Erica's Choice

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Erica's Choice Page 24

by Sami Lee


  Forever.

  Brick by brick, Griff’s fortitude started to crumble. The hot sting of tears came, their progress down his cheeks unstoppable. He barely managed to quash the urge to sob out loud. He cried in silence, knowing he’d have to gather his composure before Erica returned. If she saw him like this, she’d give up hope and that was all she had right now.

  “Jesus, Corey,” he rasped. “I don’t want to be here without you. I fucking love you, mate. I always have.”

  Griff could vividly recall the day Corey had first walked into Ashton Heights fire station, as eager as a kid on his first day of school, flashing that irrepressible smile. Griff’s relationship with Anna and Jack had already begun its painful decline, and Corey had been like a light in the gathering darkness. A balm to his soul who’d become an integral component of Griff’s heart as the years went on.

  Without Corey, Griff had no idea how his heart would keep beating.

  Realizing Erica would be back any minute, Griff forcibly got ahold of himself. He wiped the moisture from his eyes with the heels of his hands. Then he saw Corey staring at him.

  Griff’s heart skipped. He wiped his eyes again, praying the tears hadn’t blurred his vision to the point he’d hallucinated. But there they were—Corey’s baby blues, open and aware. “Cor?”

  His lips moved, but his voice was too threadbare to be heard. Griff hurried to the side of the bed, bending his head close to Corey’s. “What is it?”

  After a moment, Griff could make out one word. “…crying.”

  Griff laughed, the tears making a reappearance. “Hell yeah, I was crying. I thought I was going to lose you.”

  Corey’s forehead scrunched, as though he couldn’t quite comprehend that. Griff touched a hand to Corey’s head, tentatively brushing up against the crepe bandage and wishing he could feel Corey’s silken hair. “Don’t drift off again yet, I have to get the nurse.”

  His head moved only slightly, but Griff easily interpreted the side-to-side motion. He remained by Corey’s side, waiting patiently while he struggled to form the words. “Sorry,” he choked out. Then, “Tell…Erica.”

  Griff smiled. “Do I look like the town crier? Tell her yourself.”

  The hospital bed was surrounded by medical professionals when Erica returned. Griff managed to catch the Styrofoam cups she held before they spilled their contents all over the floor. He held them out at his sides as Erica collapsed against his chest. “He’s awake. He spoke to me.”

  She lifted her head. “What did he say?”

  “He told me to tell you he was sorry.”

  “Oh, Corey.”

  “We have him back, Red. I know it.”

  Griff had never been more relieved in his life, nor more determined. Corey was going to need a lot of TLC on the road to recovery, and they were going to give it to him.

  He and Erica.

  Corey figured he knew what lab monkeys felt like. He was poked, prodded and examined, all while being trapped in a bed that had bars on both sides. Why they had to cage him in, he had no idea. He could barely move, let alone fall out of bloody bed.

  His family came by to see him. His sister Sasha and his parents who’d cut short the first vacation they’d been on in ten years. Corey felt bad about that and resolved to help them pay for another trip, as soon as he got his life, and his credit card, back.

  The drugs they gave him took the edge off the pain, but Corey could feel the assortment of injuries leaving their impression on his body. He’d be in hell once they cut off the morphine. Still, that would be about the time he was ready to get out of here. That he was looking forward to. There was only so much he could take of being the center of attention. But the doctors wouldn’t give him a definitive time frame on his recovery, and Corey feared they didn’t want to depress him with the prospect of Christmas spent staring out a hospital window.

  His memory of the events leading up to his accident was hazy. He recalled nothing of the accident or the vehicle that had hit him or of pushing an accident victim’s stretcher out of its path.

  “You’ll have to trust me then,” Griff had said. “You’re a hero.”

  Corey had scowled, both at the concept of heroism, which he never had been able to get his head around, and at the glow of admiration on Griff’s face. Corey admired him. It had never been the other way around. Yet lately it seemed like Griff couldn’t stop staring at him with a goofy look on his face, like he’d done something miraculous. Like he wanted to throw his arms around Corey and squeeze.

  And Erica. Every time she saw him tears sprang to her eyes. She would straighten his sheets and try to fluff his pillow and ask the nurse a million questions about his feeding and sleeping habits. She kissed him over and over, but on the cheek or the hand, her brown eyes filled with…what? Concern, admiration, affection maybe. But love? Corey couldn’t be sure. His memory of the day of the accident might be hazy, but he remembered one thing clearly. Erica screaming at him that her life was none of his business. Erica storming away from him, slamming the door. Griff yelling at him about what an idiot he was, how he’d let Erica down.

  Were her visits about nothing more than obligation? He’d seen Erica and Griff hugging in the hallway a couple of times, clinging tight like a couple of shipwreck survivors. He’d witnessed the way Griff would kiss her on the forehead, his eyes closed like he wanted to concentrate all his attention on how she felt in his arms. He deduced from the details of their murmured conversations that Erica was staying at Griff’s place. They were practically living together as a couple.

  So where did that leave Corey?

  Stuck in here, that’s where. For weeks, maybe months, while Griff and Erica built a life together. Without him.

  The notion was like a kick in the chest.

  One day Erica came in doing her now-familiar Florence Nightingale impression. Corey watched her questioning the nurses, reading his chart, placing another vase of flowers on the windowsill and arranging the petals just so. Realization hit him like a fireball that sucked the oxygen out of his lungs.

  Erica was used to taking care of sick people. She’d been doing it ever since she was a kid, with her mother, then more recently with her aunt. This was habit for her, a habit she should never have had to acquire. The last thing Corey wanted was to be one more person Erica had to take care of, someone she put her own needs aside for.

  And she needed Griff, the man who hadn’t said the wrong thing that day. The man who, when the chips were down, was always there for the people he loved. Griff loved Erica, there was no question of that. He’d stand by her no matter what. By comparison, Corey was the broken man in hospital who hadn’t lent his support when she’d needed it most, and who couldn’t even wrap his arms around her.

  It was pretty obvious who Erica would be better off with.

  She smiled at him as she approached the bed, her face radiant. False cheer. “How are you feeling today?”

  “Like crap,” Corey growled, thinking it was true right down to the core of his soul.

  Erica’s expression turned to one of concern. “Are they giving you enough painkillers? Do you want me to go see if they’ll up the dose?”

  “I’m on so many drugs I don’t even know what day it is.”

  “It’s Saturday. You’ve been in here for eight days.”

  She didn’t look at him as she gave him the information, and Corey could feel the tension radiating from her. Over a week and he was only now starting to gain some lucidity, starting to talk in full sentences. A chunk of Erica’s life that she’d put on hold so she could come here every day and sit by his bed. Keeping him company because she felt sorry for him. He saw the dark circles beneath her eyes. This was exhausting for her.

  And it could go on for months. He had no idea when he was getting out of here or when he’d walk without support, let alone go back to work. He was practically an invalid.

  “School must be finished,” Corey muttered. “You should be out enjoying your holiday.”r />
  She laughed. “Right. When you’re ready to put on your dancing shoes, you can come with me.”

  “I think we both know I won’t be going anywhere with you.”

  His statement was curt and Corey noticed the way she flinched. “Not for a while, no,” she conceded softly. “This is a bad day, isn’t it?”

  She must have experienced all this with her aunt—days when she was angry at her situation and took it out on the one person who was constantly there, reminding her of her own dependence. Guilt burrowed deeper in Corey’s gut. He couldn’t make Erica go through the same thing all over again. “You should go, Erica. I’m not in the mood for visitors.”

  Deterring her wasn’t that easy. “If you’re not in the mood to chat, I’ve brought a few magazines with me.”

  “Because flipping through the pages is going to be so easy.”

  His sarcasm made her glance at his battered shoulder, which he couldn’t even move, and his other arm which was wrapped in a cast. A look of stark pain chased the brightness from her expression. “I can read them to you.”

  Jesus, he even had to be read to like a three-year-old. “No thanks.”

  “Okay.” Tenderly, as though afraid of hurting him, Erica slipped her fingers through his where they rested on the mattress. “We don’t have to talk. We’ll just sit.”

  “Don’t you get it, Erica? I don’t want you in here at all.” Corey curled his fingers inward, forming a fist so she couldn’t hold his hand. One of the few movements he could make without hurting. Christ he was a mess. A beat-up, broken mess that Erica thought she had to clean up. “Leave me alone.”

  Corey turned away from the sight of her but still heard the sharp intake of breath. He sensed her anguish, as though his own multitude of agonies made him more sensitive to it. Direct hit. Corey didn’t experience one iota of triumph.

  At length, Erica announced tonelessly, “I’ll come back when you’re in a better frame of mind.”

  “Don’t,” Corey snapped, not looking at her.

  Dead silence. Then a rustling sound as she picked up her bag and walked out.

  The city view beyond the window grew blurry, and Corey shut his eyes. He heard voices in the hallway, recognized one of them as Griff’s. A moment later his footfalls sounded on the linoleum. “What the fuck did you say to her?”

  “You can piss off too.” The strident tone Corey had been aiming for broke up like a space shuttle on re-entry. “I don’t need either of you hanging around.”

  “I hate to point out the obvious, but you need both of us more than you ever have.”

  “I won’t mess up your life. I won’t be one more person Erica has to look after.”

  “Ah, Jesus.” Griff grabbed one of the vinyl chairs from beside the bed, turned it around and straddled it. The softness in his golden eyes made Corey’s heart flutter. “You idiot. She’s here because she loves you.”

  “She’s never said that.”

  “She’s said it a thousand times over the past week. You’ve been in and out, Cor, barely able to comprehend anything. Trust me. The thought of losing you almost destroyed her.” Griff’s hand was tender and warm on Corey’s cheek. “And me.”

  Corey saw the truth of it written on Griff’s face and a memory came back to him. Griff sitting by his bed, his eyes red and shoulders shuddering. Corey’s own eyes filled with tears. “Was I…was it really that bad?”

  The nurses and doctors had told him more than once how lucky he was, but Corey figured they said that to everyone. The look of abject distress on Griff’s face painted a more vivid picture. When Griff spoke, his voice was husky with emotion. “You could have died. Or stayed comatose or had brain damage. We didn’t know how it was going to go until you woke up. And we were scared out of our minds.”

  Corey swallowed a lump of uneasiness as it formed in his throat. It was true, he’d come close to losing his life. The reality filled him with horror. What if he’d never seen Griff’s face or heard Erica’s voice again?

  “I’m glad you had each other,” he said at length. “Maybe the two of you can…”

  “Don’t even start,” Griff cut him off. “We’re not a couple. It’s always been the three of us, you know that, Corey.”

  Corey shot him a steady look. “You’re moving in together. I heard you two whispering about it.”

  “That you heard, but not the million times Erica begged God for your life or told you how much she loved you?” Griff shook his head, chuckling. “We’re getting the house ready for you, you dickhead. When you get out of here you won’t be going back to some third-floor apartment. Your parents are happy to have you at their place, but Erica and I want you with us. At least she wanted it that way until you told her to rack off a few minutes ago.”

  “But, Griff, she’s had too much of this sort of thing in her life. And she has to have her operation too. She can’t be taking care of me.”

  “Erica’s talking about postponing her op.”

  “What?”

  “She wants to focus all her attention on getting you well first.”

  “No,” Corey croaked, distraught. “She can’t do that.”

  “That’s what I said but so far she could give a shit what I say about it. That’s why I need you, Cor. With her stubbornness and her insecurities and her crazy notions about self-sacrifice, loving her is a bloody minefield. The work of two men, for sure.”

  Hope surged inside Corey before he could stop it. “But I’m a wreck.”

  “Temporarily.”

  “You don’t have time to—”

  “I’ve taken long service leave,” Griff announced. “And I’ve put in for a transfer. When you get back to work at Ashton Heights—and you will, because no way did you work so hard to get in the service to quit—I won’t be there.”

  A sense of desolation hollowed Corey out. The thought of not seeing Griff every day, of not being on his team, lessened the attraction of work altogether.

  “I don’t have a choice, Cor,” Griff said, apparently noticing Corey’s agitation. “Erica was right that night. I can’t send you in to dangerous situations and not get distracted from the job. Especially not now. Almost losing you is something I won’t forget.” His voice broke on the last statement, and never had Corey been more certain of Griff’s feelings for him. They were written all over his face. “Besides, I don’t think we’d be allowed to work together anymore. I was a walking zombie for a while there, and I’m pretty sure all the guys have guessed why I was so upset about your accident.”

  “They know?”

  “Waller’s the only one who’s said anything, but yeah, I think they know I’m head over heels for you.”

  The easy way Griff admitted it, after so many weeks of denial, made Corey’s heart trip. Head over heels. It was an apt description. Corey felt like his insides were all mixed up, and not just because the accident had knocked him around. “What did Waller say?”

  “He rolled his eyes and said, ‘I’m not as dumb as I look, Griffin.’” They both laughed. Corey stopped that pretty quick because it hurt like hell. Griff grabbed his hand and held it, squeezing his fingers to let him know he ached almost as bad as Corey did, vicariously experiencing the pain. “Are you okay with people knowing about us?”

  “I never had a problem with it. You did.”

  “Bullshit. I just got so used to hiding what you meant to me, I wasn’t sure how to change that habit.” Griff eyed him steadily. “I’ve been in love with you a long time, Cor.”

  Corey raised an eyebrow but he wasn’t sure Griff saw it underneath the bandage on his head. “Really? How long?”

  Griff’s eyes narrowed. “Long enough.”

  “Are we talking about months here, or years?”

  “You’re gonna tease me about this now? You want to make a point of finding out which one of us sucks worse at this love stuff?”

  The moment of happiness slipped away as quickly as it had come. “I sent her away.”

  “That was pr
etty dumb, but Erica’s the generous type—luckily. Who else would put up with our shit?”

  “I don’t want to be a burden to her.”

  Griff rolled his eyes. Then he leaned over the bed and planted a soft kiss on Corey’s lips. “Between the two of you, I have a feeling life’s going to be a big old pain in the ass.”

  “Like you’re so easy to deal with.”

  They both turned toward the doorway to see Erica standing there, frowning at Griff. Not a serious frown, but an exasperated furrow of her brow that barely concealed the adoration behind it. Corey’s heart lifted. She was as crazy about Griff as he was, one of the many things that bound them and always would.

  “You came back.” He couldn’t keep the lilt of desperate relief out of his voice. How could she keep forgiving him for screwing up?

  “Of course I came back,” Erica said, walking into the room with confident strides. “I’ve never seen anything so pathetic as you trying to bully a woman, Corey Wachawski.”

  Griff snorted. It was all he could do not to laugh out loud at the indignant look on Corey’s face. It was a difficult thing, too, to keep from leaping out of his chair and scooping Erica up in his arms.

  She’d decided on her own that Wachawski was full of shit, when Griff had figured he might have to chase her down and patch things up between the two of them again. He’d never been so proud of her.

  Corey’s gaze narrowed. “Pathetic?”

  “That’s right. There isn’t a cruel bone in your body so stop trying to tell me you don’t want me here when you know there’s nowhere else I’d be.”

  “You have things you need to do, Erica,” Corey pointed out. “Like have your operation, for one.”

  Erica glanced at Griff. “You told him?”

  “Guilty.” Griff smiled, unrepentant. “No secrets between the three of us, Red. Not anymore.”

  “Don’t delay it, Erica,” Corey said. “It’s too important.”

  “You’re important.” A passionate fire lit her dark eyes as she moved to sit on the edge of Corey’s bed. “I’ve wallowed in my own problems long enough. Don’t you think I feel like an idiot for doing that, only to have this happen to you?”

 

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