Paradise Falls (Paradise Falls #1-5)(31)
“I feel weird.”
“Just relax, and go to sleep.”
“I’m not tired,” she lied, but she couldn’t stifle the yawn.
“Yes, you are. It’s okay. You’re safe, now. If you need anything, just call.”
“Where’s my purse?”
“I have it. I’ll bring it up. Just don’t shoot me.”
She blinked. “How did you know I had a gun in there?”
He shrugged. “It doesn’t matter. Just get some sleep.”
Jacob reached for the light switch.
“Leave it on.”
He looked back and nodded, and stepped out, pulling the door behind him.
“Leave it open a little.”
He stopped the door just before it shut, and Jennifer let out a slow sigh. She curled up on the bed, pulling the heavy weight of the ice pack on her ankle towards her.
The room was richly appointed, all antiques, designed and put together by someone trying to emulate what the house would have actually looked like in its prime. They did a remarkable job. Everything was all dark reds and browns and earth tones, very dark and cozy feeling. There was even a fireplace.
Shifting a little on the bed, she tucked the blankets up around her chin and turned her head to lean on the ice pack, so she didn’t have to grasp it in her hand.
The only personal touch was a picture on the far wall. Four people posed in a photo probably taken at the JC Penny on Commerce Street before it closed. A man that looked like a leaner Jacob next to a tall woman with raven black hair, and seated in front of them was a skinny teenage Jacob and his little sister on his lap.
Sleep rolled over her like a wave.
Jennifer awoke still cocooned in blankets. The ice pack on her chin was gone, but a fresh one rested on her ankle. Light poured in through a gap in the heavy curtains, slashing across the bed over to the door.
“Hello?”
Barely thirty seconds after she spoke, Jacob opened the door and took a halting step in.
“Jennifer? Can I come in?”
Jennifer nodded, and pushed herself up until she could sit up against the headboard.
“Did you kill Grayson?”
“Not that I know of. He’s in the hospital. That’s the first thing you ask me?”
She shrugged. “Are we in the Dean house?”
“My house. Yes. This is my bedroom.”
“Where’d you sleep?”
“Downstairs,” he shrugged.
She rubbed her temples. “Oh. I feel funny.”
“I gave you one of my anxiety pills last night. I’m a little heavier than you are, so they probably have more of an effect.”
“Last night?” She yawned. “What time is it?”
“About one in the afternoon.”
“Shit!” she barked.
He snapped back, startled. “What?”
“I need to call my sister.”
She swung her legs off the bed, and yelped when her heel touched the floor and she yelped and pulled her foot back up.
“You need to stay off that for a day or so.”
Jennifer shook her head, and pushed her hair away from her face, causing the bandage to pull on the skin. “I don’t know what’s going on here. I can’t think.”
“Take a minute to breathe and clear your head. I’ll get you something to eat.”
He was gone before she could protest. She gingerly tried to stand up, but the sharp pain from her ankle made clearly stated she wouldn’t walk for days. Now both her ankles would trouble her. Hopefully this one was just a simple sprain.
The scent of something sweet cooking wafted through the room from downstairs. Jacob came back with a silver tray a few minutes later. Jennifer snorted at the extravagance until he set the tray with pancakes and orange juice on her lap.
He sat at the foot of the bed as she picked up a fork in her trembling hands and began tearing her food into bits.
Jacob threw a handful of pills in his mouth and downed a glass of milk, wiping his upper lip on the back of his wrist. Jennifer felt a strange chill spread through her.
“How did you know I like pancakes?”
He looked genuinely confused. “Everyone likes pancakes.”
It had to be the drug he gave her. She shook her head. “Jacob, don’t lie to me.”
“I’m not-“
“You’re not a math teacher. Okay, dealing with a punchy eighteen year old is one thing, but you beat down Grayson like he was a child. I’ve never seen anyone move like that in my entire life.”
“I study tae kwon do as a hobby. I started when-“
“I said don’t lie to me,” she snapped. “I want the truth.”
He looked at the floor. “It was just a hobby. Started when I was sixteen. I did two years of TKD before I joined the Army. I was already good. I got better.”
“You were in the Army?”
He nodded. “I joined up and was deployed to Iraq. My uncle spent my college fund and I didn’t have anywhere to go. I wanted to be part of something. I was in the shit for about two months when we ran over a bomb. Flipped the Humvee over and set it on fire. There were two survivors. Then they started shooting at us.”
“They who?”
“Local group that ran the town where we were on patrol. They took me prisoner. I don’t know what happened to…” he trailed off. “I was taken. I was pretty banged up. It got worse from there. They patched me up so they could torture me.”