“SHUT UP!” she screeches. “Brandon, you’re not killing him.” She snaps her gaze to Gabe. “Yet.”
Gabe, seeming unaffected by her threat, smirks at me. “By all means, take your ‘girl’ to dinner. Go woo her. I’ll just hang out here. Bring me a doggie bag.”
She grabs my hand and drags me from the kitchen. “Why do you even challenge him?” she huffs as we make our way into the living room. “You can’t win with him.” Her tone is annoyed and impatient. It stings that she’d chastise me for wanting to protect her from his predator ass.
“Apparently I can’t win with you either,” I mutter under my breath. “I’ll wait outside.”
“Did you get what you needed?” I ask as she climbs into the truck with a bagful of shit. Earlier when we’d pulled into the parking lot of the aging drugstore in town, she’d seemed suspicious as to why I didn’t take her to Walmart. But I just shrugged my shoulders, feigning indifference, and told her this place was closer.
She nods and rummages in the sack until she pulls out a small plastic box. Tossing it into my lap, she narrows her eyes at me and says coolly, “A phone charger. You can charge it when we get back to the cabin.”
I give her a clipped nod as I try and figure out a way to avoid her using my phone. Once she sees her face on the news as a person of interest, she’s going to really lose her shit. I don’t need her completely breaking apart. Not when I’m finally here and attempting to put her back together again.
Putting the car into reverse, I reach over and push play on my Big Wreck CD. This was an album that we always listened to together. I’m hoping to help her remember better times—times when our relationship wasn’t strained. Times when we were free to love without worry.
From the corner of my eye, I see that she bought a small purse and is quickly shoving shit into it. It all appears to be girly makeup, a hair brush, and other stuff. I didn’t really think to grab those things in my haste to get to her. All I cared about was finding her and then never letting her go.
The cemetery is about forty-five minutes from the cabin and I dread having to drive in silence. She now stares out the window as if she longs to be anywhere but inside this truck with me.
“I’m sorry, babe. I shouldn’t have been an asshole earlier. I’m just totally at my max with stress about this whole situation. All I want is to help you. That’s all I’ve ever wanted.”
Her head turns to me and she offers me a small smile. It’s not much but I’ll take it.
“Do you remember that time Dax Stevens poured hand sanitizer into Mr. Duncan’s coffee while he stepped out of the classroom?”
She nods and looks out the window.
“God, the whole class was laughing so hard when he came back in. He was so eager to tell us about the Civil War that he downed practically half his cup before he realized it didn’t taste right. When he puked in the trash can, you almost threw up.” I flash her a grin. “Dax got in so much fucking trouble. His dad probably beat his ass for getting expelled over that shit.”
“Poor Mr. Duncan.” A small chuckle escapes her and it’s fucking musical. It breathes hope into a brittle part of my heart that had been recently darkened.
She leans forward and switches the song she always skips over to the next one we both love. My chest swells with happiness. We can fix this. I just need to breathe life back into my girl. Make her remember the good times.
Reaching over, I hold my hand out to her. And like a million other times we rode around in my truck together, she grasps my hand and our fingers thread together.
Everything is going to be okay.
WHITE AND THEN black.
White and then black.
White and then voices.
“Warren.”
A blur stands in my vision and I attempt to blink away the haze. When my eyes find their focus, my father comes into view. His dark hair is disheveled and his eyebrows are drawn together in concern. Lines that weren’t there before crinkle along his forehead. My dad looks older. And stressed as hell.
“Warren, do you remember what happened?” His voice shakes as he asks his question.
I try to speak but it’s then that I realize something is in my throat. A tube maybe. Shaking my head, I attempt to conjure up my memories.
Something niggles at me.
Something heavy.
As if my heart is aching.
“Son, you were shot. Do you remember that?”
Again, I shake my head no.
His frown is immediate. “Do you remember Baylee?”
Baylee. Baylee. Baylee.
My heart rate speeds up and I can hear it on the monitor. The sound is comforting and I find myself needing to count the beats. How many of those rapid beats would resound on the monitor in a minute’s time? My eyes dart all around the room in search of a clock. Finding nothing, I decide to count them. One, two, three, four, five, six—nearly two beats per second. Two beats per second means one hundred twenty in one minute. Is that normal? Is it abnormal? Is it the reason I’m in the hospital after being shot like Dad claims?