Savage Lane (3 page)

Read Savage Lane Online

Authors: Jason Starr

Tags: #Thriller

BOOK: Savage Lane
11.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

But, just for the hell of it, Mark imagined what it would be like if Deb hadn’t been joking—if she really did leave. He’d played these “what if?” games before; it was just harmless fantasizing. If his marriage ended, Mark knew he’d wind up with Karen. He’d move into her house, and the kids could go back and forth, right on the same block, how convenient would that be? It would be an easy divorce, there wouldn’t be any bitterness or drama; everyone would get along. It would be even better for the kids because they could be step-brothers and sisters with their best friends. Meanwhile, not only would Mark be with his best friend all the time, he could have sex with his best friend. Karen had looked so amazing at the club last summer wearing bikinis at the pool. How many women her age, forty-two, with two kids could pull off a bikini? She had perfect natural breasts and the sexiest arms and back. Oh, and he loved her lips. What would it feel like to kiss her? He knew she’d be incredible in bed; she had to be. Holding her hand tonight, her skin had felt so warm, so smooth; he bet her whole body felt that way. What if she was in bed with him right now—in that little blue dress she wore tonight; no, in the bikini, yeah, the bikini. They would’ve just got back from the pool, still wet. He’d kiss her—God, those lips, the way the lower one was thicker than the upper so it seemed like she was permanently pouting—and feel her smooth toned arms, her smooth fatless back, and then he’d undo her bikini top and let it fall off and then cup his hands over her breasts, feel her nipples harden against his palms. Then they would be in bed, he’d be on top of her, untying her bikini bottom, and licking the insides of her thighs, listening to her moan—
Mark, Mark, Oh, Mark

“Mark.”

He’d been masturbating under the covers, but it was dark in the room, the only light coming from the TV. Just in case, he shifted onto his side.

“Yeah?” he said.

“Were you sleeping?” Deb asked.

“Um, yeah, just starting to.”

“Can we talk for a sec?”

Maneuvering again, he said, “Yeah, sure.”

Still in the dress she’d worn to the party, Deb sat at the foot of the bed, and said, “I just want to say sorry for the way I acted in the car. I had no right to jump down your throat like that.”

Mark could smell rum.

“Never mind,” he said. “It’s no big deal.”

“No, it is a big deal,” she slurred. “I know we haven’t been getting along lately, but I don’t really think anything’s going on with you and Karen, and I won’t talk to her, so you don’t have to worry about that. I just… I just don’t wanna be like this anymore. Seriously, I don’t wanna be like this. D’you wanna be like this?”

Mark imagined licking the insides of Karen’s thighs. “Can we talk about this tomorrow?”

With the remote he flicked off the TV. It was pitch dark in the room now.

“Let’s go away somewhere,” Deb said. “A trip, just the two of us. The kid’s’re gonna be away at camp in July, let’s plan something. We never went to Italy. We said we wanted to go to the Amalfi Coast someday, let’s just do it, let’s go for two weeks, have a real adventure together.”

Imagining how frustrating it would be to go away for two weeks and be so far from Karen, he said, “Let’s think about it.”

“That’s what we always say, but we never go. Why not just do it?”

“We already paid for the country club for the summer,” Mark said.

“We always pay for the country club,” Deb said. “I’m talking two weeks, just two weeks. Come on, the kids’re older now—this is it, this is someday.”

“I’ve got that big project next week,” Mark said, “people in from Hong Kong.”

“That’s next week,” Deb said. “I’m talking about
July
. Will you look online with me tomorrow? Can we look
together
?”

Just to end the discussion Mark said, “Okay, fine, we’ll look, we’ll look.”

“Thank you.” Deb leaned over Mark and kissed him, and then she felt him through the blanket and said, “Ooh, I guess you really
are
excited about Italy.” She sat up again, turning her back to Mark and said, “Undress me.”

More disappointed than excited, Mark unzipped Deb’s dress. Then she stood, kicked off her heels, and wriggled until she was naked. A few moments later, she was in bed with him.

“Kiss me,” she said.

Mark kissed her, tasting rum. He couldn’t stop thinking about Karen in her wet bathing suit. He imagined pulling the knot off the bottom, how it would come right off.

“Kiss me like you want to kiss me,” Deb said.

Mark continued kissing her, using more tongue, tasting more rum. He closed his eyes, imagining he was kissing Karen. His hands would be on her ass—her smooth, firm ass.

Then Deb got on top, but it was Karen. How would it feel to have Karen on top, riding him? He pictured her arching her back, her bikini top off, his hands over her breasts now.

“Never mind,” Deb said and got off him.

Mark had no idea what was wrong. “What is it?” he asked.

Deb was lying next to him, turned away, and pulled the covers up to cover her head.

Now Mark was getting seriously paranoid. Had he said Karen’s name out loud?

His pulse pounding, he asked, “Come on, what’s wrong? What did I do?”

Deb was silent for a while, then he heard sniffling. Shit, she was crying. He must’ve said the wrong name. Why else would she be acting this way?

“Come on, just tell me,” he said. “I have no idea what’s going on here.”

“Forget it,” she said. “Everything’s so… never mind.”

“Everything’s so what? What is it?”

“Nothing,” she said. “Forget it, okay? Just forget it.”

Frustrated, Mark turned away in the other direction. He was trying to picture Karen naked again, but it was foggy now. He couldn’t even imagine what her face looked like. He could see her eyes, her lips, her hair, but he couldn’t see
her
.

He kept trying, though, until he finally fell asleep.

W
HEN
D
EB
woke up, at the edge of the bed, turned away from Mark, hung over, exhausted because she’d barely slept, hovering over sleep for most of the night, she thought,
I can’t take this anymore
. She had no idea exactly why or how she’d gotten into this situation, but it was wearing her down, mentally and physically. She was stressed out all the time—bitter, edgy, paranoid. She was lucky she’d made it this far, but if she didn’t end it soon, find some clean way out, her life would turn into a full-blown nightmare.

She remained in bed, ruminating, till the alarm blared at seven. Mark, facing away, stirred, then fell back asleep. As she stood, wooziness hit. Shit, mixing vodka and rum had definitely been a bad idea. She could mix vodka and whiskey and be okay, but the rum always got her.

She wobbled into the bathroom. A few minutes later, heading downstairs, she almost lost her balance and had to grab onto the banister. She should’ve made herself throw up last night or at least had some water before she went to sleep. She always forgot the water.

In the kitchen, she filled one of Justin’s Sponge Bob cups with water from the Poland Spring tank, but was too nauseated to have more than a couple of sips.

Advil
, she thought excitedly, as if she’d just come up with a brilliant idea, and found some in the cabinet. She swallowed two capsules, then, wanting to feel better faster, took one more. She made a cup of coffee in the Keurig machine and then rested at the kitchen table, sipping coffee. She still felt like shit, but it wasn’t just the alcohol in her system—it was everything. Sometimes life seemed so exhausting and overwhelming and, worse, she knew she was responsible for making it this way. Seriously, how many forty-four year-old women would kill for what she had? A four-bedroom house in Westchester, a successful, hard-working husband, two amazing kids. Maybe she was bored, maybe that was her whole problem. She used to work for a market research firm but had quit when Riley was born. She didn’t want to go back to her old career, but she’d always wanted to paint. She used to have talent, had taken a couple of art classes in college and loved it. She could go to art school in the city a couple of days a week—she’d already checked out the Art Students League online—and she had plenty of space to make an art studio in the basement. It would be amazing to live a creative lifestyle, meet new, interesting creative-type people in the city. All she had to do was take the first step, register for a class, but she had forgotten how to be proactive, how to do things for herself.

She heard a vibration and then spotted her second cell phone, the one with the prepaid calling plan, on the kitchen table. Shit, she must’ve taken it out of her purse last night when she was drunk, looking for Advil. She was usually careful not to leave the phone in the open, but what about
him
? How many times had she told him not to text at all unless he was absolutely certain that she was home alone? What was he doing,
trying
to get caught?

She checked and, sure enough, there was a message from Owen Harrison right there on the front of the screen:
Can’t wait to fuck the hell out of you today!!!

“Jesus,” she muttered, deleting the text. Having the second phone was a good precaution, but it didn’t protect her entirely. Even if she was careful about deleting every call and text, she wasn’t sure how she could explain the phone itself if Mark found it. She could say a friend gave it to her, or she found it, but any explanation would be flimsy. She couldn’t take this stress anymore—living on the verge of catastrophe, fearing that Mark or, God forbid, the kids would find the phone or see a text that could ruin the rest of her life, was way too stressful.

Then, hating herself, she responded:
Oooo, you’re so naughty!

This was how it always went with her and Owen—she couldn’t stick to what she
wanted
. There were times she tried to end it, but she was weak, impulsive, and made the same stupid decision again and again. The worst decision had been getting involved with him at all, putting her whole marriage, maybe her whole life, in the hands of an eighteen-year-old boy.

An eighteen-year-old boy
.

Sometimes the whole situation seemed surreal. Owen had been sixteen when the affair began, which made her an adulterer
and
a rapist. Yep, Deb Berman was a rapist. Not somebody else, not a stranger on the news—
her
. She’d had moments like this before over the past two years. She’d be having a normal night at home with her family, sitting at the dinner table, or helping her kids with their homework, and she’d think,
I’m a rapist
, and she’d shudder, feel lightheaded and weightless; this couldn’t possibly be happening. It was as if she’d been inserted into an alternate reality where she was still Deb Berman, but she was a different Deb Berman, someone in the news she’d look down on:
How could she actually do that
?
How could she be so sick, so perverted
? She wished she could go back and be the high-and-mighty Deb Berman, that she could be the judger instead of the judged.

Another text from Owen:
I’m so horny right now, I want you so bad

She knew she should feel repulsed, disgusted—she wasn’t so far gone that she’d forgotten how she was
supposed
to feel. She knew this was wrong, that she had to stop being so selfish. This wasn’t about her, about filling whatever void it was filling; it was about her family and about his family. Owen was just two years older than Riley, for God’s sake, and Riley and Owen had known each other for years, had friends in common. While Deb wasn’t friends with Owen’s mother, Linda Harrison, they were friend
ly
. For years they’d run into each other around town—at school pickups, at the mall, at soccer games. What if Linda found out? How angry and devastated and vindictive would she be?

Deb had to explain this to Owen, not some other day—
today
. She had to make him understand that they couldn’t do this anymore, hurt the people they loved. She’d remind him that they’d already had a couple of close calls, like that time they were in his car in the high school parking lot and those kids walked by and almost saw them. Or the time they were having sex in Owen’s bedroom that afternoon, when Linda and her husband Raymond—Owen’s stepfather—were supposed to be at work, and Raymond came home unexpectedly, and Deb had to hide in Owen’s closet, like a character in a movie, a slapstick comedy, but this wasn’t a movie, and it certainly wasn’t a comedy. This was the real world where there were serious consequences so they had to do the smart thing, the right thing, and forget about each other, go on with their lives.

Other books

Slasherazzi by Daniel A. Kaine
Love you to Death by Shannon K. Butcher
Endlessly by C.V. Hunt