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Kiss Me When the Sun Goes Down Page 37


  Going with the pull the Band-aid off quickly school of thought, I peeled off part of the tape holding the needle in. My teeth mashed against the inside of my lips at the pain that bloomed from the big patch of missing arm hair in the process. After a deep breath or two, I gritted my teeth in anticipation of more pain. Gripping the needle firmly, I yanked it out as straight as I could manage, pressing the bandage firmly around the wound to keep it from bleeding. All in all, pulling the needle out hurt far less than removing the tape, thank God.

  The door swung open and I looked up nervously, hand clamped over my wrist guiltily. It was only Daphne, her face glowing with success as she plopped a duffel bag on the end of the bed. “I was going to try to get to the gym later,” she beamed, unzipping the bag to pull out a pair of lycra workout shorts and an oversized t-shirt.

  I would have been happy to wear clown pants at that point if it meant a chance at getting out of there, and immediately tugged them on. Relieved that none of the physical activity made me the least bit weak or woozy, I slipped on her sneakers that were thankfully just a little snug, but fit otherwise, and I tugged my hair up into a messy ponytail.

  Daphne had taken up a vantage point by the door, ready to distract anyone who came through. She darted a furtive glance over, her shoulders dropping in relief as she saw me zipping up the duffel. “Ready?”

  “Ready.” I was nervous as hell as we stepped out into the hall. After a brief check, we started walking slow but steady for the elevators at the end of the hallway. It was tempting to look at the nurse’s station on the way out to see if we were noticed. Instead, I kept my face turned away, putting Daphne between me and the desk in the hopes she’d block me at least in part.

  Once inside the elevator we both dissolved into a nervous fit of giggles, and I felt a huge hurdle had been surpassed by leaving the floor. On the ground level, no one paid us any mind and it was a quick shot out to the parking lot. I was pleased to note I still felt no fatigue or dizziness, but the colors… They nearly overwhelmed me once we got to the crowded lobby.

  Auras of all hues glowed softly around each person in a riot of colors that dazzled my eyes. Daphne caught my dazed expression and shot me a look. “Are you sure you want to leave?” she murmured, a pucker of worry appearing on her brow.

  “No, I’m fine. It’s not that, it’s… something else. I’ll explain later, I promise,” I hedged, not knowing quite how to explain the phenomenon anyway. Out in the car I took a deep, steadying breath, noting my hands shook slightly, but I figured it was from the adrenaline. We had done it!

  “Holy smokes, I can’t believe we just did that!” Daphne looked amped as she started the car and I couldn’t help but smile in return.

  I wasn’t very talkative on the way back to my apartment, but Daphne didn’t seem to notice or mind, singing along with the radio. She’d always been an upbeat person, bubbly and good hearted, and I’d always admired and envied those qualities about her. I’d always been more cynical, skeptical, but I liked to think my heart was still in the right place.

  We balanced each other out pretty well. She kept me from getting too broody and down when things didn’t go my way, reminding me about the good things in life. In turn, I kept her from floating off into the clouds when her naiveté got the better of her and threatened to lead her into making a mistake. Like the time she’d wanted to accept that ride home from those rocker guys with a van just because they had a cute puppy. I loved her to death, but sometimes she had no common sense.

  My eyes drifted to the sidewalks, still sparsely populated in the early morning. Spotting auras gave people watching a whole new dimension and I studied them, looking for a pattern to the colors.

  My eyes landed on a familiar face, and I stared dumbstruck as I spied my mysterious stranger, not four blocks from the hospital! He was tall, like I remembered, and he had the same long brown coat he wore in the alley and in my dreams. Oddly enough, he had that disheveled look one might associate with the homeless or someone who was down on his luck. But not dirty, not like he lived on the streets, he just seemed out of place.

  The same golden aura surrounded him like a full body halo, gleaming brighter than the average person on the street. This time it didn’t flicker and crackle like a bug zapper, but was steady and solid, much stronger.

  He walked with both hands shoved deep in his pockets, the breeze blowing his unruly curls down over his forehead, making my fingers itch to push them back to get a better look at his face. We were close to passing him when he looked up, his azure gaze locking with mine. I turned in my seat, staring as we drove past and he turned as well, holding my gaze until we disappeared around the corner.

  That time I hadn’t imagined him, I was as sure of that as I knew my own name. And he knew me too, or at least was as interested in me as I was in him in that brief contact. Part of me wanted to ask Daphne to turn around and go back, but what would I say? Hey, remember me from that alley the other night? Or better still, were you in my hospital room holding my hand? It sounded looney tunes just thinking about it, and my mood turned broody for the rest of the way home.

  Luckily, Daphne had her emergency key to my apartment, and I wondered again if my purse was locked up at the hospital or down at Eden. My cat, Mimsy, immediately came mewling for attention, but instead of tangling with my legs as she tended to do once I opened the door, she backed away as soon as she saw me.

  “Come on, kitty, what is it? C’mere, Mims…” I frowned at her behavior. She sniffed the air around me carefully, her hackles raised.

  “Maybe she smells the hospital?” Daphne shrugged, closing the door.

  “More likely she smells me, I haven’t showered in days.” I made a face, sighing with relief to be back in my own place again. “I should probably take one now.”

  “You need to get into bed, Mercy,” Daphne ordered resolutely, turning me by the shoulders toward my bedroom. “Just because I helped spring you from the hospital, doesn’t mean I think you should be running around all willy nilly.”

  My lips quirked over that. “Taking a shower isn’t exactly running around willy or nilly. Besides, I don’t think I can rest until I wash away the smell of that place. I don’t want to climb into my nice clean bed like this.”

  “Nope, no shower until you’ve had a chance to rest from the trip home,” she insisted, and I could tell I’d have a hard time arguing her out of that one from the mutinous cast to her face.

  “How about I rest on the couch then?” My brown vinyl couch was surprisingly comfy and I liked to pretend it was made of real leather, it made me feel more stylish. “I’ll lie here like a potato.” I was already moving to plop down into my regular spot, and Mimsy followed, sniffing my ankles cautiously.

  “Well… alright,” Daphne relented after a moment, knowing my stubborn nature. “But I’m going to make you some tea and then you can tell me all about what happened. Matt wasn’t at all specific when he called me, and Parker didn’t know much more either.”

  My kitchen was open to the living room, the space separated by a breakfast bar, and we could talk easily while she put the kettle on. There was a tiny balcony outside of the sliding glass door that the building manager laughingly called a deck, but there was barely enough room for two plastic chairs out there. Mimsy liked to sit out there with me though, and the overhang from the apartment above kept the rain off unless it was windy.

  “You talked to Parker?” My brows rose a fraction over that. My boss was nice enough after you got to know him, but I hadn’t thought Daphne ever really spoke to him much before.

  “Well sure, after Matty told me you’d been stabbed at work and the hospital said you couldn’t have any visitors, I went down there to find out if anyone saw anything. He was too busy bitching about all the hassle the cops gave him about not having proper safety lighting out in the alley. He wasn’t much help at all.”

  Great, I had to contend with Parker being pissy with me when I got back to work on top of my missed shifts. T
hat sounded like fun. “That figures. I almost die and he’s worried about the bother of installing security lights,” I muttered.

  “He did seem worried about you, if that helps. He was kind of broken up about it, guilty even. I just don’t think he knew how to vocalize it.”

  Ah Daphne, ever looking for the good in people. I knew better, Parker wasn’t the sentimental type. Hopefully I’d get a few more days grace period before I had to go back and face him, and with any luck he’d cool down by then.

  “Do you want blackberry or apple cinnamon?” Daphne held up the boxes of tea, giving each a light shake when she mentioned them.

  “I’ll take blackberry, thanks,” I replied, settling more comfortably on the couch and patting the cushion next to me, but Mimsy still gave me a wide berth. “Stupid cat…”

  “What?”

  “Oh nothing,” I sighed, closing my eyes for a moment. “This has been the weirdest week.”

  Daphne made an inelegant snort. “You crack me up, Mercy. You get stabbed, spend the week in the hospital, almost die, and then talk me into sneaking you out of there, and you that’s all you can say? It’s been a weird week?” A shake of the head was given.

  “You don’t know the half of it,” I muttered, leaning back against the couch.

  “Okay, so tell me.” Daphne returned to the living room, mugs in hand, setting them down on the coffee table. Folding her legs under her on the couch beside me, she waited, eyes alight with anticipation.

  I didn’t know how much to tell her. I didn’t want her to worry, and I was afraid if I told her about my incredible healing or the colors I was seeing, she might try and talk me into going back to the hospital for more tests. Or worse, call my mother.

  Instead, I focused on the one thing that might capture her interest enough to push those other issues aside. My mysterious stranger. “You know the guy who was in the alley getting stabbed before I showed up?”

  Daphne nodded, she knew the basics at least.

  “I could’ve sworn he was at the hospital too, visiting me when I was in intensive care.”

  “But I thought you weren’t supposed to have visitors?” A disgruntled tone crept into her voice at having been denied the same privilege.

  “No, I wasn’t, and the nurse said no one had been allowed in. So I figured I must have imagined it, right?” I licked my lips, forging on. “And then the next night I dreamed about him again, that he came to visit me while I slept. But not in a creepy, stalkerish way, more like he was looking out for me.”

  Daphne nodded again, waiting for me to get to the good part she knew must be coming from my tone of voice.

  “I figured it was all in my head, but when we left the hospital, I saw him on the street and he looked right at me.”

  “And?” she prompted, leaning forward in her seat.

  “And… that’s it, I saw him and he saw me and he definitely knew me, that’s all. Don’t you think that’s kinda weird?”

  Doubt clouded her pretty features, and I could tell she searched for the right thing to say. “Yes, I guess so. But maybe he was coming to visit you? Maybe he found out you were out of the ICU and wanted to visit you to say thanks for saving his life?”

  Obviously she didn’t think there was anything strange about that, but I couldn’t shake the feeling there was something more between us. A connection I couldn’t describe. “I just thought it was an odd coincidence to see him on the street like that,” I said with a half shrug.

  “Tell me about him, was he cute?” Warming to the subject, she picked up a pillow and hugged it to her middle.

  I couldn’t help but smile in response, it’d been too long since we had some good girl talk over a guy. A while since I’d been in a real relationship, the last few guys I hooked up with turned out to be total losers. The last one even asked me to pay for my half of dinner right after he gave me the it’s not you, it’s me speech. He ended up with a lap full of linguine and I had to catch the bus home.

  “He was cute,” I grinned. “In a kind of scruffy way. Not in the I’m cool, here is my perpetual unshaven look like Steve, remember Steve?” I groaned, oh how I wish I could forget him. “But in a cute, clueless sort of way. Like a big puppy.” I was explaining it badly, I knew that, but I didn’t think saying he dressed like a homeless guy would present the right mental image. “Tall, blonde and handsome though, what’s not to like?”

  “Like a big puppy? I didn’t think that was your type. Isn’t that how you described Walter from work?”

  Walter worked as a bouncer at the club. Despite the muscles and deliberately grim expression he wore at work, I found he was a gentle, almost bashful man. He was also a bit sweet on me, though I never felt a love connection there. “Walter is more like a big, loyal dog than a puppy,” I considered aloud. “He’s sweet and trustworthy but there’s no spark, you know?”

  Daphne nodded, she got it. “But you feel a spark with this other guy?”

  “I don’t know, I mean, I’ve never even spoken to him.”

  “Maybe you should find this guy then? I bet the cops will track him down,” she suggested, blowing on her tea, and I shook my head.

  “No, the cops didn’t even know he’d been in the alley with me, they have no idea who he is. But the detective did seem interested in him, so maybe he’ll track him down.”

  “No fair, the police got to visit you before I did?” Daphne pouted.

  “Yeah, they came to see me practically as soon as I was awake. They already know who the guy was that attacked me though, that was pretty impressive.”

  “They do? That was fast. Do they need you to pick him out of a lineup or anything?”

  “I don’t know, they hadn’t picked him up yet when I talked to the guy. He seemed pretty confident they’d get him soon though.” I smiled at the recollection of the conversation. Detective Gates had been much more personable than I’d been expecting from the police department.

  “Hey, wait a minute, I know that smile. Was the cop cute too?” Daphne teased, and I felt my cheeks grow warm.

  “He was attractive, yes,” I admitted, remembering his engaging smile. “But come on, he’s a cop.” Not that I had anything against law enforcement, it just wasn’t something I’d really considered before.

  Daphne snorted at that. “So? You don’t think they date? It’s not like you’re a criminal or anything. It wouldn’t hurt you to go out with a nice guy for a change.”

  “Just because he’s a cop doesn’t mean he’s a nice guy,” I pointed out, reaching for my own tea that had turned a deep purple, the way I liked it.

  “But was he?”

  Definitely a nice guy, it was his defining characteristic. “Yes, he was,” I admitted.

  “You should call him up and ask him if he’s been able to track down the other guy. If he has, then great, you can give your big, blonde puppy a call. If not, then maybe you and the cop can get together for a little interrogation or something.” She waggled her eyebrows at me, and we both laughed.

  “Maybe I will. But I’m not doing anything today but taking it easy.” I was pretty sure a trained detective would want to know why I was out of the hospital already.

  “Good,” she nodded with approval. “I can stick around until two, then I have to get to work.” Daphne worked in a call center for a market research company. Which was a nice way of saying she was one of those annoying people who called you at dinnertime and asked you to take a survey about what brand of laundry soap you preferred. She landed me a job there once, but it wasn’t my thing. Personally, I could never take all the rejection. People were pretty damn rude to perfect strangers on the phone, but it suited her temperament fine.

  “Okay, thanks. Don’t worry, I’ll be fine. I’m just going to curl up and wade through some of my Netflix queue.”

  We chatted for a while. She was dating someone new, and I wanted to hear all about that, of course. By the time Daphne had to leave for work, I was desperate for a shower. If I’d been as weak as a ki
tten, I still would have dragged my mangy butt in there and let the water run over me, even if I had to sit on the bottom of the tub. As it was I still felt fine, and as soon as I bolted the door after Daphne, I made a beeline for the bathroom to turn the water on.

  Speaking of kittens, Mimsy grew less wary of me and condescended to sit at my feet while I visited with Daphne, close but still out of reach for being patted. When I got up to go into the shower she followed me, sitting in her usual vantage point on the counter to watch, having a love/hate relationship with water.

  The hot shower felt amazing. I don’t know if it was because it had been a few days, or because of whatever change had come over my body since the stabbing, or secret option number three, but I lingered a lot longer than I needed to. I came out feeling relaxed and good, until I caught sight of my stitches in the steamy bathroom mirror.

  I had no idea if they were supposed to be dissolving stitches or if they’d have to be removed, but it was clear they weren’t needed anymore. The skin beneath them looked completely knitted together, even smoother than it had that morning, if possible. Picking up a pair of slender scissors from the bathroom counter, I carefully snipped through them and pulled the black threads free with a pair of tweezers. Belatedly, I wondered if I should have sterilized things first, but it was too late. Except for the faint line across my belly I looked fine.

  Better since I was clean, a healthy pink glow returned to my skin. The eyes were still startling to get used to, and I was glad Daphne hadn’t brought it up. For the moment all I wanted to do was pull on some comfy pajamas and curl up on the sofa like I promised. There was time enough to ponder what happened to me and why I felt like a stranger in my own body.