my shoulders and folded my hands in my lap, for I realized something absolutely delightful: Henri Reverieâs fear of my fatherâs dental practice gave me the upper hand in our current situation.
Interesting
.
âAre you here for an appointment, Mr. Reverie?â I asked.
âStay still, Mr. Dibbs!â yelled Father from beyond the door. âIf you donât stop flailing about, Iâll need to clamp your wrists to the chair in addition to your head.â
Henri grimaced as if his own head were being clamped to a chair, while Mr. Dibbs cackled and whooped and let loose the screams of a man suffering the tortures of the Spanish Inquisition.
âI said, are you here for an appointment, Mr. Reverie?â
âIââ Henriâs blue eyes shifted toward me for a swift moment, but they veered straight back to the bobbing andducking figures beyond the frosted pane. âYes, an appointment.â
âA bad tooth?â I asked, sitting up straighter, stifling another smile. âSwollen gums? Do you need your tissues leeched of blood?â
A howl of pain echoed through the office walls. âNo!â cried Mr. Dibbs in a decibel that made my ears ring. âNo! I wasnât ready.â
âItâs all done,â said Father. âThe extraction was a success. Hold this ice over the wound and rest a few minutes. Youâre fine.â
The patient sobbed and moaned and then cackled with laughter. âYou had a blasted smile on your face, Dr. Mead. You looked like you enjoyed ripping my tooth from its socket.â
âNobody enjoys the sight of a decayed bicuspid rotting away in an inflamed mass of bleeding gums, Mr. Dibbs. Take better care of your oral health, sir.â
Fatherâs distorted image came closer to the frosted glass; his beard and white coat grew sharp and clear behind the pane until I could almost see the browns of his eyes. He opened the operatory door and poked out his head. âAh, good. Youâre both here. Iâll lay Mr. Dibbs on the cot and bring you in.â
I jumped to my feet. âI am not going in there like one of your patients.â
âNow, donât be difficult, Olivia.â Father let go of the doorknob. âMr. Reverie has kindly agreed to help you accept the world the way it is.â
âYou actually hired this personââI pointed toward the still-seated hypnotistââto extract my thoughts in your operatory, as if my brain were a decayed thing, like Mr. Dibbsâs disgusting bicuspid? Do you know how cruel and horrifying this is?â
âOlivia . . .â Father put out a cautious hand and trod toward me as though I were a rabid dog. âI told you, I only want the best for you. Donât have a conniption.â
I lunged for the front door, but my father pounced and took hold of both my arms before I could escape.
âOlivia, please.â He spun me toward him. âPlease behave for me. Your motherâshe abandoned the both of us, not just me. She left you behind, too.â
âI know that.â My eyes smarted with tears, and I saw a blurry version of Henri Reverie turning his face away from us, pretending not to hear, which made me want to cry all the more.
âShe said she wanted the vote, too,â said Father. âI hear her voice in yours. You canât do that to some poor husband and child one day. I wonât let you break peopleâs hearts.â
âIâm not going to be like her.â
âYouâve got to change.â
âNo.â
âThink of your future sons and daughters. Think how much better your childhood would have been if your mother had accepted her place in the world and ignored her selfish dreams.â
âShe did it all wrong.â I wriggled my shoulders and struggledto break free of his grip. âI wonât be like her, I swear. Please donât pay him to take away my thoughts.â
âPlease
Kylie Brant
Loree Lough
The Book of Cthulhu
Liz Mugavero
Loren Cordain
Suzan Colón
Anne Perry
HK Savage
Laurie Kingery
Chautona Havig