Gerald's Game - Stephen King [93]
. . . and sleeping together, of course. Sleeping together at night.
She had broken down utterly then, weeping hysterically, begging him not to tell, promising him she would be a good girl forever and ever if he just wouldn't tell. He had let her cry until he must have felt the moment was exactly right, and then he had said gravely: 'You know, you've got an awful lot of power for a little girl, Punkin.'
She had looked up at him, cheeks wet and eyes full of fresh hope.
He nodded slowly, then began to dry her tears with the towel he had used on his own face. 'I've never been able to refuse you anything that you really wanted, and I can't this time, either. We'll try it your way.'
She threw herself into his arms and began covering his face with kisses. Somewhere far back in her mind she had been afraid this might
(get him going)
start trouble again, but her gratitude had completely overwhelmed such caution, and there had been no trouble.
'Thank you! Thank you, Daddy! Thank you!'
He had taken her by the shoulders and held her at arm's length again, smiling instead of grave this time. But that sadness had still been on his face, and now, almost thirty years later, Jessie didn't think that expression had been part of the show. The sadness had been real, and that somehow made the terrible thing he had done worse instead of better.
'I guess we have a bargain,' he said. 'I say nothing, you say nothing. Right?'
'Not to anyone else, not even to each other. Forever and ever, amen. When we walk out of this room, Jess, it never happened. Okay?'
She had agreed at once, but at the same time the memory of that smell had recurred to her, and she had known there was at least one question she had to ask him before it never happened.
'And there's something I need to say once more. I need to say I'm sorry, Jess. I did a shabby, shameful thing.'
He had looked away when he said that, she remembered. All the time he had been deliberately driving her into hysterics of guilt and fear and impending doom, all the time he had been making sure she would never say anything by threatening to tell everything, he had looked right at her. When he offered that last apology, however, his gaze had shifted to the crayon designs on the sheets which divided the room. This memory filled her with something that felt simultaneously like grief and rage. He had been able to face her with his lies; it was the truth which had finally caused him to look away.
She remembered opening her mouth to tell him he didn't have to say that, then closing it again — partly because she was afraid anything she said might cause him to change his mind back again, but mostly because, even at ten, she had realized she had a right to an apology.
'Sally's been cold — it's the truth, but as an excuse it's pretty sad shit. I don't have the slightest idea what came over me.' He had laughed a little, still not looking at her. 'Maybe it was the eclipse. If it was, thank God we'll never see another one.' Then, as if speaking to himself. 'Christ, if we keep our mouths shut and she finds out anyway, later on — '
Jessie had put her head against his chest and said, 'She won't. I'll never tell, Daddy.' She paused, then added, 'What could I tell, anyway?'
'That's right.' He smiled. 'Because nothing happened.'
'And I'm not . . . I mean, I couldn't be . . . '
She had looked up, hoping he might tell her what she needed to know without her asking, but he only looked back at her, eyebrows raised in a silent interrogative. The smile had been replaced by a wary, waiting expression.
'I couldn't be pregnant, then?' she blurted.
He winced, and then his face had tensed as he worked to suppress some strong