Creep

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Creep Page 31

by Jennifer Hillier


  Morris looked at his son with so much love that Sheila thought her heart would burst. Then Morris turned back to her, his eyes watering. “He’s right, darlin’. You did a good thing.”

  Randall gave her hand a gentle squeeze before letting it go. “I’ll wait for you outside, Dad.”

  “No, stay. Please.” Morris looked at Sheila and cleared his throat. He seemed nervous and she felt a stab of alarm. “I have something that belongs to you. I know we have a lot to work through, and I know it will take time, but I’m hoping . . .” His lip trembled slightly. “I’m hoping you’ll say yes again.”

  He slipped something shiny onto her finger. In disbelief, she lifted up her hand and gazed at it in wonder. Though her wrists were still bruised and a needle was stuck in her vein, she felt a smile light her face.

  Morris had given her back her engagement ring.

  CHAPTER : 44

  Roseburg, Oregon, was chilly in November. But something about the crisp air and the misty skies cleared Sheila’s head. She sat on the veranda of the large ranch house, a thick wool blanket wrapped over her coat, looking out into the gray day and feeling better than she had in a long time. It was Visitor’s Day. She was probably the only person dumb enough to sit out in the cold waiting for her visitor, but she wanted to be the first person Morris saw when he pulled up to the New Trails Treatment Center for Addiction.

  The front door to the left of Sheila opened, and Melanie Rudder, one of the ladies in the administration office, poked her head out.

  “Holy cow.” Melanie wasn’t even all the way outside but her arms were already wrapped around herself. “It’s freezing out here.”

  Sheila smiled at the younger woman from her rocking chair. “It’s not so bad once you get used to it.”

  Melanie shook her head in disbelief, shivering. She held out what looked like a postcard. “Here, this came for you. I must have missed it when I was handing out the mail this morning. Quick, take it before my arm freezes and falls off. Looks like it’s from your work.”

  She dashed back inside once Sheila took hold of the glossy postcard. Melanie was right; there was no mistaking where this was from.

  The front of the card showed a picture of the grounds of Puget Sound State University in the autumn, specifically the quad in the middle of campus where the huge water fountain sprayed mist into the air. In the background stood the old, brown-brick George Herbert Mead psychology building where Sheila had worked for the past fifteen years.

  She smiled to herself; she hadn’t even known that PSSU had postcards. It was sweet of her colleagues to think of her. Dean Simmons, especially, had been very understanding. Her job would be waiting for her whenever she was ready to return.

  She wasn’t sure if she wanted to go back. But it was nice to have the option.

  The sound of snow crunching under tires made her look up. A big, black Cadillac was making its way up the long driveway toward the ranch house.

  She waved happily to Morris, who grinned and waved back. Turning the postcard over in her gloved hands, she smiled in anticipation of the kind words.

  Her hands began to shake and it wasn’t from the cold. This note wasn’t from anyone at the university—at least not from anyone there now.

  Dear Professor Tao,

  Saw you the other day. You seem to be doing well.

  Enjoy it while it lasts.

  Best,

  Abby Maddox

  Sheila heard the roar of a motorcycle from somewhere behind Morris.

  Looking up, she caught a glimpse of tight jeans on a Triumph before it sped away.

 

 

 


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