on methamphetamines who was  threatening a hostage with a gun. The man was dangerous and out of  control and when the opportunity arose, Alex had pulled the trigger  without hesitation. The death had given his job a sobering new meaning,  but in his heart he knew that there were moments in life when violence  was necessary to save lives. He knew that if Kevin ever showed up, Alex  would protect Katie, no matter what. In the army, he'd slowly come to  the realization that there were people who added goodness to the world  and people who lived to destroy it. In his mind, the decision to protect  an innocent woman like Katie from a psychopath like Kevin was as clear  as black and white-a simple choice.

On most days, the specter of  Katie's past life didn't intrude, and they spent each day together in a  state of relaxed and growing intimacy. The afternoons with the kids were  particularly special for him. Katie was a natural with children-whether  helping Kristen feed the ducks at the pond or playing catch with Josh,  she always seemed to fall effortlessly into rhythm with them, by turns  playful, comforting, rowdy, or quiet. In this way she was much like  Carly, and he somehow felt certain that Katie was the kind of woman  Carly had once spoken about.

In the final weeks of Carly's life,  he had maintained a vigil beside her bed. Even though she slept most of  the time, he was afraid of missing those times when she was conscious,  no matter how short they might be. By then, the left side of her body  was almost paralyzed, and speech was difficult for her. But one night,  during a brief lucid period in the hour just before dawn, she'd reached  for him.

"I want you to do something for me," she said with effort, licking her cracked lips. Her voice was hoarse from disuse.

"Anything."

"I  want you to be …  happy." At this, he saw the ghost of her old smile, the  confident, self-possessed smile that had captivated him at their first  meeting.

"I am happy."

She gave a faint shake of her head.  "I'm talking about the future." Her eyes gleamed with the intensity of  hot coals in her sunken face. "We both know what I'm talking about."

"I don't."

She  ignored his response. "Marrying you …  being with you every day and  having children with you …  it's the best thing I've ever done. You're the  best man I've ever known."

His throat closed up. "Me, too," he said. "I feel the same way."

"I know," she said. "And that's why this is so hard for me. Because I know that I've failed-"

"You haven't failed," he broke in.

Her  expression was sad. "I love you, Alex, and I love our kids," she  whispered. "And it would break my heart to think that you'll never be  completely happy again."

"Carly-"

"I want you to meet  someone new." She struggled to take a deep breath, her fragile rib cage  heaving with the effort. "I want her to be smart and kind …  and I want  you to fall in love with her, because you shouldn't spend the rest of  your life alone."