I loved you. Didn't come naturally off my tongue. And it sure as hell wasn't a phrase that was bandied about in my house."
"I don't want you to tell me."
"You always said it first." He saw the surprise on her face. "You never realized that, did you? I was never able to say it to you, unless you'd said it. Times change. People change. Some people take longer than others. I realize I've been waiting, Mia, maneuvering again, so you'd say it first. Easier for me that way. You used to make things too damn easy for me."
"Fortunately, that's changed. Now I have to go. It's late."
"Yeah, it's late. I love you, Mia. I love you. I don't mind saying it a few hundred times until you believe it."
It hurt to hear it. A quick, pinching pain. She used that pain to keep her heart cool and her voice even.
"You gave me words before, Sam. We gave each other words. They weren't enough. I can't give you what you want."
She ran down the path, away from him.
"Won't give me," he replied. "Yet."
She didn't stop until she got to her car. Didn't go into the house for her shoes, or think about them. She thought only of driving away, driving fast until her mind settled again. She had let herself love him again. Or rather, her heart had turned on her when she'd been vulnerable. But that was her problem, and one she would deal with.
Rationally, reasonably, if loving him were the right choice, it wouldn't make her so unhappy. If hearing him say he loved her was the solution, how could it have been like a blow to the heart?
She would not become a victim of her own emotions, not a second time. She wouldn't throw herself mindlessly into love, putting herself and everything that mattered to her at risk. Balance, she told herself, and clear thinking. They were essential when one was contemplating a life-and-death decision. Maybe it was time to take a few days off, regroup. She'd been spreading herself too thin, she decided. She needed to be with herself.
Alone.
"What the hell do you mean she's gone?" Annoyed at being roused out of sleep before eight-thirty, on a Sunday, on the only day that week she could sleep in, Ripley scowled at the phone.
"She's off the island." A pulse was pounding in Sam's throat, making speech almost painful. "Where did she go?"
"I don't know. Christ." She sat up in bed, scrubbed her hand over her face. "I'm not even awake. How do you know she went off-island? Maybe she's just out for a walk or a drive."
He knew, Sam thought, because he'd tuned in to her. And the snapping of the connection had
awakened him. Next time, he thought grimly, he wouldn't limit the link to the island.
"I just know. I was with her last night. She didn't say anything about plans on the mainland."
"Well, she doesn't keep me as her social secretary. Did you have a fight or something?"
"No, we didn't have a fight." What they'd had could never be boiled down to such an elemental word.
"If you have any idea where she's gone - "
"I don't." But the worry in his voice got through. "Listen, ask Lulu. Mia wouldn't go anywhere without letting her know. She probably just went over to do some shopping or something and - " Scowling, Ripley held the phone out and listened to the dial tone. "Well, goodbye to you, too."
He didn't bother with the phone this time, but jumped in his car and drove to Lulu's. He barely noticed that she'd changed the paint from the pumpkin orange he remembered from his boyhood to a wild purple. He knocked on the front door.
"You got two seconds to tell me why you woke me up out of a dream where I was dancing with Charles Bronson and we were both naked. Otherwise, I'm kicking your - "
"Where's Mia?" he snapped.
He slapped a hand on the door before she could slam it in his face. "Just tell me she's okay."
"Why shouldn't she be?"
"Did she tell you where she was going?"
"If she did, I'm not telling you." She could sense his anger and his fear. "You try any hocus-pocus on me, and I'll not only kick your ass, I'll mop the floor with it. Now back off."
Disgusted with himself, he stepped back. When the door slammed he just sat on the porch steps and rested his head in his hands.
Had he driven her away?