Home>>read Safe Haven free online

Safe Haven(33)

By:Nicholas Sparks


When he got home, dinner was ready.  He ate the lasagna and talked about his day. When he asked for a second  serving, she rose from the table and brought it to him. After dinner, he  drank vodka as they watched reruns of Seinfeld and The King of Queens.  Afterward, the Celtics were playing the Timberwolves and she sat beside  him, her head on his shoulder, watching the game. He fell asleep in  front of the television and she wandered to the bedroom. She lay in bed,  staring at the ceiling, until he finally woke and staggered in,  flopping onto the mattress. He fell asleep immediately, one arm draped  over her, and his snores sounded like a warning.


She made him  breakfast on Tuesday morning. He packed his clothes and toiletries and  was finally ready to head to Marlborough. He loaded his things into the  car, then went back to the front door, where she was standing. He kissed  her.         

     



 

"I'll be home tomorrow night," he said.

"I'll miss you," she said, leaning into him, putting her arms around his neck.

"I should be home around eight."

"I'll make something that I can reheat when you get home," she said. "How about chili?"

"I'll probably eat on the way home."

"Are you sure? Do you really want to eat fast food? It's so bad for you."

"We'll see," he said.

"I'll make it anyway," she said. "Just in case."

He kissed her as she leaned into him. "I'll call you," he said, his hands drifting downward. Caressing her.

"I know," she answered.


In  the bathroom, she took off her clothes and set them on the toilet, then  rolled up the rug. She'd placed a garbage bag in the sink, and naked,  she stared at herself in the mirror. She fingered the bruises on her  ribs and on her wrist. All of her ribs stood out, and dark circles  beneath her eyes gave her face a hollowed-out look. She was engulfed by a  wave of fury mixed with sadness as she imagined the way he'd call for  her when he walked through the house upon his return. He'd call her name  and walk to the kitchen. He'd look for her in the bedroom. He'd check  the garage and the back porch and the cellar. Where are you? he'd call  out. What's for dinner?

With the scissors, she began to chop  savagely at her hair. Four inches of blond hair fell onto the garbage  bag. She seized another chunk, using her fingers to pull it tight,  telling herself to measure, and snipped. Her chest felt constricted and  tight.

"I hate you!" she hissed, her voice trembling. "Degraded  me all the time!" She lopped off more hair, her eyes flooding with  rage-fueled tears. "Hit me because I had to go shopping!" More hair  gone. She tried to slow down, even out the ends. "Made me steal money  from your wallet and kicked me because you were drunk!"

She was  shaking now, her hands unsteady. Uneven lengths of hair collected at her  feet. "Made me hide from you! Hit me so hard that I vomit!"

She  snapped the scissors. "I loved you!" She sobbed. "You promised me you'd  never hit me again and I believed you! I wanted to believe you!" She cut  and cried, and when her hair was all the same length, she pulled out  the hair dye from its hiding place behind the sink. Dark Brown. Then she  got in the shower and wet her hair. She tilted the bottle and began  massaging the dye into her hair. She stood at the mirror and sobbed  uncontrollably while it set. When it was done, she climbed into the  shower again and rinsed it out. She shampooed and conditioned and stood  before the mirror. Carefully, she applied mascara to her eyebrows,  darkening them. She added bronzer to her skin, darkening it. She dressed  in jeans and a sweater and stared at herself.

A dark, short-haired stranger looked back at her.

She  cleaned the bathroom scrupulously, making sure no hair remained in the  shower or on the floor. Extra strands went into the garbage bag, along  with the box of hair dye. She wiped the sink and counter down and tied  up the garbage bag. Last, she put eyedrops in, trying to erase the  evidence of her tears.

She had to hurry now. She packed her  things in a duffel bag. Three pairs of jeans, two sweatshirts, shirts.  Panties and bras. Socks. Toothbrush and toothpaste. A brush. Mascara for  her eyebrows. The little jewelry she owned. Cheese and crackers and  nuts and raisins. A fork and a knife. She went to the back porch and dug  out the money from beneath the flowerpot. The cell phone from the  kitchen. And finally, the identification she needed to start a new life,  identification she'd stolen from people who trusted her. She'd hated  herself for stealing and knew it was wrong, but she'd had no other  choice and she'd prayed to God for forgiveness. It was too late to turn  back now.


She had rehearsed the scenario in her head a  thousand times, and she moved fast. Most of the neighbors were off at  work: she'd watched them in the mornings and knew their routines. She  didn't want anyone to see her leave, didn't want anyone to recognize  her.

She threw on a hat and her jacket, along with a scarf and  gloves. She rounded the duffel bag and stuffed it beneath her  sweatshirt, kneading and working it until it was round. Until she looked  pregnant. She put on her long coat, one that was roomy enough to cover  the bump.

She stared at herself in the mirror. Short, dark hair.  Skin the color of copper. Pregnant. She put on a pair of sunglasses, and  on her way out the door, she turned on her cell phone and set the  landline on call forwarding. She left the house through the gate at the  side. She walked between her house and the neighbors', following the  fence line, and deposited the garbage bag in their garbage can. She knew  that both of them worked, that neither was at home. Same thing for the  house behind hers. She walked through their yard and past the side of  the house, finally emerging onto the icy sidewalk.         

     



 

Snow had begun to fall again. By tomorrow, she knew, her footprints would be gone.

She  had six blocks to go but she was going to make it. She kept her head  down and walked, trying to ignore the biting wind, feeling dazed and  free and terrified, all at the same time. Tomorrow night, she knew,  Kevin would walk through the house, calling for her, and he wouldn't  find her because she wasn't there. And tomorrow night, he would begin  his hunt.


Snow flurries swirled as Katie stood at the  intersection, just outside a diner. In the distance, she saw Super  Shuttle's blue van round the corner and her heart pounded in her chest.  Just then, she heard the cell phone ring.

She paled. Cars roared  past her, their tires loud as they rolled through the slush. In the  distance, the van changed lanes, angling toward her side of the road.  She had to answer; there was no choice but to answer. But the van was  coming and it was noisy on the street. If she answered now, he would  know she was outside. He would know she'd left him.

Her phone rang a third time. The blue van stopped at a red light. One block away.

She  turned around, walking into the diner, the sounds muffled but still  noticeable-a symphony of plates clanking and people talking; directly  ahead was the hostess stand, where a man was asking for a table. She  felt sick to her stomach. She cupped the phone and faced the window,  praying that he couldn't hear the commotion behind her. Her legs went  wobbly as she pressed the button and answered.

"What took you so long to answer?" he demanded.

"I was in the shower," she said. "What's going on?"

"I'm about ten minutes out," he said. "How are you?"

"I'm okay," she said.

He hesitated. "You sound kind of funny," he said. "Is something wrong with the phone?"

Up  the street, the signal light turned green. The Super Shuttle van's turn  signal indicated that it was pulling over. She prayed that it would  wait. Behind her, people in the diner had gone surprisingly quiet.

"I'm not sure. But you sound fine," she said. "It's probably bad service where you are. How's the drive?"

"Not too bad once I got out of the city. But it's still icy in places."

"That doesn't sound good. Be careful."

"I'm fine," he said.

"I  know," she said. The van was pulling over to the curb, the driver  craning his neck, looking for her. "I hate to do this, but can you call  me in a few minutes? I still have conditioner in my hair and I want to  rinse it out."


"Yeah," he grumbled. "Okay. I'll call you in a bit."

"I love you," she said.

"Love you, too."

She let him hang up before she pressed the button on her phone. Then she walked out of the diner and hurried to the van.

At  the bus terminal, she bought a ticket to Philadelphia, hating the way  the man who sold her the ticket kept trying to talk to her.

Rather  than waiting at the terminal, she went across the street to have  breakfast. Money for the shuttle and the bus ticket had taken more than  half of the savings she'd collected during the year, but she was hungry  and she ordered pancakes and sausage and milk. At the booth, someone had  left a newspaper and she forced herself to read it. Kevin called her  while she was eating and when he told her again that the phone sounded  funny, she suggested that it was the storm.