| And Shadows Have
Their Ending
by P.G. Forte
Excerpt
Chapter One
Midsummer
Seth Cavanaugh had been too long at the fair. He’d
known it after the first ten minutes, but still he’d
stayed for the whole two days of the festival. Even now, as
Oberon’s Midsummer Faire wound slowly down around him,
melting gradually into the warm, mellow gold of a perfect,
summer, Sunday afternoon, he made no move toward the exit.
Where was the sense in leaving, when he couldn’t go
home?
He was drunk. But not so drunk that he’d reached the
point where he thought he could pass for sober. Or, had he
got that backwards? Had he managed to drink himself past the
point of delusion? He wasn’t sure. And, anyway, what
did it matter? Drunk was drunk, after all. And he was drunk
enough, and tired enough, to be disoriented by the swirl of
noise and color that surrounded him. Even if he tried to go
home, he probably couldn’t find his way.
He cast a jaded eye around at the booths selling food, handcrafts
and herbs, and at others that offered a variety of readings––cards,
tea leaves, auras, past lives. He had no interest in any of
it. It took a moment longer for it to register in his drink-fogged
brain that he was alone in the crowd. He’d lost track
of his friends. The group he’d been hanging with since
yesterday morning had disappeared from sight.
Good. He breathed a sigh of relief. He wasn’t in the
mood for company, anyhow. He didn’t want to party anymore.
He didn’t want to laugh, or drink, or play around. He
was far too disgusted with himself to socialize.
A year and six months. That’s how long it had been
since he’d had a drink. One year. Six months. And he’d
really thought he had it beat. But that was before the night
last April when he’d come home to find that one of his
best friends had just bled to death on his bedroom floor.
Today would have been Ray’s eighteenth birthday. Considering
that it was at least partly Seth’s fault that his friend
was dead, there was no way he could have refused to come here
this weekend or to join with the others as they said their
last good-byes, as they mourned Ray’s passing. Or, as
they toasted his memory again. And again. And again.
They were all eighteen years old now, most of them, just
out of high school and finally able to legally gain entrance
to most of the fair’s restricted areas, to enjoy most—if
not all—that the festival had to offer. They’d
stayed awake and partied hard, all day, all night, and on
through the next day. All the old crowd. Friends since grade
school. Together for what might be the very last time in who
knew how long. It was what Ray would have wanted. What he’d
planned for his birthday weekend. What he’d have been
doing with them—had he lived.
“Wish you were here, dog,” Seth murmured sadly.
“Wish it was you above ground now, instead of me.”
Why couldn’t he have been the one to die? How the
fuck had things gone so far wrong? He was tired of living.
He was sick of the grief and the guilt and the sorrow that
marked each moment. Weary from dragging his sorry ass through
one day and into the next. It was one of life’s really
bad jokes, that Ray should die—that he should be killed
in Seth’s place—and that Seth should be left behind
to deal with the aftermath. It was ugly and wrong and incredibly
unfair. But, it was nothing more than what he should have
expected from life.
“Seth? Is that you?”
A girl’s soft voice pierced through the angry haze
of his thoughts, startling them into flight. His mind wiped
blank, Seth was surprised to notice that his wandering feet
had come to a halt. When had he stopped walking? Why had he
stopped? And what was causing his heart to pound so fiercely
in his chest?
“Seth?” That voice again. Warm. Worried. Familiar.
His heart twisted in pain as he recognized the sound.
“Deirdre?” He turned his head to stare in appalled
disbelief at the face that had haunted his dreams for two
years. At shiny brown hair and bright blue eyes—things
he’d told himself he despised. At a smile more hesitant
than he’d remembered, but just as sweet. At a bod that
he’d claimed in a thousand horny fantasies. “Oh,
Jesus.” Fuck, this could not be happening. “What
are you doing back in Oberon?”
Red flags appeared on Deirdre’s cheeks. “I-I
live here now,” she said, sounding confused as she stumbled
into speech. “In Abraxas, actually. I’m going
to school there. I don’t know why you’re so surprised
to see me, I mean, you knew I’d be back, right? I-I
told you about my plan, didn’t I?”
“You told me?” When might that have been?
Deirdre blinked in surprise. “Well, yeah. Didn’t
I? It’s all I’ve ever wanted to do, ever since
I was a little girl. To go to UC Abraxas and become a journalist.
Just like my mother did. I’m sure we talked about it.
Don’t you remember?”
“You think I’m gonna remember some bullshit
idea you told me about two fucking years ago?” But,
oh, hell, of course he remembered. He remembered everything
about her; every moment they’d spent together, every
word she’d spoken. Every look. Every kiss. How much
easier would his life have been these past two years if he
could have only forgotten some of it?
But he hadn’t been that lucky. He remembered it all
perfectly. The night they’d met, the clothes she’d
worn, her laughter, her scent. He’d thought she was
the prettiest girl he’d ever seen. But, she’d
lied right from the start, giving him a fake name and a fake
story about why she was in town.
He remembered how he figured out her secret, piecing together
clues until he arrived at the truth. She was a runaway. And
even though he’d been willing to run away with her;
willing to leave his home, his family; willing to turn himself
into a liar and a thief and a fugitive—all for her sake—she’d
betrayed him. She threw him over the very first chance she
got. For a thug. A would be gangster. A would be murderer.
Still, he’d been in love and she’d been in danger.
So even though she’d betrayed him, he’d tried
to save her from herself. He’d been beaten and drugged
and nearly killed for his trouble. He’d lost the respect
of his family and his reputation with the whole town. He’d
emerged from his ordeal with an addiction he was still struggling
to overcome. But that had not been the worst of it.
No, the worst had been the hours he’d spent in the
dark; lying on a cold, stone floor; tied up and wracked with
pain; forced to listen while, oblivious to his heartache,
she made love with his captor in the next room.
Deirdre. Deirdre of the sorrows. In the two years since
he’d seen her, he’d done a little reading. She’d
been well named. His Deirdre might not be quite as innocent
as her namesake, but she was no less skilled at wrecking a
guy’s life.
“It’s been two years,” he reminded her
again. Two years. And for each time he remembered her and
cursed the day they met, there’d been at least that
many times he’d prayed that she’d come back to
him.
Until the night Ray died and life became a twisted joke.
Now, she was the last thing he needed. The last thing he wanted.
The last person he ever wanted to see.
[To be continued…]
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