by Cassia Leo
Laurel and I turned to each other and we both smiled. Neither of us had to say a single word. We were both thinking the same thing: This lady felt more like a preschool teacher than a therapist, but at least she was mildly entertaining.
“I can do that,” I said, taking Laurel’s tiny hand in mine.
She smiled. “I can do it, too.”
After scheduling our next appointment, we left the brick building in fairly good spirits. I wouldn’t admit it aloud, but maybe talking about our problems with a complete stranger wasn’t a stupid idea after all. There was a certain lightness that came from unburdening yourself of the horrible things you tried to never think, much less say.
I walked Laurel to her SUV, which was parked next to a meter on 12th. As she reached for the door handle on the Tesla, I got a bit of déjà vu, as if I’d done this before. And I had.
“Feels like when I used to walk you to your car in college. Remember that beat up Jeep Cherokee you used to drive?”
She leaned against the driver’s side door. “It wasn’t that bad. It was very spacious.”
“We threw down a lot in there,” I said, reaching up to tuck a wisp of blonde hair behind her ear.
She closed her eyes as she leaned into my touch. “I saw that receptionist flirting with you,” she said, opening her eyes to meet my gaze. “You can have anyone and anything you want… Why are you still fighting for me?”
I took her face in my hands as I fixed her with a fierce glare. “Because you’re not anyone or anything… You’re everything.” I kissed her forehead and the tip of her nose. “You’re my beautiful, golden pixie. No one will ever love you the way I love you.”
She closed her eyes as she grabbed onto my forearms. “I don’t know how to do this,” she whispered.
I leaned forward, my heart racing as I got a whiff of the familiar sweetness of her vanilla lip balm. Before I could talk myself out of it, I whispered in her ear, “Wanna throw down?”
Her eyelids flew open, her chest heaving as she gazed at me with those beautiful brown eyes and nodded eagerly.
Despite the fact that we could have easily headed to her mom’s house and threw down there, it was much easier to do it in my truck. Afterwards, I followed her to her mom’s and walked her up the steps to the front door, the way I used to in college, after a public throw down.
“Your hair looks like shit,” I said, reaching up to run my fingers through her messy hair.
She pursed her lips. “Pfft! Yours doesn’t look much better.”
I clasped her face in my hands, brushing my thumbs over her sharp cheekbones. I wanted to tell her to come home with me, but I knew better than to beat that dead horse.
“What?” she asked as I continued to stare into her eyes without speaking.
I shook my head and kissed her forehead. “Nothing. I just love the fuck out of you.”
She wet her lips and closed her eyes as she smiled. I was a goner. How did I resist sleeping with this beautiful creature almost every night for the past six months?
I kissed her slowly, our mouths tangled in a sweet dance of back and forth that I wished could last forever. She stood on the porch wearing a soft, sexy smile and watched as I walked back to my truck, which was parked in the driveway behind her SUV.
As I climbed into the truck, I caught a glimpse of movement at the house next door. When I looked, I locked eyes with a guy who looked about our age, with tattoos covering almost every inch of his bare arms. He turned away quickly as he continued to trim his hedges.
The protective husband in me wanted to go introduce myself to him, make sure he knew Laurel was off limits. But I knew Laurel would get pissed if I made her neighbors uncomfortable. Plus, I didn’t want to piss the guy off and give him a reason to be a dick to Laurel.
Instead, I pulled out of the driveway and looked him straight in the eye as I drove past his house. I didn’t like the way he looked right back at me, never breaking his focus. I’d have to keep an eye on him.
Chapter 12
Laurel
Drea stopped by on Saturday, the day after my first counseling session with Jack. We binge-watched Breaking Bad on Netflix, and I tried not to laugh too hard when she made fun of the premise of the show, a science teacher who resorted to cooking meth to pay his medical bills.
“That would never work in the UK, with the NHS. It’s a bloody brilliant concept, but also really fucking sad,” she said, reaching for the bowl of popcorn on the table. “My parents still think Barry and I are absolutely mad for moving here.”
“Did you tell them you have great healthcare coverage through Jack’s company?”
She shook her head. “I don’t think it’s the healthcare they worry about.”
“Do they know about your fab best friend?” I said, declining her offer when she held out the popcorn bowl to me.
She shrugged and lay down on the sofa, resting her head on the arm and putting her feet up on my lap. “You should come to England with me when I visit them in December. You’d love it.”
I wondered silently whether I’d be back together with Jack by then. When Jack left me on the front step of my mother’s house yesterday, it felt like the early days of our relationship. I actually got butterflies in my belly when he kissed me. As he walked away, I had to fight the urge to chase after him for one more kiss, the way I used to when we were dating.
But part of me feared this was a honeymoon phase. We were merely coming out of an extreme low into an extreme high. Pretty soon, we would enter another rapid freefall.
“I’ll talk to Jack about it. He might be up for a trip after all this.”
Drea cocked an eyebrow. “I’m sensing a note of uncertainty. Are you doubting the outcome of your couple’s therapy experiment?”
I sighed. “I doubt my ability to hold Jack to his word. He… He promised me that once I came home we could start trying for another baby. I’m worried I’m going to go home and we’re going to stop going to counseling and things will get worse again.”
“I thought he didn’t want another baby.”
“So did I. I don’t know if he’s doing it to get me to come home or if he means it. I hate that I even doubt his sincerity.” I shot her a desperate look, practically pleading for her to tell me what to do. “I love Jack, but something happened to him that night. It was like a switch flipped inside his brain. He was always cynical and wickedly smart. But I think what happened that night made him…”
I wanted to say it had made him calculating, but I couldn’t bring myself to say the word aloud. Though I felt it was true, I didn’t want to infect Drea with my poisoned thoughts.
Drea sat up, placed the popcorn bowl on the coffee table, and fixed me with a sober expression. “I hate to even suggest this, but… maybe you should just start cooking meth.”
I shrugged. “I don’t think I have any other choice.”
She smiled as she stood up. “How about I turn off Breaking Bad and put on some Little Britain?” she asked.
Drea was always keenly aware when I needed a distraction or a change of scenery. I was also fairly certain she’d noticed me flinching at the sound of every gunshot while we watched Breaking Bad.
The one time I had a PTSD-induced hospitalization, I had come home early from having coffee with Drea. As I opened Jack’s office door to let him know I was home, I heard the sound of two gunshots in quick succession — I knew from sheer instinct that what I was hearing was the first shot that hit my mother’s shoulder and the second, which hit the left side of her head.
As I stood in the doorway, frozen, Jack scrambled to turn off the audio on the surveillance video he was watching, but not before I heard the third and final shot.
Though I’d seen the surveillance video of the murderer as he rummaged around the bottom level of our house, I stopped watching as soon as his body language made it evident that he’d heard someone moving upstairs. There was no footage of the murder, since we didn’t have cameras in the bedrooms or bathrooms.
But the cameras in the hallways and downstairs picked up almost all of the audio.
I had never heard the sound of the gunshots that killed them. But I knew, from reading the autopsy report, that my mother was shot first, and she was likely dead or unconscious when Junior was killed.
I spent the night in the hospital on heavy anti-anxiety medication as they attempted to stabilize my mood and heart rate. I had one more severe panic attack and one moderate before they released me the next afternoon.
I’d spent the months that had passed since that day trying to forget the sound of what I’d heard as I stepped into Jack’s office. Sometimes, it felt as if the trauma of that night followed me around like a monster, occasionally jumping out at me from behind corners to make sure I would never, for one second, make the mistake of believing I was strong.
“Little Britain sounds perfect,” I replied.
“Another round of lemon drops?”
I nodded. “Better make it a double.”
I entered Sunny’s Garden Depot for my first day of work in a daze, sleep-deprived from my inability to stop thinking about Jack all weekend. Oddly, when I saw Dylan’s mother, Vera Beckett, behind the cashier’s counter, her auburn hair up in a ponytail and reading glasses resting on the tip of her nose as she counted money for the cashier’s drawer, I felt at ease.
“Good morning, Mrs. Beckett,” I said, approaching the counter.
She looked a bit surprised at first, then she recognized me and smiled. “Oh, hello, dear. Please call me Vera. I haven’t been Mrs. Beckett in a long time.”
I didn’t ask her if this meant she was divorced or widowed. “You can call me Laurel.”
“Beautiful name. You know there are more than a dozen different plants, trees, and shrubs in the laurel family. Some of them have beautiful flowers. But my favorite is the Alexandrian laurel tree. An evergreen with many medicinal uses, and it can flower all year round.”
I smiled as I remembered the many times my mother told me about how she decided on my name when she was pregnant. She told me my grandmother had let her pick out some plants for a small patch of garden space, and the only thing that had survived was the laurel tree.
My mother kept that tree, transplanted it from her mother’s house into the house where I’d grown up in Portland. Even after she divorced my father when I was in college, that laurel tree was still there, tucked away into a corner in the backyard. I wondered if it had survived the past two years of neglect.
My relationship with my father certainly hadn’t fared well. After the divorce, we only spoke every few months over the phone and the occasional email. But after Junior’s death, when he “couldn’t make it” to the funeral, it was almost easy to forget him. One less person I would have to mourn.
As I came out of my memory, I found Vera smiling at me. “You mentioned on your application that your mother taught you quite a bit about gardening,” she said, sliding the cash drawer into the register. “Do you live with your mother?”
I shook my head. “My mother’s… gone.”
“Oh, I’m so sorry, dear.”
“It’s okay,” I said, waving off her apology. “But, yes, she taught me a bit. Though, now I wish I’d paid more attention.”
“Oh, it’s not that hard. Just mind the register and use this,” she said, lifting a large binder out from under the cashier’s counter, “if you can’t find something. This is the inventory list. It will tell you where everything is and whether or not we carry it. And it will even tell you if we can special order something and who to call for that.”
I smiled as I realized this five-inch thick binder was this woman’s inventory system. “Sounds easy enough,” I replied, then I got to work.
As she minded the register, I swept the back office and cleaned the employee and public restrooms — not my favorite task. Then, I happily hosed down the floors in the greenhouse. Vera and I laughed at my initial ineptitude as I learned to use the mini-range pallet truck to move pallets of soil and sandbags. I felt a sense of accomplishment after I helped a little old lady safely load twenty trays of delicate petunias into her station wagon.
And that was just my first two hours on the job.
Thankfully, my next day at Sunny’s was far less strenuous. Unfortunately, as soon as I arrived for my second day on the job, Vera informed me that Dylan and I would be taking the company truck to make deliveries today, and one of those would be to Isaac.
I had yet to work up the nerve to thank him for helping me get this job.
“Dylan is going to accompany you on all deliveries,” Vera said, as if Dylan wasn’t standing right next to her and fully capable of telling me this himself. “We have a few customers like Isaac, who live mostly off the grid. It’s becoming a trend. Anyway, they tend to get large orders of supplies delivered about once a month.”
“Off the grid? Like those people who build nuclear bunkers and stock them full of canned food so they’re ready for the apocalypse?” I asked, as I followed her and Dylan toward the lot in the back of the store, where pallets were stacked taller than me with bright-green sod and large, flattened bags of soil, mulch, and seed.
Dylan laughed. “You’re thinking of preppers. People who think the end of the world is nigh. People like Isaac and Marlon aren’t preppers. They’re not really homesteaders either. They’re just folks who try to live off the land as much as possible. They usually only produce enough food and energy to take care of themselves and their families.”
It dawned on me that I hadn’t seen anyone else living at Isaac’s house. Would I be meeting Isaac’s family today?
Vera tsk-tsked at Dylan’s explanation. “Isaac and Mr. Tripp are good men. Solid, salt-of-the-earth boys. But most of these people, like Marlon, are just hippies trying to ‘lower their carbon footprint,’ which is a load of nonsense, if you ask me.”
Dylan looked embarrassed as his mother walked away. “I’ll load the order. You can drive,” he said as he opened the gate on the back of the stake-bed delivery truck, then reached into his pocket and produced a set of keys.
“I can help you load the delivery,” I said, following him toward the hydraulic pallet truck, which was parked near the chain-link fence that surrounded the backlot.
“You’re skinnier than me,” he said with a chuckle. “Save your calories, girl. You can watch me do it this time.”
I knew in my heart Dylan was only teasing me, but his words still felt like a punch in the gut, especially since it confirmed what Jack had said to me a few days ago at Bonnie’s office.
The truth was that I had already talked to my doctor about my loss of appetite. My doctor explained that, due to my anxiety, my body was almost always flooded with adrenaline and stress hormones. My mind, unable to accept my new reality without Junior, was keeping my body in constant fight-or-flight mode. The anxiety — and PTSD — both contributed to a constant impending sense of doom, that made it near impossible to eat, despite my best efforts.
Eating becomes a secondary interest when mere survival is your primary concern.
“Oh, hey, I meant that as a joke,” Dylan clarified as he pulled the pallet truck toward the stacks of soil bags. “I’m sorry. That was kind of insensitive.”
“No, it’s okay,” I said, following closely behind him. “It’s just that Jack — my husband — commented on the same thing a couple of days ago. I just… wish there was an easy fix. Believe me, up until—” I stopped myself before I blurted out the details of my tragic life. “Well, I used to eat a lot.”
He cast me some major side-eye as he slid the pallet truck into place. “So, have you started on the garden yet?” he asked.
“A little,” I said, trying to sound as casual as I could to hide the guilt from my lack of progress.
The pallet truck beeped loudly as he drove the pallet of soil toward the delivery vehicle. “You should ask Isaac to help you out. From what I hear, he had nothing but nice things to say about you.”
“Really?” I replied, pra
ctically yelling to be heard above the beeping noise coming from the pallet truck.
I had avoided going to Isaac’s house to thank him for helping me get the job, because, quite frankly, I didn’t know how to thank him. The more I thought about the dog-sitting idea, the stupider it felt. I didn’t know anything about dogs.
The hydraulic lift activated, raising the pallet of soil up and into the bed of the delivery truck. “I’m going to be totally honest with you right now,” Dylan said, glancing over his shoulder before he leaned in to whisper to me, “I think Isaac likes you.”
I laughed at this. “Isaac knows I’m married.”
I climbed into the driver’s seat of the truck and slammed the heavy door closed. Breathing in the dusty, worn leather smell reminded me of being in Jack’s truck the first year we were together.
Dylan rounded the back of the truck and slid into the passenger seat. “If you’re married, why aren’t you wearing a ring?” he asked as he pulled on his seat belt.
I glanced at my hand, where it rested on my lap. The faint tan line that was there when I removed my wedding band ten days ago was now gone. This realization washed over me like a wave of ice-cold water, shocking me to my core. I instantly felt guilty for leaving the ring behind.
The longer I thought about it, I began to start feeling guilty about everything: leaving, getting a job, introducing myself to Isaac, even having a good time with Drea this weekend felt indulgent.
It wasn’t as if I hadn’t had brief moments of sheer pleasure or even happiness these past two years — a few hilarious moments came to mind from Jack’s coworker’s wedding we attended last year. But I had lived with the guilt of outliving my son for too long. The guilt was now embedded in my soul, as much a part of me as the four-inch scar that stretched along my abdomen.
For some reason, instead of shying away from the discomforting guilt, I decided to lean into it.