Read Discovering Normal Online

Authors: Cynthia Henry

Discovering Normal (3 page)

BOOK: Discovering Normal
4.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“I’m from Saskatchewan.”

“Ahh,” Jack said as if it made any sense and continued. “Well, just when we stupid, naïve civilians thought that we were home free, they nabbed Beth and moved her to Jaelyn, this tiny island off the coast of Denmark. Harold Holden
might’ve been
slime, but he knew his stuff. He had such underground connections there was no way to find them, no way to trail them. It was like they disappeared off the face of the earth. Finally after about four months, they get a tip and Chris reache
d
Jaelyn within twenty-four hours. But
it wasn’t
that easy.”

Dora Perry’s jaw was hanging now as she clung to every word.

“It
was
a setup. They
want
ed
the Bureau to find them. Want
ed
to take down as many as they c
ould
because now Harold Holden from Tulsa
was
starting to believe his own press--starting to believe that he really
was
the ‘
lord and master’
. Eighteen law enforcement officers
were
killed, four
were
Special Services. After a bloody standoff, Chris and his team g
ot in and go
t Beth. Problem
was
, she
thought she was…
what was her name again?”

Chris glanced at his wife and back again. He sucked in a breath and muttered. “Farley-Fauna.”

Jack chuckled, took a slug of his Molson and continued. “She went through almost a year of deprogramming
--
turn
ed
out Holden had put more into Beth’s submission than he had into little Gloria Tweed. Another power play
--
to make a United States agent his primary wife.” Jack tipped his bottle Chris’ way. “But everything c
ame
out in the wash they say. Beth
remembered finally, she
and Chris got married, moved here, bought their farm, had two great kids…”

“My goodness, Mr. Stoddard,” Dora looked absolutely dumbfounded.

“Chris.”

“And you’re our
neighbor
? We’ll come to your house when we need sugar and stuff?”

Chris clinked Jack’s extended bottle. “We usually have plenty of sugar,” he said and polished off his brew.

             
             
             
             
      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 2

 

 

Beth quietly shut the door to Audrey’s room. A squeaky floorboard made its presence known and Beth did her best to avoid it as she had every day since Audrey had been a light-sleeping newborn.

She peeked into Noah’s room on her way by and saw him sprawled across his bed, sleeping the comfortable and unencumbered
rest
of a child. She felt guilty in so many ways--guilty to be destroying the life that her children had always known
,
but justified too in the realization that they’d all be better once it was over and done and just part of their past.

She pulled her robe tight, still feeling as relaxed as possible after her bath. In the distance she could hear firecrackers explode in celebration as she moved down the stairs. She glanced out of the pane in the front door and tried not to think about how much she’d miss this--this house she’d painstakingly re-designed and took more pride in than anything aside from her children. Would it be easier if she’d just left the dingy wallpaper and metal cabinets that the elderly former owners hadn’t minded? Would it be easier then to go?

Beth poured a glass of wine from the bottle that sat on the antique dry sink and slid into the cushy chair that she’d talked Chris into stuffing into the back of the truck when they found it in a shop window on a quaint street in Montreal. She sipped, closed her eyes and rested her head against the back before she reached for the phone.

It didn’t take long for an answer. “You’re late. Is he there?”

“No, he’s not. He stayed at the picnic. He’ll be along soon though, and I didn’t say for sure that I’d call.”

“Are you telling him tonight?”

For some reason Beth found her eyes drawn to the framed family photo resting on a nearby shelf. It was a candid shot, not a posed one, but it was her very favorite. She had smiled so brightly that day with her arms laced around Noah who stood in front of her. Her head rested on Chris’ broad shoulder as he held Audrey, only about two-years-old then, to his chest. It must have been merely days later that things started to change--she’d begun to grow weary of sharing her husband with a herd of cows and meters of land.

“If he gets home at a decent hour, yes. I’m going to tell him.”

“Can you call me?”

“George.”

“Just get a hold of me when you can.”

“All right. Good night.”

“I’m thinking of you, Beth.”

“Good night, George.” Beth disconnected and slid the receiver back to the cradle. Was it really him? Was George really a reason or was he an excuse, a crutch? She didn’t love him--at least not in the blazing and all-consuming way that she had once loved Chris. But maybe that’s why it had plummeted to the ground in a scalded heap. Maybe gentler assents were so much more realistic and long lasting.

It was George Bauman who had first greeted the trembling twenty-one-year-old kid she’d been the day she first walked into the Bureau. A fellow profiler, so much more her equal than Chris ever could’ve been. Beth and George shared similar backgrounds, similar families
;
similar battles to wage when those families realized that their children wanted to spend their time cleaning up the world instead of organizing Junior League cookbooks. But no more than fifteen minutes after George escorted Beth into the building, she’d spotted Chris.

He was then and remained the most handsome man she’d ever seen. The cocky smile, shaggy hair and silver stud glittering in his left lobe had hooked her, and his cool confidence and charm had reeled her in. When they’d first teamed against an organized crime affiliate and proved successful in bringing it down in just weeks, Beth found justifiable proof that they were meant to be partners in work, in love, in life. Never had she found such utter comfort and held such complete trust in another person.

They clicked like a machine that had been designed in two parts only to form one in sync unit. They understood each other, often without words. From the first moment they’d kissed on the bow of a speedboat as it raced through Long Island Sound, to the first time they made love--so passionate and fiery in a little hotel room in Helsinki that they’d broken an antique lamp and laughed about it for days--there was just an inherent compatibility.

But maybe they’d been wrong.

Maybe they’d been wrong to give up the Bureau when it got a little rough and abandon their Boston lives for a quiet slice of land and the safety of a country that wasn’t so embroiled in the hugeness of itself. Perhaps they should’ve talked of past lovers and the future that each of them envisioned for themselves instead of surrendering to the moment, as delicious a moment as it was. Because ultimately the business of life came down to simply living and when the glow was done being basked, there had to be something left. Something besides fire and sex and attraction.

Beth startled when she heard Chris’ truck pull into the drive
--t
he familiar hum of the engine followed by the scilence. Crickets chirped and Sundance barked one low and mellow woof.

Chris was inside in seconds flat, the result of long
,
strong legs that hurried with every step. Beth allowed her mind to wander back to the moment when she finally remembered after months and months of being so confused. Chris’ face was the first thing she saw, the first thing that jolted her into knowing. She later learned that he hadn’t left her side, stayed right there and waited for the person he missed to return. He took a leave of absence to spend months
at
the Toronto mental facility while the best specialists in the world worked to convince Farley-Fauna that she was in fact Beth Williams. Chris lived for close to a year without sex, without feedback to reaffirm that she still loved him too. He turned down presidential invitations, sent representatives to accept Bureau citations. He said ‘
No Thank You’
to
Time
magazine and
60 Minutes
while he remained poised with anticipation for the moment when she’d return. Why had he abandoned her now for so much less reason?

Beth stood up and pulled her robe tight. “I hope the beer I saw you with two hours ago was the last you had.”

He threw his keys to the corner table near the door and met her eyes. “Are you my mother?”

“Not last I checked.”

“Then I suggest you don’t worry about it.”

Beth closed her eyes and massaged her temples. She didn’t want it this way. Didn’t want the annoying bickering before she told him that she couldn’t stay. “Chris, could you please sit down for a minute? I need to talk to you.”

He stretched and then dragged his fingers through the waves of his hair. As if it were a poignant punishment, his wedding band caught a flash of light and winked at Beth as she stood waiting near the couch.

He ambled over and plopped. “What?”

Beth lowered to the rocker she had nursed, cuddled and sung to her children in. “I’m taking the kids to Connecticut.”

He didn’t say anything, just looked.

“I don’t mean for a visit. We’re moving there; we’re going to stay with my folks for a bit until I figure out what’s next for us.”

He still just looked, just stared with those creamy brown eyes, heavy with lashes.

“Do you hear me?
” she asked. “
Do you
ever
hear me?”

Chris shook his head, one small movement. “Who the hell told you you could take my kids to Connecticut?”

Beth exhaled and stood. “Fine. I should’ve known it would turn into a power play.”

He hopped up and snatched her arm. “Did George tell you? Did he look into it for you? I’ll bet he’s waiting in a little room in Greenwich for his new family to arrive.”

The words smashed into her heavy and real. “What are you talking about?”
T
hough there was no mistaking the fact that he knew. She should’ve realized he’d know.

He shook his head as if he pitied her soul. “Do you think I’m a fool, Beth?”

“No,” she said with a voice that would’ve better suited Audrey.

His grip tightened around her forearm. “Are you in love with him?”

Beth wrenched it away, but realized he’d let her go. Had he intended to hold on, she never would’ve been successful. “It’s not about him. Yes, we’ve become close. He sensed that I was unhappy when we saw him last year at Deej’s wedding, but he’s not a reason, Chris. I was unhappy when we got there.”

He shoved his hands into his jeans that still looked so good on him and glanced out at the star-filled night. “You didn’t answer my question.”

“I don’t know if I love him.”

He turned to face her, looking more defeated than she would’ve thought, but Beth recognized anger brewing beneath. “Have you slept with him?”

She shook her head before his words were even out. “No.”

He looked back into the night. “Kind of hard to believe since you sure as hell haven’t been sleeping with me.”

“Stop it. Why does everything have to turn into my fault? I’m trying to be honest here. I’m trying to tell the truth finally before we destroy each other with anger and resentment.”

He spun around and the anger was there now, not masked at all any longer. “What do you want, Beth? Am I supposed to say
go
?
Am I supposed to try and get you to stay? I don’t believe a thing you’re telling me, least of all that you haven’t screwed him.”

She felt like a child, but she couldn’t remember how to be an adult as her foot stamped against the hardwood floor that Chris had worked so hard to install. “It’s not about him. I didn’t want you to know because I knew you’d think it was about him and it’s not. It’s about
us.
You and me and what we’re doing to Noah and Audrey. I haven’t slept with George, not yet, and I’m not sure if I love him--I’m only sure that I don’t love you. I have to get out of here--off of this farm so I can figure some things out. That’s all I know, Chris.”

BOOK: Discovering Normal
4.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Gambling on a Secret by Ellwood, Sara Walter
When We Danced on Water by Evan Fallenberg
Island by Alistair Macleod
The Broker by John Grisham
Dark Sacrifice by Angie Sandro
Wreck Me by Mac, J.L.
Fay Weldon - Novel 23 by Rhode Island Blues (v1.1)