Сидни Шелдон – Tell Me Your Dreams (страница 3)
“Father, he’s very decent, and I love him.”
“How can you love him? He’s a goddamned
I’m not going to let you marry a football player. He’s not good enough for you, Ashley.”
He had said that about every boy she had gone out with. Her father kept making disparaging remarks about Jim Cleary, but the explosion occurred on the night of the high school graduation. Jim Cleary was taking Ashley to an evening graduation party. When he came to pick her up, she was sobbing.
“What’s the matter? What’s happened?”
“My—my father told me he’s taking me away to London. He’s registered me in—in a college there.”
Jim Cleary looked at her, stunned. “He’s doing this because of us, isn’t he?”
Ashley nodded, miserable.
“When do you leave?”
“Tomorrow.”
“No! Ashley, for God’s sake, don’t let him do this to us. Listen to me. I want to marry you. My uncle offered me a really good job in Chicago with his advertising agency. We’ll run away. Meet me tomorrow morning at the railroad station. There’s a train leaving for Chicago at seven A.M. Will you come with me?”
She looked at him a long moment and said softly, “Yes.”
Thinking about it later, Ashley could not remember what the graduation party was like. She and Jim had spent the entire evening excitedly discussing their plans.
“Why don’t we fly to Chicago?” Ashley asked.
“Because we would have to give our names to the airline. If we go by train, nobody will know where we’ve gone.”
As they were leaving the party, Jim Cleary asked softly, “Would you like to stop off at my place? My folks are out of town for the weekend.”
Ashley hesitated, torn. “Jim … we’ve waited this long. A few more days won’t matter.”
“You’re right.” He grinned. “I may be the only man on this continent marrying a virgin.”
When Jim Cleary brought Ashley home from the party, Dr. Patterson was waiting, in a rage. “Do you have any idea how late it is?”
“I’m sorry, sir. The party—”
“Don’t give me any of your goddamn excuses, Cleary. Who the hell do you think you’re fooling?”
“I’m not—”
“From now on, you keep your goddamned hands off my daughter, do you understand?”
“Father—”
“You keep out of this.” He was screaming now. “Cleary, I want you to get the hell out of here and stay out.”
“Sir, your daughter and I—”
“Jim—”
“Get up to your room.”
“Sir—”
“If I ever see you around here again, I’ll break every bone in your body.”
Ashley had never seen him so furious. It had ended with everyone yelling. When it was over, Jim was gone and Ashley was in tears.
And she turned and headed back home.
Ashley was up the rest of that night thinking about her life with Jim and how wonderful it was going to be. At
At noon, Ashley and her father were on a plane to London…
She had attended a college in London for two years, and when Ashley decided she wanted to be involved in working with computers, she applied for the prestigious MEI Wang Scholarship for Women in Engineering at the University of California at Santa Cruz. She had been accepted, and three years later, she was recruited by the Global Computer Graphics Corporation.
In the beginning, Ashley had written half a dozen letters to Jim Cleary, but she had torn them all up. His actions and his silence had told her only too clearly how he felt about her.
Her father’s voice jarred Ashley back to the present.
“You’re a million miles away. What are you thinking about?”
Ashley studied her father across the table. “Nothing.”
Dr. Patterson signaled the waiter, smiled at him genially and said, “We’re ready to look at menus now.”
It was only when Ashley was on her way back to the office that she remembered she had forgotten to congratulate her father on his cover of
When Ashley walked up to her desk, Dennis Tibbie was waiting for her.
“I hear you had lunch with your father.”
“That can’t have been much fun.” He lowered his voice. “Why don’t you ever have lunch with me?”
“Dennis … I’ve told you before. I’m not interested.”
He grinned. “You will be. Just wait.”
There was something eerie about him, something scary. She wondered again whether he could be the one who … She shook her head.
On her way home, Ashley stopped and parked her car in front of the Apple Tree Book House. Before she went in, she studied the reflection in the storefront mirror to see if there was anyone behind her whom she recognized. No one. She went inside the store.
A young male clerk walked up to her. “May I help you?”
“Yes. I—Do you have a book on stalkers?”
He was looking at her strangely.
Ashley felt like an idiot. She said quickly, “Yes. I also want a book on—er—gardening and—and animals of Africa.”
“Stalkers and gardening and animals of Africa?”
“That’s right,” she said firmly.
When Ashley returned to the car, it began to rain again. As she drove, the rain beat against the windshield, fracturing space and turning the streets ahead into surreal pointillistic paintings. She turned on the windshield wipers. They began to sweep across the window, hissing, “He’s gonna get you … gonna get you … gonna get you….” Hastily, Ashley turned them off.
She turned the windshield wipers on again. “He’s gonna get you … gonna get you … gonna get you…”
Ashley parked her car in the garage and pressed the button for the elevator. Two minutes later, she was heading for her apartment. She reached the front door, put the key in the lock, opened the door and froze.
Every light in the apartment had been turned on.
“A
Toni Prescott knew exactly why she liked to sing that silly song. Her mum had hated it.