I was in the field by the airport, shivering, looking at the sky. It was a clear night with no moon. I walked backwards, counting stars. Was I here to meet Penny? When did I get here? I bumped into someone, but when I turned around, no one was there. Another shadowy figure moved in my periphery, but when I turned to look- no one. In turning, I bumped a shoulder, but no one was there. I felt alone and crowded all at once. I reached my arms out- to push someone away? I find someone?
I looked again at the stars. There were fewer. The stars were dying. They were going away. There were no clouds blocking them, the stars were...leaving us. I cried out to them to stay. I was scared. I called out for Ian to help. Only shadows, and soon even the shadows would be gone- there are no shadows without light.
I was terrified, lost, alone. I stumbled backwards into my recliner. Why was my recliner here in the field? I curled up and cried, pushing deeper into the cushions. I drove down deeper, trying to get away. The cushions swallowed me down, but then I couldn't move and was smothered and I was terrified and I screamed.
I was startled awake to find Andrew kneeling next to my bed. Andrew? "I heard you screaming," he said soothingly. "It's OK now, it was was a dream, Gina, just a dream."
His hand on my shoulder was a connection back to reality and out of my dreams. I hadn't had those dreams in a long time. It took some wonderfully strong sleeping pills to get me through high school, but I'd been OK since then.
I didn't know what to say. I wanted to ask Andrew for help, but...I shouldn't. I didn't dare. Wordlessly, he crawled into my bed beside me, facing me, both of us fully clothed. He ran his hand over my hair a few minutes until my breathing slowed.
"Gina," he said tenderly, "who's Ian?"
I rolled over to face the wall and closed my teary eyes. Andrew moved close behind me and put his arm around me. I slept.
*******
Part of me was glad that Andrew wasn't there when I woke up. I didn't know how long he had stayed- perhaps just long enough to make sure I went back to sleep. I was confused and torn. I wanted to rush down the hall and hold him, and I wanted to rush out of the house and not face him. I opted, predictably, for the "pretend nothing happened" route.
It was early Sunday morning. My plan was to find Penny that afternoon. The problem was, I needed a plausible excuse to be gone for a few hours. And there were a few other pieces to the puzzle that I needed before I could pull off my plan. I needed to get into Andrew's closet without him noticing. I wished I had thought of that last night, when he was at work.
I made a simple breakfast for myself and had some brunchy things ready to go for when Andrew got up later. I realized that he probably hadn't been home very long when I started having my nightmare. He'd probably sleep into the late morning.
I pulled out a sheet of paper and wrote down questions I had. I really wasn't sure what I was going to see when I found Penny, but I wanted to get all the answers I could while I had the chance. Of course, that all assumed that my plan worked.
Looking at the clock, I figured I had at
least
an hour or two before Andrew woke up. I decided to risk digging in his closet while he slept. Just in case he caught me, I pulled some clean shirts of his from the dryer and threw them over my shoulder, planning to put them in his closet.
Slipping quietly into his room, I tiptoed over to the closet. It creaked a little when I slid the doors open, but Andrew didn't stir. I knew exactly which box I was going for, and I knew it should be on top of the pile. I quietly dug down to the middle of the box and pulled out the hand-made scrapbook-style wedding photo album. I was ready with excuses in case Andrew surprised me:
I was hanging up your shirts and dropped my phone- it fell into this box.
I didn't have an excuse for being caught with the album in hand, but at the last second, I realized I could cover it with his shirts.
After putting the closet back in order, I moved towards the door with my bundle under my arm.
"Gina?" His sleepy voice stopped me.
"Just getting some dirty clothes out of your room, don't mind me."
"No, I'm up, I'm up. You OK?"
"Yeah, I'm fine," I said nonchalantly.
"OK. I'll be down in a little bit."
"There'll be food waiting when you do," I said over my shoulder as I headed into the hall. My bundle ended up in my closet, and I was warming up some breakfast as Andrew came slowly down the stairs.
"You should be all set for today. I've got a few things to do in my room this morning, and I'm going out this afternoon. I'll be back be before you leave for work."
"Where you going?" he asked casually.
I knew I couldn't get away with a lie- Andrew had demonstrated that several times. But I was pretty sure I could pull off a half-truth. "Moira just got engaged, and I've been wanted to catch up with her." Technically, all that was true, but that wasn't where I was going.
He looked at me for a few seconds and I was afraid he was about to call my bluff. Then, picking up his toast, he said, "OK. I was going to hit the grocery store today, so let me know if there's anything in particular you want to research a recipe for." He finished that sentence with a smirk, and I met his smirk with a dish towel to his face. His awareness of my cooking ignorance was a secret that had only recently come out. "Jerk!" I said, with no animosity.
I tried not to look like I was in a hurry to get to my room. I picked up a few things around the first floor, put some dishes away, wrote a grocery list, and chatted with Andrew a bit. Then I headed up the stairs to my room. Locking my door, I pulled out the wedding album and flipped through some pages until...
aha!
The wedding program listed the names of everyone in the wedding party. There was one bridesmaid whose last name was the same as Penny's maiden name, and in the pictures, there was a girl who looked unmistakably like a younger sister. I wrote down her name. Now with just a little luck this afternoon...
*******
I left the house while Andrew was out shopping. I thought my anxious state would betray me. I swear, he could see right through me sometimes. I drove as fast as I dared, drumming my fingers on the steering wheel. Pulling up to the gate of the Institute, I was relieved to see that Ernst was
not
working. Luck was with me.
I thought back to a seemingly casual conversation with Andrew that morning.