Sweet Dreams
Page 174

 Kristen Ashley

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“Go to sleep, Laurie.”
“Tate,” I whispered, my eyelids falling again and I couldn’t pull them open.
But before sleep swept me away, I felt his lips on mine form the words, “Sweet dreams, baby.”
* * * * *
Jim-Billy
Jim-Billy woke feeling something he hadn’t felt in seven years.
A soft, warm female pressed to his side, her hand under her cheek at his shoulder.
With effort, he looked down to see the top of Laurie’s blonde head, her shoulder covered in a hospital gown, the rest of her body covered in a thin hospital blanket.
He sensed movement, his head settled back on the pillow and his eyes turned to the bright, Colorado sunshine coming through the window where Tate stood, Tate’s eyes on the two people in the bed.
“She asleep?” Jim-Billy asked, his voice a soft rasp.
Tate nodded.
“Made me bring her in here, wanted to be with you,” Tate whispered, his voice barely audible.
Jim-Billy nodded.
“She okay?” Jim-Billy asked.
“Better than you,” Tate answered.
Jim-Billy nodded again.
He didn’t feel much pain but then again, he wasn’t moving and he had a soft, warm female body pressed to his side. She was Tate’s but she was still a soft, warm female and she was Laurie, alive and breathing. It was a gift and life was too short, you get a gift, especially one as precious as the one squeezed next to him in a damned hospital bed, you accept it.
Tate walked from the window to the bed, the entirety of this short trip his eyes never leaving Jim-Billy’s.
Once he made it to the bed, though, they flicked down to Laurie then back to Jim-Billy.
Then he said in a fierce whisper, “Owe you, Billy, owe you huge.”
Jim-Billy nodded again.
“I know.”
And he did know, not because Jim-Billy suffered whatever was behind the complete numbness of his gut, made that way from whatever was feeding into his bloodstream from the drip in his arm but because Jim-Billy suffered it to do his bit to keep what was squeezed in bed beside him alive and breathing.
Jim-Billy grinned his semi-toothless grin at Tate.
Then he said, “Merry Christmas.”
Tate stared at him for a second and he did this hard.
Then Tate’s face relaxed and Jim-Billy heard his low, amused chuckle.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Where Are They Now?
“In one of the most remarkable where are they nows, Tatum Jackson, All-American linebacker for Penn State and first round draft pick for the Philadelphia Eagles, is back in the news after a twenty-two year absence.”
The minute they said Tate’s name, I pushed a bit up Tate’s chest where we were lying on the couch.
Me and my whole family were watching the football commentators doing their bit during halftime of the Sunday (the day after Christmas) game.
Pop had called my folks the minute he had a chance after they found me. They decided not to wait for the next flight out, which was late the next morning because by that time, my Dad said, they could be halfway across Nebraska (and were). So they packed up their stuff and all the presents and took turns driving all night to get to Colorado.
“Turn that shit off,” Tate growled, as he would, since he was in a very bad mood even though it was the day after Christmas.
I’d been let out of the hospital on Christmas Eve.
I’d talked to the cops in the hospital. Dalton was in bad shape from a gunshot wound and the beating Tate had given him. He’d also confessed after Special Agent Tambo explained the extent of the evidence against him which was a lot, considering he’d abducted me, cut my hair, kept trophies, didn’t dispose of his mattress that was covered in DNA and used the same knife on us all, leaving that knife in Jim-Billy’s gut.
Not to mention, Sunny had given a partial ID.
He’d also confessed to murdering his Mom and pinning it on her boyfriend. He was, as Tate would call him, seriously whacked. Not appreciative of the fact that his Mom had found the love of her life and especially not appreciative of the fact that she didn’t mind hiding it.
She was, Tambo told Tate that Dalton told him, meant to be only his.
They’d released Dalton’s Mom’s boyfriend after he spent nearly twenty years in prison for a murder he didn’t commit against a woman he adored. The State gave him restitution but, I figured, losing the woman he loved and nearly half of his life to prison, no restitution would heal those wounds.
Tambo had also told Tate that I’d gotten loose, in a way, partially thanks to Tonia, Neeta and the other girls. They’d struggled, weakening the pipe of the radiator.
I hated this fact, hated knowing their torture helped to save my life, but I was thankful all the same.
And lastly Tambo told Tate that Dalton did all the girls there, at that old house, then took them home even if that meant Nevada or Utah. Dalton said they needed to go home, needed to be with their families, needed to be at rest someplace familiar. Dalton was contrite, driven to his behavior but he struggled against it. He killed in May, his mother’s birth month, and December, her boyfriend’s. That he would allow. Knowing he could give in those months kept the urge at bay the rest of the time. But, when I got to the bar and Dalton watched Tate and me falling in love, that triggered something, flipped the switch, and he lost control.
I hated this fact too but I didn’t dwell. Tate had taught me, with what I allowed Brad to do to me, with what he felt after his Dad died, with how he acted after Neeta’s murder, that life was too short to dwell, to twist special in your head and make it go bad. Tate and I falling in love was just that, a biker and his biker babe falling in love. It was something else for Dalton and that was on Dalton. After searching my whole life, I wasn’t going to finally find special and let some psychopath twist it and make it go bad.
No, I was going to hold it precious.
Forever.
As for my family, we’d had a pretty good Christmas, considering I was still banged up and in some pain. As I suspected, Mom had spoiled Jonas but she’d also spoiled Tate and me. Jonas definitely had a good Christmas, what with Mom, Carrie, Pop, Stella, Wood and me giving him his every heart’s desire (and some of them he didn’t even know he wanted). It had taken us hours to unwrap presents.
Tate had left me to spoil Jonas and he’d just spoiled me. He’d had a silver necklace custom-made, a fall of five, exquisite silver flowers in a pendant hanging from it, the links in the chain were unusual and beautiful. He’d also had a set of five silver bangles made, two had flower pendants dangling, three had been inset all around with peridot and rose quartz. He’d also had a wide silver band made, it fit my index finger, went from base to knuckle and it was also inset with peridot and rose quartz. He’d given them to me telling me, right in front of everyone, “From now on, babe, you only wear my silver.” This, I figured, was healthy indication that he intended to add to my new silver collection and since Tate had good taste, the jewelry so gorgeous, I didn’t mind that at all.