by Hamel, B. B.
He shrugs. “Maybe. Never went pro, though.” He pushes back his stool and finishes his beer. “Should get back now.”
“Yeah, okay.”
“Call me, Will.”
“Okay,” I say, laughing.
He nods, shakes my hand with a grin, and heads over to a table of guys that I don’t recognize.
I sit there for a while longer, sipping my beer, brain buzzing with excitement. I don’t know how this happened, but this feels right. A high school JV team isn’t exactly the big time, but it’s a step in the right direction, and it sure as hell beats sitting around on the couch.
More than that, it’ll show Addie that I’m serious. I’m not running away from her. I’m settling down and staying in Weston for the long run, or at least however long she decides to stay here.
Because I have a daughter and a best friend that I’m stupidly in love with.
I finish my beer, get up, and leave the bar.
The next day, I make that phone call.
21
Addie
Three Months Later
I shiver and sigh, looking out at the yard covered in fallen leaves. The orange and red landscape of the dying foliage makes me want to pull out a sweater, even though I’m already wrapped in one.
“What’s the matter?” Eleanor asks me.
I shake my head. “Nothing,” I say. “Just wondering how it’s October already.”
She laughs softly. “Honey, it only moves faster and faster.”
I frown a little. “Really?”
“Really.” She stretches a little, sipping her tea. “I read somewhere that your early life seems so long because it’s all new experiences, while your later life seems so fast because you’re doing the same things over and over. There aren’t a lot of new experiences when you’re my age. The days slip past.” She laughs softly to herself. “Sorry, I don’t mean to sound so depressing.”
“That’s not depressing,” I say.
She raises an eyebrow. “Really?”
“Really. It just means that I have to keep making new experiences every day.”
Eleanor laughs at that and I smile. She seems happier than I’ve seen her in a while, probably because I’m finally moving out.
It happened pretty suddenly two weeks ago. Teddy asked if I could increase my hours at work, and of course I said yes, since I could use the money. Almost a day later, Eleanor casually mentioned that a friend of hers has a vacancy in his apartment building, and I should move in.
Reluctantly, I went to see the place. It’s beautiful, of course, and I thought it was out of my price range. But no, Eleanor’s getting me a deal. So we signed the papers on the spot and set a date for me to move.
All of my things are packed. Although I’ve been living with Eleanor for a long time, I surprisingly don’t have all that much. Cara’s stuff took way longer to set up and pack, although she’s not moving right away. I’m going to get her room settled and everything unpacked before I bring her over, which should only be a couple days at most.
I really never thought I’d get to this point. I always pictured myself living with Eleanor forever. We’d raise Cara together, and make sure that my daughter turns into a great young woman. I always thought I’d have her help and support for as long as I wanted it, and I think I would. But it’s time and we both know it.
It’s time for me to move out on my own, and it’s time for Eleanor to get her life back. Although she’s pretending like she’s excited, I know she’s going to miss me and Cara. Pretend all she wants, this house is going to be lovely without the whole crowd. I suspect she’ll be calling pretty often.
At least she better be.
Eleanor sighs and gives me a sidelong glance. “You know, speaking of new things. I have an idea.”
I raise an eyebrow. “Oh, yeah?”
She nods and heads back into the house. I watch her go, sipping my tea. Cara’s a few feet away, playing in the leaves and laughing. She throws a whole bunch of them into the air and giggles as they rain down on her. I smile to myself, enjoying the moment, letting myself savor the simple pleasure of watching my daughter play in the leaves.
Eleanor comes back a minute later with a cardboard postcard in her hand. “This came in the mail a couple days ago. I was about to toss it but I’m glad I didn’t.”
I frown at the card. “What is this?”
“Just read it,” she says.
“You’re invited to the first playoff game of the Weston High School JV hockey team. Come ready to cheer for the Trojans!” I look up at Eleanor, frowning. “What is this?”
“Apparently the high school’s JV hockey team is doing very well this year.” She shrugs a little bit. “Maybe we could go watch the game.”
I laugh. “I didn’t know you were a sports fan.”
“I’m not. But we want life to move slowly, don’t we?”
I shrug a little bit. “I guess so. I’ve just never gone before.”
“It’ll be fun,” she insists. “Let’s give it a chance. I’ll get Julissa to watch Cara and we can have a night out.”
“Okay,” I say. “I can’t turn that offer down.” I check the card and sure enough, the game’s tonight. “Well, I guess I should go brush up on my hockey.”
“You better.” Eleanor grins at me. “Don’t want to embarrass ourselves.”
I laugh again and walk down toward Cara, ready to roll around in leaves and make life go slow.
* * *
The ice rink is shockingly crowded when Eleanor and I get inside. We find seats toward the top center of the home side, and it seems like every single person is wearing Weston blue and gold.
“We’re underdressed,” I point out to Eleanor, and she just shrugs.
“Who cares. At least we’ll be warm.”
“Amen to that.” I’m wrapped in a sweater, a sweatshirt, and a jacket, and I’m not sure that’s enough.
I jostle my knees a little nervously, although I don’t know why I’m nervous. There’s nothing special about this. I don’t know anyone here, which is fine, nobody knows me either. The kids aren’t out on the ice just yet, since we got here early, so I find myself scanning over the crowd. Parents with younger kids, some high school students, and lots of local people just here to watch a good game.
I glance at Eleanor but she’s not paying attention to me. She’s watching the entrance ramp with a strange look on her face. I can’t really read it, but it’s almost like she’s afraid of something. I’m about to ask her what’s going on when the lights dim and some music starts playing. The crowd begins cheering as the Weston team comes skating out onto the ice.
“Lots of drama for a JV team,” I say to Eleanor, which gets a tight little laugh. She doesn’t reply, though, and I follow her gaze to the home bench. It’s full of players and a couple coaches, although I can’t really make out any of their faces in the dim lights.
As the kids get out onto the ice and the opposing team is warming up, the lights slowly come back up. I watch the kids skate and shoot at their goalie, running through drills and preparing themselves. I don’t know much about hockey but it looks really fun at the very least. I can ice skate, but I have absolutely zero athletic ability, except for hiking and climbing over rocks like an idiot, if anyone counts that.
Slowly the lights come back up and the two teams square up in the middle. They drop the puck and the game starts.
I watch the action, not really understanding what’s happening. I just react along with the crowd, so when they get excited, I cheer even more. Meanwhile, Eleanor’s face looks tight and she keeps glancing away from the game with a frown.
“What’s the matter?” I ask her during a lull in action. “You keep looking at something.”
Her eyes go a bit wide and she shakes her head. “No, nothing’s wrong.”
I purse my lips. “Are you sure?”
“Of course.”
I let it go but I don’t believe her. I keep an eye in her direction as the g
ame progresses. When the Weston team scores a goal and everyone stands, I keep my eyes on Eleanor. In that moment, I finally figure out what she’s been staring at this whole time.
I follow her gaze to the Weston bench. I look at the players, trying to figure out what has her attention, until I get to the coach.
I stare at him, shock being replaced by anger. I turn to her as the crowd cheers the Weston team.
“Did you know?” I ask her loudly over the noise.
She looks at me, guilt clear in her expression. “I’m sorry,” she says.
“How could you?” I’m so angry it hurts. “I told you I didn’t want to see him again.”
“Addie, please. You’re making a mistake.” She gestures down at Will as he high-fives his team, talking to them animatedly. The boys all seem to respect him and they’re all hanging on his every word, which doesn’t surprise me at all. Will’s so outgoing and personable, he’d make an amazing coach.
“I want to leave,” I say to her as the crowd settles and we all sit back down. I remain standing, looking down at Eleanor.
“No,” she says.
“Eleanor, I want to go.”
“Addie Carter, you sit your ass down right now and you stop making a fool of yourself.”
I blink, not sure what to do. I’ve never heard Eleanor curse, let alone talk to me that way. Slowly I sink down into my seat, mostly out of shock.
“Listen to me,” she says into my ear. “That boy is the one. Do you understand? He’s changing, making himself better, putting down roots. I never would’ve brought you here if that weren’t true. Have I ever done you wrong?”
I shake my head. “It’s not so simple,” I say, a little distantly.
She sighs. “It is so simple. You’re just so used to hating him that you can’t see how good he is for you. If I had a man like Will, I know my life would be better for it, and yours will too.”
I bite my bottom lip and look down toward the bench. Will is watching his players with a serious expression, calling out encouragement, cheering for them, shouting at them. He looks so serious, so grown up in his shirt and tie. I’ve never seen him working a real job before, but this makes so much sense.
“Just talk to him,” she says.
“Did he invite you here?”
She nods. “We’ve been in touch.”
I just shake my head slowly. I shouldn’t be surprised. “What am I supposed to do?”
“Let it go,” she says softly. “All that hurt you’ve been holding on to for so damn long, let it go, Addie. Let someone love you. Nobody’s going to hurt you like your parents did, not ever again. That man down there, he’ll make sure of it.”
I look at her, fighting tears. “Why are you so sure?”
“I just am.” She smiles at me, softer now. “I see you around him, and you’re more alive when he’s here. You’re looking for life to go slow? That’s your chance, right down there.”
I turn back toward the game, but I don’t see hockey anymore. All I can see is Will, and all our history, and all the reasons I should keep on running away, and the basement my parents locked me in, and the days they starved me so bad that it ruined my body in ways that’ll never heal, and the way they ruined my ability to love, and his patience in the face of it all, and how badly I need him. God, I need him so badly, it actually hurts to sit here in this seat and look at the man I could be with, if only I’d get over myself and let him.
“Okay,” I say to her finally. “I’m ready.”
She grins. “I know you are,” she says. “You just needed to know it too.”
I laugh and she squeezes my hand. I sniffle a little bit, tears in my eyes. I feel ridiculous, crying in this crowd as they go wild for another Weston goal, but I don’t care.
I know what I have to do. I know it’s time. “Thank you,” I say to her. “You saved me again.”
“No, sweetie,” she says. “You saved yourself. I’m just here to help you out.”
I hug her and she hugs me back. We’re silent for a little while, watching the game, although really I’m watching Will.
I wish I could’ve decided this earlier. But it’s better now than never, and now’s good enough for me.
22
Will
I’m nervous as I walk down the path toward the old familiar fork. I know Addie’s there waiting for me, although I never really thought that was going to happen again.
I got my shit together. I guess that’s putting it mildly. I took over the Weston JV hockey team a week after that fateful night in the Tuned Piano, and I threw myself into my work. The pay isn’t amazing, but it’s something, and it’s making me self-sufficient.
And it turns out I love the job. I love coaching these kids. They’re not all superstars, but that makes it even more fun. I can try and improve their skills and create a team that actually wins games, which apparently I did really well, because we made it into the playoffs and won our first season. Who knows how far we’ll go, but that’s a seriously good start.
I’ve been trying to keep in touch with Eleanor, as much as she’ll let me at least. I call her once a week, just to ask about Addie and Cara. She gives me a quick rundown, asks how I’m doing, and gets off the phone when I’m done. The conversations would last for maybe five minutes, but I looked forward to those conversations more than anything else. They were my only lifeline to Addie and Cara.
Until Addie texted me out of the blue last night, right after our victory, telling me to meet her today at the usual spot. Of course I knew where she was talking about. I barely slept last night in anticipation and excitement. I’m like a kid before Christmas, buzzing with energy.
My knee feels pretty good. I’ve been keeping up with my exercises, and I’ve strengthened it enough to walk without a limp and without the help of a walking stick. I stride confidently toward our meeting spot, although inside I’m freaking the fuck out, terrified of what Addie’s going to say, but mostly just excited to see her again.
I come up over a rise and spot her at the bottom of the hill. She looks up and smiles, the sort of smile that splits the sky apart. She starts toward me and my heart starts beating so fast I can barely breathe.
“There you are,” she says. “I thought you were still a gimp, you’re so slow.”
I grin at her. “I had a lot further to walk, you know.”
“Poor excuse, Eaton.”
I laugh a little bit. She’s smiling huge, and she only uses my last name when she’s teasing me.
“You look good, Carter.”
She shrugs a little. Her hair’s pulled back into a ponytail, with a hat pulled low over her eyes, khaki shorts, and a navy blue top. “Same to you,” she answers. “No more walking stick?”
I shake my head, flexing my knee. “Healed a lot, actually.”
“Skating yet?”
“A little bit, with the team.”
“I heard about the team.” Her smile doesn’t waver one bit, and my heart keeps beating fast. She seems happy to see me. “JV coach and made playoffs in the first year? That’s pretty impressive.”
“Thanks,” I say, rubbing the back of my head. “Turns out I’m pretty good at coaching, and I really like it.”
“Go figure.”
“Getting injured was actually a good thing, in retrospect.” I laugh softly and meet her gaze. “Forced me to decide what’s important.”
“What is important, Will?”
I cross the last few feet between us and stop so close I could kiss her. She looks up at me and doesn’t move, doesn’t step back.
“I should’ve done this a long time ago,” I say softly, taking her by the back of the neck and pulling her close. I kiss her hard and she kisses me back. When we slowly part, I kiss her one more time softly. “I love you, Addie. I’ve loved you for a long, long time.”
“I love you too,” she whispers.
I kiss her again, excitement and joy whirling through my mind. “Why now?” I ask as we slowly break away.
/> She shrugs. I pull her tighter. “Something Eleanor said,” she whispers.
“What did she say?”
I feel her shake her head against my chest. “That’s just for me.”
I smile to myself and hold her like that for a little longer. I want to exist in this moment forever, before real life comes in and makes things harder like it always does. I want to exist here, in this happy place, before it can be taken away. But that’s not how things actually work.
She slowly pulls back and looks up at me. “We should talk, right?”
“I guess.” I frown a little. “I don’t feel like it, though.”
“What would you rather do?”
I smirk. “I’d rather take you behind that waterfall and fuck you until real life disappears.”
She blushes and laughs. “We can do that later.”
“Promise?”
“Come on.” She pulls back and takes my hand. “Let’s walk.”
I meet her mid-stride and we walk side by side. I realize this is the first time we’ve walked together where I didn’t have a limp the whole time. She glances over at me through the gorgeous autumn light, the leaves all falling down around us, and I swear we’re in a movie. The wind picks up slightly and she laughs.
“What?” I ask.
“Nothing. You’re just giving me that look again.”
“Which look?”
“The one that means I’m going to end up in your bed.”
I grin at her. “You know me so well.”
She squeezes my hand before letting it go. “We need to talk first.”
“I know,” I say softly. “I’m still just happy you came.”
“Cara’s your daughter.”
She says it so simply and without any preamble, and practically out of nowhere, that I’m not sure she actually said the words at first. Slowly though, it hits me, and I grin ear to ear.
“I knew it,” I say, laughing. “You wouldn’t admit it, but I knew.”
She nods, smiling a little. “And that doesn’t freak you out?”