“I just want to sleep next to you and hold you.”
“Okay,” I breathed.
How can you tell the bad boy who’s not really bad no? You can’t. You really, really can’t.
25
Noah
I rummaged through my drawer and pulled out an Imagine Dragon’s t-shirt, tossing it to her. “You can sleep in that if you want.” She timidly picked it up. God, she looked so out of place standing beside my bed, like she was second-guessing what she was doing. “Oh, shit.” I went back to the drawer and grabbed a pair of basketball shorts. “And these. I mean, they may fall right off you but…”
She looked away from me, rubbing her lips together. There was a moment where I expected her to tell me to take her home, but then she stepped in front of me and took the shorts. “It’s fine.” She dropped them onto the dresser. “I trust you.” Her eyes locked on my lips while her hand rubbed across my chest.
“Mmm.” I inched toward her mouth. “Don’t know that anyone’s ever said that before.”
“And I don’t want to know if they have.”
God, she drove me crazy. I fisted her hair and slammed my lips over hers. The subtle hint of cherry transferred from her mouth to my tongue, just a reminder of how innocent she really was. Literally. It was like a mixture of apprehension and fear, timid lust. If Hannah had been any other girl, I would have gladly tainted her in ten seconds flat. But she wasn’t any other girl. She was the girl that made me believe I could be a better person. Kissing her, I imagined, was an experience akin to when an atheist saw God for the first time.
Spiritual.
Something you know you’ll never forget. She almost made me forgive myself for all the stupid things I’d done in my life, for all the hate I’d held on to for so long. I could see where loving her could make me let that all go, because it would seem so inconsequential. Isn’t there a saying love saves all? Well, if there’s not. There should be. It’s what we live our entire lives in search of, even the shittiest person wants someone to love them. And while it wouldn’t take much for a guy like me to feel loved, a girl like her—someone who grew up with a storybook family, picture perfect home—hell, how could a guy like me ever be capable of loving her enough?
Slowly, I backed her toward the bed, my lips never leaving hers until she fell down onto the mattress. The way her dark hair splayed out over the white sheets seemed like art, and it caused me to bite my lip on a groan. “You don’t know what you do to me,” I mumbled as I carefully lowered myself on top of her.
“Likewise,” she whispered against my lips.
We kissed, simply kissed, for what felt like hours. Until my lips were raw and swollen. Until, for the first time, I appreciated what it felt like to want someone. Not that superficial bullshit want, but really, honest to God want someone. There was this heavy pull, like being caught in a riptide. Something that stirred a bit of panic in my chest because I knew I was in over my head, but at the same time, it was almost freeing because I knew I was no longer in control of any of it.
When I pulled away, she stared up at me, studying me while lazily threading her fingers through my hair. “Do you think everyone we meet has a purpose?”
“What do you mean?”
“I don’t know, maybe fate. Just, do you think there’s a reason we meet everyone we meet?”
I rolled onto my back, dragging her with me and brushing my fingers through her long hair. “Meet or just run into.”
“Meet, I guess.”
“So not the random guy with the squinty eyes that always makes my sub at Subway?”
She laughed. “No.”
“Okay, just had to be sure. I mean, I don’t know. Maybe. I’m sure you could make a reason if you wanted to.”
She traced over the indention in the middle of my chest. “I like to think there is.”
“You do?”
“Yeah, especially with you.”
I smiled even though she couldn’t see me, but just as quickly as that comment made me feel good, it made me feel like crap. There were so many ways I could fuck up, so many ways I could ruin her. Just as easily as I thought she could love me, I knew she could hate me. That line between love and hate is fucking fragile. And as much as I wanted her to love me, I’m a firm believer that you’ll never hate anyone you didn’t love. I swallowed. Hannah was not a girl I ever wanted to hate me.
“What are you thinking about?”
“I don’t know.” I stared up at the ceiling. “How right this feels.”
She snuggled against my chest and kissed my throat. “It really does.” There was a moment of silence, a moment where she stilled, and I thought she’d drifted off to sleep. “This is the first time in a long time I haven’t been afraid to fall asleep,” she said.
My brow wrinkled. “What?”
“I’m always afraid if I fall asleep, I’ll wake up and she’ll be gone.”
Damn. My pulse beat a little faster. I didn’t know how to respond to that, but it damn near broke my heart for her.
“That’s stupid, isn’t it?”
“No.”
“I know it could happen anytime. I’ve held patient’s hands at ten in the morning while they took they’re last breath, but…” She exhaled, and I held her more tightly, kissing the top of her head. “I think that’s it. I think it’s the thought of her dying alone in her sleep that bothers me so much. I just want to be there for her, and maybe that way neither of us will be as scared.”
I closed my eyes. There was so much sorrow in her voice, so much guilt. All I wanted to do was protect her, but how do you begin to protect someone from life? “You know you’re safe here, right? Cry if you need to.”
She shook her head. “I’m fine when I’m with you.”
“I’ll always be here for you, Hannah. I promise, we’ll get through thi.”
“I believe you.”
After a few minutes, her breathing grew heavy. I laid there, holding her and staring up at the ceiling. I’d never let a girl get close enough to fall asleep on me. I fucked them and left them. Every single time. Not Hannah. There was something so intimate about holding her like that, something so vulnerable in the way she trusted me enough to fall asleep on my chest. I loved that I was safe to her. Moments like that were what life was about. I knew that more than anyone, because I’d missed out on so many of those moments. Sometimes you just want somebody to hold you.
Sometimes that’s all you need.
She was all I needed…
26
Hannah
It had been a week since I’d stayed at Noah’s for the first time, and I’d stayed there nearly every night since. The only time I felt okay was when I was with him. It didn’t mean that I forgot that Momma was sick, or that I accepted the fact that I would lose her, but when I was with him I didn’t have to pretend to be as strong, and I could fall asleep because I wasn’t alone.
I was finishing up my shift at the hospital, gushing at the picture of us he’d sent along with the text:
Miss you so much I had to write a song for you.
“What is that smile about?” Meg asked, rounding the corner and placing a lab kit on the counter.
“Nothing.” I closed out of my messages and dropped my phone in the front pocket of my scrubs.
“Again, I’m offended that you think you can just lie to me like that. Some preacher’s daughter you are.” She sighed. “Come on. What’d loverboy do?”
“Nothing.”
“Look, if you want him to win over my cold black heart, you better start spilling. I mean the two of you aren’t bumping uglies, so I’m not sure what the hell you’re doing!”
“We just… talk.”
“Yep, no idea what that’s like.”
“Dear God.”
“I’m just saying, something’s messed up here. He has a bad reputation and yet… you’re still one with your hymen.”
I laughed. “You are so eloquent.”
“I know. It’s a gift.” She walked behind me, playing with my hair. “Come on, humor me.”
“Fine, he said he wrote me a song.”
“Oh, now that”—she pointed at me with a wide grin—“that’s brownie points! Sappy as shit, but absolutely swoon-worthy.”
I smiled. “Right?”
She batted her lashes and sighed. “Imagine if he sang it to you at the bar, broken hearts would be left shattered all over the floor, and there you’d stand, the Virgin Hannah at the feet of Noah Greyson, former manwhore of the year.”
“Wow. You didn’t snowball that or anything.”
Dr. Robbins stepped behind the nurses’ station and leaned over one of the computers. Meg tilted her head, and I watched her gaze land on his butt.
“Alright, well, I’m out. I’m taking Momma to Judy’s.”
She glanced at me. “Gonna catch up on Rockford’s gossip?”
“Is there a choice when you’re there?” I walked to the time clock on the far wall and swiped my badge.
“You guys are going to Birmingham tomorrow for her appointment, aren’t you?”
“Yeah.”