Read Dancing on the Wind Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
could do was bellow with fury and that he did, only to have the nurses come running.
“Get out!” he ordered them. “Leave me the fuck alone!”
But they hadn’t. They had been expecting his outburst and had come prepared for
it. The moment he saw the vac-syringe in the head nurse’s hand, he bellowed again but
they held him down and the drug was administered despite his weak struggles.
The last thing he remembered before the darkness flowed over him was Keenan
standing in the doorway with tears running down her pale cheeks.
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“Are you going to give me a ration of shit or do you want to get out of this room for
a while?”
Fallon stared at the wheelchair for a hateful second then looked up at the
Supervisor with narrowed eyes. “Why can’t I have crutches?”
The Supervisor folded his arms over his chest. “Do you think your leg is healed
sufficiently that you can take a chance falling on it? If you do, then I’ll have crutches
brought, but if you fall, if you re-injure the leg, you’ll be in here even longer. Wanna
gamble another month’s stay before I have you carted off to the Island?”
Glaring once more at the wheelchair, Fallon sighed deeply, his shoulders slumped
in surrender. He said nothing as the orderly lifted him from the bed and sat him in the
wheelchair, hunkering down to position Fallon’s leg with its cast on the leg support.
The Supervisor gently backed the wheelchair out of the room, swung it around and
started down the hall. “How ’bout the solarium?”
“I don’t care,” Fallon said, but he was privately thrilled to be out of the
claustrophobic room with its medicinal smells.
“You’re the only patient up here right now,” the Supervisor reported. “We had an
appendectomy patient a few days ago but he’s already gone back to the dorm.”
“Whoopee,” Fallon growled.
“I’ve scheduled you to leave for the Island day after tomorrow. They have state-of-
the-art rehab equipment there and the very best physical therapists, so we should have
you back on your feet in short order.”
Because of the rainy weather, the solarium wasn’t as bright and cheerful as it
normally was. When the Supervisor rolled him over to the windows, the Reaper stared
intently at a trickle of rainwater as it wriggled down the outside of the glass pane. He
ignored the Supervisor who pulled up a plastic chair and sat beside him.
For nearly half an hour neither man spoke. They watched the rain falling, the low
clouds streaking by and the Canada geese that flew through them.
“I’m sending Keenan with you.”
Fallon flinched. “I wish you wouldn’t.”
“I know you do, but it’s a done deal.”
The Supervisor got up and started away.
“Where are you going?” Fallon asked.
“Talk to her,” was all the Supervisor said, and despite Fallon yelling at him to come
back, continued on his way.
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Alone in the solarium with his right leg and left arm in casts, Fallon had no way to
maneuver the wheelchair. Besides, he didn’t think at that moment he had the strength
to push the wheels. He was still weak and in more pain than he was prepared to admit
to his caretakers. Hanging his head, he clenched his teeth, squeezed his eyes tightly shut
with frustration and waited for Keenan to join him.
* * * * *
“Sit,” the Supervisor ordered.
Keenan did as she was commanded. Over the course of the last two days she’d
come down with a late summer-early autumn cold and felt miserable. Her head ached
and every bone in her body felt as though it were being attacked with tiny little
hammers.
“I left him in the solarium about an hour ago,” the Supervisor said, “with
instructions that no one was to go in there. He’s too weak to ply the wheelchair on his
own and I seriously doubt he’ll start yelling for help until another hour has passed.”
“The object of this exercise is to make it clear to him just how powerless he is right
now,” the third person in the room said softly.
“And you think he needs that brought home to him?” Keenan snapped. “You don’t
think he already feels powerless enough?”
“What Dr. Vardar is saying is that Fallon needs to look upon you as his savior when
you arrive to take him back to his room,” the Supervisor commented. “He’ll be relieved
and thankful and more inclined to talk to you.”
“He’ll be pissed,” she corrected. “Believe me he will, and much less inclined to talk
to me.”
“I disagree,” Dr. Vardar, the Exchange’s psychiatrist, stated.
“Keenan, we’ve seen this kind of reaction before when an agent has been subjected
to the kind of traumatic experience Fallon experienced. Not only do we need to
rehabilitate his body, we need to heal his mind. At the moment, his mind has suffered
far more damage than his body did.”
“At the moment, Agent Fallon is feeling a great deal of shame. He…”
“Shame?” Keenan interrupted the psychiatrist. “Why should he be feeling shame?”
“Because he found out he wasn’t as invincible as he believed himself to be,” Dr.
Vardar replied. “He has always viewed himself as being strong, unbeatable and
indestructible—if you will—and completely in charge of every situation. He was
helpless to prevent what happened to him, and helplessness to a man like Mikhail
Fallon is completely unacceptable. Oh, he’d taken beatings in the past. His stepfather
abused him at every turn so he was no stranger to pain, but the pain he was given by
Martiya was much worse than anything he’d ever endured before and it crippled him.
It drove him to his knees and in some dark place within him he believes he surrendered
to it. Although the creature didn’t break him, it did tear something vital inside him.”
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“And this perceived surrender is eating away at him,” the Supervisor added.
“He is undergoing a very severe case of posttraumatic stress disorder,” Dr. Vardar
said. “He has most of the symptoms—depression, irritability, emotional detachment,
difficulty paying attention, hypervigilance—have you seen him staring out the window
as though he expects something to come at him?”
“Yes,” Keenan said, looking down. “I have.”
“In the last few days, he’s also experienced nightmares,” the Supervisor told her.
“That is, when he can sleep at all.”
“Loss of appetite, anxiety, being easily startled,” Dr. Vardar continued. “All classic
symptoms.”
“And you want to make him feel even worse by leaving him alone in the
solarium?” she questioned.
“You are his Extension, Keenan,” the Supervisor reminded her. “These feelings of
disassociation he’s having should not include you. You are his lifeline and we want him
to acknowledge it.”
“What if he blames me for what happened to him?”
“How could he?” the Supervisor queried.
“Do you believe he does?” Dr. Vardar asked.
Keenan dug in her pocket for a tissue to wipe her runny nose. “It’s the way he looks
at me,” she said. “He looks angry.”
“Oh well, that’s part and parcel of the PTSD,” Dr. Vardar said.
“Just go to him,” the Supervisor said. “Try to get him to talk about what happened.
He won’t discuss it with me or Dr. V., but he might open up to you.”
“It will be good for him to get it out there,” Dr. Vardar said. “Until he
acknowledges what happened to him, he can’t move past it.”
Keenan wasn’t sure it was a wise thing to open up the wounds she felt Fallon was
trying to close, but she kept her thoughts to herself as she left the Supervisor’s office
and took the elevator up to the solarium. The soft music playing in the background
aggravated her and she blew her nose noisily to block it out. When the elevator doors
opened, she hurried out and away from the canned tune that had her wanting to thrust
her fingers into her ears.
He was sitting in front of the windows, but she was fairly sure he was sleeping. His
chin was tucked down and his hands were resting limply on the wheelchair’s armrests.
As quietly as she could, she took the chair positioned beside him and released a soft,
wavering breath, passing her gaze lovingly over his profile.
To her, he was such an extraordinarily handsome man. With the thick black hair
and the tawny complexion, the amber eyes and straight nose, full lower lip and the
determined chin, he could pass for a matinee idol. There were no razor nicks to mar his
flesh.
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“They heal quickly,” he’d once said to her when she asked if he never cut himself
shaving. “The scar on my brow I got when I was four. If I’d gotten it after the
Transference, my hellion would have healed it. She doesn’t like imperfections.”
As she sat there, she switched her attention to his back beneath the hospital pajama
top and realized the scarring there would have occurred when he was young. That
knowledge hurt her deeply and she clenched her hands together in her lap and looked
away.
She lost track of how much time passed as she sat there beside him. At one point he
whimpered and she saw his eyes moving rapidly back and forth beneath the lids and
knew he was dreaming. His fingers twitched in his lap, but the moment she reached
over and put her hand protectively over his, the nightmare ceased, the twitching
stopped and he subsided into dreamless sleep once more. Content just to touch him, to
have her skin close to his, she kept her hand there and returned her attention to the
rolling Iowa hills.
A few moments later he woke with a start, drawing in a harsh gasp, blinking
against the dull gray of the rainy afternoon. A vein in his neck throbbed rapidly and his
chest rose and fell quickly—an indication he had been thrust from an unpleasant place
into the realm of reality. He swallowed hard and looked down, eyes narrowing as he
noticed her hand closed over his. Slowly he turned his head to look at her. When she
smiled gently at him, he looked away again but did not attempt to move his hand from
under hers.
“Do you want to talk about the dream?” she asked softly.
He closed his eyes as though in great pain, and when at last he opened them, stared
straight ahead. She didn’t think he would answer but he did, his voice was husky.
“I got the hell beaten out of me by that thing,” he rasped.
Her hand tensed on his. “Yes, but you survived.”
He didn’t look at her. “Did I?”
“You’re here, aren’t you?”
A low snort accompanied his answer. “For what it’s worth.”
“It’s worth a lot to me.”
Some time passed before he spoke again.
“I had my ass handed to me, McCullough. That bitch stomped me good.”
His gaze was roaming the dark skies constantly, and with each flash of lightning, he
flinched.
“You are safe here. You do know that, don’t you?”
“She’s out there. Waiting. She didn’t finish what she started and will try again until
she is stopped.”
“We will find it and…”
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“No!”
he shouted, his head snapping toward her. His eyes were glowing with fury.
“You will stay the hell out of this, Keenan!”
“Fallon…” Keenan was almost afraid of the man sitting beside her. There was
murderous rage in his steady glare and it sent ripples of unease down her spine.
“This is between me and that bitch!” he snarled. “She’ll come for me again and
when she does, I
will
put her fucking slimy ass down!”
She wasn’t so sure Fallon could win in a fight against something as powerful as
Martiya. The creature had nearly destroyed him, had hurt him in ways she knew she
couldn’t begin to comprehend, and the continuing influence on him was exacting a
terrible revenge.
“Don’t shut me out,” she said. She twisted in the chair so she could place her free
hand on his cheek. “I love you. Don’t close yourself off to me, Fallon.”
Fallon seemed to slump in the chair. “I’m tired,” he said. “I need to go back to my
room.”
There was more that needed to be said, things that needed to be asked, but she
could sense him withdrawing and knew she’d get nothing else from him. She lowered
her hand, eased the other one from beneath his and stood.
“Do you want me to take you back to your room?”
He nodded.
Moving behind him, she looked down at his bent head then pulled the chair from
the window, turned it and started out of the solarium.
“Did the Supervisor tell you we would be leaving for the Island in a couple of
days?”
“Yeah,” he acknowledged curtly, making it clear he didn’t want to discuss it.
So she didn’t. She pushed his chair down the hallway and into his room. His bed
had been freshly made and a nurse was pouring an iced tumbler of water at the bedside
table. The woman said nothing but left quietly, returning almost immediately with a
burly orderly.
Knowing Fallon wouldn’t want her to see him being lifted into bed like a child,
Keenan bent down and kissed him on the top of the head.
“I’ll see you tomorrow, okay?”
“Whatever,” he mumbled.
Keenan exchanged a look with the nurse—who shook her head and shrugged—
then left. Once in the hall, she collapsed against the wall and buried her face in her