Fighting Fate (Granton University #1)(45)
“Let me.” Awareness curled up her spine as he stepped in close behind her. His arm brushed hers as he reached past her. She dropped her hand and lowered her face. The radio fell silent and her own thoughts seemed to echo around the quiet shop like a sonic boom.
When Logan stayed directly behind her, she swallowed and shut her eyes, hoping and praying he wouldn’t do what she actually wanted him to do.
“You found her, didn’t you?” he said. When she frowned and turned around, not comprehending, he winced. “Your mom.”
He stepped back as if to give her space to run if she wanted to, but she didn’t move. His face was now flushed. “It’s just…I assume it has to be something even more traumatic than what happened with Tra—with your brother, since you still can’t talk about her.”
“Yes. I found her.” She’d never told anyone that. “Why are you asking about this?”
“Because I need to know.” His throat worked as he swallowed. She knew exactly what he was thinking. He wanted the details so he could share the pain with her. He felt responsible. She had no idea how she knew that just by looking at the bleak desolation in his blue eyes, but she was more certain of it than she was of anything.
“It must’ve happened on some big day,” he went on, his voice hoarse. “A holiday, or…or the anniversary of your brother’s death?”
“New Year’s Eve,” she whispered, closing her eyes, reeling in the fact she was sharing this…with Logan Xander of all people. “She left a note saying the thought of suffering through another year of life was more than she could handle.”
“I’m sorry.”
His quiet, heartfelt words didn’t even reach her. She’d shifted to the past. “I’d just spent the night at my best friend’s house. When I came home, she was…in the kitchen. I saw her as soon as I opened the back door.”
Logan nodded. “Where was your dad?”
“In the living room, passed out on the couch. I don’t know why he hadn’t found her yet or heard the gunshot, but when I screamed, he came tearing into the kitchen, an empty beer bottle in his hand. After…after he saw her, he roared out this sound like an enraged animal, and he threw the bottle against the wall. But I was standing too close. Some of the shattering glass ricocheted and caught me in the arm.” She rubbed the side of her shoulder where the half-moon scar was hidden under her long sleeves. “So much happened that day, I didn’t even realize I’d been cut until late that night when I changed into something to sleep in.”
With a sad sigh, Paige kept talking, the words spilling from her without her permission.
“Sometimes I wonder if she thought of me at all when she put the gun in her mouth. And I can’t decide which would be worse, that she did consider my feelings in all this and hated me so much, she didn’t care how it would affect me. Or that I meant so little to her, I didn’t even cross her mind.”
A sudden anger rose in her throat. “I mean, how dare she do this to me? To my dad? To herself? She planned it, probably for days. It was purposeful. It was even worse than what you did.”
She knew she’d gone over the line when Logan wrenched back, his face saturated with pain and shock. And guilt.
Opening her mouth to instantly apologize, “Logan, I—” she stopped when he shook his head.
“No. I don’t know if it was worse or not.” He ducked his face as it flushed with color. “Maybe it wasn’t. I definitely meant to hit your brother.” Just as abruptly as the color had highlighted his cheeks, it fled, leaving him shaken and wan.
Reading his expression, she knew he was remembering. He was seeing Trace die at his feet all over again.
“But you didn’t mean to kill him.” She kept her voice low. Apologetic.
He closed his eyes and shuddered. “No. From the bottom of my heart, no. I didn’t mean to kill him, I swear to you. I never meant it to go that far.” When his lashes lifted, his piercing gaze begged her for forgiveness. “I never meant it to go that far.”
For the first time, she actually wanted to give it. But letting go of the bitter anger toward him scared her, even though she knew she’d already absolved him in her heart over a month ago.
Clinging to her denial like a security blanket, she realized forgiving him would open the floodgate for other emotions to enter, emotions she knew she shouldn’t harbor for Logan Xander.
Needing space from the overly personal conversation they’d started, she backed up and glanced around. They were still at The Squeeze, clocked in and discussing her mother of all things, a topic she’d refused to discuss with anyone.
She shook her head, dazed. “Why did I tell you all that?”
He shrugged. “Because I asked.”
She knew it was more than that. She felt a connection with him. They had both suffered from the same event. They were both scrambling to find a way out of the misery. They were both lost but desperately seeking a purpose.
“Do you know why I came to Granton?” she asked, pretty much out of the blue.
Logan shook his head. “Did you know I was here?”
“No.” She gave him a sad smile. “Not at all. It was actually because of Trace. This was his dream school.”
“Oh, God.” Face once again blanching of color, Logan leaned against the opposite counter and swiped a hand over his short crop of hair. “I had no idea.”
Linda Kage's Books
- Linda Kage
- Priceless (Forbidden Men #8)
- Worth It (Forbidden Men #6)
- Consolation Prize (Forbidden Men #9)
- A Perfect Ten (Forbidden Men #5)
- A Fallow Heart (Tommy Creek #2)
- Hot Commodity (Banks / Kincaid Family #1)
- The Trouble with Tomboys (Tommy Creek #1)
- Delinquent Daddy (Banks / Kincaid Family #2)
- How to Resist Prince Charming