“Listen, if I tell her the truth, it’ll put her in an impossible situation.”
“Fair enough,” he says. “Answer me this: did you cheat on her?”
“Nope.”
He seems shocked but continues on without commenting. “Did you hurt her in some way?”
“Nah, but I’m trying not to. If I tell her the truth, she might get hurt eventually.”
“Lord, you’re such a girl.”
“I am not,” I say, tossing him a dirty look.
“We’re in the twenty-first century, bud. Women can make choices. They like them. And, quite frankly, they get a little pissy if you try to take them away. Just throwing that out there.”
My stomach knots up as I consider what he’s saying. Mariah is an intelligent woman. She’s capable of handling her own business. Should I have just laid it all out there, no matter how embarrassing to me it is?
“I don’t know,” I groan, still unsure.
“Even if it means not getting her back?”
I hate the way he put that. It feels … final. I’m considering that when he taunts me more.
“Even if it means never feeling her—”
“Our mother is right there,” I say, motioning towards the ground. “Have a little couth.”
“Fine. Even if it means never feeling her in your arms again,” he says with a mock-sweetness. “I don’t know what you lied about. But I know you’re in love with that girl and you’re going to feel this way for the rest of your life if you don’t grow a pair and at least come clean. Maybe she loves you too.”
I’m zapped right back to a couple of days ago at Goodman’s when she said she loved me. She glossed right over it, but it’s the only thing I remember hearing her say.
I’ve replayed that single line over and over and held onto it like a life raft.
Women have said they loved me before. Lots of them, really. But even when they were looking me in the eye and professing their undying devotion, it didn’t register like Mariah’s words did. It didn’t feel the same. Not even Britt, the woman I thought I loved. The woman I’m sure now I didn’t. Not even close.
“You’re overcomplicating this,” Machlan tells me. He ponders this for a second. “Let’s go back to the blessings, okay?”
“Yeah.”
“Mom didn’t say all blessings were pretty. She just said to find them, identify them, and use them. That they were given to us so we could do something with them, right?”
“I guess …” I try to follow him, but the surge of adrenaline in my veins starts to make it difficult.
“Take Britt, for example. If you hadn’t had that accident, you’d be married to her sure as shit. If that happened, we wouldn’t be here right now all pussy-whipped over Mariah.”
I turn my head to react to that, to smash him in the arm, but the weight of his words stops me.
Oh.
My.
God.
He’s right.
“What if Mom and Dad had lived? Yes, we’d all make that happen if we could, but we can’t,” he continues. “Let’s look for the blessings. Well, Blaire is a hotshot at her law firm in Chicago. Walker happened to be at my bar the night Sienna rolled into town. Us kids are really fucking close, something that might not have happened had we not had to rely on each other.” He looks at me. “You feel me, Lance?”
“Yeah,” I say slowly, trying to keep up with the thoughts pouring through my head. “I think I do.”
“Good.” He stands and stretches his arms over his head. “I got shit to do. Come by and see me at Crave if you need more professional opinions.”
He cackles to himself as he walks away, leaving me on the bench alone.
I consider everything that’s happened over the last few weeks, the things that have really affected me. Getting to know Mariah, hearing Ollie’s story, seeing Brandon start to turn around—all of those are blessings. But what if my story took a turn the day I had the accident? What if the one thing I considered a stain on my manhood is actually a blessing in disguise?
I plant a kiss on top of the tombstone and let my gaze linger on that date for a long moment. Then I turn and head to my car, my shoes sinking into the ground once more.
Thirty-Two
Mariah
“The three most popular answers are on the board. Name a place you go where you can’t touch anything.”
“Work,” I deadpan, popping the rest of a brownie into my mouth. Flipping off the television before I can hear the answers, I toss the remote onto the couch.
Whitney called earlier to see if I wanted to go to the movies and I told her maybe later. I’m probably going to have to pass altogether. The sun coming up this morning didn’t bring me the relief I’d hoped.
Last night was the worst night yet. I’m sure the fact it coincided with seeing him at the gas station isn’t ironic. Or that Gretchen gave me the best hug at the nursing home when I told her what was going on. Or that I was really bored and loneliness is the biggest bitch I know.
Dressed in sweatpants riddled with holes, ones I can’t make myself throw away because they’re so perfectly soft, and a t-shirt with a logo from Ruma, a restaurant I loved in California, I get off the couch and look for my phone. I find it where I left it last night, sitting on top of a book about finding inner peace. I’ve never read a book that made me so hateful.
Leave nothing unresolved. Accept what is.
It can fuck right off.
I switch to a playlist that aligns with my mood and am ready to hit play on some girl power jams when the doorbells rings.
Working my hair into a makeshift ponytail, which is harder than usual because I haven’t even brushed it today, I pull the door open with one hand without even looking through the peephole. If someone wants to try to kill me on the other side, bring it. Today’s their day.
Or maybe it’s mine.
Lance stands on the stoop, his hands tucked into the pockets of his jeans. A plain black Henley hangs from his frame; his hair is a mussed-up mess.
The look on his face is somber, pained, almost, and as my hand falls to my side, my brain issues orders for it not to reach for him. And don’t invite him inside.
“What are you doing here?” I ask.
“I want to talk to you.”
“I’m busy,” I lie, bouncing on my toes to the lyrics in my head.
“Doing what?”
“Feeding my fish.”
The corners of his lip quip up. “You have fish?”
“No,” I shrug, narrowing my eyes. “Get the picture?”
“Give me ten minutes.” There’s a smirk hidden in those full, delectable lips and I want to kiss it and smack it at the same time.
Damn him.
“Nope,” I say, pulling the door closer to me so he can’t see inside. I have no idea why I do this. It just feels like the right thing to do.
“Mariah.”
“Will you stop?” I bark, losing my grip on the door. I ignore the way he melts me with his gaze, how my knees wobble as he makes no secret of sliding his eyes down my body and up again. “You’re driving me absolutely insane. Is that what you want? I have never in my entire life met a man as frustrating as you are, Lance Gibson, and it’s so mean for you to show up here and want to talk to me after breaking my heart—”
My words are stolen as his lips crush mine. I’d fall on my ass if his hands weren’t holding my face, cupping my cheeks like he might not ever let them go.
I raise my hand to smack his chest, but my arms fail to take commands. Instead, like the loser I am, I give in and kiss him back.
His lips take control, leading mine in a motion that feels like a lot more than a kiss. Lucky for me I’m still riding the tail-end of my all-nighter and don’t have the clarity to listen to whatever it is he’s trying to convey.
His grip loosens just a bit on my face and my eyes pop up.
Stop doing this.
My palm connects to his shoulder and I shove him away. It’s
certainly not the punch I’d like to deliver, but it’s enough to make him step away. But, when he does it, his eyes are on fire.
“Feel better?” he asks.
“No. You’re still here.” My voice is wobbly now, his stupid kiss throwing me off my game. “Please leave.”
“Just talk to me. Or let me talk to you. You don’t even have to say anything.”
“Can I ever not say anything?”
He laughs, his hand moving through his silky locks. “Good point.” He tucks his fingers back in his pocket, his smile starting to fade. “Please let me come in. Ten minutes. Tops.”
With every decrease in his smile, my willpower goes with it. “Fine. But you aren’t coming in. I’ll come outside.”
His eyes spring open. “Fine. I won’t come inside. Let’s go for a drive instead.”
“I’m not going anywhere with you.”
“It’s chilly out here and I need to have your undivided attention for a couple of minutes, okay?” He looks at me without a trace of humor in his eyes. “Give me this and if you insist I don’t come back again, I won’t. You have my word.”
The thought of that twists my insides into a bundle, but I have to hold firm. “Not even to my office?”
“You installed a lock.” He raises a brow.
“Yes,” I say, reaching inside and grabbing my keys and a jacket. “I did.”
He waits as I lock the door, his proximity messing with my head. I can feel his energy swirling around me, teasing me, luring me in like the tempo of a Marvin Gaye song.
I start down the sidewalk but shoot him a look when I sense his hand nearing the small of my back. As badly as I want that contact, I know I can’t have it. Boundaries and all that.
He does open the door and I let him, climbing in and settling into the seat. I grin as he nearly runs around the front and jumps in, pulling the car onto the street as if I might change my mind before he gets us gone.
“I want to tell you I only came with you because I’m weak,” I say, looking straight ahead. “I won’t always be weak, but I will always hold it against you for doing this to me.”
“Doing what to you?”
“This.” I look at him out of the corner of my eye. “I’m taking some of this blame. I knew this wouldn’t end well. But I do feel like you pursued me, knowing I would fall in love with you and you would break my heart. So, at the end of the day, you, Lance Gibson, are a cocksucker.”
One hand releases the wheel, resting on the console between us as he laughs. “I’m happy to know how you feel.”
“Yup.”
“I am, in fact, a bigger cocksucker than you know.” The laugh falls from his voice, his hand going back to the wheel. He takes a turn at Carlson’s towards Goodman’s Gas Station as my heart falls to my feet.
This is going to be bad, worse than I thought. Not that I knew what to expect. I honestly didn’t think about it enough.
Damn it, Mariah.
“Why don’t you take me home?” I ask. “This conversation isn’t necessary if that’s what you have to tell me.”
He turns the opposite way of my house, heading towards Bluebird.
“I dated a girl once,” he says, his eyes trained out the windshield. “She—”
“I don’t want to hear about your app girls.” I grip the door handle to steady myself. I’m weak to him, even though I don’t feel it, and I’ll be damned if I sit here and listen to him talk about some girl I’ve already decided I hate.
I think he’s going to smile, but he doesn’t. “She’s not an app girl.”
He looks at me, the emotion in his irises bombing my soul. It shreds me, rips me apart, and I don’t even know what it’s about. My heart just hurts for him because I know he’s hurting and I’m pissed at myself for that, but what can I do?
I love him.
“I’ve been with two girls who weren’t app girls in my life,” he says, his voice barely audible over the roar of the engine. “One was the reason I started using apps, the other was the reason I quit.”
My breath stalls in my chest, the burn from not breathing only acceptable because I’m not thinking about it.
The other was the reason I quit …
“It’s not fair to do this to me,” I say on an exhale. “Do you hate me? Is that why you won’t just leave me alone?”
The car slows down as we hit a gravel road, the sun filtering through the trees. It’s gorgeous here, a lake to our right and a cow pasture to our left. We ride a few minutes in silence as I fight tears.
I won’t look at him. If this is what he’s doing, he doesn’t deserve to see me cry. Then again, maybe it would be good for him to see my pain.
“See that hill over there?” he asks, bringing the car to a crawl. He points to the other side of the lake. “This road used to go right through there. That lake was really two lakes until a few years ago. We had a flood and they joined, the road went underwater, and they never separated.”
“I didn’t even know that could happen,” I offer.
“One night, when I was younger,” he gulps, clearly fighting with the words to this story, “I was out here screwing around with a friend. We’d been to this campfire at a barn out that way and were racing to see who could get to town first.”
The car stops along the side of the road. He turns the top of his body to me, but his eyes are glued to the hill.
I look from where he’s looking and back to him. “What happened?”
“I was going too fast. My tires hit the gravel the wrong way and I caught air.” He cringes, balling one hand in a fist. “It rolled, almost going into the water right down there.” He points again to a little spot dotted with tall grasses.
“You’re lucky to be alive,” I gasp.
He nods, forcing a swallow. “I am. It’s one of those blessings Mom used to talk about. Out of a really ugly situation came one positive. I survived.”
Reaching out, not sure who needs the contact more, I place my hand on his arm. I feel him relax beneath my touch, but he doesn’t say a word about it.
Instead, he takes a deep breath. “I ... um .. I was dating a girl then. Britt was her name. And she broke up with me right after that.”
“Good for you,” I tell him. “She sounds like a jerk.”
The car fills with a silence that comes right before a shoe drops. The air is heavy, pregnant, even, and I can barely breathe through the weight of it all.
I drop my hand as he puts the car in park and flips off the ignition. I consider getting out and walking back to town because I’m not sure if I want to hear whatever it is he’s going to say.
“Lance—”
“A couple more minutes. Please,” he chokes out. He waits for me to indicate my willingness to hear him out before continuing. “You don’t deserve to think that me telling you this won’t work out between us has anything to do with you.”
“Lance, stop it.”
“I should’ve been completely honest with you. I thought … I thought I was protecting us both by just walking away. I’d keep you from having to make a hard choice and me from having to hurt my ego a little.”
“What are you talking about?” I ask, my heart threatening to beat so hard it sends me into cardiac arrest. The uncertainty about where he’s going with this is killing me and my hand is on the door to get out of the car. It feels too cramped in here, too small, not nearly big enough for whatever this bomb is that’s going to fall.
“Britt left me because I couldn’t meet the conditions she had for her life. She, like you,” he says, eyeing me carefully, “wanted the entire thing—marriage, a little house … a family.”
“I don’t understand …”
The gorgeous green eyes I love blur with unshed tears. It causes mine to react the same way, even though I don’t know why.
I grab his hand, holding it in my own, even though I shouldn’t. Even though I know better than to get any more tangled up with this man who’s already broken my heart once.
&
nbsp; “Mariah …” He looks at me completely unguarded. Completely broken. “I can’t have kids.”
I feel myself flinch, hear the rush of a swallow drop into my stomach. “What?”
“The accident fucked me up.” He hesitates. “I’m sterile.”
Sterile.
I sort through my mental dictionary and make sure I’m not confusing that word with another. This is not a word you mistake and react to incorrectly.
As it dawns on me what he’s saying, his features smoothen into an emotionless mask, it breaks my heart. This is why he lied to me by omission.
“Oh, Lance,” I say, the words bound up together as I force them by my lips.
He works a finger around the inside corner of his eye and then around his nose. He sniffles, like he’s just clearing out his nostrils, but I hear the fear, the sadness.
I reach across the console, my arms going around his neck. Right or wrong, I can’t stop myself from hugging this beautiful, broken man as a tear slips down his cheek. He squeezes me so tight I can barely breathe, but I’m positive I don’t need air to survive right now. I just need him and for him to know I’m here.
We sit for a long time wrapped in each other’s arms. A truck goes by all too fast, rocking Lance’s car back and forth. We just sway along with it, unable, or unwilling, to pull apart.
With a kiss to the spot just below his earlobe, I finally lean back. My heart is so swollen it puts pressure on every other organ in my chest. Brushing a strand of hair off his forehead, I search his eyes.
“Fuck her,” I say, trying to get him to smile. “There are so many ways to build a family. Fuck her for not seeing that.”
His forehead creases as he now leans away from me. “I can’t blame anyone for wanting kids.”
“Then she didn’t love you.” I fall back into my seat, my eyes blinking back tears. This time, they’re for me.
I wouldn’t have left him after the accident. I wouldn’t have left him if it left him in a wheelchair and I had to take care of him every day for the rest of my life. Because even if that were my day, it would still be a day with him.
Tears slip down my cheeks, burning hot as they fall to my shirt.
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