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Authors: Julie Johnson

BOOK: Erasing Faith
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Chapter Eleven: FAITH

 

 

GRISLY FLOWER PETALS

 

My hand twined with his and I was startled by how much I liked the feeling of his calloused palm pressed warm against mine. I glanced apologetically at match number eight, muttered a quiet “sorry” under my breath, and allowed Wes to pull me to my feet.

“Excuse me!” Linda’s voice boomed through the megaphone. “Sir! Miss! There will be time to mingle at the conclusion of all the sessions. Where are you going?”

“Oh, shit!” I cursed, looking up at Wes. “We’re so busted.”

He deliberated for a moment. “Well, there’s only one thing to do…”

I stared at him for a suspended instant, wondering if he was going to make me sit back down and suffer through another string of potential suitors. To my relief, his hand didn’t release mine — it only tightened and tugged, as he took off running at a breakneck pace that had me tripping over my own feet.

“Run!” he explained needlessly.

I giggled, breathless and reeling, as we sprinted off the bank toward the path. Linda was chastising us with a fresh round of admonishments via the bullhorn, but there was no stopping us.

“Call you later, Margot!” I shouted over my shoulder to my roommate, locking eyes with her for a brief moment. Her eyebrows had drifted high on her forehead and she looked slightly concerned by the fact that I was making a break for it with a man she’d never before laid eyes on, but her mouth was half-lifted in a grin, so I knew she wasn’t too distraught that I’d abandoned speed-dating night.

“Be safe, you crazy bitch!” she yelled after me, which only made me laugh harder.

We ran like fugitives. Like Bonnie and Clyde, bolting from a big heist with the law on our heels.

There was no one chasing us, but that wasn’t the point. There was something exhilarating about holding hands with Wes Adams, running through City Park like lunatics, laughing so hard it was impossible to catch a good breath.

***

“Are you sure you want to do this?” I asked, swallowing roughly.

“It was my idea.”

“Well, I’m just not sure I’m ready…”

“You’re ready.”

“I’m…um…”

“Don’t tell me you’re backing out now.” His voice was teasingly exasperated.

“It’s just so….
high
,” I whispered, tilting my head back to take in the sight of the towering Chain Bridge, sprawled out before us in all its glory. When my gaze swung down to the brown-blue waters of the Danube flowing below, I gulped nervously. I knew that, as far as bridges went, this one wasn’t exceedingly tall. But that knowledge did little to calm my stomach, which was flipping queasily at even the thought of the fifteen-minute walk across to the Buda side of the city.

“It’s not that high,” Wes argued. “Even if you fell off — which you won’t — you’d probably walk away with nothing but a few bruises and a mouthful of river water.”

I winced at the mental image of my body toppling over the railing.

“You haven’t truly experienced Budapest until you’ve walked the Chain Bridge,” Wes pointed out.

I nodded — I knew he was right. The famous suspension bridge had been a Hungarian landmark since its construction in 1849. Its distinctive square towers and the imposing, carved-stone lion statues that guarded either side made it one of the most beautiful sights in the entire city. Scores of tourists were walking it at this very moment, snapping pictures and laughing without a care as I deliberated on a sidewalk.

Thus far, most of my exploring had been limited to the Pest side of the city for this very reason — I couldn’t work up the courage to walk across a damn bridge. The university, my apartment, and the Hermes offices were all in Pest and, after a bit of begging during my first shift, Konrad had agreed to give me delivery routes on that side only. So, I didn’t necessarily
have
to go to Buda. But if I didn't conquer this fear, I’d be missing out on half of the place I’d come to immerse myself in.

Budapest was a city of split-personalities. Pest was a buzzing, bourgeois hub of restaurants, bars, clubs, and cafes; Buda was the richly historic home to the Royal Palace, Parliament, Castle Hill, and the Fisherman’s Bastion. Two distinct cities, one old and one new, divided by the Danube.

As a history student, I really needed to explore the old side — and, if I wanted to avoid paying for a ferry or a taxi every time, it was paramount that I get my ass walking across the damn bridges. Pronto.

Unfortunately, as with most things, this was much easier said than done.

“I’m afraid of heights,” I squeaked out.

“You don’t say.” Wes’ voice was amused.

“You know, if you were a nice guy, you’d let me take the ferry. You wouldn’t make me do this.”

He was silent for a long moment — so long I thought he might not respond at all — but, finally, he broke the quiet with one, tiny word that, for no logical reason at all, sent chills down my spine.

“Hey.”

The softness of his tone — something I’d never heard from him before — immediately caught my attention. I turned my worried gaze away from the bridge in order to meet his eyes, which were empty of their usual teasing light and, instead, full of sincerity. His hand lifted carefully to touch my face, like a cautious hunter might approach a wounded wild animal — slow and steady movements, giving me ample time to bolt if I didn’t want the contact. To flinch back or flee if crossing this line from simple strangers to
something more
wasn’t what I wanted.

I didn’t flinch or flee. In fact, I stood so still, I barely breathed as two fingertips landed gently on my cheekbone, skimming like the lightest flutter of a butterfly’s wings against my skin.

Stifling the involuntary gasp that threatened to escape my lips, I felt the electricity of his touch coursing through me like a current, from the tiny points of contact where the pads of his fingers smoothed away the worry lines on my face, all the way down to the soles of my feet. He traced slowly up the bridge of my nose, across my forehead, and down my temple, circling my eye in a caress so delicate I had to stop myself from leaning into his touch.

“You’re right,” he whispered.

My thoughts were honed so intently on his featherlight fingers, I couldn’t string words together to form a response.

“I’m not a nice guy,” he told me in a hushed voice. “I’m not going to give you a free pass when it comes to doing things you’re afraid of. If that makes me an asshole, so be it. Phobias, fears — either they own you, or you own them. Whether you let them rule you — that’s your choice, Red. I don’t live my life hiding from the shit that scares me. I don’t believe in running from fears; I believe in facing them.”

My lips parted in an exhale and I stared into his eyes, totally transfixed, as he spoke on.

“And, if it makes it easier… If you need me to…” He swallowed roughly. “I’ll face this one with you.”

He held out his hand for me to take and, without hesitation, I slid mine into his grasp. I didn’t know why, I couldn’t begin to explain it… but I trusted Wes implicitly. I looked into his eyes and thought, for the first time in a long time, for the first time maybe
ever
, someone had finally taken the time to look beneath my surface. To understand who I was deep down, where no one could see.

Except him.

He
saw
me.

Not the Morrissey’s youngest child, or Saffron’s little sister. Not the homecoming queen or the honors-level history student.

Just me. Just Faith.

A flurry of nervous butterflies erupted in my stomach — and they had absolutely nothing to do with heights.

“If I die on this bridge, I’m gonna be so pissed at you,” I whispered. 

“Aren’t you the one who’s always saying
you just need to have a little faith
?” he reminded me, that devilish, crooked smile playing on his lips. “I’ll keep you safe. I promise.”

I laughed. “Thanks for the reassurance. And, speaking of faith…”

His eyebrows arched in question.

“My name.” I paused for a beat. “I’m Faith.”

He was silent for a moment, a slow grin dawning like a glorious sunrise as he stared at me. My heart turned over at the sight.

“Of course you are,” he eventually murmured.

“What does that mean?” I asked narrowing my eyes at him. I wasn’t sure whether he was complimenting or criticizing me.

“Just that it suits you.” He squeezed my hand in his. “Now, are you coming, or not?”

My eyes drifted back to the bridge and my apprehension, lost momentarily as I stared into comforting, chocolate eyes, returned with a vengeance. “Um…” I swallowed against the lump that had lodged itself in my throat. “I, well, uh… See, the thing is—”

Before I could voice the excuse hovering on the tip of my tongue, Wes laced his steady fingers through my shaky ones and pulled me close. My words dried up altogether as our bodies collided — interlocked hands trapped in the sliver of space between us, faces mere millimeters apart, eyes locking together in a heated gaze that made my heart race. For one crazy instant, I thought he might bend down just the slightest bit, close that final gap of distance between us, and kiss me.

Slowly, so slowly, he moved closer.

My eyes dropped to his mouth and I watched its progression as the breath caught in my throat.

Closer.

A fraction of an inch apart. Suddenly, I was longing for his lips to brush against mine. Praying for it. Fighting my innermost instincts, which were screaming to rise onto my toes and crush our lips together.

Closer.

A centimeter of space. Achingly near to tasting him. I licked dry lips in anticipation.

Closer.

His mouth was practically on mine, now. If either of us moved even the slightest bit forward, we’d be kissing. And I knew it was stupid and reckless. I was fully aware that I knew virtually nothing about Wes Adams, that running off with a stranger in a foreign city was, by far, the most idiotic thing I’d ever done. I recognized my stupidity easily — heard all the internal rebukes, saw all the red flags.

Still, I was going to let him kiss me.

No — I
had
to let him kiss me. There was no choice, any longer. Because if he didn’t close that final bit of space between us, I’d shatter into a million sexually-charged pieces. I’d crumble into a pile of what used to be Faith Morrissey — splinters of a girl caught between the cobbles at the mouth of the Chain Bridge, blowing down the ancient avenues, floating in the Danube like grisly flower petals.

His lips parted; like a mirror, mine opened as well.

His eyes stared into mine with a burning intensity; I had no idea what emotions were swirling in the depths of my own gaze.

And, finally, after a small eternity of waiting, he moved that fraction closer. My heart pounded a mad tattoo in my chest as his breath ghosted across my lips… 

“Oh, ye of little
faith
,” he taunted, breathing the mocking words into my mouth and instantly obliterating the intensity of the moment.

In that sliver of time, I wasn’t sure who I hated more — him, for toying with me, or myself, for believing him. I felt an inferno of embarrassment flame up my cheeks, and shoved at his shoulder as I moved out of his space. He didn’t let me get too far — his right hand was still interlaced tightly with my left.

“You officially suck,” I muttered. I couldn’t believe I’d been so weak, that he’d drawn me in like that. And, if I was being honest, I was also irrationally disappointed that he’d only been joking around. “Let’s just walk the damn bridge.”

He laughed and led me onward, to my doom.

Chapter Twelve: WESTON

 

 

COUNT TO FIVE

 

She made it about three steps onto the bridge before her face paled, her palms went clammy, and her confidence fled entirely. Four steps, and the panic set in. Five, and she was ready to turn back around and forget the whole thing.

“I can’t do this, Wes,” she whimpered softly, squeezing my fingers harder than an enemy insurgent with a goddamn pair of vise-grips. Since it was her, I didn’t mind.

“Yes, you can.” I drew to a stop and turned so I could see her eyes. They were wide with terror as they lifted to meet mine. Seeing the raw fear there was an unwanted punch to the gut. It hit me hard, a stinging jab beneath my ribcage.

For once, I didn’t want to cause pain — I wanted to cure it.

I didn’t want to break someone’s spirit — I wanted to bolster it.

The sensation was strange. Unfamiliar. Unwelcome.

I shoved it from my mind and focused on the beautiful, fearful girl before me.

“Take a deep breath, Red. That’s it — in through your nose, out through your mouth. You’re panicking.”

She nodded, breathing deeply as she fought to regain control.

“Talk to me,” I ordered gently.

“Um…” He eyes lost some of their fear as confusion suffused their depths.

“What do you like?” I asked abruptly. “Hobbies, interests…”

She looked at me blankly.

“What are you studying?”

“History.” She whispered her answer through parched lips, a new light entering her eyes. “I like history.”

I nodded. “This bridge — it’s old. Really fucking old. I’m sure it has a great history. Why don’t you tell me about it?”

Her mouth lifted in a hollow half-smile. “You want to hear about the history of a bridge?”

“I want to hear the sound of your voice as we walk this damn historical bridge,” I corrected. “Frankly, the subject doesn’t matter much to me.”

Her lips trembled into a full smile.

“See the lions?” she asked, gesturing at the dual stone statues on either side, which guarded the entrance to the bridge like sinuous feline sentinels. They were lit with spotlights, easily visible despite the fading sun.

Looking up, I nodded. “Kinda hard to miss those, Red.”

She laughed softly. “Well, they’re from the original bridge. The rest was destroyed in World War II and eventually rebuilt, but the lions survived the siege.”

“Why? They were too ugly to destroy?” I guessed, grimacing at the colossal cats.

Faith gasped in outrage. “They aren’t ugly! They’re a work of art!”

“Just teasing, Red. Carry on.”

She huffed lightly, but a smile was twitching the corners of her mouth. “Anyway, these
beautiful, historic
lions are from the 19
th
century. Legend goes that the sculptor who made them was so proud of his work, he dared the crowds at the bridge’s opening ceremony to find a flaw. He was so confident in their perfection, he declared he’d end his life if anyone found a single mistake.”

“Sounds like a prick,” I noted, taking a few steps forward onto the bridge. Faith was so wrapped up in her story, she followed docilely, not seeming to notice where I was leading her. Her eyes were distant and animated as she spoke, recalling facts and figures from long ago. With measured steps down the pedestrian walk, I guided her out over open water.

“Well, then you’ll enjoy the rest of this story,” she told me, her cheeks flushed with enthusiasm. “The crowds gathered to see the new bridge and, when the statues were revealed, a little boy in the audience gleefully pointed out that the lions didn’t have tongues.” Faith chuckled under her breath, her whole face lighting up with mischievous joy.

I bit the inside of my cheek. Hard.

Better to focus on the pain than the way she made me feel when she looked like that.

“Devastated his perfect lions weren’t so perfect after all, legend goes that the sculptor threw himself over the side of the bridge and fell to his death.”

I snorted. “A bit dramatic, don’t you think?”

“Tell me about it.” Faith’s smile stretched wider. “He didn’t really die, of course. It’s just part of the myth. But the tongueless lions have become sort of a citywide joke.”

“You get your kicks where you can,” I murmured, drawing to a full stop.

We’d reached the exact center of the bridge.

Faith shook her head lightly as she laughed, still lost in her thoughts.

“Red?”

“Mhmm?” she hummed, turning her attention to me.

As soon as she stopped thinking about the past and focused on her present, her eyes went wide with terror and her face drained of color. She backed as far from the railing as she could on the narrow walkway, tripping over a family of German tourists in her frantic flight with a series of whispered, white-faced apologies.

Hand still clasped around hers, I followed until her back pressed against the stone partition dividing walkers from cars. I leaned into her frame, forcing her to focus on me.

“Faith.” I whispered it like a benediction, my voice hushed and undeserving as I used her name for the first time — an unfit outlaw addressing a queen.

Her eyes snapped to mine and held.

“I’ve got you,” I told her simply, squeezing her hand in mine. “You hear me?”

She nodded unconvincingly.

“You’re safe. I can’t promise you much, but I’ll promise you this — you will always be safe with me.” I tried to convince myself it wasn’t a lie as the words left my mouth. “Look how far you’ve made it already, Red. You’re halfway there, without even realizing it.”

Her eyes left mine for a moment, darting over my shoulder to glance at the waters of the Danube. I heard her breathing rate increase, felt her heartbeat speed up to a rapid staccato at the pulse point in her wrist. Panic was setting in again.

“When I was a little boy—” I broke off abruptly and swallowed down the indecision that was clawing at my throat in a chokehold. I warred internally — did I follow protocol, as I’d done a million times before, and fabricate a convincing little anecdote to comfort her? Or, for the first time ever, did I throw the rulebook in the fucking river and give her a piece of my own past?

Those beseeching honey-gold eyes returned to mine and the decision was made without another thought about proper procedure.

“When I was small, I didn’t have anyone. And, for a while, I was scared of everything — the dark, the monsters under the bed, the kids who were bigger and stronger than me at the shelter. Thunderstorms, dogs, strangers on the street. You name it, I feared it. Solitude makes the world a helluva lot scarier, especially when you’re a kid.” My eyes lost their focus as my thoughts turned inward, to places I’d left unexplored for decades. “After one particularly bad day, which started and ended with an empty stomach, I’d crawled into this abandoned warehouse and curled into a ball on the floor. And I remember just crying like the fucking world was ending. For hours, till my eyes ached and my face was a streaked mess of dirt and snot and tears.”

Faith stared at me, her panic gone. In its place was a look that I wanted to hate on principle, but couldn’t. It wasn’t pity — it was horrified compassion. I couldn’t meet her eyes when she was looking at me that way, so I stared over the top of her head at the buildings on the embankment, their windows illuminating like distant fireflies as dusk fell.

“Hunger breaks you down, makes you weak. Not just your body; your mind.” I cleared my throat, as though that might expel the emotion that had lodged itself there. “I let it break me, that night.”

Faith was silent, absorbing my words with rapt attention. I swallowed again, as more cobwebbed, dust-coated memories rose to the surface unbidden.

“Finally, I heard a voice in the darkness. Nearly pissed my pants, I was so scared. It was this other street kid — bigger, stronger, meaner than me. He’d been on the streets for years. Told me to shut the fuck up so he could finally get some shut eye.” One corner of my mouth lifted involuntarily. “And then he gave me a piece of advice I never forgot.”

I forced myself to look into Faith’s eyes.

“He told me, no matter what happens, no matter how scared you are, you can’t let fear shut you down forever. So you give it five seconds — you let it own you, control you, take hold of every one of your senses. But only for those five, finite seconds. You breathe them in, count them down. And when they’re over..” I dragged a ragged breath through my mouth. “You tell the fear to go fuck itself.”

Forcibly, I pulled out of my twisted stroll down memory lane. I was rattled I’d revealed so much. Once I’d started, I hadn’t been able to stop myself from spitting out the whole goddamn sob story. I’d kept it locked inside for too long, without an outlet. I hadn’t talked about this shit since…

Actually, I’d never talked about this shit. Period.

Our eyes locked. Both of us were breathing too fast, like we’d been running a goddamned marathon. I didn’t know what else to say to her, so I waited.

“Just count to five?” she finally asked in a small voice. “That’s the big secret?”

I nodded. “Just count to five, Red.”

She looked over her shoulder at the water and panic flashed briefly on her features. Taking one shaky step closer to the railing, her grip tightened on mine.

“Will you count with me?”

I couldn’t hide the smile that was tugging at my lips. “Of course.”

Together, we took a step closer to the edge.

“One,” I counted, nodding in encouragement when she looked my way.

A shiver of fear rippled through her body, but she took another determined step toward the water.

“Two,” she whispered.

“Three.” I squeezed her hand tighter as we moved in unison. Almost there, now.

“Four,” she said in pinched voice, taking the final step. Waists pressed against the stone railing, we stood shoulder-to-shoulder and stared out at the river. I saw the whites of her eyes flash when her gaze dropped straight down over the edge. Shaking visibly, she crushed her lids closed, took a deep breath in through her nose, and released it with a whoosh of air that made her entire body sway like a reed in the wind.

“Five,” she breathed, opening her eyes to stare into mine.

I stilled for a beat, watching to see if the panic would return. Waiting for her to freak out or run from the railing, toward the relative safety of the wall.

She didn’t.

Instead, she did something so surprising, it nearly knocked me on my ass. She unlaced her fingers from mine, stepped forward into my space, and wrapped her arms around me in an embrace that had me clenching my jaw and curling my fists in an attempt to maintain even the pretense of control.

And there on a bridge in the middle of the Danube, with a beautiful girl pressed tight against me, I felt my mask slip. For just a moment, I let Wesley Adams fall away and Weston Abbott took his place. His thoughts filled my mind, swirling in a chaotic tangle, and for once I didn’t push them out.

This girl.

She kills me.

Every look, every laugh, every smile.

She slays me. Breaks me.

Undoes me. Creates me.

She sets everything in my hollow, heartless world on fire.

And I let her.

Because I love to feel the flames lick my skin.

The chaos she incites, ignites…

It’s the realest thing I’ve ever felt.

My hesitant arms lifted of their own volition to return her embrace, wrapping around her frame in a light grip that wasn’t quite a hug. I was out of practice at this. Undoubtedly, I was fucking it up.

She didn’t seem to notice, though. She just hugged me tighter.

Minutes ticked by as we stood there, interlocked in an embrace I felt down to my tar-black soul. Her forehead tucked against my shoulder, her fingertips dug into the thin cotton of my t-shirt like she couldn’t bring herself to let go.

The sun set, and the moon drifted up to take its place.

The stars appeared one by one, sprinkling the sky with light.

The summer breeze lost its warmth, and a chill blew off the water.

And still, we stood. Frozen. Entwined like one figure, one soul, for so long the lines between where I ended and she began became blurred. There was nothing left to say — I had no pretty words for her. I didn’t even have more ugly ones.  So I let my arms speak for me.

I tightened my grip and returned her embrace, holding her until thoughts of who I was supposed to be and what I was supposed to be doing here disappeared entirely. Until I was just a nameless man on a bridge with a brave girl in his arms. Until it was just us.

Wes and Faith.

Faith and Wes.

We were doomed from the start. A lost cause. A losing battle.

And yet, in that narrow instant, I didn’t give a single fuck.

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