by Cassia Leo
“Thanks. It’s not really my house. Well, it was my mother’s… until she died.”
She frowned as she stood next to the sofa. “I read about that. I’m truly sorry for your loss. No one should have to go through that. I… I lost my best friend in college to suicide. Houston’s sister Hallie. He was the one who found her. He still has nightmares about it.”
She whispered the last sentence as if it were a dirty secret, but I knew she didn’t mean it that way.
Men dealt with grief much differently than women did. Rory probably knew, just as I did, that most men didn’t like to admit weakness. To them, the uncontrollable emotions that came with grief were a flaw, a chink in the armor that must be smoothed out. And anything that was beyond repair should be kept hidden.
Sort of the way Jack and I had hidden the extent of the problems in our marriage from the people who knew us best. But based on the uncomfortable conversation I had with Jack’s mother last week, Jack didn’t feel the need to hide our dirty secret anymore.
Houston entered through the open front door, carrying a cardboard box in one of his enormous arms and a silver gift bag in his other hand. He set down the box on the floor and closed the door behind him. Rory took the gift bag from him and spun around to face me with a huge grin on her face.
She held out the bag to me. “Dylan told us you’d be turning thirty next week, so we decided to bring you a gift before we left on our trip to New York. Houston tells me turning thirty is a very big deal.”
Houston shook his head. “You’ll get there soon enough,” he said, then he turned to me. “Go ahead. Open it.”
I stared at the silver bag, unable to hide my trepidation. “You didn’t have to do that. I’m really not looking forward to this birthday.”
They both laughed as Rory jiggled the bag in front of me. “Go on.”
I let out a soft sigh as I grabbed the handles of the bag and peeked inside. “What?” I whispered, unable to contain my surprise as I reached in and pulled out a creamy white box with gold lettering. “Where… why? I mean… what?”
I was speechless, completely incapable of stringing together a coherent sentence.
“Oh, I’m sorry. Do you not like it?” Rory asked with a note of disappointment in her voice.
I looked up at her, shaking my head adamantly. “No! That’s not what I meant. I’m just… flabbergasted to be honest. This…” I paused as I tried to control my emotions, but my shock made it impossible. “This was my mom’s favorite perfume. Did Dylan tell you to get this?”
Rory’s mouth dropped open. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to make you cry.”
She still hadn’t answered my question, but I didn’t want to press her for details. I was fairly certain Dylan had seen the perfume while living here. He probably thought it was mine, and noticed the bottle was almost empty, so he assumed he was being thoughtful. And he was. Maybe a little too thoughtful.
“Thank you. This is a very beautiful, thoughtful gift,” I said as I put the perfume back inside the bag and wiped tears from my cheeks. “Now I feel like my crying has made this very awkward. I’ve just been a bit overly emotional since Jack and I separated.”
She smiled as she took the bag from my hand and placed it on the coffee table. “Hey, remember when you and I were broken up a couple of years ago?” she asked Houston.
He shook his head. “Don’t remind me.”
Rory rolled her eyes. “He made me jump through hoops when we got back together.”
“What? That’s not true,” he contradicted her.
She gasped. “You don’t recall telling me we should just be friends, then sending me on a wild goose chase all the way to Eugene?”
A sheepish grin spread across his face as he ran his hand through his light-brown hair, which was slightly damp with rain. “That was not a wild goose chase. It was a treasure hunt. And I got a lot of help from your friends. It wasn’t all me. Anyway, we should get going. I’m sure Laurel has better things to do than stand here listening to us bicker.”
“Oh, no. This is fine. It’s nice to have company,” I insisted. “I just put on some coffee if you’d like to stay and chat.”
Rory smiled. “We have a flight to New York in a couple of hours. But thanks for the offer.” She glanced at the silver bag on the coffee table. “Happy early birthday. We hope you get everything you want.”
“Thank you.”
When Rory and Houston were gone, I carried the box of Barley Legal merchandise to the office and set it down on the desk. The box exhaled a puff of sweetly scented air as I pulled open the flaps. The first item I pulled out was a white Barley Legal T-shirt. The next item I extracted was a six-pack of beer.
The label on the side of the cardboard beer carrier read “Summer Sampler.” The logo for their Barley Legal Summer Shandy was a lemon slice superimposed over a bright-yellow sun as it rose over a field of hops. Tears slid down my cheeks as I remembered the last time I saw that logo.
As Jack spoke to the officer who drove us to the Columbia Gorge Hotel and Spa, he held me tightly in his arms, allowing me to hide my swollen, red eyes in the collar of his blazer. Jack thanked the officer for doing his best to process us quickly. The officer once again offered his condolences and assured Jack that our vehicles would be returned to us as quickly as possible, once they’d been processed by their forensics team.
“We should get inside,” Jack said, his voice hoarse from all the yelling and crying he’d done in the last eight hours.
“Yeah, sure. We’ll be in touch,” the officer replied.
Jack kissed the top of my head and whispered. “Let’s go lie down, baby.”
He didn’t say, “Let’s go to sleep,” or even, “Let’s get some rest.” He knew as well as I did that sleep and rest would not come easy today, even though it was now almost 7:30 a.m. and we’d been up all night. How could I sleep after what I just saw?
Jack never let me go. He kept one arm wrapped around me as we entered the lobby of the hotel, both arms as we checked in at the front desk and took the elevator up to our floor. I knew he wanted to comfort me, but I also knew he was holding on so tightly because I was the only thing keeping him from going under.
Jack’s parents tried to insist that we should stay with them instead of a hotel, but I was glad that Jack made it clear we needed to be alone right now. We needed to process what we’d seen in private. The crisis counselor at the police station assured us it was perfectly normal to feel the need to be alone at a time like this. But she also insisted that we couldn’t isolate ourselves forever, or we might never heal.
Her statement assumed there was a chance we would someday heal.
As we entered the hotel room, I set my purse down on the desk and noticed a cardboard coaster with the Barley Legal logo beneath a bright-yellow lemon sun. It was a promotional coaster for their Summer Shandy. But all I saw was the hundreds of Barley Legal bottles on the tables at our wedding reception exactly three years and one day ago. How the summer sun made the white silk tents glow. The laughter and music and joyful chatter that echoed in my memory.
As I sat on the edge of the hotel bed, Jack knelt before me and gently slid the straps of my heels off and set them aside. He stared at my shoes for a long moment, and I was grateful I couldn’t see what he was thinking. The muscle in his jaw twitched and it killed me to see him like this.
I reached forward, my fingertips grazing the scruff of his jaw to snap him out of his trance. He turned toward me and wrapped his arms around my waist. Pulling me toward him, he buried his face in my belly. I stroked his hair as his tears soaked through the silky fabric of my blouse.
Finally, he pulled away and drew in a deep breath as he laid his large hand over my abdomen. “This isn’t right,” he said, his fist curling around the damp fabric.
I took his face in my hands, and his scruff felt comforting as my gaze wandered over his face. The bloodshot eyes, the shimmering moisture on his skin, the anguished crease in his brow. Jack
was hurting. Possibly even more than I was, considering he was the one who had to push me out of the bathroom so he could check their bodies for signs of life.
He tightened his grip on my shirt and pulled me forward until I was also on my knees. As I wrapped my arms around his waist, his arms swallowed me, squeezed my shoulders so tightly I could almost imagine I wasn’t falling apart. I pressed my face into his collar as I wept, inhaling the crisp scent of his skin. My shoulders jumped with each gasping sob, and each time he tightened his hold on me.
After a long while, my cries dissipated as my energy waned. Our breathing synced and my muscles finally began to slacken as the warmth of Jack’s body enveloped me. Maybe if we stayed in this position for eternity, maybe if we never let go, maybe it would be possible to heal.
Chapter 15
Isaac
I read the text message twice, then I read it one more time before I began typing my response.
Me:
No, I didn’t get a chance to watch it yet. I’ve been hobbling around the house, trying to get the basic things done. I still don’t trust this leg behind the wheel of my truck yet.
Emily:
OMG. I can’t believe I didn’t put that together. You hurt your right leg. Of course you can’t drive. Now I feel dumb.
Emily had recommended I see the latest movie release from the Marvel franchise. She said she hadn’t laughed so hard in a long time. I didn’t know if this meant she thought I needed a good laugh — who didn’t need one? — or that she didn’t laugh much. I wanted to ask her if it was the latter. She knew so much about me, and I hardly knew anything about her. But I couldn’t help feeling as though she was purposely not volunteering anything too personal about herself.
Me:
Don’t feel dumb. I’m the one with the bum leg and even I forget about it sometimes. Yesterday, I was practicing my figure skating and totally forgot I couldn’t land that triple salchow on my right leg.
Emily:
I’m not sure if I’m more impressed by your ability to spell salchow or your ability to joke about getting shot. Is the therapy going well?
Me:
I’m embarrassed to admit that I had high hopes I’d be cured overnight. But it turns out that’s not the way it works. But it does work.
She didn’t respond right away. Finally, after six minutes of waiting like a desperate chick, I tucked my phone in my jeans pocket and pushed myself up from the sofa. I tried not to take the lack of response personally, but it was difficult when the last thing I’d texted her was something so personal.
As I grabbed a beer out of the fridge, I could sense myself building a wall around my heart. Just because Emily had taken such an interest in me these past two years, it didn’t mean she was interested in anything more than a long-distance friendship. How could I feel so connected to Laurel and Emily when I hardly knew either of them? I needed to put my guard up or I was going to get my heart broken again.
As I pulled on a hoodie, Boomer and I went outside to sit on the back porch. I’d been enjoying my beer and the late morning rain for a few minutes when my phone vibrated in my pocket.
Emily:
Sorry for the delayed response. My phone is blowing up with a group text. It’s my friends coordinating rides for a party. I turned off notifications so I should be good now.
I shook my head as I realized I had overreacted to her lack of response. I remembered something my therapist had said. He said that PTSD sometimes causes us to catastrophize. Small problems are blown out of proportion and large problems feel like the end of the world. It reminded me of the day I found out Nicole had cheated on me with my brother.
I literally thought it was the end of my world. I had thought about suicide a lot during my third tour, when all the trauma finally started catching up to me. I considered the logistics: what method I’d use, where I’d do it to make sure no one found my body. I didn’t want to leave any of my loved ones with PTSD. I considered allowing myself to be killed in action, but I worried that this might put my brothers in danger.
The only thing that kept me from taking myself out was the promise of a life with Nicole. I knew after six years together, she would stay with me until I got better. She would be my safe haven from the raging storm in my mind.
The day I found out she had been cheating on me with Dane was like any other day. I came back from Afghanistan in the end of June, so I was outside in my parents’ driveway washing my dad’s truck. I’d been looking forward to making it back before the Fourth of July block party they threw in our neighborhood every year.
My parents’ house backed up to Lake McCusick. They were very close friends with the neighbors in the other seven houses on McCusick Lane. I had just picked up a bunch of groceries for my mom, who was making a ridiculous amount of food. I washed my truck and had moved on to washing my dad’s truck, when Nicole and Dane pulled up next to me in the driveway.
My brother got out of the SUV first and I nearly tackled him in my excitement to see him. The atmosphere shifted when Nicole got out of the car and I saw her belly. At first, I wondered if maybe she’d just gained a little weight. She was only five months pregnant at the time, so it was a possibility. But I quickly realized she hadn’t gained weight anywhere else, and the apologetic look in her eyes just about destroyed me.
As I stared at Emily’s text message, I thought of what had transpired between Laurel and me in her SUV the other day. A simple touch and the atmosphere had shifted. She had dropped me off that day without the promise of a phone call or a visit, the way she normally did.
My instinct was to not respond to Emily’s text. I needed to keep building that wall around my heart. I didn’t know if I could survive another heartbreak.
Fucking hell. My life was getting messier than an Afghan village after an airstrike.
Finally, I shook my head as I let out a hefty sigh and began typing.
Me:
No need to apologize for being popular. I’m sure your company is in high demand.
Emily:
You can’t see it, but I’m totally blushing.
Me:
I wish I could see that.
The sound of footsteps in my driveway made my muscles tense as I whipped my head to the left.
“Shit!” I said, louder than I probably should have.
Laurel gasped. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to creep up on you.”
I looked at Boomer, who was lying on his side fast asleep, and chuckled. “You’re fine. But you have once again confirmed that this lazy dog has absolutely no guard dog tendencies. What brings you here on this fine day?”
She was wearing a pair of faded black skinny jeans with rips in the knees and a light-gray hoodie that looked at least two sizes too big for her. Her blonde hair was pulled up in a messy bun and, as usual, she seemed completely unaware of how unbelievably beautiful she looked.
She glanced into my backyard then at my leg. “Some of your apples fell over the fence into my yard. I just… wanted to know if you need some help picking them.”
I smiled. “Well, aren’t you just as thoughtful as can be? You sure you’re not just making up excuses to come over here now?”
She smiled and shook her head. “Nope. But I may be interested in stealing some of those apples, if you don’t mind.”
“Actually, if you’re offering up your services, I do have about an hour or two of work that needs to be done back here. I could pay you one bushel of apples per hour.”
“Deal,” she beamed.
It took about fifteen minutes for Laurel to help me pick the first harvest of kale. She didn’t seem to mind doing it in the rain. We grabbed a ladder from the garage for her to pick the fruit from the Fuji apple tree near the fence.
“Check you out. I didn’t know you had such amazing tree-climbing skills. You’re definitely going to survive when the apes take over the planet.”
She laughed as she grabbed a few apples off the branch in front of her and tossed them into
the wooden crate I was carrying. “Climbing trees used to be one of my favorite pastimes when I was growing up. My mom refused to let my dad build me a tree house. She was afraid it would kill the tree. So I had to climb up the tree without a ladder. I used to stay up there for hours sometimes.”
I followed her as she moved to a different part of the tree and continued to drop apples into the crate. “Careful!” I blurted out as her foot began to slip on a wet branch.
She giggled nervously as she regained her hold on the limb above her. “Well, maybe this wouldn’t take so long if you stopped eating all the apples I’m picking.”
“I ate one apple!”
She let out another throaty guffaw. “Oh, crap. I just realized… That would make a great headline: Woman slips out of apple tree and dies three days before her thirtieth birthday.”
“That would most definitely not make a great headline. Maybe you should come down now. You’re getting too wet up there.”
As soon as I said the words, I realized how bad they sounded, but it was too late to take them back. Almost a week had passed since that brief encounter we’d had outside the shooting range. I knew she had felt something just as I had. Laurel was very rarely quiet, but she didn’t say a word the entire ride back. Then, I didn’t hear from her again until today.
But accusing her of “getting too wet up there” was a very poor choice of words. I was ready to flay myself when the sound of her laughter refocused my attention.
“Oh, my God. That’s so cute. You look mortified,” she said, reaching for another apple.
“You think that’s funny,” I shot back, willing myself not to stare at the curve of her ass or the way wisps of wet hair stuck to the sides of her face. “I am mortified. I should not be talking like that to a married woman.”