I raised my eyebrows at him. "Why's she think that?"
"Because I didn't say no."
"Huh. Congrats." I leaned my elbows on my thighs and watched the water. "Tiffany and I just had a similar conversation."
"How'd that go?"
"She brought up marriage already, man. You were right."
"I'm not surprised." He raised his sunglasses, appreciating a barreling surfer with a low-whistle. "What'd you say?"
"I . . . I didn't say anything." I opened my hands. "My parents had this bad marriage, and I never really thought I'd want that."
"What was bad about it?"
"They fought all the fucking time. He was a piece of shit, but she'd forgive him, and then it would start all over."
"From what I've seen, it's the opposite for you and Tiffany. Maybe this is your chance to break the cycle."
I looked back at him. "What cycle?"
"Remember what I said about parents passing on their bad habits?" He pulled his feet up onto the tailgate to sit cross-legged. "Let me ask you something. Are you a piece of shit?"
I laughed a little, but he didn't. Was I? At times, I'd thought so. Like now, for instance-I wasn't sure if I loved Tiffany, but here I was, talking about marrying her. Maybe I owed it to her to walk away, knowing I could never love her completely, but I'd be good to her. I'd step up to the plate and eventually, I'd be able to take care of her. I'd find a way to love her as much as I was capable. Did that make me a piece of shit? "Sometimes I'm not sure."
"The answer to that was supposed to be no. And do you think Tiffany would let you get away with treating her like shit? You think she'd turn around and forgive you just like that?"
I had to smile. Based on the attitude I'd seen Tiffany give her dad, she wouldn't put up with that from a partner. "More like she'd remind me how many other men were lined up to treat her well."
He chuckled. "Exactly. You know how I felt in the beginning. I didn't understand your interest in her. But I think you saw something the rest of us didn't, and what's more . . . now I see it. You brought that out in her."
Just like my conversation with Tiffany last month, I got a sense of pride thinking I'd helped her. I'd improved her life. I'd done good.
There were things I wanted from the depths of my soul, but I understood how loving something too much could do irreparable damage. Because whether I wanted to or not, I did love Lake. Like my cigarette craving, it lived in me. I couldn't cut that cancer out, couldn't quit this addiction. It would've been easier to swim across the ocean.
Since the age of fifteen, I'd wanted to put on a uniform and stand up for those who couldn't for themselves the way Henry had for me. I'd lost my family, so instead, I'd decided to lead a fulfilling life protecting other people. I thought that opportunity had been taken away with my felony charge, but perhaps it hadn't. Maybe I could still make a difference, and maybe there was a way I could have both things.
I could help the ones I loved, and I could have a family of my own.
18
Manning
Tiffany stood in Gary's doorway with her purse at her side. It must've looked to her as though I was living the life. At four in the afternoon, Gary and I were spread out in the living room, my arms and legs hanging off the couch, Gary slumped in a neon yellow beanbag while he strummed a guitar. On the coffee table sat a bong, an open pizza box, and a dozen empty beer bottles. Gary had muted the TV on The Ren & Stimpy Show, and Beastie Boys' Licensed to Ill had been on repeat for two hours.
Tiffany crossed her arms and surveyed the scene. "So this is what you've been doing all day?" she asked. "Getting high and eating pizza?"
"I'm not high," I said. "But I am eating pizza."
Gary giggled. "I don't know why I'm laughing," he said. "He really didn't smoke."
"We made another sale today," I told her. After moving our coffee table into its new owner's house this afternoon, a neighbor of his had asked for an armoire. I hadn't known what the fuck that was, but I'd said yes right away. I needed the money. "We've been working on it all afternoon."
"Oh."
"Can I get you something to drink, Tiff?" Gary asked.
"You've been smoking for an hour straight," I told him. "I don't think you could move if you tried."
It was clear Gary wasn't planning on doing even that. I got up from the couch. "Thanks for coming to get me."
She shifted feet. "Sure. Can I see the new piece?"