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Authors: Lauren K. McKellar

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BOOK: How To Save A Life
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CHAPTER TWENTYTHREE

The
dreams are so vivid, it hurts.

 

I’m coming home from the store. I’ve been staying at Ellie’s since
that
day. Mum dropped me off there, and I haven’t seen her since. She needed time to regroup. To recover.
Alone
. Still, on day three I need new clothes, so I’m here for a change of outfit. I open the front door.

Something is wrong.

Something is very wrong.

Photos are scattered everywhere, all over the floor of our living room. I throw down my bag and rush to pick them up, gathering them close to my chest, to my heart, all these images of our family.

What
was
our family.

They lead in a trail to the kitchen and I walk, stopping to pick each one up as I go, trying to soften the blow of hurt that stabs at my heart when I revisit each memory.
Stab.
Mum, Dad and I at the park.
Twist.
Mum, Dad and I on vacation.

I bend down to pick up the last one in the doorway to the kitchen, Mum and Dad on their wedding day. Their lips are locked in the kiss to end all kisses, and even though it’s my parents, it’s kind of nice to see them in a moment so happy. So in love.

A small smile plays on my lips.

And then I look up.

And then everything changes.

She’s sitting on a chair at the dining table, the golden afternoon sun glinting off her brown hair.

Glinting off the blade of the knife at her wrist.

Time slows down.

I scream.

She shakes her head, and the knife slices into the flesh at her wrist, scarlet red blooming where the blade meets skin.

My stomach lurches, and blood thunders in my ears. This can’t be happening.

“I’m sorry, baby,” she whispers.

It’s all I need. Time speeds up. Her words jolt me into action.

I race around the table and dive, lunging my body at her. The chair, my mother and I go tumbling into a heap on the floor.

The knife, though?

The knife stabs into my stomach.

And the pain is inescapable.

***

"Hi, I just have some questions about ... about what constitutes as a crime."

There's a pause on the other end of the line and some shuffling of papers. "What sort of a crime are you talking about?"

I lick my lips, and stare at the lake in front of me. "Well, I’m seventeen. Basically, if there's a guy, and he sits and watches me sleep ... and is really creepy ... is there anything I can do about it?"

The female officer seems to sigh down the line, and I wonder if she gets vague calls like this a lot. "It depends who the man is to you. Is he your boyfriend? Brother? Father?"

"My mum's boyfriend."

"And has he done anything inappropriate?"

"Well ... he kissed me on the cheek." Saying it sounds so lame, and from the harrumph I get down the line, it seems I'm not the only one who thinks so.

"This is something you need to talk to your mother about. Or, if you don’t feel comfortable with that, we can get Child Protection Services involved, to speak on your behalf.”

Thu-thunk
.

That’s the sound of my heart as it worries about anyone from the police department talking to my mother. Discovering more about our past. More about
her
present.

“That’s fine.” I rush out the words. “But … so I should talk to her … not you.”

“Until there's an actual law broken, there isn't a lot I can do," she says, and then with a touch of sympathy in her voice, adds, "If he's making you feel uncomfortable, I'm sure she'd understand."

I'm sure she would too.

But how do I tell her that the one good thing in her life right now, the guy who has volunteered to take her to AA, is actually bad?

"When would the line be crossed?" The pink sky gives the lake a beautiful sheen on the surface, making it appear almost two-tone. "I mean, if he forced himself onto me, but how about ... is there emotional abuse?"

"Yes ... listen, I really think you should talk to your mum. She'll want what's best for you," the officer says, then voices sound in the background and she must cover the speaker, as her voice is muffled for a moment. "Look, I have to go. But call back anytime if you need, and yeah, speak to your mother. I'm sure it'll work out fine."

The phone disconnects. He didn't do anything wrong, my logical brain argues. But the idea of someone watching you sleep like that—it just screams weird and scary to me.

I check the screen straight away, but no new messages came through during the call. I know Jase and I made plans for tonight, but no meeting time or place was arranged, and I'm starting to think that maybe he’s having second thoughts. And maybe that’s for the best.

To keep my mind off things, I bring up Mum's name in my contacts and type out a new text.

 

Good luck at AA tonight! Knock 'em dead!

 

Seconds later, a reply buzzes in.

 

Looking forward to it. Smith's taking me and waiting outside. He's so sweet! Gonna be another smiley face day :) :) :)

 

That, right there. How can I possibly ruin that?

Shaking my head, I grab my bag and head into the hall, pulling out the sheet music for a new piece and placing it on the stand. This piece is different to the one I'd been working on before. Slower. More ... lonely.

And for some reason, something clicks. The notes make sense to my brain, and my fingers find their designated spots with ease. By the eighth or maybe the ninth run through, I've got it, and I can play the first sonata from start to finish without breaking the tortured piece of music that comes from my heart so easily.

When I check my phone, it's past six-thirty, and I realise that I've been caught up much longer than I'd intended. I place my sheet music back in my bag, and lock up the hall then dawdle to my car, throwing my bag in beside my backpack on the floor of the front seat. The lights in the bar aren't on, and with only the streetlight illuminating my path, it feels mighty lonely out here.

Guess he did forget, after all.

I turn back to the car and am about to hop in when I see it. A note under my wiper again.

 

WHERE THE LAKE MEETS THE SEA …

 

My lips twist in a smile. I grab my phone and a jacket from my car, sliding it over my shoulders. It's not too cold now that spring is in full swing, but I don't know exactly what Jase has planned, and I figure it's better safe than sorry.

I switch my phone's torch on and start along the little path that snakes its way beside the lake, the trail I've walked so many times before. It's peaceful here at night, and soon I reach the point where the bush runs beside the road, making it less desolate and rapey.

The path flips left, and a dune covered in green plants and trees stretches up. The dirt beneath my feet gives way to sand and when I turn the bend, I see it.

Jase is sitting on a picnic blanket, spread out on the very last of the woodland grass. A small bonfire burns in front of him, right next to the lake shore but out of view of anyone driving past on the main road. The only people who can see it, are us.

He raises his head from his phone and sees me, then smiles, standing up and offering out his hand.

Thu-thu-thu-thu-thu-thu-thu-thu

Thunk

My heart's racing so fast, I think it might be about to jump ship and board his. And even though I shouldn’t fall, I don’t want to fall, I can’t help it because he is just so hard to resist.

I close the gap between us in five steps, and then I'm standing there, and he's standing there, and we're both standing in front of each other with all this hope on our faces. I can see myself in Jase's eyes. It's where I want to see myself, always.

"Hi," he whispers.

"Hi," I whisper back, and then his hands are linked with mine, and he's pulling me closer to that broad chest of his and lightly feathering his lips over my own. All thoughts of just being friends fly away with the evening breeze that stirs the lake.

It's the most perfect thing that's ever happened to me.

"So, I hope this is okay." He gestures to the rug behind him, the bonfire, the lake, the stars and the moon, and I can't help but do a loop-de-loop with those crazy butterflies in my stomach because he couldn't have arranged it better if he'd tried.

"Is this what you do with all your friends?” I give a coy smile.

“We were never just friends, Lia.” Desire flashes over Jase’s features. “I thought you’d know that by now.”

He settles down on the blanket, patting a spot next to him for me to join. "So, I brought some things with me."

He grabs at a basket I hadn't seen that's sitting behind him and starts unpacking. There's a bottle of wine and two glasses, some cheese, biscuits, crisps, chocolate, strawberries, and a baguette that's so long it almost covers the entire blanket.

"You organised all this?" My eyes practically bug out of my head as still more delicacies are retrieved rom the basket.

"Actually, I just ordered it from this girl in Sandy Bay. You can get date picnic baskets," he confesses, with a slight grimace. "I hope that's not weird."

"You mean you didn't go to a strawberry patch and pick the best ones there for me?"

"No." He shakes his head sadly. "And I didn't personally squash the grapes at the vineyard to turn into this wine either."

He twists the top and offers me a glass, and even though it's red, and red wine is so not my kinda thing, I'm on a date, with an amazing guy who has a date picnic basket for crying out loud——it kinda is my thing now.

"So what'd you get up to today?" he asks as the wine splashes into the glass. Waves dance on the shore in the distance, and the fire crackles and pops, hot orange streaks of light flirting with the night air.

"Just sch—" No, no, no, "scholarship study. And some cleaning."

"Fair enough." Jase nods. "Do you live alone?"

"With my mum."

"No brothers or sisters?"

"Only child."

"And can I ask about your dad ...?"

I look down at the purple drink resting in my hand. "Yeah." I finally force the word out. "He's dead."

"Damn." Jase shakes his head. "That must have been hard on you both."

Relief floods through me at what he didn't say. He didn't say he was sorry. Because there's one thing I don't need from Jase, from anyone in Emerald Cove or Sandy Bay, and that's sympathy.

"It was." I frown. "More so on her than me."

Ain't that the truth.

"Do you miss him?" he asks, taking a sip of his wine.

"Not at all."

If you're ever looking for an effective way to shut down a line of questioning on your first date, that'll probably do it. I start running through ways I could have answered that question instead, lies and half-truths, ways to avoid this awkward silence we're in now but—

"I don't miss my father either."

My attention snaps to Jase. "You lost him, too?"

His gaze goes to the fire, the dancing of the flames. "Yeah," he finally says. "I did."

I reach out my hand and squeeze his leg, and he places his hand over mine and squeezes right back.

"I did not, however, bring you out here and order a damn date picnic basket, all at the risk of losing my man card, just to depress you with stories about my deadbeat dad." He straightens his posture, and raises a glass in the air. "I brought you here to utilise the very specific hour, hour and a half you mentioned you had for me on the phone with two main activities."

"What's the first?" I grin, and take a strawberry, biting into it. It's rich and sweet and explodes in my mouth, juice coating my tongue.

"The first is to get to know you better." Jase smiles and lays back, propped up on one elbow.

"Ugh! I hate all those boring getting to know you questions."

"Who said mine were going to be boring?" Jase challenges.

"You just asked about my family. Isn't that proof enough?" I retort.

"Fine. Only non-standard questions allowed." There's a dark twinkle in Jase's eye, and I worry what I've gotten myself into. Only for a second, however, because his opening line is, "What's the one thing you have that you'd never give away, for love or money?"

"Easy." I snort. "I have this book at home. It's really kinda lame, but in it I paste parts of my favourite piano scores, or lines from books, movies—things that make me feel."

"That is not kinda lame." Jase shakes his head.

"Coming from a guy who organised a romantic picnic for a first date? That doesn't mean much," I tease, and he laughs and runs a hand through his hair. "How about you? The one thing you have you would never part with?"

"I have this wooden box. It's a light-coloured timber, and on the front of it there's this black ink drawing of a soldier. It was my grandfather's from during the war." His face takes on a deep, introspective look. "I've always just ... really admired that, y'know? Fighting for our country. Being that kind of brave."

BOOK: How To Save A Life
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