One Call Away

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One Call Away Page 17

by Emily Goodwin


  “Chase Henson?” he asks.

  “That’s me,” I say, looking at the small box in his hands. I have to sign for it, and as soon as I see the shipping label, I realize it’s my phone, sent back from the Apple store with a new screen. There was a time I didn’t think I could live without this thing, now I’m not even excited to get it back. Just how disconnected I was from my previous life didn’t hit me until right now, as I feel the light weight of the box in my hands.

  I haven’t talked to anyone I used to in weeks. I haven’t thought about working a job in even longer. And it’s really fucking nice. Maybe I won’t turn this phone back on. Maybe I should keep it in this box and forget that part of me completely.

  Start over fresh in Summer Hill.

  With Sierra.

  “I bet you’re happy to get that back,” Josh says as we walk back up the stairs to the apartment. “You can let your friends know you’re still alive.”

  “Hah, yeah.” There’s only one person I trust enough to consider a friend, and not talking to him for days or even weeks at a time is nothing out of the ordinary. Not talking to him might be a good thing. We tend to get into trouble when we’re together.

  Josh and I go back upstairs and watch a couple of episodes of Breaking Bad—Josh was appalled when I said I hadn’t seen it. After he leaves, I do the shit I’ve been putting off: grocery shopping and straightening up the apartment. I get done a little before Sierra calls, saying she’s going to go home to take care of her cats and get changed, then she’ll be over.

  I shower and throw fresh sheets on the bed, then end up watching another episode of Breaking Bad. I turn the TV off and stand, looking at the brown box on the counter. As much as I want to forget about the past, I know I should at least turn on the damn phone and get my mom’s number off it. It might be sad I don’t know her number off the top of my head. It’s changed multiple times over the years, and we rarely talk. There’s no point in memorizing it. Still, she’s my mother and though she resents the hell out of me, I need to know if something happens.

  The phone is completely dead of course and will take a few minutes before it even turns on. I plug it in and forget about it as soon as Sierra knocks on the door. She’s wearing a coral-colored dress that shows off her perfect tits and hugs her tight around the waist before flaring out, giving the whole thing a contradicting sexy-yet-innocent look that instantly turns me on.

  “I brought you a home-cooked dinner,” she says, holding up a wicker basket. The moment she’s inside and the door closes, I grab her and kiss her hard. Still holding the basket in one hand, she curls her other around me, fingers going to my hair.

  “It smells amazing,” I tell her, lips brushing against hers. “You made it?”

  “I wish. My parents’ personal chef did. I stopped by on my way out and was able to get us something to eat. Are you hungry?”

  “Starving.” I put my mouth on Sierra’s neck, teeth grazing her flesh. She groans and tips her head back, wanting more. I move away, take her hand, and lead her to the table. I’ve come to realize that getting Sierra hot and bothered and then not immediately having sex leads to her desperately fucking me as hard as she can. Walking away from her is a challenge for me, that’s for sure, but the way she’ll be looking at me in an hour will make this worth it.

  “I was super paranoid about this. One of the side dishes had shellfish in it. So I used a new spoon for everything in case it got cross-contaminated and got food from the opposite side of the dishes. I don’t want to kill you. Not yet at least.”

  I smile at Sierra. “That probably won’t affect me. I have to actually eat it to have a bad reaction.”

  She slowly shakes her head, eyes trained on me. “I’m not willing to risk it. I like you, Chase Henson. I want to keep you around a bit longer.”

  It dawns on me as she begins to unpack dinner that she’s probably hypersensitive to losing anyone she cares about. I take her hand before she grabs a biscuit.

  “Thanks, though. For making sure.”

  “Of course, Chase.”

  Our eyes meet and my heart does that stupid skip-a-beat thing again. So much emotion is conveyed in under a second it throws me for a loop. She wants her happy ending as much as I want to give it to her.

  Not the mystery woman.

  Her.

  And I want to be a part of it.

  Leave it to Sierra to make me have a moment right here and right now, in the most mundane setting.

  I get us plates and silverware and go back to the table.

  “I grew up thinking these were a family recipe,” she tells me, breaking apart a biscuit and putting it on her plate. “And then when I was like sixteen I found out it was from the can. Talk about an existential crisis.”

  “Your whole life was a lie,” I laugh.

  “Yes! I mean, I knew my mom didn’t cook worth a shit, but I honestly thought my grandma made the best biscuits in the history of biscuits every holiday. Then I found out the truth.” She breaks off a small piece and eats it while getting more food out. “And to this day, I can’t open a can of biscuits without wincing and feeling shame.”

  “I’ve made canned biscuits maybe three times in my life and all three times I had to close my eyes and look away,” I admit.

  “It’s awful! Couldn’t they come up with a better way to do that by now?”

  “You’d think so.”

  Sierra shakes her head, smiling, and serves dinner for us both.

  “What was it like growing up with a personal chef?” I ask, picking up my fork.

  She shrugs. “It all seemed normal to me for years, until I started going to friends’ houses and hearing how they’d help their moms cook dinner or make cookies together. It made me kind of sad to realize that I was missing out on so much with my own mother. Which I know…poor pitiful me and my personal chef.”

  “No, no, I get you. My own mother wasn’t involved in the least, so I understand that feeling of letdown when you see other people. Like how the fuck did they get things so…so…right?”

  It’s not the first time words escaped me, the truth seeping out, desperate to finally be set free. It won’t be the last time. And for the life of me, I cannot figure out why the fuck Sierra makes me so unhinged.

  “I don’t want to sound pretentious by saying that upholding the perfect family image was damaging or anything, but sometimes I’d see my friends and wish I had what they had. Because all the glitz and glamour comes with a cost. I still rarely see my father.”

  “So I take it you don’t want to go into the family business, right?” I ask slowly, recalling her voicemail about getting into grad school. I don’t know what her focus was, but I doubt it was agriculture.

  “Not in the same way my dad runs things. The plan was for the three of us—my brother, sister, and I—to take equal parts. Scott wants nothing to do with farming, obviously, and Sam can’t wait to take over.” Sierra lets out a breath and spreads butter on her biscuit. “But the Belmonts have been farmers for years, and I like that family history. I’m a part owner of the farm whether I like it or not, and there’s no way I’d sell my share. When I was a kid, I wanted to be a farmer, like my dad. My sister wanted to be a farmer’s wife. That’s the Belmont way, after all.”

  “That doesn’t suit you. At all. You’re not the kind of woman who can sit idly by and be a trophy wife.”

  Sierra raises her head, looking into my eyes. “What kind of woman am I?”

  “That’s a loaded question,” I say with a chuckle. “You are smart and kind. You won’t sit around taking orders from someone, and you won’t let anyone use your gender as a handicap and play that role of ‘farmer’s wife.’ You want to make the world a better place, even though the last year or so hasn’t been kind to you. You believe people are inherently good, and for some unknown reason, you make people like me see it too.”

  Sierra’s eyes gloss over, and for a beat, she stares at me. Then she blinks and looks away. “Sounds about right.”


  “I wanted to be an Avenger when I was a kid,” I tell her, digging into my food. “At least you had more ambition than me.”

  “Aspiring to be a superhero is pretty ambitious.”

  “Ambitious but not realistic.”

  Sierra’s fork goes limp in her hand, resting against her plate. “What did you do? Before you came here, I mean.”

  I lean back in my chair. “A lot of things. I never found anything that stuck.” It’s a half-truth, but I still feel like shit for saying it. Though I did do a lot of things, like I said, none are things I’m proud of. All are far from anything I’d share with Sierra. I don’t want her to look at me differently than she is now.

  “I bartended a bit before I came here,” I say, which is true. To an extent again. Fuck. I mentally sigh. “At a bar on the shore in New Jersey.”

  She scoops up rice with her fork and snickers. “You lived on the Jersey Shore?”

  “It’s not as bad as the show makes it.”

  “So you’re not D.T.F. tonight?”

  I raise an eyebrow. “I should be glad I have no idea what you’re talking about, right?”

  Sierra laughs. “Yes, and I am too. Is that where you’re from originally? You don’t have a Jersey accent, but you do sound northern.”

  “And you sound southern. Though not as much as other people in this town.”

  She nods. “It’s because my mom doesn’t have an accent.”

  “Oh, right. You said she’s from the east coast.”

  “Yeah. Though she’s picked up on the Mississippi accent more and more over time. Stay here long enough and you’ll pick it up too.”

  “Maybe mine will rub off on you.”

  “Lisa and I used to pretend we were from New York and see if we could get people to believe us.”

  “Did it work?”

  She shakes her head. “Not at all. But we were usually drinking when we’d play that game.”

  “I was born and raised in Indiana,” I tell her. “Northern Indiana, close to Lake Michigan, to be exact, and not all that far from Chicago, actually.”

  “Does it get cold there in the winter?”

  “Very. With lots of snow since we’re by the lake.”

  “I like snow. It’s so pretty.”

  “Has it ever snowed here?”

  “A few times,” she says. “It’s never much though. I went to Park City, Utah a few years back for a New Year’s ski trip and party. It was breathtaking.”

  “You’ll have to see the piers in Lake Michigan in the winter then. The ice build-up is insane.”

  “I’d like that.”

  “I’ll take you someday.”

  Sierra smiles. “I’m going to hold you to it.”

  17

  Sierra

  I rake my fingers through Chase’s hair, and he lets out a soft moan in his sleep. Leaning back into the pillows, I close my eyes as well even though I’m not tired. I know Chase only got a few hours of sleep last night and didn’t nap like he intended to during the day. We have time before the bonfire at Rob’s tonight, so he might as well sleep.

  And he has to be exhausted from the sex we just had. Hell, I am, and I wasn’t the one holding me up against the wall the entire time.

  We’re in his bed, both still naked. Chase’s head is nestled against my breasts, and he has one arm lazily draped around me. I hook my leg over him, and a foreign feeling of peace falls over me. It’s so pleasant it’s almost startling. I didn’t think I’d ever be able to get on with my life after Jake, let alone find another person who gets me the way that Jake did.

  I’m drifting to sleep when Chase’s phone vibrates on the nightstand next to me. Chase jerks awake, eyes wide as he sits up.

  “It’s your phone,” I tell him and reach for it, pulling it off the charger. “Is this new? I thought you had a different one.”

  “I do,” he says and pushes himself up.

  “Whoa, that’s a lot of missed texts,” I blurt when I see the screen. Chase takes the phone before I can get a better look. “Did that say you have thirty-seven texts from someone named Jax?”

  “Yeah. This is my phone—my real phone. The one I’ve been using is a temporary, so to speak.”

  “What?”

  “Dakota, my niece, broke the screen my first day here. I sent it away to be fixed and forgot about it until it came back today.”

  “Who’s Jax?” I ask, trying to get another look at the phone. I can be a bit nosey regardless, and right now I really want to know why Chase has so many missed texts and calls.

  “A friend.” He sets the phone down and reaches for me.

  “Shouldn’t you text him back?”

  “Nah, it’s not important.”

  “He sent you like forty texts. I think that warrants at least a look.”

  Chase shrugs and grabs me by the waist, sliding me to him. “Later. We should probably leave, right?”

  “Probably. I don’t know what time it is.” The sun set a while ago, and soft moonlight filters through the window in Chase’s bedroom. He presses the home button on his phone to check the time, and I see that has a slew of missed calls as well as texts. How is he not dying to read them?

  “Nine twenty-three,” he tells me.

  “Wow. I did not realize it was that late.”

  “We’re good at losing track of time.” He grins and moves closer.

  “Very. Maybe we can lose track of time again later?”

  His lips graze mine as he talks, his deep voice rumbling through me. “Not maybe. Definitely.”

  Dark clouds blanket the sky, and the smell of rain sits heavy in the air, mixing with the thick scent of the bonfire. The crackles and pops of the fire fight to drown out the late-night singing of the crickets, and talk and laughter weave between the two, muted by the country music that’s coming from the barn. Humidity clings to the night, blanketing us in sticky heat.

  This is summer the way it should be. I’ve spent most of my summers like this, outside with friends, partying in some sense or the other.

  “You look lost in thought,” Chase says, handing me a can of beer. I crack the top and take a sip. I’m not a fan of beer. The idea of it sounds nice, refreshing even, but I can’t get past the taste. It’s terrible.

  “I am. I was thinking of how these get-togethers have evolved over the years. From innocent slumber parties with my girlfriends to crazy parties in college to this…low-key, more adult fun. I missed that last transition.”

  Chase puts his arm around me and kisses my forehead. Sometimes saying nothing is the best thing to hear, and Chase knows how powerful his silence can be.

  “Siiieerrraaaa!” Lisa calls from across the yard, throwing her hands up.

  “I think she missed the transition too,” Chase jokes and I laugh.

  “Lisa will always be in the crazy stage. She’s been in the crazy stage since birth.”

  “I told you to be here at nine, hooker,” Lisa bellows as she rushes over, throwing her arms around me. She’s already drunk and the party just started. “It’s like ten…ten…something.”

  “It’s ten fifteen. That makes me fashionably late.”

  Lisa pouts. “But I had no one to tell me to stop taking shots. Or take shots with. Want one?” She turns before I can answer. “Rob! Bring me those tequila shots.”

  “I don’t think Sierra wants one of those,” Chase says, eyes meeting mine. He arches his eyebrows and smiles, and I roll my eyes back at him, knowing he’s referencing that time I almost had a threesome with Mr. and Mrs. Backwoods.

  “Why don’t you let Sierra make her own decisions,” Lisa slurs.

  I love and hate Drunk Lisa. She lacks a filter most days, and when she’s been drinking, the filter is completely off and locked away in some repressed compartment in her mind that won’t surface again until at least three hours after her hangover wears off.

  “I don’t want tequila,” I say, grimacing. “Do you have any wine inside, though?”

  �
��Of course. Come with me. I have to pee anyway.”

  I take Chase’s hand and start forward after Lisa.

  “No,” she says, turning around. She holds up her hand, squinting at Chase. “Just the girls.”

  I shake my head. “Lisa, chill a little.”

  “Rob!” she calls, turning away from us. He jogs over a few seconds later.

  “What’s up, babe? And hey, guys,” Rob says.

  Lisa takes my hand out of Chase’s and loops her arm through mine. “I need to take Sierra into the house for some girl stuff. You talk to Chase. Because if we’re going to stay together and they’re going to be together, then the two of you need to get along.”

  “We do get along,” Rob says slowly, not following Lisa’s drunk logic.

  “Ugh,” she sighs, throwing her head back. “You don’t know each other. Go be friends. Start a bromance and become best friends. Come on, Sierra.”

  I look at Chase, who is amused by the whole thing, and gives me a small nod, telling me to go with Lisa.

  “What the fuck?” Lisa blurts as soon as we’re inside.

  “About what?” I ask her.

  She blinks, and then shakes her head. “I don’t remember. Wine is in the fridge. I’m going to pee.” She stumbles through Rob’s house to the bathroom while I open a bottle of wine, trading my beer for a plastic wine glass. I fill it halfway, take a few sips, and lean on the counter while I wait for my cousin.

  “Where’s my glass?” she asks when she’s back in the kitchen.

  “I’ll pour you one later. How about some food?”

  “I’m drinking my calories tonight.”

  “Take a break for a minute and dance with me,” I try, taking her arm and pulling her out the door. I see Chase standing by the fire, talking with Rob and his friends.

  “You like him, don’t you?” Lisa slurs.

  “Yeah. I hope so, at least, since we’re sleeping together.”

  “You know what I mean. Like really like him.”

  “I’m starting to.”

  “Good.” Lisa gives me a smile and rests her head on my shoulder. If she’s getting tired already, there’s no way she’s going to make it through the rest of the night. “But it is weird seeing you with someone other than Jake. When you guys were out there, backs turned, I thought it was you and Jake for a second. Then I saw you with Chase and it’s just weird.”

 

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