FADING (A novel)(20)



I know I am no longer alone when I feel arms wrapping around me and a heavy chest on my back. Jase holds me tighter than anyone has ever held me, and I begin to cry harder. I sit here, on the bottom of the shower, and everything I know about myself, everything I love, everything I am begins to fade.

My tears run dry, and Jase and I sit in silence under the water. He loosens his hold on me, and I continue to rest on my knees—frozen. Jase takes the body wash and starts to rub it into my skin. All of my energy has disappeared, so I don’t protest; I just let him take care of me.

After he washes my hair, I open my eyes and look at him for the first time. He is soaking wet in his gym shorts and t-shirt. He turns the water off and strips out of his clothes, leaving them on the floor of the shower as he steps out. Wrapping a towel around his waist, he grabs another and drapes it over my shoulders as he helps me stand up. He walks me over to the toilet and sits me down.

“I’ll be right back,” he says as he walks out of the bathroom. When he returns, he is wearing a pair of dry gym shorts and is carrying a handful of clothes for me. Grabbing a hand towel, he kneels down in front of me and starts wiping my face. I look into his eyes, and I can see the worry in them. I reach up and rake my fingers through the wet hair on top of his head and grip tightly as I drop my head and begin to cry again.

“I’m so sorry,” I manage to say through my tears.

He takes my hand from his head and kisses it. Leaning his forehead against mine and holding my face between his two hands, he says, “You . . . don’t you ever be sorry for this.”

We sit like this for a while before he dries me off and helps me put on one of his shirts and a pair of his boxers. We walk to his room and slide into bed. Wrapping me in his arms, I lay my head on his chest and listen to the rhythmic sound of his heartbeat. I release a silent prayer that when I wake up, this will have never happened—it will have only been a horrendous nightmare. I hold on tightly to that prayer as my eyelids become heavy, and I slowly drift into a restless sleep.

?????

I jolt awake and can hardly catch my breath. My hands are shaking, and when I look up, I see Jase on his knees next to me.

“Are you okay?” he asks, looking completely freaked out.

“I don’t know,” I say. I’m really confused, and my heart is pounding. “What happened?”

Jase lets out a deep breath as he falls back on his heels, sitting next to me. “You were having a nightmare. You scared the shit out of me, screaming and thrashing around.”

“I’m sorry. I don’t even know what I was dreaming about,” I say as a slowly lie down on my side and try to calm my erratic breathing.

Lying down facing me, Jase asks, “How are you feeling?”

“Numb,” I answer and close my eyes. Maybe I cried out all the emotions I had, because I can’t seem to feel much right now. When I open my eyes, Jase is staring at me with concern written all over his face. I really wish he wouldn’t look at me like that; it makes me feel weird, like I’m suddenly different now. I know that I am, but can we just pretend that I’m not?

“What time is it?” I ask.

He rolls on his back, reaches over to his nightstand, and swipes his phone. “It’s almost three in the afternoon,” he says as he rolls back to me.

“Three?”

“Yeah, we didn’t even leave the hospital till after five this morning,” he says, and then reaches his arms out as a request to hold me. I scoot over and allow the embrace. He kisses the top of my head before asking, “Do you want to talk about it?”

I haven’t spoken one word to Jase about what happened last night. I’m not sure I can. But I know that I don’t want to. I swallow hard against the lump in my throat and simply shake my head. How am I supposed to talk about it? What do I even say?

The tears start to well in my eyes; the tears I thought I no longer had. It’s hard to fight them with the tightness in my throat. Jase must feel my body trembling when he kisses the top of my head and whispers, “I’m sorry, sweetie. I didn’t mean to push you.”

As the tears spill over, I silently curse my unanswered prayer. I try hard not to cry, but it only makes my body jerk as I try and hiccup the sobs back. Jase moves one of his hands up from my back, cups my head, and whispers in my ear, “Please don’t hurt yourself like this, Candace. Just let it out. It’s just me here.”

I shove my head harder and deeper into his chest as a desperate attempt to hide. Hide from the cloud that is suddenly looming over me. He tightens his grip on me, and I let it out. I lie against his chest and just cry. I cry like a baby—helpless. I’m so desperate for someone to save me. To make it all go away.

The heat of Jase’s bare chest against my wet, teary face suddenly makes my skin burn. I push back off of him and cup my cheek, unable to stop the free-flowing tears. He removes my hand and looks at the cuts on my face.

“I’ll be right back, sweetie,” he says as he jumps out of bed. I hear him in the bathroom, and when he returns, he’s holding a large square bandage and some ointment. He sits on the bed in front of me and starts tending to the scratches on my face. Once he is done, he adheres the bandage to my cheek, then walks to his closet, and throws on a t-shirt.

“You hungry?” he asks.

“No,” I say as I shake my head and lie back down. “I just want to go back to bed.”

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