She blinked. "What?"
"My name is Matthew Jedediah Stone. My mother used to call me Matt." He smiled, surprised by the admission. "I haven't told anyone that in years."
"Why tell me?"
He paused, feeling a surprising sadness. "It's all I have to give you."
She shuddered, hugged herself, and looked away. "I don't want anything from you."
"Yeah, I know."
She looked pointedly at the front door. "Well ... Matt, I appreciate your honesty, but—"
"Last week you would have cared," he said quietly.
"Yes, well ... then you should have told me last week. This week I don't care about much of anything. Now, if you'll excuse me ..."
"I have the cure for apathy."
Her dull glance flicked at him. "I doubt it."
He picked up the tequila bottle. "Hair of the dog," he said, grinning.
She gave a disbelieving snort. "You expect me to get drunk as a way of dealing with my grief?"
"It always works for me."
She almost smiled, but it was a bitter, humorless curving of the lips and no more. "It won't work for me. It's stupid and pointless."
"So?"
"So?" She turned to him, her eyes as cold as a north wind on his face. "So let me understand your plan here. I ... no, we ... get drunk, and when I wake up— feeling horrible and sick—my father won't be dead?"
Mad Dog's smile faded. He stared deeply into her eyes, hoping—praying—she could see the comfort he offered. "He'll still be dead, Marian; it'll still hurt like hell.
But maybe it won't hurt as bad. Maybe a good cry—"
Her eyes widened. "Alcohol can make you cry?"
"Sure."
A small, tight frown pulled her features. He could tell she was thinking about it, really considering it.
Come on, Mariah. Take a chance. Take a—
"Well," she said slowly, "maybe just one drink." She looked at him. "If you promise it'll make me cry." Mad Dog felt like whooping for joy. It was a start. And no one drank just one shot of tequila.
Chapter Twenty-three
Mariah couldn't believe she'd said yes to tequila. In the past week she'd said no to food, to sleep, to talking, to everything. And now she'd said yes to tequila.
It was the possibility of crying that had trapped her.
She bowed her head, stared through burning, gritty eyes at the shadowy earth. She wanted to cry so badly, it physically hurt. She'd tried time and again to let go of the grief locked inside her heart. But she couldn't do it. The tears were a solid block of ice pressing against her lungs, riveted in place by years of rigid, desperate self-control.
She cast a surreptitious glance at Mad Dog. Matt, she reminded herself. He was walking beside her wordlessly, leading her to some secret destination in the center of the farm.
He'd tried to hold her hand, but she didn't let him. She didn't want to get that close to him again, didn't want to let him comfort her. She just wanted to go to some dark, secret place, drink a little tequila, and cry. She couldn't afford to let herself care about Mad Dog again. It didn't matter what he told her, how many pretty words he murmured, the truth was constant. Soon ic'd leave, and she'd be alone. Not so long ago, that jadn't mattered. Or at least she'd told herself it didn't natter. But then she'd had Rass. She wasn't alone.
Now, when he left, she'd be desperately alone, and she didn't want to send him off with any more of her heart than he already had.
He stopped suddenly and opened the bottle. "This is i good spot."
Mariah looked around. They were in the middle of (he west pasture. Most of the snow had melted since yesterday, but the ground was hard and frozen.
Black-shadowed earth rolled away from them on all sides, melting into the star-spangled, purple sky. Down to the bft, the river was a gurgling ribbon of sterling silver, its surface illuminated by shifting strands of moonlight. Up to the right, she saw the barest outline of the old oak tee and a glimmering hint of ironwork.
She looked quickly away.
Mad Dog touched her. "It's okay. You'll be fine."
She frowned. "That's it ... we just sit here and get drunk?"
"You could stand."
Mariah reached out. "Give me the bottle."
He handed it to her. The brown glass caught a glimmer of moonlight; the liquid inside swirled like gold. Tie sharp odor of alcohol assaulted her senses.
She wrinkled her nose in distaste. "It smells bad."
"Tastes worse."
Mad Dog plopped to a cross-legged sit in the spike-sharp grass. Then he patted the ground beside him. 'Come on, sit down."
Slowly, stiffly, she knelt beside him. Staring down at the bottle, she tried to tell herself she was doing the right thing.
"Second thoughts?" he asked softly. "No " She tilted the bottle and brought it to her mouth.' The thick glass felt cold and foreign against her lips. She squeezed her eyes shut and took a huge, dribbling gulp.
Tears sprang to her eyes. Fire burned down her throat and puddled, pulsing, in her stomach. She yanked the bottle from her mouth and wiped her sleeve across her lips. "Oh ... my . - - God."
Mad Dog grinned at her. "I told you you'd cry. He reached out and took the bottle from her. Taking a big drink, he handed it back.
She frowned at him. "Another one?" "At least."
"Maybe I should wait-----"
"It's not gonna digest, darlin'. Take another drink.' Grimacing, she took the bottle and wiped the mouth of it with her sleeve.
He laughed. "Whatcha doin' that for? You know where my mouth has been."
Mariah ignored him and took another burning drink. Mad Dog leaned back on his elbows and crossed his legs at the ankles, staring up at the endless, star-bright sky They sat that way for an eternity, with him sprawled casually in the grass, her kneeling primly alongside him.
The tequila passed back and forth, back and forth, until Mariah started actually liking the taste. It was like swallowing a starburst, and after each sip, she felt warmer.