9
I cried myself to sleep.
Raisa noticed I wasn’t well and didn’t force any information out of me. Even if she managed to make me talk, would she have understood?
My alarm clock blared early the next morning, warning me it was time to get dressed and go to class. I didn’t. Instead I went to the hospital. Perhaps I was just deluding myself, but I had to try again. I couldn’t let Victor, a real flesh and bone Victor, escape so easily. Besides I knew too much about him, and I could use the information to find him.
At least I had an excuse to go there since, with all that had happened, I had forgotten about taking my resume in when they had asked for it the previous day.
Once at the hospital, I checked in with the receptionist and handed her my resume. Taking advantage of the moment, I asked to visit Bianca Gianni, Victor’s Italian grandmother. The receptionist confirmed my suspicion that his grandma was real too. She asked if I was a family friend. I lied, saying that I was, otherwise she wouldn’t have told me that Mrs. Gianni had been taken for an examination but should be back to her room on the eighth floor in about an hour.
So everything Victor had told me in my visions was real? Why? I figured I didn’t have time to waste mulling over that. I took an elevator to the eighth floor to wait for him there. He was bound to show up at some point, and I didn’t care if I missed my classes or my job to speak with him again.
On the eighth floor, I dismissed the wooden number shining brightly on the wall and walked down the corridor looking for Mrs. Gianni’s room. It wasn’t far.
I raked through my mind, trying to recall another episode in my life when I had been this nervous. Besides my brother’s funeral, no memories came.
To steady the trembling of my body, I leaned against the white wall, letting the anesthetic smell impregnated in the corridor fill my lungs. Maybe the drugs would help calm me. They didn’t. I tucked my sweaty hands inside the pockets of my hoodie—another ineffective attempt to calm my senses.
Expecting to see Victor with each door that opened, each new footstep that drew closer, each new voice that crossed the corridor caused my breath to catch. I knew he would have to pass through this place sooner or later. I had to have patience.
Not much time had passed, when I saw an old lady with white hair and bluish-green eyes being brought in by a nurse in a wheelchair. I had never seen or spoken to his grandmother in my visions, but he had showed me pictures of his family, and those eyes were enough proof that this woman was his grandmother.
I was shaking again. Holy hell, there she was. She was real. Like Victor was real. Everything I knew about him was real. I still couldn’t believe it.
I heard a heavy sigh and turned toward it. It was Victor. He was leaving the elevator down the hall and coming toward his grandma’s room. He had seen me and didn’t seem happy about it.
He wore faded jeans, a T-shirt, and a thin jacket. Too casual. I shook my head. The fact that my dream Victor and this real Victor were exactly the same physically, while their clothing styles and posture were the opposite of each other still boggled my mind.
He came to a stop before me. “You again.” There was disdain in his tone. I cringed.
“How are you?” I managed to ask and immediately felt silly. I had planted myself here in this hallway for over an hour waiting for him, and when he finally arrived I didn’t know what to say. Though I really did want to know how he was. The last time I had seen him in the flesh, he’d been jerking on the floor of the hospital’s garage, in pain. “What was that … ah … before …?” I trailed off, hoping he would understand what I was referring to.
He shrugged, his sea-green eyes still staring at me with suspicion. “I don’t know. By the way, how do you know my name?”
I twirled a lock of my hair around my index finger as I considered my answer. I wanted to answer him. I wanted to be honest, but he would never believe me.
As if my answer would pop out of the walls, I scanned the hallway.
At the end of the corridor, a nurse left a room and entered another.
“The nurse,” I almost shouted, hoping he wouldn’t notice my sudden lie. I avoided his inquisitive eyes. “I heard a nurse calling you earlier that day.”
His deadpan expression hid his thoughts and didn’t let me know if he was buying it or not.
“What did you do to me last night?” he asked, crossing his arms. God, I hated how his voice and his posture were so guarded and mistrustful. I wasn’t used to it.
“What do you mean?”
“When you touched me, the shock and the pain went away. How did you do that?”
“I don’t know.” This time I wasn’t lying. I really didn’t know. He frowned, clearly still suspicious. “Seriously, I have no idea.”
His shoulders stiffened. “What are you doing here? What do you want?”
My eyes widened as I retreated a few steps, trying to avoid his toxic tone.
Yes, he looked like my Victor—the same voice, the same hair, the same face, the same mouth that had offered me smiles and rendered me breathless many, many times. I wanted to touch him, to embrace him, to tell him everything was going to be okay. Maybe if I touched him he would remember me, and he would want to touch me too.
I came closer to him, looking deeply into those wary green eyes, my fingers itching to stroke his skin, to feel it smoldering under my caress. But I didn’t. He was like my Victor, but he wasn’t my Victor. The Victor from my visions would never speak to me like this. He would never snap at me. No, no. My Victor loved my company, loved to hear me sing, loved to embrace me and inhale my scent.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered, my voice croaking under the heavy pressure inside my chest.
Then I walked away.
At first, each step was heavy and slow, but as forlorn tears spilled over and shook my body my pace increased until I was running. I ran as if the strides could erase the agony slowly consuming me.
How could I have been so blind? How could I have believed Victor truly existed and that he loved me? Why had I tortured myself by looking for him? I knew the answers to these questions. If I could make one wish, I would ask for my dream Victor to be real. When I’d seen a guy that could be his identical twin, I thought my soul’s wish had been fulfilled.
It had been too good to be true. Nobody could be so lucky. Still, I couldn’t believe I found a guy that looked like my Victor—but he would never be my Victor.
I had to stretch the not-feeling-well lie for a few more days with work since I didn’t have any strength to get up from my bed. Adam was livid for having to fill in for me, while Raisa and Olivia were left worrying.
On Friday, after I spent three days in bed barely eating or speaking, the girls called Cheryl.
“I heard you’ve been hiding in here since Tuesday,” she stated. My face was buried in my pillow, but I felt the bed wobble as she sat next to me. “You’re not eating, you’re not going to class or work, and you aren’t speaking to your friends.”
Through the pillow, I smelled them. Cinnamon rolls—my favorite snack.
“That’s not fair,” I mumbled.
Cheryl chuckled. “I’m not above using all weapons available to me.”
Grunting, I turned to her and instantly saw giant-sized cinnamon rolls on a plate beside her. They were still hot, with extra sugar icing. Exactly the way I liked. And the fact I was starving added to the temptation.
“God, you’re playing dirty,” I kidded. My first joke and half-smile in nearly five days.
She passed me the plate. “I’m glad you decided to talk to me.”
We sat in silence while I ate. It wasn’t an awkward silence though.
“Thanks,” I said after I devoured three rolls. I was feeling better and cozier. I figured it was Cheryl’s presence, her sure self and kind smile.
“You’re welcome.” She offered me a mug of coffee I had missed earlier. “So, what is this all about?”
Where to start? Or, a better question, would I even tell her? Here I was, in the privacy of my room, with a woman who was both a friend who wanted to help and a psychologist. I could take advantage of this opportunity and open up for the first time ever. But was I brave enough? I wasn’t sure.
I decided to give it a shot and opened my mouth to let the words come out naturally.
“I-I …” I stuttered, not ready to confess how insane I was out loud. I tried another route, not far from the truth. “I met a guy.” I swallowed hard. “I feel very, very attracted to him, but he has been sort of rude to me. He hasn’t let me get close.”
“Hmm. All of this because of a guy?” She smiled. “Tell me about him.”
I stood and smiled. “He’s gorgeous. Perfect. His hair is dark blond, and he is very tall. And his body …”
Cheryl chuckled. “It’s easy to see when you are nervous or excited.” She pointed to my hair. “You start doing that thing with your hair and don’t even notice it.”
I looked down at my hand near my shoulder, where my finger was entwined in a strand of my hair. I hid my hands behind my back, holding them together to stop my nervous habit and to steady their trembling. Still smiling, she beckoned for me to continue.
I took a deep breath and plunged on. “Well, I just feel this pull, this incredible need to be near him. I talked to him on Tuesday.”
She seemed surprised. “How was it?”
My brows contracted. “He was rude actually. And that’s why I’ve been hiding in here. Maybe my reaction was a little childish.”
“Oh, Nadine, maybe it wasn’t childish at all. How do you feel about him? Strongly?”
I thought about it for two seconds before answering, “Yes, very much.”
“I’m no godmother from a fairy tale, but I think love is worth it. If you feel like you should be with him, then don’t give up. Go after him. Show him you’re a great girl. Show him what he’s missing.” Cheryl sounded like a motivational speaker.
At her tone, a reluctant smile appeared on my face. “Cheryl, I’ve never heard you speak like that before.”
“Well, I believe that when you think you found the one, you shouldn’t give up easily.”
I had always wondered if she’d ever been in love. I started whirling my hair again, but stopped a second later. I had to stop with this habit. “And you, Cheryl? You’re talking like you know the feeling, but I’ve never seen you with a guy and never heard you speak of anyone special.”
Her silver eyes became dull. “I lost the love of my life many years ago.”
“Oh my God! I’m so sorry.”
“I’ve never told anyone. I don’t think I’m ready to go looking for another romance. The truth is I don’t think I’ll ever be ready to love again.”
I reached for her hand and squeezed it. “I think I understand.” If Victor kept rejecting me, I knew I’d become lonely and bitter fast.
“The past is past.” She perked up. “Now, we must do something about your case.”
I chuckled at her renewed spirit. “What do you suggest?”
“Find out where he will be, what he will do. Be there, stare at him, practice some hair flipping and lashes batting. Ask some pointers to Raisa. I’m sure she knows all about those. Nadine, you have to try.”
My chest still ached from Victor-not-Victor’s rejection, but what Cheryl said was true. I had to try. I truly felt like he was the one for me—at least the one from my dreams—and until I was convinced this Victor was not the one I thought he was, or he remembered who I was, I wouldn’t give up.