by Ann, Jewel E
Tom put his hand on Luke’s shoulder. “Maybe she needs you to be okay first.”
Luke didn’t respond. He knew there was truth to his dad’s words. His fear held him back from being okay.
“I’ll drag her skinny ass inside.”
“Thanks, Dad.”
*
“I’m not going to have an excuse to duck out on laundry this weekend if you chop all that wood.”
Jessica dropped the ax and wiped her brow, smearing dirt along her forehead. “Sorry. I feel out of shape and Dr. Eat and Don’t Exercise won’t let me do anything because of a few little injuries that are just fine.”
“Felicity coddled him too much.” Tom leaned against the shed and blew at the steam spiraling from his coffee mug.
“How did he react?”
He studied her. “When you died?”
Jessica nodded.
“He was devastated. We all were. We’d been drowning in the fear of losing Lake and the news of you was like this goddamn freight train that came out of nowhere, barreling through what was already a shitload of wreckage. Luke was numb for months. He just existed—barely. Then Lake came out of her coma and we had to relive everything again with her: the wedding, her accident, Ben’s death, her leg, your parents, and you. I know people say that God won’t give you more than you can handle, but I think He did. I’m still not sure my boy is okay. He’s scared right now. I see it in his eyes, like any day he could break.”
“Scared of what?”
“You.”
Chapter Forty-Three
Luke suggested leaving a day early. Jessica didn’t argue. The harder she tried to hold it together in front of his family, the more she felt herself falling apart. The events of the previous month taught her one thing: death came in the unsuspecting arms of silence. Luke didn’t speak on the drive home. Even small talk seemed to be too much.
“I’ll take Jones for a walk.” Luke set their bags on the floor.
“Want company?”
His three-second delay said everything. It was the truth before the lie.
“Sure. If you want to.”
Jessica picked up her bag. “Maybe I’ll just unpack.”
“Okay.”
She took her bag to the guest room. The slam of the front door was another stab to her heart. Luke didn’t slam doors. He controlled everything.
After sitting on the edge of her bed, staring at her bag on the floor for almost thirty minutes, she decided not to unpack. Maybe she’d outstayed her welcome.
On her way to the kitchen to get a drink—a real drink—she noticed Luke’s bag on the floor. Leaving things on the floor was also something he didn’t do. What had happened to her Luke?
She grabbed his bag and took it to his room. Tossing it at the end of the bed, she stood there taking in everything that felt so familiar. Why did that familiarity, that comfort, hurt so much? Moving toward the closet like sneaking up on the enemy, she opened the cracked door and the light came on.
“Oh my God,” she whispered.
All of her clothes were exactly where they’d been when she left—when she died.
Jessica died.
Jillian lived.
She loved another.
And Luke never let go.
“I lied.”
Jessica closed her eyes at the defeat in his voice behind her.
“When I told you I’d move on and love again if you died … I lied.”
“Luke,” she whispered.
“I don’t expect anything.”
She turned. Every word he said intensified the pain and flared her anger. “Jesus, Luke … I put on a wedding dress, I went to the church, I didn’t have cold feet, I didn’t even have to think. Being with you was as easy and necessary as breathing.”
“I don’t know what you want me to say or do or—”
“I want you to expect everything and say anything.”
Tension pulled at his brow as he shook his head. “I can’t.”
“We need to talk about AJ.”
“I can’t.” He swallowed, jaw firm, gaze set on the floor between them.
“That picture—”
“Don’t.” He continued to shake his head as his expression hardened. “I can’t.”
With a blink, her tears broke free. Irene wanted to destroy everything dear to Sunny and Knox. She wanted to destroy Jessica. She did. The moment she showed that picture to Luke, she took everything.
They stood a chance if all he had was the idea, the verbal confession that she had loved AJ. But that image would be in his mind forever, eating at him—at them—like a slow death.
“Tell me how you feel.”
“I can’t.” His voice cracked. “It would end us.”
“There is no us! You haven’t touched me since I asked you to in the hospital. You’re miserable and so am I. It can’t get any worse. If we can’t save us, then at least save yourself. If you don’t say what you’re feeling, it will kill you. I can take it. I’m so much stronger than you think I am.”
He said nothing.
“Five minutes.”
Luke looked up.
“I’ll give you five minutes to say everything. Don’t think … just say it. For once don’t protect me. Give me the part of you that hurts the most. And then we’ll never mention any of it again. But what’s happened between us feels worse than any death, and we both need closure.”
She lost him, but even more than that … he lost himself in her. Luke wouldn’t acknowledge her at all. That hurt the most.
“Fine,” she whispered. “Don’t tell me, but please tell someone. Then get rid of my stuff and choose to live because you’re not … not like this.” She walked past him to the bedroom door. Love wasn’t enough … not for Mickey and Sunny, and not for Jessica and Luke.
“I haven’t had my five minutes yet.”
Jessica stopped breathing. She didn’t recognize the icy voice behind her. It held no love, only a year of anger that would cut her to the bone.
Turning, she held her head up in spite of her tears. She would die from his words before she’d let him live with the pain of harboring them. Fisting her hands, she imagined them taped and ready for Jude’s unforgiving jabs. The difference was she wouldn’t fight back. Luke was about to knock her out without even touching her.
“You destroyed us when you died without giving me a choice. Knox said I could have come with you. I know you did it for my family, but that’s just it. You made the choice. I know how fucking selfish it sounds, but I would have chosen us. I would have left, even with Lake in a coma.”
Jessica blinked.
Words cut.
Emotions bled as tears.
He knocked her down. She got back up.
“That picture is branded into my memory, and I want to physically cut it out of my brain. Another man touched you. Another man loved you. Another man made you feel and love and it wasn’t me. You let him have you, and it should have been me. I never knew him, yet I hate everything about him including the part of your heart that he took to his grave. I can never have that. And I’m selfish because I want everything.”
Jessica bit her quivering lip until she tasted blood.
“I hate the color of your hair. I hate the name Jillian Knight. I fucking hate the whole goddamn state of Nebraska.” His voice escalated. Each word cut deeper as he let go of the rawest, deepest, most painful emotions. He stepped toward her.
“Is that what you want to hear? That loving you has turned me into a selfish bastard.” He blinked and just like that … his own emotions bled down his face.
“I hate myself for feeling this way. I hate myself for wanting to rip off your clothes and fuck you until I can no longer see that photo, until you can no longer remember his touch, until I’ve reclaimed every part of you right down to your soul.” He stepped closer, as close as he could get without touching her. “In my head I know what you did was selfless and amazing and … the most beautiful gift to him. And the rational
part of me is so damn proud of you for finding the part of you that I’ve seen all along.”
She swallowed hard, refusing to shy away, no matter how hard he punched.
“But with you, my feelings don’t come from my head, they come from my heart. My love for you is selfish because I don’t think you need it anymore. I’ve been walking around here on pins and needles, so afraid that you’re still grieving him, missing him, needing him. I’m so afraid my touch will scare you away. But I’m So. Fucking. Selfish. Because it doesn’t matter whether you need my love anymore …”
He released a sob and so did she.
“Because I need to love you.” Drawing in a ragged breath, he shrugged. “It’s all I know,” he whispered.
Knocked out.
Luke reached into her chest, pulled out her heart, and said, “If I can’t have it, no one can have it.”
She wanted to tell him that her love for AJ was real. She wanted to tell him that she regretted nothing. She wanted to tell him that fate took her away from him because AJ needed her more, if only for a mere breath in time. But she didn’t because it didn’t matter. AJ died … and so did Jillian Knight.
“Time’s up,” she whispered.
Five minutes. He killed her in five minutes.
Defeat pulled his gaze to the floor. “I don’t know what you want me to do.”
Jessica took his hand and placed it over her heart. “Touch me.”
His eyes locked to hers. “Jess—”
She kissed him. Time was up.
It was the longest five minutes of her life. It was the most painful five minutes of her life. Like all the other odds in her life, she survived and they would never talk about it again. Jessica died to be with AJ … but she lived to be with Luke.
“Dammit, Jones!” She grabbed his hair because he stood there, hands limp at his sides. “He borrowed me, but you own me. You. Fucking. Own. Me. Take back what’s yours and don’t ever let me go.”
He kissed her—really kissed her. Eager hands tore off clothes. Within seconds of hitting the bed, he filled her on a painfully emotional groan.
“Luke …” She surrendered everything.
He captured her lips and reclaimed the woman that had always been his. In that moment Jessica couldn’t remember AJ’s touch. She let the memory of it die. She let Luke erase it.
In a life filled with monsters, their love was a survivor.
Epilogue
One Year Later
“I’m cured?”
Dr. Harper looked over her red-framed reading glasses. Bangs of gunmetal gray streaked with white fell across her forehead as Jessica spun in the desk chair, dark hair flowing behind her.
“You’re functional.” Dr. Harper closed her laptop and slid it onto the desk.
“And Luke?”
“You know I can’t discuss my other patients with you.”
“Why didn’t you ever suggest counseling us together?”
“Neither one of you did anything wrong. This hasn’t been about apologies and reconciliation. It’s about acceptance, but not of each other. It’s accepting the past … the things you can’t change.”
God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change;
courage to change the things I can;
and wisdom to know the difference.
Jessica nodded. “The Serenity Prayer. I think it’s become my mantra.”
Dr. Harper set her glasses on her computer. A grin played with the corner of her mouth. “You’re not the most troubled person I’ve worked with in my career, but you are unequivocally the strongest. There are some things that can’t be taught. Either you have it or you don’t.” She nodded slowly. “You have it.”
Jessica planted her feet on the ground and crossed her arms on the desk. “Have what?”
“A will to live that goes beyond circumstance and possibly even reason. You find something from nothing and feed off it. You’re that flower that sprouts through a crack in the barren granite face of a mountain. You feel what everyone else has to see to believe. You sense the sun before you see its light, and you do it subconsciously. That’s a gift. That’s why you’re still here—alive—with me today.”
A smile grew on Jessica’s face. “You shrinks have a way with words. Luke has said the most profound things to me over the years and I don’t even think he expects his words to affect me the way they do. What you just said? It’s haunting yet flattering and …”
Dr. Harper stood. “The truth.”
Jessica grabbed her purse and walked around the desk. “The men in my life have been that something I’ve found from nothing.”
Dr. Harper pulled Jessica in for a final goodbye hug. “Hold on to them and the memories. Happiness moves you forward, but pain keeps you balanced.” She held her at arms’ length. “Okay?”
“AJ will keep me balanced?”
Dr. Harper shook her head. “His memory is a promise. A promise that should anything ever happen to your beloved Luke, you will survive. Life will go on.” Narrowing one eye, she held up her index finger. “Mickey and Sunny … those memories will keep you balanced.”
Jessica frowned. “Mickey and Sunny …” She sighed. What could she say? So many lives had been affected because one day, many years ago, little Knox McGraw met a giggling angel in red Mary Janes on the playground.
“My mother once said, ‘Love is reckless because true emotions are immune to logic. The most beautiful love stories are often the most tragic.’”
“Mmm …” Dr. Harper smiled. “Your mother told you the story of her life in just two sentences.”
*
A handsome—albeit cocky bastard—stood at the entrance to Samovar Tea with the most beautiful baby girl nestled to his chest in a red Ergo carrier.
“Give her to me.” Jessica held out her hands and wiggled her greedy fingers.
“No way.” He opened the door.
Jessica shot him a glare as she walked inside the restaurant.
“Two?” the waiter asked.
“Yes.” Jessica pointed to a booth in the corner. “Over there please.”
After she shrugged off her coat, she held her hands out again. “I mean it. Give her to me.”
The cocky bastard’s chuckle accompanied his smile as he shook his head. “No. Sorry. If you wake her we’re both screwed.”
She plunked down into the booth. “You’ve always sucked at sharing.”
Tatted arms hugged the little bundle tightly as he eased to sitting. “Ryn ran a few errands. She took her breasts with her so I’ve got nothing if Livy wakes up.”
“She should have left a bottle.”
“We’re not using a bottle for another three weeks. Nipple confusion.”
Jessica laughed. “Never thought I’d live to see the day where my brother was an expert on nipple confusion.”
Jackson pressed his lips to Livy’s tiny head. She had his dark hair and lots of it. “You’ll understand soon enough.” His eyes, the ones that matched hers, looked up. A smile pulled at his lips still pressed to Livy’s head.
“We’ll see. Dr. Overprotective insists on no babies until my doctor gives me the okay. Apparently the whole starvation then dying thing, followed by six months of no menstrual cycles makes me a poor candidate for getting pregnant or having a healthy pregnancy.”
They gave the waiter their order. Jessica’s gaze stayed glued to Livy. She adored her.
“San Francisco.” She smiled, shaking her head. “I still can’t believe you sold Ryn’s place after everything you did to it, but I’m glad you did. I love having you living here again.”
Jackson bounced Livy gently as she stirred then settled back into him, resting her other cheek to his chest, her tiny fist at her mouth.
“Her parents were willing to move wherever we moved, but it was still a hard sell until Maddie took that job in Baltimore.”
“I never want to ask, but how are they?”
Jackson lifted his shoulders. “Maddie is … Maddie.
Stubborn. Young. Immature. Defiant. And unforgiving. But she’s smart so she’ll do well with her job, marry some guy who can tolerate her attitude, and if she has a child of her own someday, I suspect she’ll come crawling back to Ryn.”
“And she’ll welcome her with open arms because a mother’s love is unconditional.”
Jackson stared at Livy, his face stone. “I still can’t forgive her.”
Jessica felt that familiar pang in her chest that came every time they talked about their mother. She thought of Dr. Harper’s words. Your mother told you the story of her life in just two sentences.
“Mom’s dead. I don’t think she’s spending her afterlife worrying about you forgiving her, because I don’t think she regretted any of it—not with Knox, not with Dad, and not with us. The same way I don’t regret mine.”
“The unconditional love?” He looked at her. “It’s gutting.”
Jessica smiled. Livy would break him some day … one boyfriend at a time. “Yes, yes it is.” She glanced out the window. “Oh she’s coming … gimme, gimme, gimme.”
Jackson followed her gaze to Ryn walking toward the building. He smiled. Jessica loved the way he looked at Ryn, like each time he fell in love with her all over again.
Before he could protest, Jessica had the Ergo latch unfastened and Livy in her arms.
“God … I love how she smells.” Jessica held her close, inhaling the essence of her niece. Livy’s blue eyes blinked open as she sucked at her fist.
“There’s my beautiful wife.” Jackson stood, freed the carrier from his body, and hugged Ryn, palming her ass and kissing her like they were the only two in the room. But they weren’t and there were plenty of wide eyes staring at them.
“Daddy’s ready to give you a little brother already … right here in Samovar,” Jessica baby-talked to Livy. “Maybe they should go work on that in private and we’ll go visit Jonesy.”
Ryn giggled with Jackson’s greedy lips still pressed to hers. “Hi, Jessica.” She freed herself.
Jackson adjusted himself before sliding back into the booth next to Ryn.
Jessica shook her head and rolled her eyes.