That was just what I needed.
As I lie next to Brady on his lumpy queen-size bed with his itchy comforter partially strewn over us, I feel like I can barely catch my breath. I look over at him, and he gives me this dopey grin, and Iโm pretty sure my smile looks just as dopey. Iโm a little loopy from the whole thing.
โGood?โ he asks.
โSoย good,โ I say. โYouโve improved.โ
He bursts out laughing. โSince college? I sure hope so.โ
I donโt want to admit to him how long itโs been for me. Iโve been out with other guys since college, but not many. I move closer to him, allowing him to put his arm around me and pull me close. I wonder if maybe Iโve been over-cautious. Maybe it wouldnโt be the worst idea to let him have my phone number. For a repeat performance or two. Or ten.
โI was so glad to see you tonight,โ he murmurs into my hair. โI was sure you were never coming back after last night.โ
โIโm glad I did.โ I lift my head to look up at him. His five oโclock shadow has gotten very dark. โHow long did it take you to recognize me when I came into Christopherโs the other night?โ
โAbout two seconds.โ
โReally?โ I raise my eyebrows. โI think I look pretty different.โ โNot that different. Anyway, youโre hard to forget.โ
I donโt know entirely what he means by that. Is it a compliment? I suppose it must be, considering we ended up here. I donโt like the idea of being memorable. Iโm glad when my patients remember me, but the idea that a guy I knew only briefly in college would know me so quickly makes me a little uncomfortable.
Brady must sense my discomfort, because he adds, โI just feel like youโre the coolest girl I ever dated.โ
โThe โcoolestโ girl you ever dated? Now I know youโre making stuff upโฆโ
โYou are!โ he insists. โI never met anyone like you before. Thereโs just something different about you.โ
Thereโs nothing different about me. At least, not something I advertised to anyone I knew. To Brady, I was always just plain old Nora Davis. He never knew about my past. And he never will.
โAlso,โ he adds, โyouโre the most beautiful woman I ever went out with.โ
I laugh. โYeah, right.โ
โYou are.โ He squeezes my shoulder. โYou and Laurie Strode are my top two ever.โ
Laurie Strode? Who is Laurie Strode? I never even heard ofโฆ Oh no.
I remember why I broke up with Brady.
He must sense my body going stiff. He touches my chin with his fingers. โNora?โ
I sit up in bed, yanking my green scrub top from the floor where I abandoned it. โI have to use the bathroom.โ
Brady sits up in bed, watching me pull on my shirt, underwear, then my pants. As I tighten the drawstring, he frowns at me. โAre you leaving?โ
โI have to get up early for surgery in the morning.โ
โYeah, butโฆโ The blanket falls from his muscular chest, and for a moment, Iโm tempted to stay. โItโs not that late. Stay a little longer. We can order a pizza or something.โ
โI donโt think so.โ โChinese?โ
โSorry.โ I look around the bedroom for my shoes, then remember I left them at the front door. โI just have a very busy schedule.โ
Before he can protest again, I race into the bathroom and slam the door behind me.
I look at the doorknob and find a little lock. I turn it, even though I think itโs very unlikely that Brady will attempt to burst in on me. Iโm sure heโs still sitting in his bed, wracking his brain to try to figure out what he did wrong. But I need a moment of complete privacy. Just to myself.
I check out my appearance in the mirror. I had pulled my hair out of its bun at some point between the kitchen and the bedroom, and the black locks are strewn everywhere. Luckily, I wasnโt wearing any makeup to get smeared, but I look decidedly disheveled. I splash some water on my face and take a deep breath.
Laurie Strode. Of course.
Laurie Strode was the girl inย Halloween, played by Jamie Lee Curtis. You know, that movie with Michael Myers, the guy in the white mask who tries to kill the babysitter. I watched that movie with Brady in college because he loved it. Then we watched the rest of theย Halloweenย movies. Andย Friday the 13th.ย Nightmare on Elm Street. He loved slasher films.
And I grew to love them too. My favorite part of the day became curling up with Brady on the futon sofa in the common area in his suite and watching actors get bludgeoned to death. It was probably the best relationship I had ever been in. I had never felt quite so connected to another person.
I can now remember the exact moment when I stopped liking him.
It was a Saturday night. We had been invited to a costume party, but we waited until the last minute to deal with the costume situation. I had mostly figured I would just go as a sexy cat or something along those lines, but Brady insisted he had some scary masks in his closet.ย From Halloweens past,ย he told me.
Sure enough, he had about half a dozen masks stashed away at the bottom of his closet. I laughed when he held up the Jason hockey mask. Or the Freddy Krueger mask that was a mass of scarred skin.ย Scared yet?ย he teased me.
And then he pulled another mask out of the pile. When he held it up to his face, a shiver went down my spine. What is that?
This is my Halloween mask from like ten years ago,ย he explained.ย Remember that serial killer from right here in Oregon, the one who killed all those women and cut off their hands? The Handyman?
Thatโs when I knew for sure what I was looking at. Brady owned a Halloween maskย of my fatherโs face. Of course, why was I so surprised? Hadnโt we spent our entire relationship watching women get bludgeoned to death? It was a fictionalized version of my fatherโs life.
Looking at that old mask, I was so sick, I had to make up an excuse to avoid going to the party. The next day, I broke up with him. And for the rest of college, every time I saw him, I ran the other way.
God, how could I have forgotten? I mustโve blocked it out. After breaking up with Brady, I never watched another scary movie. It was never the same after that.
I wonder if he still watches slasher films. I wonder if he still loves them as much as he used to.
I wonder if he still has that mask of my fatherโs face.
I take a shaky breath and come out of the bathroom. The door to the bedroom is closedโdid I close it when I left? I canโt remember. I put my hand on the doorknob, intending to tell Brady Iโm leaving now. I owe him that much at least. Itโs not like he did anything wrong.
But the doorknob doesnโt turn. The door to the bedroom is locked.
I frown and try again. Why did he lock himself in the bedroom? Thatโs strange.
โNora? What are you doing?โ
I jerk my head up. Brady is standing next to me, now dressed in the jeans and T-shirt he had on earlier. His eyebrows are bunched together. โI was just going back to the bedroom,โ I say.
He looks over his shoulder. โThe bedroom is over there. Thatโs my office, remember?โ
โOh.โ
He snorts. โI think youโre the first person ever to get lost in this tiny apartment.โ
โYeahโฆโ I look back at the locked door, my stomach suddenly queasy. โHow come you lock your office?โ
He shrugs. โIโve got some financial papers in there. Justโฆ keeping them safe.โ
โRightโฆโ
I canโt help but notice the way Brady avoids my eyes. Is he lying to me? Is there something else in this locked room? Something he doesnโt want anybody to see?
I canโt help but remember the locked basement door in my old house growing up. What turned out to be behind that locked door.
But this is entirely different. People lock doors to rooms in their houses, for Godโs sake. It doesnโt necessarily mean theyโre a psychotic serial killer. And Brady seems perfectly nice. I can tell.
I take a deep breath through my nose, trying to detect that distantly familiar smell of old blood and rotting flesh.
No. Nothing.
Not even lavender.
โAnyway,โ I say, as I walk back past Brady to the living room. My purse is where I left it on the kitchen counter and my clogs were kicked off in the living room. I slide my feet back into my shoes. โIโm going to head out now.โ
โIโll walk you to your car.โ โUnnecessary.โ
He shakes his head. โItโs not a great neighborhood. Iโll feel better if I walk you to your car.โ
โI can take care of myself.โ
โIs there aย reasonย why you donโt want me to walk you to your car?โ
I pause in the middle of putting on my jacket and look up at Brady. Thereโs a hurt expression on his face. I realize Iโm kind of being a bitch. We had a good time tonight, and Iโm taking off on him pretty abruptly. He didnโt do anything to deserve that. Heโs been nothing but nice to me. And what he did back in the bedroom wasโฆ
โFine,โ I say. โLetโs go.โ
Brady grabs his keys off the kitchen counter and shoves them into his pocket. Then he follows me down the stairs and out the front door. We donโt say a word the entire time, but I hear his footsteps behind me.
Even though it was dark when we got here, it seems darker now. The neighborhood isnโt very well lit. I look at the front of the house, and at first, I think that old woman is still rocking on her chair, but then I realize the chair is now empty. It must be rocking from the wind.
As much as I hate to admit it, Iโm glad Brady came out to walk me to my car. He even comes around and holds the driverโs side door open for me. Even though itโsย myย car. Someone raised him to have good manners.
It makes me think again of that tie he wore on our first date. How hard he was trying. Itโs almost enough to make me want to stay.
โNora,โ he says.
I slide into the driverโs seat and look up at him. โYes?โ โI had a really good time tonight,โ he says.
โMe too.โ
He chews on the side of his lip. โDo youโฆ?โ He doesnโt even finish the question. He knows the answer. โLook, youโve got my number. You know where I work and where I live. Soโฆ Iโm here, if you ever want toโฆ you know.โ
โYeah,โ I mumble. We both know Iโm never going to call him. โBye, Brady. Thanks.โ
He lets out a breath. โYeahโฆโ
I slam the door closed, then I start the engine and take off. I donโt look back, but when I glance in the rearview mirror, Brady is still standing on the street where I left him.
Watching me.