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Revenge Games (Revenge Games Duet Book 1)

Page 52

by Sky Corgan


  My birthday rolled around, and I stared at my phone throughout the day, hoping for a text message from Tammy. She never did text me though. I tried to be happy when I came home and Dominick told me he was taking me to a surprise dinner. He didn't deserve to have me like this.

  Dominick drove me downtown to Il Vinaio, a little Italian restaurant. As we walked through the parking lot, he gently put his arm around me, guiding me to the door.

  “Look whose here,” he said to me as we approached the front of the restaurant, and when I looked up, I saw Tammy standing just inside, staring out at us with a smile, though I couldn't tell if it was fake or not.

  Part of me was elated to see her, but another part of me was horrified. All I could do was smile in appreciation, my face feeling tense from the effort.

  “Is this going to be okay?” I asked Dominick quietly before he held the door open for me.

  “I invited her. Just try not to kill one another.” He gave me a smirk, though it wasn't the least bit reassuring.

  “Kim!” Tammy said, holding her arms out to embrace me as I entered the restaurant.

  When I hugged her, it felt like heaven. It's strange how much a person can take something as simple as a hug for granted.

  As we released each other, I looked into Tammy's eyes and saw genuine warmth. It was the best present ever.

  “You girls hungry?” Dominick asked, standing behind me awkwardly.

  “I could eat,” I replied with an ear to ear grin.

  “I left your gift in the car,” Tammy told me. “I'll give it to you after we're done eating.”

  “Just having you here is gift enough for me.”

  I was all smiles as we were seated in the middle of the dining room. The air between Tammy and Dominick was still a bit tense, but at least they were trying to occupy the same space, for my sake. It was definitely a special day, having my two favorite people together after so long.

  “So, how has school been?” Tammy asked once we had placed our drink order.

  “It's good. I can't wait until the semester is over. Dominick's going to take me to Fiji for vacation this summer.”

  “Fiji. Nice.” She nodded stiffly.

  “How are you and Marcus doing? How's the pregnancy thing coming along?”

  “Still trying,” she sighed wearily, and I could tell it wasn't a subject that she was interested in discussing. They had been trying to have a baby for what felt like forever, it was starting to seem like it might never happen.

  We made idle conversation until our food arrived. Tammy asked Dominick about business, though he didn't have much to say. Then she talked about everything that had been going on at her job. There always seemed to be an endless amount of drama to discuss from wherever Tammy worked. I wasn't sure if she just had shit luck getting stuck with unproductive employees or if part of having a day job was bitching about it. If I remembered correctly, our parents complained a lot about their jobs too.

  We ate Italian food and shared good company, and for a while, I thought everything would be alright. The evening was going absolutely perfect. Strong pleasant emotions were swirling around inside of me. In fact, I was happier than I had been in a while.

  “I missed you, sis,” I told Tammy while we were waiting for the bill.

  “I missed you too.” She smiled warmly at me.

  “Too bad Marcus couldn't come,” Dominick commented.

  “I know. He had to work late though. Next time,” Tammy replied.

  “So, do you want to help me plan for the wedding?” I asked, hopeful.

  Her lips drooped into a frown, and all the tension that had been left at the door suddenly came rushing back in.

  “I'd rather not be involved in the wedding,” she said stiffly.

  “Why not?” I quirked an eyebrow, trying to hide the offense in my voice.

  “I came here because I wanted to spend time with you on your birthday, but you both know how I feel about you getting married.”

  “Oh,” I replied quietly. “I thought you'd gotten over it by now.”

  Silence hung in the air like poisonous gas, choking me and threatening to make my eyes water. It felt like I had been brought up to the top floor of a building overlooking an amazing landscape and suddenly been dropped. The wind left my sails, and I was quickly becoming emotional. If I cried though, it would completely ruin the night—ruin everything.

  The longer we sat there, the less I felt able to contain it. A tear streamed down my cheek, burning a trail in its path. Dominick moved to put his hand on my back, and I instantly recoiled. It was too much to handle. I couldn't be around them anymore.

  Emotionally distraught, I stood up and made my way to the front of the restaurant. I needed to go outside for a minute, to recompose myself. Dominick moved to follow me though, and Tammy was right behind him. It was like a train of bad that I couldn't get away from. I just wanted to be left alone, to find somewhere private to cry. If I went into the bathroom, Tammy would follow, so I continued outside, blinded by tears. Their footsteps were right behind me, echoing in my ears. I had to escape. They didn't need to see how miserable I was, not after they had given me this amazing night, not after Dominick had gone out of his way to bring Tammy and I back together.

  As soon as I was outside, I put my head down and took off at a run. Dominick was calling behind me, his voice frantic. Tammy screamed just in time for me to feel a hard jolt to my back. Too many horrific sounds echoed in my ears at once: a car horn, screeching tires, and a sickening thud. I fell forward, and the ground came up to meet me, ripping the skin off my palms with near blinding pain.

  People were shouting around me. A car door opened. And when I turned, I saw Dominick laying on his side several yards away. I blinked in disbelief, trying to piece together what had happened.

  Tammy was standing at the edge of the parking lot with her hands up to her mouth, her eyes wide in shock. There was a truck parked in front of Dominick's body, its headlights shining down on him. The man who had gotten out of it came to Dominick's side, his expression a mixture of anger and panic.

  “Hey, Mister, are you alright?” he called down to Dominick, but Dominick didn't respond.

  It took me a few seconds to realize that the jolt to my back was Dominick pushing me out of the way of the oncoming vehicle. I must have run in front of it blindly. Dominick took the blow. How fast had the truck been going? Since I hadn't been watching, I couldn't tell, but it had obviously been going fast enough to knock Dominick unconscious . . . or worse.

  Now the tears streaming down my face were for a different reason. I crawled towards Dominick's body, barely noticing the pain of my skinned palms as they moved across the asphalt. When I reached him, I saw that he was unconscious and there was a gash in his forehead where his head was touching the ground. Blood was flowing out steadily. I quickly cradled his head on my lap, shouting to whoever would listen to call an ambulance.

  This couldn't be happening—wasn't happening. I had lost my parents to a car accident, though not in the same fashion. I couldn't lose Dominick too. I would die if I lost him, especially on my birthday.

  The ambulance eventually came, and I rode with Dominick to the hospital. Tammy followed behind us, calling Marcus to see if he would care for Dominick personally. We got to the hospital, and they wheeled Dominick inside, forcing me out into the waiting room with Tammy. I was a hysterical mess, but she held me while I cried, assuring me that he was going to live and that everything would be alright.

  It was hard not to blame myself for what had happened. If only I had been paying attention, if I had just kept myself together for a little while longer, then the truck would have driven right by, and Dominick would be okay. But that's not what had happened, and who knew how badly he was injured now or if he would ever recover.

  Chapter 17: Dominick

  Darkness. How long I stayed in it, I don't know, but when I opened my eyes, the light blinded me. It was a sick fluorescent light with a yellow tint to it. The
re were shapes but no sounds. It took several seconds for me to blink the sleep away, for the images in front of me to take shape.

  “Dom,” a voice said. Not Kim.

  I turned my head, and pain shot through my neck. There was a strange stiffness in my body, as if I hadn't used it in a while. The face my eyes landed on was oval with soft pale skin and big green eyes.

  “Tammy,” I replied, my tone filled with confusion. My memory slowly returned to me. Kim was upset, trying to run out to the car. The truck was coming too fast to stop. I had to push her out of the way. And then . . . and then . . . “Is Kim alright?” I tried to pull myself into a sitting position, but everything was sore.

  “Shh. Calm down. Kim is fine. She's asleep. See.” Tammy pointed to a chair in the corner. Kim was curled up in it, sleeping soundly, unharmed.

  I sighed in relief, “Thank God she's alright. Where are we?” I asked stupidly.

  “We're in the hospital. You've been out for a few days with a cerebral contusion.”

  “A what?” A sharp pain stabbed at the side of my head as if to wordlessly explain, and I found myself falling back onto the bed and grasping at my forehead. There was a bandage over my right eyebrow, and I could feel stitches beneath it.

  “You hit your head on the concrete whenever that truck hit you.”

  “Kim didn't get hurt then?”

  “No. Thanks to you,” she said softly, turning her attention to her sleeping sister with a faint smile. “I'm surprise you remember any of that. Marcus said you'd probably have amnesia for a while.”

  “I guess I'm just lucky,” I groaned through the pain.

  “We're all lucky.”

  I didn't get her meaning, but it didn't matter in that moment. All I wanted was for the pain to go away.

  “Is there a morphine drip or something I can press?” I asked.

  “If it hurts, I can call a nurse in.”

  Somehow, the pain subsided at the mention of the word nurse, and I sighed in relief, resting my head against the pillow.

  “It went away. I think I'll be fine,” I breathed heavily.

  “I know this probably isn't the best time,” Tammy said. “I know I should probably wake Kim up to let her know you're alright, but I want to talk to you first, and this is probably the only chance I'll get. She's never left your side, you know.” She gave her sister a fond look. “I told her to go to school, but she refused. She wanted to be here when you woke up. I feel a bit bad for denying her that.”

  “She's still here. She's just not awake.”

  “I know, but I suppose she wanted to be the one sitting by your side when you did wake up.”

  “That can't be helped. But I suppose I could pretend to be asleep until you guys switch places.”

  “No,” Tammy laughed. “That would just be silly. But it's proof of how far you'd go for her, among other things.” She looked back at me thoughtfully. “I guess I just never expected that something like this could happen.”

  “Well, I never expected to get hit by a truck either.”

  “That's not what I mean.” Tammy shook her head. “I'm talking about you and Kim, falling in love, wanting to get married. Even though we were always all so close, it just seemed like a foreign concept to me, because all of our memories together are from when Kim was just a baby. It seemed weird to me that you would go for her. And I must admit that I thought that maybe you were trying to get to me by wanting to marry her.” She looked down shamefully. “I know you're not vindictive like that, but I couldn't justify it any other way. I mean, why would you be interested in someone so much younger than you. You've never been interested in younger girls for as long as I can remember.”

  “Tammy, I—”

  “No,” she cut me off. “You don't have to explain. I don't need for you to explain anymore. When you pushed my sister out of the way . . . You didn't even hesitate. The sound of your voice when you saw that she was in danger, the swiftness with which you moved . . . You didn't even think about your own safety. You didn't care if you lived or died as long as she was alright.” A tear silently fell down her cheek, and she wrapped her arms around herself. “I see that now.

  “All this time, I don't think I've really been questioning Kim's feelings. She's loved you, for as long as I can remember. She never talked about it a lot, but I could tell. The way she looked at you, the way she perked up every time you called. It wasn't the reaction someone would have towards a friend. I even figured that when she moved in with you to go to college that her feelings might cause problems. That's one reason I didn't want her moving in with you.

  “What I never expected though was that you would fall in love with her too. I thought you would brush off the way she acted, or that she would continue to keep it bottled up. The tension would eventually be too much for her to handle, and she'd tell me she wanted to move out. It almost happened once, I think. Then again, I don't know if you guys were together by then or not.”

  “What?” I quirked an eyebrow, the injured eyebrow, which made it feel like someone had taken an ax to my head. “Gah.” I reached up to touch the bandage, pressing my head back against the pillow.

  “Let me call the nurse.”

  “I'm fine,” I insisted, trying to swallow back the pain until it subsided.

  My head throbbed for what felt like forever, but Tammy sat patiently, waiting for me to recover with a concerned look on her face. It had been such a long time since she'd shown any worry for me, I couldn't help but appreciate it. At least, she didn't seem to hate me anymore.

  “Are you sure you're alright?” she asked quietly.

  “I'll be fine. What were you saying before about the tension being too much for her to handle?”

  “She called me shortly after she had moved in with you to tell me she wanted to move out.”

  “Oh,” I replied, searching my memory banks. Kim had never spoken to me about wanting to move out early on that I could remember. Then again, my recollections of the past were a bit fuzzy. It didn't matter anymore. That was back then. Things were different now. “Well, she obviously didn't move out.”

  “No. She didn't.” Tammy took a deep breath. “And now you guys are going to get married. I'm still not sure what to think about it, but I'm not angry anymore, not so worried as I was.”

  “Why is that?”

  “Because I know that your intentions are pure. I suppose that I should have always known. I'm kind of a crappy friend for not believing you.”

  “We haven't really hung out on the regular in years. I can't blame you for suspecting I had changed. I have changed, as have we all, but I'm still the same person at the core.”

  “I know. I know that now, and that's why I'm going to give your wedding my blessing.”

  “That's good to hear.” I smiled weakly, though it seemed like every change of expression made my head injury hurt.

  “Well, that's all I wanted to talk to you about. I suppose I should wake Kim now. She'll be ecstatic to know you've regained consciousness.”

  “I suppose you should, and then we can call that nurse in. I'd like to pretend to be strong, but my head is killing me.”

  “Of course.” She nodded, standing up to go wake Kim while I pressed the button to call the nurse in.

  Kim groaned as Tammy gently shook her shoulder, uncurling from the chair like a cat who had just risen from a nap. As soon as she heard Tammy tell her that I was conscious, her body stiffened a bit, and she looked at me, relief sweeping over her face. Immediately, she stood to cross the distance to my bedside, reaching out to grab my hand before sitting down in the chair that Tammy had previously occupied.

  “Dom, are you alright?” she asked, noticing that I winced when she laced her fingers with mine.

  “I've been better,” I replied, trying not to grimace too much.

  “I'm so sorry. This is all my fault.” Kim leaned down and hid her face behind our hands.

  “Shh. Don't worry about it. I lived, and you didn't get hurt. That's al
l that matters.”

  “But I was being so stupid. If I hadn't blindly run out into the parking lot, this never would have happened.”

  “Stop it. I don't want to hear another word about it.”

  “Okay,” she sounded small and childish. The guilt wasn't going to go away no matter how many times I told her not to worry about it.

  “I'm going to give you two some time alone,” Tammy said, smiling down on us with a serene look on her face.

  As strange as it was to think, perhaps this tragedy had been for the best. Now Tammy knew that both Kim and I were serious about our relationship, and I doubted she would bring it up again. That made it all worth it to me, the near-death experience, the pain, everything.

  “I love you,” Kim whispered to me after Tammy left.

  “I would certainly hope so,” I teased.

  “You know I do.” She gave me a sardonic look.

  “And you know that I love you.”

  “There's no question in my mind about that. There never has been.”

  “It looks like everything worked out in the end.”

  “How do you figure?” Kim quirked an eyebrow.

  “Well, Tammy isn't angry at me anymore, and she approves of us. I suppose we couldn't ask for more.”

  “At the expense of you almost dying,” her voice took an angry turn.

  “Hey now, don't be like that. No one died.”

  “Pfft. You don't understand.” She turned away from me, though her grip on my hand tightened. “If you had died . . . Oh God, I don't even want to think about it.”

  “Then don't think about it.”

  “If you had died, I think it would have destroyed everything.”

  “Well, it certainly would have destroyed me,” I joked.

  “No. I mean, Tammy and I. I would have blamed myself for the rest of my life, but I also would have blamed her. I would have blamed her for trying to drive us apart. And I would have hated her for it.”

 

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