Gabriel's Inferno: Gabriel's Rapture - BestLightNovel.com
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Julia groaned, rolling onto her stomach. "Would it kill her to tell me that she likes my thesis? Or that I'm doing a good job?"
"Katherine will never tell you that she likes your thesis. She thinks positive feedback is patronizing. This is simply the way those old, pretentious Oxonians are."
"You aren't like that, Professor Emerson."
Gabriel found himself twitching at the mere change in her tone.
"Oh, yes I am, Miss Mitch.e.l.l. You've simply forgotten."
"You're sweet with me now."
"I should hope so," he whispered, his voice almost breaking. "But remember, you're my lover, not my student." He grinned wickedly. "Except in the ways of love."
She laughed, and he found himself laughing with her.
"I finished the book you lent me, A Severe Mercy."
"That was quick. How did you manage that?"
"I'm loneliest at night. I've been reading to help me fall asleep."
"You have no reason to be lonely. Take a cab to my place. I'll keep you company."
Julia rolled her eyes. "Yes, Professor."
"Okay, Miss Mitch.e.l.l. So how was the book?"
"I'm not sure why Grace liked it so much."
"Why?"
"Well, it's a romantic love story. But when they became Christians, they decided their love for each other was pagan-that they'd made idols of one another. That made me sad."
"I'm sorry it saddened you. I haven't read it, although Grace used to talk about it."
"How could love be pagan, Gabriel? I don't understand."
"You're asking me that question? I thought I was the pagan in this relations.h.i.+p."
"You aren't a pagan. You told me so yourself."
He sighed thoughtfully. "So I did. You know as well as I that Dante views G.o.d as the only thing in the universe who can satisfy the longings of the soul. This is Dante's implicit critique of Paolo and Francesca's sin. They forego a higher good-the love of G.o.d-for the love of a human being. Of course, that's a sin."
"Paolo and Francesca were adulterers. They shouldn't have fallen in love with each other in the first place."
"That's true. But even if they were unmarried lovers, Dante's criticism would be the same. If they love one another to the exclusion of everything and everyone else, then their love is pagan. They've made idols of one another and their love. And they're also very foolish, because no human being can ever make another human being completely happy. Human beings are far too imperfect for that."
Julia was stunned. Although there were aspects of Gabriel's explanation that she knew already, it truly surprised her to hear such words from his lips.
It appeared that she was a pagan about her love of Gabriel, and she hadn't even realized it. Moreover, if he actually believed what he was saying, then he had a much less exalted view of their attachment. She was shocked.
"Julianne? Are you still there?"
She cleared her throat. "Yes."
"It's just a theory. It has nothing to do with us."
He spoke the words, but the unease remained. He knew that he'd made an idol of Julianne, his Beatrice, and no denial or sophisticated rhetoric could make that truth false. Given all the time he'd spent in a twelve-step program that encouraged him to focus on a higher power and not himself, his lovers or his family, he knew better.
"So why did Grace like this book? I don't understand."
"I don't know," said Gabriel. "Maybe when Richard swept her off her feet she viewed him as a savior. He married her, and they rode off into the sunset of Selinsgrove."
"Richard is a good man," Julia murmured.
"He is. But Richard is not a G.o.d. If Grace married him thinking that all her troubles would disappear because of his perfection, their relations.h.i.+p would not have lasted. She would have become disillusioned eventually, and she would have left him in order to find someone else to make her happy.
"Perhaps the reason why Richard and Grace were so happily married was because they had realistic expectations; they didn't expect one another to meet all their needs. It would also explain why a spiritual dimension was so important to each of them."
"Maybe you're right. My book is a lot different from the Graham Greene novel you were reading."
"They aren't so different."
"Your novel is about an affair and a man who hates G.o.d. I Wikied it."
Gabriel resisted the urge to growl. "Don't Wiki things, Julianne. You know that website is unreliable."
"Yes, Professor Emerson," she purred.
He groaned.
"Why do you think Greene's protagonist hates G.o.d? Because his lover gave him up for G.o.d. We both read a novel about pagans, Julianne. It's just the endings that were different."
"I'm not sure they were so different."
Gabriel smiled in spite of himself. "I think it's a bit late for us to be having this conversation. I'm sure you're tired, and I have some paperwork I need to do."
"I love you. Madly."
Something about the way her voice sounded in his ear made his heart quicken.
"I love you too. I love you far too much, I'm sure. But I don't know how to love you any other way." His final words were a whisper, but they burned in the air.
"I don't know how to love you any other way, either," she whispered back.
"Then G.o.d have mercy on us both."
If you were to ask Gabriel if he wanted to be in therapy, he would have said no. He didn't relish the idea of talking about his feelings or his childhood, or being forced to relive what happened with Paulina. He didn't want to talk about his addictions or Professor Singer and the myriad other women he'd bedded.
But he wanted a future with Julia, and he wanted her to be healthy-to bloom fully and not just partially. He privately worried that he was somehow impairing her ability to blossom, just because he was, well, Gabriel.
So he vowed to do everything in his power to support her, including changing his behavior for the best and focusing more on her needs. In so doing, he recognized that he could do with an objective evaluation of his own selfishness and some practical advice as to how to overcome it. Consequently, he was determined to brave the discomfort and embarra.s.sment of admitting he needed help and see a therapist on a weekly basis.
As the days of January slipped by, it became abundantly clear that both Gabriel and Julia were very fortunate in their choice of therapists. Drs. Nicole and Winston Nakamura were a married couple who sought to work with clients on their psychological and personal issues with a view to integrating those considerations with both existential and spiritual pursuits.
Nicole was concerned about the nature of Julia's relations.h.i.+p with her boyfriend. She worried that the power differential between Julia and Gabriel, coupled with his strong personality and Julia's diminished self-confidence, would make their romantic relations.h.i.+p more of a mental health hazard to Julia than a help.
But Julia claimed to be in love with Gabriel and to be very happy with him, and it was clear that she derived a lot of pleasure and no small amount of security from their relations.h.i.+p. However, the strange account of how they met and then met again, when added to certain facts about Gabriel's past and his addictive personality, raised all sorts of red flags in Nicole's mind. The fact that Julia did not recognize these red flags showed more about her own psychological state than she could reasonably realize.
Winston pulled no punches, informing Gabriel that he was placing his recovery in jeopardy by continuing to drink alcohol and by failing to go to Narcotics Anonymous meetings. What was supposed to be an introductory meeting exploded into an angry confrontation, which resulted in Gabriel storming out of the office.
Nevertheless, Gabriel returned to his next session, promising that he would attend Narcotics Anonymous meetings. He attended one or two and never returned.
Chapter 15.
Snowfall in the city is very different from snowfall in the country, thought Julia, as she and Gabriel walked through the cascading flakes to his building so he could pick up his car. Tonight would be an evening of celebration at a fancy French restaurant, Auberge du Pommier.
Gabriel tugged on Julia's arm and pulled her into the doorway of a shop, kissing her firmly as he backed her into a wall of gla.s.s. She giggled breathlessly when he finished, and in return, dragged him out to the sidewalk so they could admire the falling snow.
In the country, you can hear the snow whispering around you, the large, fat flakes unfettered by skysc.r.a.pers and office buildings. In the city, the wind drives the snow in between the tall buildings, but the snowfall is lessened considerably by the many obstacles. Or so Julia thought.
When they arrived at Gabriel's building, she paused in front of the large china shop that dominated the first floor. But Julia wasn't interested in the great window of china that gazed out at her matrimonially. She was only interested in the handsome man beside her.
Gabriel wore a long black wool coat that boasted a black velvet collar and a Burberry scarf wrapped like an ascot at his neck. The hand that clasped hers was clad in black leather gloves. But it was his hat that fascinated her.
Professor Emerson wore a beret.
She found his choice of haberdashery strangely appealing. Gabriel had refused to succ.u.mb to the local custom of wearing knit caps or toques. A black wool beret to match his overcoat did nicely enough. And he was very elegant in it.
"What?" His face crinkled as he watched her watching his reflection, a slow smile playing about his lips.
"You're handsome," she stammered, unable to take her eyes away from his striking figure.
"You're the attractive one, inside and out. A beautiful popsicle."
He kissed her long and good in front of a hundred bone china place settings, and gently pecked her ear. "Let's take a cab to dinner. Then I'll be able to devote my full attention to you. I'll run inside to take out some cash from the ATM and I'll be back in a minute. Unless you'd rather join me."
Julia shook her head. "I want to enjoy the snow while it lasts."
He snorted loudly. "This is a Canadian winter. Believe me, the snow will last." He moved her scarf aside to kiss her neck, and he chuckled to himself as he disappeared into the Manulife Building.
She peered through the window at the display of china and began to admire one place setting in particular, wondering how it would look in Gabriel's apartment.
"Julia?"
She turned around and came face to chest with Paul. He smiled at her and engulfed her in a warm hug. "How are you?"
"I'm fine," she responded somewhat nervously, worrying that Gabriel would surprise them.
"You look great. Did you have a good Christmas?"
"Very good. I brought you a souvenir from Pennsylvania. I'll put it in your mailbox in the department. How was your Christmas?"
"Fine. Busy, but fine. How are your cla.s.ses?"
"They're good. Professor Picton is keeping me busy."
"I'll bet she is." Paul chuckled. "Maybe we can get coffee sometime next week and you can tell me all about it."
"Maybe." Julia smiled back, resisting the urge to turn around and look for Gabriel, when all of a sudden Paul's smile slid off his face.
His dark brows came together, and he took a step closer, a scowl clouding over his usually benign features. "What happened to you?"
Julia looked down at her winter coat but saw nothing that would alarm him. And then she wiped at her face, wondering if Gabriel had smeared her lip-gloss across her cheeks.
But Paul was looking elsewhere. He was looking at her neck.
He came closer still, so he was truly violating her personal s.p.a.ce, and pulled the edge of her purple pashmina aside with his bear-like paw.
"Holy G.o.d, Julia, what the h.e.l.l is that?"
She flinched as one of his work-roughened fingers tentatively skimmed the bite mark on her neck, cursing the fact that she'd apparently forgotten to use concealer that morning when she applied her make up.
"It's nothing. I'm fine." She moved backwards and wrapped her pashmina around her neck twice, fussing with the ends so she wouldn't have to look at him.
"I know what nothing looks like, and that ain't nothing. Did your boyfriend do that?"
"Of course not! He would never hurt me."
Paul c.o.c.ked his head to one side. "You told me he hurt you before. I thought that was why you broke up the last time."
Julia found herself wrapped in the coiled python grip of her lies. She opened her mouth to protest and quickly closed it, trying to think of something to say.
"Did he bite you out of love? Or anger?" Paul tried to keep his voice calm. He was furious with whoever had treated Julia so violently and more than willing to track down the offender and kick his a.s.s. Several times.
"Owen would never do something like that. He's never put a violent hand on me."
"Then d.a.m.n it, Julia, what happened?"