Written in the Scars(12)
The door slams behind me.
TY
The fire crackles, sending sparks shooting into the sky. Scents of burnt marshmallows and hot dogs linger in the chilly night air as most of the people I grew up with relax on hay bales and lawn chairs.
The party is a lot tamer than most of the bonfires out here. So many of the guys I grew up with, even some of our dads, worked at the mine and are now unemployed. It’s not just a truck payment we have to cover now; we have families and mortgages and bills.
The lucky ones do, I guess.
Maybe that’s why no one is doing anything that would need the fire department this time. Everyone has too much on their minds—real shit—for mischief. It’s just as well. I don’t even want to be here. I wasn’t even going to stay, just stop by and say hi, until I saw her. Now I can’t leave.
Twirling the bottle of beer between my fingers, I watch Elin across the fire. She’s talking to Lindsay, her hand on her friend’s stomach, and I realize they’ve told her about the baby. I take a swig of beer, more to squash the burning in my throat than because of thirst.
A baby—that’s what we’ve always wanted. I felt guilty our senior year of high school when she thought she was pregnant and I was happy about it. There are worse things than a baby. I hated being an only child. I wanted the chaos the neighbors had with five boys.
Elin’s mom used to say she and I had the same spirit. That’s why we were so drawn together. I didn’t correct her and say it was her daughter’s ass that initially drew in, but it was her sweet, selfless spirit that kept me.
Her having my kids, my name, felt like such a victory. Such a coup. What more could a man want than to find a woman of Elin’s caliber to have your family with?
Our life was built on that. The house we picked out has a large oak tree that Elin thought was the perfect view for a nursery. Her job teaching would keep her home on holidays and summers and my job at the mine would afford us plenty of money to raise a slew of children. It might even let her stay home, if she chose.
To think none of that might happen . . .
“Hey, man,” Cord says, bumping my shoulder. He plops his tall frame into the chair beside me. “How are ya?”
I shrug.
“Yeah, I feel ya,” he voices, following my line of sight. “She’s pretty hot.”
My head jerks to the side, my fist ready to pound his face. I don’t give a f*ck that he’s one of my oldest friends. He just crossed a line.
“Oh, did you think I meant Elin?” he laughs. “I was actually talking about Becca, but Elin isn’t bad either.” He tosses me a wink.
“I just about ended you, McCurry,” I chuckle, sitting back in my chair. “You were this close to dying tonight.”
Cord laughs and stretches his legs. “Yeah, well, what are you going to do when you do see her with someone else? Have you thought about that?”
Yeah, I’ve thought about it, and it makes me want to end up in prison for a very, very long time. Instead of answering, I just watch my wife from the safety of the darkness.
The light of the fire highlights her delicate cheekbones and the fullness of her soft lips. Her hair brushes against her shoulders as it hangs straight, not curled or fixed up like she usually does. She’s thinner than I remember, and I miss her curves and hate knowing that they’re missing because of me.
“Have you talked to her at all?” Cord asks.
I start to respond but press my lips together instead. Whatever I say is going to make me sound like a *.
“Do you remember when my birth mother came looking for me a few years ago?” he presses. “Fuck, that was hard, Ty. I grew up hating even the idea of her. I was never the kid that wanted to know her. I was the boy in foster home after foster home, wondering why my own mother didn’t love me enough to keep me. Wondering why I had to live with the alcoholic in a rage downstairs or the foster mom that had me only for the check, not to actually feed me or take care of me. I mean, if my birth mom couldn’t love me, didn’t want me, no one would.”
He looks into the night, away from everyone, and I watch as a flurry of memories skirt across his face.
“You know, one night I remember lying in a bed with no blanket or pillow, and it was cold as hell,” he says to himself more than to me. “It must’ve been December or so because I remember seeing Christmas lights out the window. My stomach ached,” he cringes, “and I mean ached. I hadn’t eaten more than a half a sandwich in a couple of days and a handful of iced animal cookies I snuck out of the cabinet in the middle of the night.” His voice breaks and he pulls away from me, turns so I can’t see his face anymore. “I remember lying there and praying that my mother and father, wherever they were, were hungry and cold and miserable. I prayed they died.”
I watch his shoulders tense, his jaw clench, and I feel absolutely terrible for him. “Man, I’m sorry. I don’t know what to say.”
He faces me. “I hated my parents more than I ever thought one person could hate another. Their choices ruined my life. And then my mom showed up out of nowhere.”
“I remember that. She came into Thoroughbreds, right?”
“Yeah. And she asked me who I was, and I told her, and she started crying,” he says, the corner of his lips twitching. “I called her every name under the sun. I mean, I really ripped into her. But after I settled down some and the shock wore off, we went out to the lake and sat by the water and talked. It was . . . it was okay.”