by Kate Aster
I glance her up and down. She isn’t too far from the truth about that. The heavy makeup and big hair looks fine when she has her forty-pound princess dress on. But in her cutaway shorts and t-shirt, she does look like she’s in a questionable line of work.
“Want me to run over there and get some?” I offer.
“I’ll never make it in time. It’s on the way. I’ll be fine.” She disappears into her bathroom. “Leash is on the kitchen table and the extra keys are next to it.”
“Thanks,” I call into her, only then noticing her roommate passed out on the couch. I stare at her for a few beats, more to make sure that she’s still breathing than anything else. And then I thank God for Logan so that I don’t have to stay here till I find out about the foreclosure.
Logan. Again, my mind wanders happily in his direction as I shut and lock the door behind me, with Skylar tugging at her leash.
So, Logan thinks I’m too young for him. The very thought elicits another chuckle from me as I load Skylar into my small hatchback with my three fosters.
Too young? Since I was twelve or thirteen, I’ve been told I was too mature. That I should loosen up and have more fun. Not take life so seriously. Act my age.
This is the first time anyone’s ever said I was too young for them.
Not that I’ve dated many thirty-somethings. There was one once who took me to dinner a couple times in Dayton. He seemed really nice till the third dinner he forgot to take off his wedding band before meeting me at the restaurant. That sort of made me cut things short.
Other women might be annoyed by Logan’s blow-off, but I’m not. I’ve been told I’m cute, but even as recently as last month, a guy I was attracted to at an adoption event ended up dating Cass. Who could blame him? Look at her. Then look at me. Unless a guy is attracted to my wider, better-for-birthing hips, of course he’d go for my rail thin model friend. I didn’t even lose an ounce of self-esteem over that one.
So I can handle having an attractive, but off-limits man living next door, especially one who is big-hearted enough to let my dogs and me stay there for free.
But only if I get to ogle him when he wears a tight t-shirt.
I pull into a space right in front of Sally Sweet’s and see Kim already setting up lawn chairs. A tray with two coffee cups is resting on the concrete at her feet and my smile forms at the sight of it.
I love Kim. I love coffee. And the fact that Kim brings me coffee makes me devoted to my bestie till the day I die.
“Am I late?” I ask.
Her eyes look sad. “No. I had to bolt out of the house early. My mom was in a mood and if I stuck around, I think she would have come up with an excuse to not babysit.”
“What’s wrong, hon? You look totally depressed.”
“I am depressed.” She takes two of the dogs off my hands. “Do you know what it’s like trying to be a mom to your son when you’re living with your own mom who still treats you like you’re sixteen years old?”
I have no clue what that would be like. I’m still at the stage in my life when I can’t even imagine myself as a mother. I have a hard enough time with my dogs. “I’m sorry. Did she say something bitchy?”
She rolls her eyes. “She always says something bitchy. And then Dad just stands there and shakes his head at me like I’m the most disappointing thing in his life. I swear to God, Allie, I have to get out of there.”
I sit down and sip my coffee contemplatively. “How much money have you saved up?”
“Not enough for a down payment on anything yet.” Kim is the manager of a flower shop just off Anders Street. And even though she’s manager, there’s not a ton of money rolling in.
“What if you pulled Connor out of pre-K?”
“I have to put him somewhere while I work. Daycare is just as expensive.”
“Maybe you could move in with me for a couple months? There’s tons of space in that townhouse and Logan seems to have a sweet spot for kids. He has a niece he really adores.”
I see something in Kim’s eyes soften, probably from hearing about a single man who actually likes kids. I know she is convinced they don’t exist, and after the way Connor’s dad bolted on Kim when she said she was pregnant, I guess I can understand why she’d think that. “Thanks. But it’s useless to move there for a couple months and then just have to move again.”
I lean back, watching the slow traffic. “I wonder what Logan is going to sell those townhomes for when he’s done with them.”
She shakes her head. “A lot more than I can afford. I guarantee it. What I need is a better job. But all the better paying jobs won’t allow me to pick up Connor at 3:00.”
“Yeah, but with a better paying job, you’d be able to afford aftercare.”
“And how many better paying jobs are there around here? None. If I commuted all the way to the city, I’d be on the road over two hours a day. Even you said you applied to the corporations close-by and they all rejected you.”
“But that was me, not you.”
“Yeah, well, I’ve sent them all résumés, but I’m trapped till I hear back anything.”
My heart breaks for her. I don’t know how single moms do it. I drape my arm around her. “Well, I’ve got two parties booked this week, and I’d love to unload one on you.”
Her features brightening, she looks at me. “Really?”
“Really.” Why not? Foreclosure or not, she can use the income more than I can.
Chapter 10
- LOGAN -
My hammock swings low, nearly touching the grass as I settle in under the canopy of stars. It must have stretched from the rain, and I’ll hook it up higher on the chain next time I’m standing. But that won’t be for another six hours, if I get my way.
I haven’t slept out here since last fall. I’d be crazy to sleep outside in the middle of an Ohio winter, and I already feel crazy enough with my heart hammering in my chest at the sound of silence. I had put the hammock out here, outside my fenced-in backyard, down near the creek where the babbling water offers some kind of noise.
The crickets are especially loud tonight, and I’m grateful. I can barely hear the owl hoot over their constant singing.
It’s just what I need—a kind of natural chaos. Unpredictable. From the skittering sound of a field mouse running alongside my hammock to the sound of a fish flopping in the water, there is just enough noise to distract my brain from the shouts and gunfire of that night seven thousand miles away.
It’s been more than two years, and countless hours talking to a psych. But the images still come to me on nights like this, when silence looms and I’m waiting for the stillness to be shattered by the explosion of an IED followed by enemy fire the same as it had that night.
And then the choices I made in those moments wrap themselves around my heart like a vise and squeeze till I’m breathless.
If I didn’t have Allie living next door, I’d start working on #4 right now, pulling off the 1970s wood paneling and demolishing the timeworn kitchen cabinets. Even though I warned her that I’d be a noisy neighbor, I feel no need to torment her at this late hour.
She works hard during the day and needs her sleep. Every spare minute she has from her two jobs, she’s been showing up in #3 ready to paint. I feel guilty, but love the company just as much as the help. And she seems so eager to learn this stuff. Watching her fire off a nail gun for the first time was like watching Hannah open up her Christmas presents from Santa. Her eyes were full of excitement.
It’s hard for me to not get turned on by a woman with a nail gun.
But she’s just 24. I was an idiot at 24, full of ideals and something that I thought was courage but was really just ignorance. I didn’t know what the world could hold for a person. Not like I do now.
I hope she keeps that idealism and doesn’t have it killed like mine was.
The crackling sound of tires on gravel carries over the wind and my ears perk up. It’s Allie—I can tell because the muffler sounds like it
’s seen better days—and I’m momentarily irked that I’ve been laying out here to keep quiet when I could have been working on #4.
I give myself a shake as I hear her dogs bark briefly when she enters her townhome. I hope they don’t get Kosmo started up next door. He looked to be in the middle of an enviably sound sleep when I left him on my bed a few minutes ago.
I worry about Allie, out late all the time, juggling two jobs and still up at the crack to walk her dogs every morning. I worry about her, I tell myself, because it’s part of that brotherly attitude I’m trying to adopt with her.
But if I were really her brother I wouldn’t be checking out her ass every time she stoops over to unleash her dogs.
In my peripheral vision, I see a few of her lights flick on, and she lets her dogs out in the backyard. It somehow warms me to have her nearby. Living in Annapolis, I became accustomed to having neighbors within shouting distance.
Minutes later, I hear her back door open again and watch her dogs jog back into her house. I see her silhouette coming out into her backyard. I can’t quite make out what she’s doing until she opens up her fence and starts approaching me.
“Hey,” I say.
She jumps in response. “You scared me. I saw you when I let the dogs out and thought you had fallen asleep out here.” She extends her hands. “I brought you a blanket.”
My heart melts in a way that is completely unexpected. That’s probably the most thoughtful thing a woman has done for me, outside of my mom. “Thanks. That’s really nice of you.”
“What are you doing out here?”
“Just love to sleep under the stars,” The words fall from my lips so easily, even though it’s not the whole story. I do love sleeping under the stars. But that’s hell-and-gone from why I’m out here.
“Really?”
“Sure. Stay out here a few minutes and you can sometimes see the Milky Way.”
She glances upward. “I don’t see it.”
“You have to let your eyes adjust. Here.” I scoot over on the hammock. “Room enough for two.” It’s the God’s truth. You could fit a family of four on this hammock, if you were hell-bent on doing it. So I shouldn’t even feel the faintest electric charge in my heart at the prospect of her lying next to me.
I shouldn’t. But I do.
“Okay,” she answers, choosing to stay on the outer side of the blanket. Good call, Allie.
“Your eyes will adjust completely after forty-five minutes.”
“I’ve never seen the Milky Way.”
“And you’ve lived in the Milky Way your whole life. That’s unacceptable.”
She smiles. “Nah, I’m not really from the Milky Way. Moved here when I was eight. I’m an Andromeda girl.”
“Oh, well, that explains a lot.” I chuckle.
“So you must like camping, I’ll bet.”
“Love it. My brothers and I had a tent that we’d spontaneously put up in the backyard any clear night that came along. I used to wake them up at midnight sometimes, when the stars were out, and we’d race out the back door without even thinking twice. Used to drive my mom nuts, the back door slamming shut in the middle of the night and the dogs barking. You never did that as a kid?”
“Spontaneity has never been my thing.”
“No?”
“No,” she answers firmly. “Come on, think about it. Last time I tried to be spontaneous, you were stuck with two orders of dessert.”
“Ahh. The lava cake.”
“Mmm. You ordered lava cake? Had I know that, I might have gotten the nerve to stick it out.”
“So was I your first?”
“Excuse me?”
“Your first act of spontaneity.”
Frowning, her chest rises and falls in a deep breath. “No. I went to New York City once on a whim with my boyfriend and some friends from college.”
“Oh, hey, that sounds hopeful. You can’t not have fun in New York. Well, unless you got mugged. Tell me that didn’t happen.”
There’s a long pause, just long enough for me to look over at her and see her eyes glistening under the starlight. Glistening too much.
“It was Thanksgiving. I was supposed to go home for the holiday, you know? I had promised my parents I would. But everyone got this crazy idea of driving to New York for the parade. My parents were fine with it when I called to tell them I wasn’t coming.” She pulls a corner of the blanket over to her hands, and toys with the edge of it. “My dad died of an aneurism that weekend.”
“Oh, Allie. I’m so sorry.”
“I keep thinking that if I had just gone home, I would have noticed something. Maybe I would have had him go to the ER. My dad and I were like this,” she says, raising her hand and crossing two fingers. “I knew what was on his mind before he did sometimes. It was almost eerie, my mom used to say. Maybe I would have known and could have gotten him help more quickly. Maybe I could have saved him.”
As she brushes her hand against her cheek, my heart cracks at the sight of the tears, now streaked across her fingers. Without thinking, I take her hand in mine, and am not fully prepared for the charge of emotion that swells inside of me when I feel her cool fingers encompassed in my warm ones. “Allie, I’m no doctor and don’t know much about aneurisms, but if there were any signs that you could have noticed, your dad would have gotten to the ER on his own. Was your mother with him?”
She nods. “But she wasn’t as connected to Dad as I was. Mom used to say I was his clone.” She smiles, but I can tell it’s forced.
A flood of advice is welling up behind my lips. Useless catch phrases and customary advice from PTSD specialists and shrinks, and even some of my brothers in the SEALs who didn’t bear the weight of that deadly mission on their shoulders quite as squarely as I did. But none of their well-meaning words will help her. I know that for a fact.
“I was worried about you tonight,” I say instead.
“Huh?” she answers.
“You. Driving home late on this narrow country road. If something happened to you, it would be my fault.”
“No, it wouldn’t.”
“Yes. It absolutely would. I offered this place to you. And if you got hurt or worse, then it would be my fault.”
“Oh, I get it. You’re telling me that I can’t take responsibility for everything.”
“Yep, exactly. You can’t control all the bad things that can happen in life any more than the good things. And even though it doesn’t take the hurt away, it’s the truth. What if a meteor tore out of the sky right now, and killed you? My fault. I was the reason you’re lying out here.”
“What if Kosmo decides he hates you and clenches his thick jaw right over your jugular while you’re sleeping?” Her eyes glimmer mischievously and I’m glad to see it.
“Totally your fault. You handed over the dog to me.” I smile back. “Imagine all the dog bites and fur allergies you’ve caused in your life. It’s a wonder you can sleep at night.” I move to my side slightly, trying to keep my arms from wrapping around her protectively. “But also think of all the smiles you’ve brought, all the love and the laughter, all the lives you’ve saved.” What I’m saying is borderline sappy, but I think it’s what she needs to hear.
She sighs. “Okay, you win.”
“I’ll tell you what,” I begin, barely letting the words form in my brain before escaping me. “I’ll help you be more spontaneous and you can help me be less jaded.”
“Deal,” she extends her right hand to shake mine, and only then do I realize I’m still holding her left one.
My breath catches at the feel of holding both her hands in mine, and I glance back up at the stars to distract myself. I pause. “So why do you even live out here, anyway? There aren’t many new grad jobs. You could do a lot better in Cincinnati or Dayton or Columbus. Or hell, you’ve got no obligations holding you down. You could move anywhere.”
She shrugs, and the movement causes her shoulder to nestle in closer to my body. The feeling is making my
heart beat a little faster, especially now that I’m thinking Allie isn’t as starry-eyed as I think she should still be at 24.
“My dad grew up here, and it just seemed like a good idea at the time,” she responds. “I don’t know. It makes no sense, but I just missed him and wanted to feel closer to him.” Giving a shiver, she pulls the end of the light blanket over herself. “So why are you here, Logan?”
My lips press together, as I prepare to actually share something of myself. I’m not very good at it, but I can’t help feeling like she’s given me a little piece of her world tonight, and I really should do the same. “My dad got diagnosed with vascular dementia.”
“What’s that?”
“It’s a little similar to Alzheimer’s. Essentially, he’s losing his memory. Eventually, he won’t even know who I am anymore.”
“I’m so sorry, Logan.”
“It’s okay. He’s actually doing really well right now. But when it first happened, I thought I’d be needed out here more. I’ve been away for a long time. Might be good to help out for a change.” I frown, thinking how little help I’ve been since I arrived. My mom is getting by fine with my dad without any help from me. Staring up at the stars right now, I’m not really sure why I’m here anymore.
“So, do you plan to head to San Diego when you’re done with the townhomes?”
Her words make my insides knot. “Why would I do that?”
“Well, you had told me once that San Diego is home for you. I just figured if your family is doing all right, you’d head there.”
My blood pressure is inching upwards and I feel that familiar squeeze in my chest. “I might,” I answer her, knowing that’s exactly what I want to do, but exactly what I can’t do.
I hate how weak it makes me feel to have survived countless missions only to cower behind the excuse of my family now. But facing an enemy armed with AK-47s is a lot easier than what I’m avoiding in San Diego.
“See the Milky Way yet?” I ask, anxious to change the subject.