Love and Other Words(78)
I haven’t felt this way in so long. Or maybe I never felt this particular emotion: I want to cry. I want to positively sob. I give it full access, letting it tear through me into these awful howls that echo off the high ceilings and shake my torso, curling me forward. Snot, spit: I am a mess. I feel him right there behind me but I know he isn’t. I want to call out to him, to ask him what’s for breakfast. I want to hear the even cadence of his footsteps, the intermittent snap of the newspaper as he reads. All these instincts seem to live so close to the surface that they warp and weave through the fabric of possibility. Maybe he is downstairs, reading. Maybe he is just getting out of the shower.
It’s these tiny reminders that hurt, the tiny moments where you think – let me just call out to him. Ah, right. He’s dead. And you wonder how it happened, did it hurt, does he see me here in a sodden, sobbing puddle on his floor?
This is the only thing that interrupts the torrent, pulling a thick laugh from my throat. If Dad ever found me crying like this inside his closet, he would stare down – befuddled – before slowly lowering himself to a crouch, and reaching out, gently running his hand down my arm.
“What is it, Mace?”
“I miss you,” I tell him. “I wasn’t ready. I still needed you.”
He would get it, now. “I miss you, too. I needed you, too.”
“Are you hurt? Are you lonely?” I swipe an arm across my nose. “Are you with Mom?”
“Macy.”
I close my eyes, feeling more tears slide across my temples and into my hair. “Does she remember me?”
“Macy.”
“Do either of you remember you had a daughter?”
I’m not myself, I know I’m not, but I’m not embarrassed to be found like this, either, especially not by Dad. At least this way he’ll see how loved he was.
Strong arms come beneath my legs, around my back, and I’m lifted from the fog of mildew and Dad, and carried down the hall.
“I’m sorry,” I say, again and again. “I’m sorry I didn’t call. I’m sorry, Dad. It’s my fault.”
I’m still on his lap when he sits on my bed. He’s so warm, so solid.
I haven’t been this small in years.
“Mace, honey, look at me.”
My vision is blurry, but it’s easy to make out his features.
Greenish-gold eyes, black hair.
Not Dad, Elliot. Still in his tux, eyes bloodshot behind his glasses.
“There you are,” he says. “Come back to me. Where did you go?”
I slide my arms around his neck, jerking him closer, squeezing my eyes closed. I smell the grass on him, the bark of the olive tree. “It’s you.”
“It’s me.”
He needs my apology, too.
“I’m sorry, Ell. I ruined everything because I forgot to call.”
“I saw the lights on,” he whispers. “I came over and found you like this… Macy Lea, tell me what’s going on.”
“You needed me, and I wasn’t there.”
He goes quiet, kissing the top of my head. “Mace…”
“I needed you even more,” I say, and begin sobbing again. “But I couldn’t figure out how to forgive you.”
Elliot pushes my hair out of my face, eyes searching. “Honey, you’re scaring me. Talk to me.”
“I knew it wasn’t your fault,” I choke out, “but for so long it felt like it was.”
I see the confused tears fill his eyes. “I don’t understand what you…” He pulls me into his chest, one hand in my hair as his voice breaks. “Please tell me what’s going on.”
And so I do.
then
monday, january 1
eleven years ago
I
woke to the sharp slam of the door, the pounding of footsteps along the entryway tiles.
“Macy?”
I groaned, cupping my stiff neck and sitting up just as Dad rounded the corner into the living room. A father’s first assumption rippled through him, and he rushed to my side, crouching.
“Did he hurt you?” His accent pushed the words together into a ball of anger.
“No.” I winced, stretching. Remembering. My stomach melted away. “Actually, yes.”
Dad’s hands made a careful trek over my shoulders and down my arms, taking my hands in his. He turned my palms over, inspecting them, and then pressed the pads of his thumbs to the centers of my hands.
I remember that touch like it was yesterday.
We linked fingers.
Realization pushed through the fog, and I registered that I was at the cabin, and Dad was here, too – in the freezing cold morning, more than seventy miles away from home. “What are you doing here?”
He gave me a hard look with soft edges. “You never called to tell me you arrived here safely. You didn’t answer your phone.”
Slumping into him, I mumbled, “I’m sorry,” against his broad chest. “I turned it off.”
He sighed a concerned sound. “What happened, min lille blomst?”
“He made a mistake,” I told him. “A big one.”
Dad pulled back to meet my eyes. “Another girl.”
I nodded, and a thick sob escaped at the memory of Elliot’s body, bare, just… lying there. Sprawled.
Christina Lauren's Books
- Roomies
- My Favorite Half-Night Stand
- Josh and Hazel's Guide to Not Dating
- Sweet Filthy Boy (Wild Seasons #1)
- Beautiful Bitch (Beautiful Bastard, #1.5)
- Beautiful Bastard (Beautiful Bastard, #1)
- Wicked Sexy Liar (Wild Seasons #4)
- Sweet Filthy Boy (Wild Seasons, #1)
- Dirty Rowdy Thing (Wild Seasons, #2)