This was supposed to be a two-part story. And maybe someday I'll make it to the second part. But that would involve way a lot more angst than I am currently prepared to deal with. So, since this has been written for *months* and I haven't managed to make myself do the second part...
Red Shoe Diaries (for the unenlightened) is a Showtime erotica series
where Jake (David Duchovney) places an ad in the newspaper asking for
diaries from women. He reads them, and each episode is a separate diary.
This story was supposed to be X-rated, darn it, or at least R, in keeping
with the level of erotica seen in the series. I don't think it's any
more than PG-13,
though. For Chris and Dianne, who dragged me into this show to begin with...
hanging out with you guys is dangerous to my free time, darn it! Especially
Chris, who gave me the idea to do RDS...
Praise, flames, comments, cute Mounties and/or cute Chicago cops to
lizbet@primenet.com -----------
* WOMEN
Do you keep a diary? Have you ever been betrayed? Have you betrayed
another?
Man, 35, wounded and alone, recovering from loss of once in a lifetime
love, searching for reasons why.
Willing to pay top $ $ $ For your experiences
Please send diaries to:
RED SHOES
All stories remain confidential ------------------------------------------------------
Dear Red Shoes:
No, I don't keep a diary. For one thing, from childhood I never wanted
to look back. And after adulthood was reached, it was even worse. I didn't
want to remember, didn't want to remember anything, but I didn't need
a diary to remind me. Some things get burned into your soul, and recollection
remains unmercifully clear.
It goes without saying that I'm not going to indicate who I am on
this letter. I don't care how confidential you keep things. When you're
wanted in two states for robbery... sorry, three, forgot about Texas.
How could you forget Texas? My life's been shitty lately, forgive me.
But I need the money, and I need to tell this story.
Where was I? Oh, yes, betrayal. The answer, Red Shoes, is yes. I have
been betrayed. I've betrayed another. Revenge is supposed to be sweet.
Why are my tears so bitter then?
I suppose I should start at the beginning. My father abandoned my
family when I was six. Just poof, up and left. Reality was too much for
him to deal with, apparently. So it was me and my mother and my sister.
My mother was wonderful. Really, she was. She was the epitome of the
loving, hard-working single mother. She taught English lit at a high
school in Juneau, directed the church choir, sewed, and in her spare
time coached the girls' Little League. Annie was my little sister. Annie
was my mother's carbon copy. Everything she touched turned to gold. I
was my father's daughter. Everything I touched... died.
Anyway, at sixteen I was the stereotypical rebel child. There's a
line from Shakespeare, about since there is no way for Richard to be
believed as a good, honorable, decent person, he is determined to prove
a villain. That's one way of making what I was sound a little more dignified.
Truth was, I was just plain old rebelling. Ran away from home, school,
life, you name it. If I couldn't be perfect, I'd be perfectly bad.
Before this gets any more boring, I'll scoot ahead two years. Eighteen
years old, broke, too damn proud to go home, and I hook up with Ed. Ed
was a real prize. A shrink would have a field day with me, with why I
stayed with him. It's fairly simple: when you have no respect for yourself,
you don't go looking for people to respect you. Anyway. A couple months
later, Ed and his best friend Jolly decide to rob a bank. They elected
me to be the getaway car driver. I didn't refuse. Ed beat and raped me
on a monotonously regular schedule, and it kind of destroyed my initiative,
if you know what I mean.
The robbery was a disaster. Ed died in the attempt. I didn't cry.
Jolly got away. So did I -- and I knew where Ed hid the money. That was
the best part.
You still with me, Red Shoes? I suppose you're wondering where the
betrayal comes in. Ed didn't betray me. He never lied to me. He was exactly
what he was, and nothing he did surprised me. But...
I crossed the border into Canada in a small plane. Hated the things,
but I had to get *out* of there. Get free. The plane crashed, but the
pilot bailed out, leaving me alone. There was enough of a snow cover,
enough trees breaking the fall, that the crash didn't kill me. It would
have been kinder if it had. I was doomed to a death of hypothermia or
starvation. At this point, I didn't give a damn. Eighteen years old,
and my life was over. I'd screwed things up so thoroughly that I didn't
know how to find my way back. It seemed a judgment on me, that I should
end up here, in the middle of nowhere. No one to hear me scream. No one
to know when I died. No one to care.
I found out later that the place where I went to ground was called
Fortitude Pass. Bitter irony. I didn't have any strength. I curled into
a little ball and waited to die.
And then he found me. God, he was like something out of a fairy tale.
The prince waking Sleeping Beauty from her frozen slumber. How he found
me, to this day, I haven't the faintest idea. But somehow, he did find
me, at the point of death. And in finding me, lost any chance of living
himself.
Everything I touched... died.
He tried. He wasn't a coward like me. He wasn't willing to give up.
He somehow came up with a crude shelter, held me against his body, kept
me warm, kept me alive. He was talking, endlessly, about what I never
knew. The thread of his voice was all that held me above the pit of hell.
Then his voice stopped. I was afraid that he had... stopped too. But
he took my hand, my poor cold fingers, and warmed them with his breath,
his tongue. He kept them tucked in his mouth, keeping them warm, keeping
them safe. I can't even begin to tell you what this did to me. It was
very simply the most tender thing anyone had done for me. And it, very
simply, destroyed me.
I don't remember beginning to speak. But somewhere, out of the depths
of my being, rose words. He had talked himself hoarse for me. I returned
the favor, whispering the words of a poem my mother had used to soothe
me as a child, whispering it over and over. "...High there, how he rung
upon the rein of a wimpling wing/In his ecstasy! then off, off forth
on swing,/As a skate's heel sweeps smooth on a bow-bend: the hurl and
gliding/the big wind. My heart in hiding..."
We were dead, I knew it. But he hadn't given up yet. So neither could
I.
The storm's end came as a complete shock to both of us. The sudden
cession of noise, the sudden appearance of the sun... it was like being
reborn. Laughing like children, we scrambled away from the shelter we
had found into the sunlight. We were weak with hunger and thirst, but
at least we were alive. We had passed under Death's hand -- and lived.
I felt invincible. Most of our energy was focused on retracing his
steps, back to the place where he had lost his supplies. No Boy Scout
had ever taken the motto "Be prepared" as far as this one had. There
was enough food in his pack to feed three people three days. We devoured
it in one sitting. He built a fire to melt snow for drinking water, and
it was the most magical thing I'd ever seen. Until I looked at him, and
really saw him for the first time.
Would you believe that at that point I was beginning to wonder if
I really was alive? No earth-bound creature ever looked like that. He
was completely angelic. Michelangelo could have used him as a model for
the Sistine ceiling. Eyes bluer than the winter sky above, hair dark,
and a face to make a woman weep with envy -- or desire. But more than
that, there was a purity in him, in his eyes. Not innocence so much as
simple goodness. There wasn't a war going on in his soul the way there
was in mine. As young as he was, he radiated peace, tranquility, determination...
he was everything that I had never been, but wanted to be.
I don't know when I fell in love with him, Red Shoes. But that was
the moment that I knew I was in love with him.
The fire was burning merrily and he pulled out a crude tent from his
pack. Watching him set it up, I sat back on my heels and said, "You know,
I don't even know your name."
He was silent for a few moments, finished the shelter. A gust of wind
made the fire dampen, then flare, sparks dancing. Then he turned to me,
holding out his hand as though we had just met on the street. "I'm Benton
Fraser," he said soberly.
I reached out to clasp his fingers. Cold in the frigid air, they were
still warmer than we had been on that desolate mountain side. "Victoria
Metcalf."
He wasn't finished. "I'm RCMP." I blinked, confused by the letters,
the non sequitur. The synapses in my brain didn't fire. What had happened
three days ago was already ancient history. Then he elaborated, "Royal
Canadian Mounted Police." He paused, swallowed. "You were involved in
the bank robbery."
I froze. I simply froze. For a long moment I felt colder than I had
when he found me in that crack in the rock. My hand went limp and fell
from his. So much for my renaissance, my new beginning. The outside world
didn't care that I had had an epiphany. I would pay for my sins, regardless.
A part of me wonders why I didn't just lie. I'd lied my way out of
a lot of situations. No, sir, that wasn't me on the store video camera
sticking the cassettes in my backpack. Nope, I would never turn in somebody
else's paper with my name on it. Surely you believe me when I say I missed
curfew because my (girl) friend's car got a flat.
Before I could form a reasonable lie, he pulled a picture from the
pocket of his heavy coat. It was one Annie had taken shortly before I
had run away. Sepia-colored and indistinct with my hair flying in the
way, it was still indisputably me.
All the lies caught in my throat. I bent my head and examined my fingers
in my lap. "So now what?"
He fumbled, tucking the picture back into his pocket, turning to poke
at the fire needlessly, restless motions that kept his eyes from mine.
"I don't want to go back," I whispered. "Please."
"I don't have that choice." He had the voice of an anguished angel.
"You committed a crime. It is my duty to bring you to justice."
"You have a choice." He flinched at the lash in my voice. "You can
choose to let me go. I didn't hurt anyone. All I did was drive the damn
car." "Where's the money?"
"I don't have it." I took comfort from the fact that it was a false
truth, rather than a lie. The money was stashed back in Alaska. "Please..."
He shook his head, hard, more as though trying to force himself to
an unwanted duty then denying my plea. "I can't. I can't."
It took us four days to reach civilization. One night, we camped on
a mountainside and watched the Northern Lights dance, achingly beautiful
and out of reach. We barely spoke, barely touched. Every night he would
set up the tent and sleep outside of it. And every night I'd wish he
was in it with me.
On the fourth day we reached the vicinity of the outpost. It was barely
more than a cluster of buildings surrounding a small church. In the distance,
we could see the town grow larger and larger. I thought it was a monster,
set to devour me. Out here, away from the world, I wasn't alone. I had
Ben, I was free. Once I was surrounded by people, they would take me
from him and I would be cast adrift.
I stopped. Ben moved a few more steps, then turned when he realized
that I wasn't keeping pace with him. "Come on. We can reach the town
before nightfall." His voice was tired, deader than it had been at Fortitude
Pass. I took what bitter comfort I could in the fact that he was in as
much pain as I was.
"I don't want to reach the town before nightfall." He reached out
to take my arm, to pull me forward, and I wrenched myself backwards.
"I'll go with you there, tomorrow. But give me one more night of freedom.
That's all I'm asking." Pleading, now. "One more night under the stars
where I can be free."
He hesitated so long that I thought he was going to refuse me. But
with a barely perceptible nod he began to make camp. We sat watching
the fire for hours that night, so completely aware of each other it was
as though only one drew breath. Tomorrow I was going to lose everything.
Tonight... Ben tossed another stick on the fire. "Go to sleep. You
can have the tent."
"No." My voice was very loud in the still night.
Ben didn't move. He kept staring at the fire. But I could sense a
fine tension in him, as though he were struggling with himself.
"I want you to come inside that tent with me."
Silence. Then, "That's not a good idea, Victoria."
"I don't care. I don't care. Damn you, I'm losing everything. Give
me something to hold onto."
I think I really did have some half-formed notion of trying to control
him with my body. Sex, for me, had never been about pleasure. It had
been a way of controlling the boys I knew, a way for Ed to control me.
Theoretically, male minds went to jelly when a woman used sex on them.
It had worked for Eve Kendell. Why not me?
I should have known better. Because he was Ben, that's why. I leaned
over him, aggressively covering his mouth with mine, attacking him with
my hands, my tongue. He just sat there for several moments, letting me
do it. It was humiliating for both me and him, and still I couldn't stop
myself.
Then he took my hands in his grasp, tore his mouth away from mine.
"No, Victoria. Not like this."
Before I could ask how, he was showing me. His hands gently brushed
my tangled mass of hair out of my face. He tracked his lips lightly across
my cheek, down the line of my jaw, less a brush of lips than an absorption
of my scent, a total and complete focus on my essence. His eyes were
closed in the flickering firelight and almost unwillingly, I fell under
his spell. There was... reverence in the way he touched me, just his
hands in my hair and his mouth tracing my face. Patient, calm, unhurried,
as though this night of my freedom was a million years long, as though
we had all the time in the world rather than just this space of dark.
I had to have him closer. I had to feel his body on mine. Fiercely,
I wrapped my arms around his neck pulled him to me. His arms crossed
behind my back, holding me to him as though we were one flesh. Something
that had been held tightly within me broke at that moment. My heart maybe,
I think. I could feel it bleeding out, but instead of pain, there was
this sense of release. This sense that what was flowing out of me was
going to him, and that nothing mattered but that I become a part of him.
He undressed me in the tent, away from the bitterly cold wind. I kept
my eyes barely open, and the light from fire gleamed through the canvas
walls of the tent and limed him in beauty. Every touch was a caress.
The winter weather made undressing a torturously slow process, slow enough
that it woke ever sleeping nerve I ever possessed into shuddering life.
His hands on the skin of my neck, my breast, my thighs... it was almost
unbearable. But I was sure I would die if me moved away.
I couldn't move, could only watch as he shed his clothes. With the
heavy flannel and standard-issue holster went the Mountie who was bringing
me in. Naked in the dim light, he was mine, and mine alone.
I pulled him down to lay on me, surrounding my body with warmth. He
threaded his hands through my snarled hair again, gently, reverently.
My entire body was liquid, molding to him. He brushed his lips across
one cheekbone, and then the other. Then he lowered his mouth to take
mine in a kiss.
In that one kiss there was more passion and more joy than I had ever
known. It made a mockery of the manipulation I had tried to practice
on him. The tears I had been fighting broke free to slide down into my
hair. When he moved to slide his mouth down my neck I arched under him,
offering myself to him completely.
His hand shifted to cup my breast, then slid up to brush the nipple
with his palm, delicate, light touches that nearly drove me mad. I wanted
more. I wanted him to lose his control as much as he was making me lose
mine. But I didn't know how. I could only surrender to him as he touched
me.
Slowly, his hands moved over my body. No one I had ever slept with
had taken so much care with me. I realized that this was what was meant
by making love, by intimacy. I felt feather-light, floating on the wind,
as his hands brushed my skin and made be feel wanted, cherished... and
hungry. As he slid inside me and became one with me, in a union that
was so complete that I forgot everything but him, the scent of his hair,
the hoarse tenderness of his voice as it broke and I felt his warmth
filling me, a response that sent me over the edge. Northern lights burst
behind my eyes.
Nothing else mattered.
I woke the next morning at dawn. Ben had held me tightly all night,
an embrace that was shelter, strength and affirmation all at once. I
stirred, turning over, watching his face in the dim light that seeped
into the tent from outside.
He woke too soon. He didn't move, didn't sit up, just opened his eyes
and looked straight into mine. And there was pain in them, so much that
I flinched.
And gloated, I confess.
In silence we rose, dressed. He'd snared a small animal for food the
night before, and I fried the last of it for our breakfast. He took down
the tent, packed it away. Every few moments he touched me, my arm, my
hand, a gentle brush of my hair. There was a powerful connection between
us, an undeniable link.
I smiled a little and spoke into the quiet. "I have a strange feeling
that there is a string tied here, just below my heart, that is connected
to a similar region in your body. And I have this fear that if too much
distance is between us, the string will break, and I should take to bleeding
internally."
He didn't smile, not really, but something shifted in his eyes. "Jane
Eyre," he said, recognizing the passage though I had no doubt mangled
my quote of it.
I shrugged, packed the last of the breakfast dishes. "My mom teaches
English. She read to me a lot growing up. Some of it stuck." I closed
the pack, stood up and turned into his arms. They closed around me strongly,
so strongly that I thought my ribs would crack. There was desperation
in that embrace, and it frightened me.
To stave off the fear, I pulled back, laughing a little. "So, where
are we going?"
He didn't move, didn't speak for so long that I thought that maybe
he hadn't heard me. Then he turned, and nodded in the direction of the
church spire in the distance.
I thought he was joking. I seriously, blindly, thought that he was
joking. A short huff of a laugh broke from me. "Ben? Ben, you're kidding,
right? Tell me you're kidding."
He closed his eyes and turned away from me. Grabbing his arm, I tried
to turn him back, tried to make him face me. "Why? Why? Why, damn you?
How can you do this to me?"
"It's what I am." His voice was almost soundless. He cleared his throat
and tried again. "I uphold the law. I bring in criminals. You broke it."
I stumbled back several steps. There was grief in his face, misery,
but I couldn't register it. All I knew was that he'd screwed me last
night and was screwing me this morning.
"Damn you to hell, Benton Fraser. You'll be sorry. I'll make you pay."
THE END.
END PART ONE -------------------- And yes, it is terrifying to have
Victoria insist on you writing her in first person, thank you *very*
kindly! So what's the verdict? Should I keep going? Part two is going
to be Victoria's Secret from her point of view... do you all want me
to torture myself that way?
Betrayer and Betrayed
by Elizabeth Ann Lewis