Indigo: The Saving Bailey Trilogy #2 (31 page)

BOOK: Indigo: The Saving Bailey Trilogy #2
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He shuts the door and locks it. The blinds swing again, agitated by Sarah looking out of them. I rip myself from the bush and tear down the porch, leaving his hoodie at the door.

Getting on Harley, I look back at the hoodie on the ground and regret abandoning it. What else will I have to remind myself of Spencer? I could still find his smell on the inside, even if Holden’s cologne has soiled the outside. Storming back up the steps to the porch, I snatch it up.

With Tarzan inside of me, swinging on all of my insides and slamming into them like trees, I ride home. My tears never leave the corners of my eyes; they dry as fast as I can produce them, the wind stinging every part of me.

Chapter 29

I rotate the bottles a quarter inch clockwise. Place the second layer on top of the first, creating a staircase. I slide the whole staircase of bottles forward until the top bottle meets up with the brightest star outside my window. I lean against the windowsill, cheek against the cool marble, squinting at the star. That is my heaven, right here in the boundaries of this window frame; accessible by my staircase of prescription bottles.

Dad and Mom are in the kitchen, talking in voices that are low and, as they assume, free of anyone hearing. I told them I was going to bed hours ago. Mom kissed my head and Dad tucked me in. I kept my eyes open, staring at the bare ceiling for forever. When I got up to look for comfort, my heart weighed me down; it sagged to the floor and it felt like I was carrying a granite pillar a thousand miles. I stopped at the window.

“Our daughter is crazy,” Dad says.

I am.

“Well, it’s our fault,” Mom says.

It is.

“She’s terrified of the dark—how many sixteen year olds do you know need a lit room to fall asleep?” Dad says.

One.

“How many sixteen year olds watched their daddy kill a man?”


God
,” Dad says in a hoarse crying voice. “What did we do to our child? How could we have let her get this bad?”

How?
Dad, Mom?

“Trouble follows her,” Mom says, “and it doesn’t leave. I’ll just be happy if she makes it to her eighteenth birthday.”

“Why does she collect pill bottles?” Dad asks. “What’s wrong with her? What did you do to her when she was little, besides beat her?”

“I loved her, damnit! Something you could never do because you weren’t there. I wiped away her tears. And you don’t know how many times that little girl asked for her daddy, and I had to deny her you. Don’t try to pin her on me, again. You’ve done it since the day she was born. You messed her up just as much as I did—maybe
more
.

“She collects pill bottles because she doesn’t have anything else. And what once was inside of them brought her more comfort than the two of us combined could ever give. She was dying before you came, still is. And she doesn’t need my beatings to do that.”

I swipe the bottles off the sill and they clatter to the ground. Angel wakes up and hops off the bed, barking and snarling at me like I’m a stranger. “
Shut up!”
I try to shush him.

Dad and Mom fall silent in the kitchen. Chairs scrape against the wood floor and both of them come running into the room.

“How long have you been awake?” Dad asks, his face as white as the moon shining down on me and the mess of bottles.


Long
,” I say.

“It’s time for bed,” Mom says. “Go to sleep.”

“Why? So, you can continue talking about me and how fucked up I am?”

“Don’t use that language with me,” Mom says.

“Fuck,” I say. “Fuck you, fuck Dad, fuck Spencer and fuck it all!” I kick the bottles and storm into the bathroom locking out Angel, who had been trailing behind me.

“We really fucked up,” Dad says to Mom. “You better let me talk to her. I think I can calm her down.”

Dad knocks on the door. “Open the door, sweetie,” he says.

“I’m not sweetie,” I snarl.

“Bailey.”

“I’m not Bailey! Spencer loved Bailey!”

No, I’m Indigo. That’s who I am.
Like the night, like the darkness that takes my breath away, like the nightclub that has demeaned my mother and myself.

“Call me Indigo,” I demand.

“Aren’t you a little old for nicknames?” Mom says.

“Open the door…
Indigo
,” Dad says.

I turn off the light and open the door to him. He finds me in the darkness and wraps his arms around me. “I’m sorry. We didn’t think you were listening. We shouldn’t have said those things. You aren’t crazy, we are, for treating you this way.”

“It’s okay, Daddy, I love you.” Indigo loves you. But
Bailey
is a little unsure, now.

He ruffles my hair and shows me to bed. I crawl on top of the covers and he pulls them out from under me. Tucking me in for the second time tonight, he kisses my cheek. His breath smells chocolaty, I bet he and Mom were sipping hot chocolates when I interrupted them.

“It’s pretty dark in here, do you want the light on?” he asks.

“No. I’m indigo. I
am
the dark.”

“You aren’t scared anymore?”

“I’m not scared of myself.”

“Indigo, huh? I had a nickname once. My buddies used to call me Italy, because they thought I looked kind of Italian.”

“My buddies call me Indigo because I guess that’s what they want me to be. I don’t think anyone wants Bailey anymore,” I say. “Spencer certainly doesn’t.”

“I love Bailey,” Dad says. “She’s funny and sweet, and so, so strong. Even when the darkness frightens her she turns on the light to chase it away. Indigo isn’t brave enough, she’d rather the dark become her.”

“I don’t feel strong, anymore. Couldn’t you let me be Indigo for a while?”

“You can be whoever you want to be,” he says. “Do you want Mom to sleep with you tonight?”

“Yes,” I say. “Bring her in.”

She curls up next to me on the bed, her arms looping around my body like she is a giant squid and I am a tiny ship wrapped in her tentacles.

“Goodnight, girls,” Dad says closing the bedroom door.

“When is that baby gonna come?”

“Soon,” Mom says, “hopefully before my stomach pops.”

“Do you have a name?”

“Not yet, I’m still thinking of one.”

“I’m tired. I’m going to go to sleep,” I murmur. “Will you play with my hair?”

Gently, Mom’s hands rake through my hair and I remember the thorns. The day comes flooding in, but I put up a mental dam before it can drown me. I will myself to fall asleep the same way Ashten does, to pass out like I have been knocked in the head. And in a hot second I am conscious only in my dreams.

Empty dreams with empty faces
. I have an empty heart and an empty head. An expanse of empty land ahead of me, a desert with tumble weeds and rattle snakes curled up under cool rocks. I’m thirsty in mind and soul, but what I want to drink doesn’t seem to be here in this empty dream.

Maybe it isn’t in a dream at all.

•••

My arms are stretched above my head, the comforter covering my face. Fingers brush against my skin and push the covers off of me. Mom’s hand glides over tiny red cuts.

“What happened?”

“Spencer pushed me into a rosebush.” I sit up and pull my arm away from her hand. It’s late morning, but it feels like I went to bed only seconds ago.

“That’s mean,” Mom says.

“You don’t even know,” I say. “He can be real
heartless.”

Indigo doesn’t have a heart. She can’t be hurt by heartless actions.

“I’m sorry about last night… I shouldn’t have been talking about you like that,” Mom says.

“It’s okay.”

“No, it’s not,” she says squeezing my hand. “It’s not okay, but I’m going to make it up you.”

“Okay, Mom,” I say unhinging our hands and getting out of bed before I can fall any more victim to its vindictive comfort.

I have to pass the window to go to the bathroom; I stop in front of it, my pathway impassable by my horde of prescription bottles. They are standing upright in the shape of a heart. A sticky note is stuck to one of the bottles and it reads,
My heart for you,
in green crayon.

“What are you looking at?” Mom asks.

I pitch forwards, pocketing the sticky note and bulldozing the bottles in one fluid motion. “Nothing,” I say, continuing on to the bathroom.
Indigo is ruthless. Indigo doesn’t share her father’s love.

I scrub myself clean, suds and toothpaste choking me in my hurry to wash myself of Bailey.

Bailey who is hurt too easily, who doesn’t shower regularly, and wears used clothes.
Natural beauty
, Spencer once called it. Natural, like the dirt I had been rolling in.

•••

Mom has finally peeled herself out of bed and is in the kitchen, sizzling bacon and scrambling eggs, when I come out of the shower; finished with the arduous task of scrubbing Bailey away. I throw my nightgown on from the night before and put my hair in a towel. I walk into the kitchen, my wet feet padding against the wood floor.

Mom’s hair is pieced out like an old dolls’ nylon hair, patches of her white scalp showing through. “Your hair is falling out,” I say.

Indigo is careless.

Her hands fly to her head, smoothing over her hair and feeling for bald spots. “That isn’t nice.” She pouts. “
You’re
making me bald.”

“And
you’re
giving me a headache,” I say grabbing plates to set the table with.

“Watch your attitude, young lady.”

“You watch yours,” I sneer.

I guess Indigo has decided to take over this morning.

I fold napkins and set out forks. Mom pours us orange juice and I take my seat.

“Your dad and I, we were talking earlier this morning,” she says, swishing orange juice in her mouth.

“About me?”

Always about me. Their world revolves around me.

“Yes, nothing bad. We just wanted to give you something. Your dad would have liked to give you it, but you looked so tired this morning he didn’t want to wake you.”

“What is it?”

“Here,” Mom says, passing a hundred dollar bill to me.

“A hundred dollars?” Bailey asks in wonder
. Indigo scoffs at the small amount.

“Go shopping, or see a movie with Alana. We just want you to have fun with it. You’re only sixteen once.”

I roll the money into my fist. I’ve never seen such a large bill in my hand before; I feel its lightness but imagine it’s heavy as a gold bar. I reach across the table and kiss my mother’s cheek; she flushes at my affection. Maybe Indigo and Bailey could take turns.
Best of both worlds
.

I spoon hot eggs into my mouth and tear at the chewy bacon with my teeth. Mom eats a yogurt parfait, an attempt at cleaning up her diet for the baby.

“You’ve gotten thicker,” she says. “Your dad feeds you well.”

“He’s got everything in his pantry!” I gush. “And his refrigerator is
never
empty.”

“Well, I couldn’t get you to eat when we
did
have food.”

I finish the eggs and bacon, and a bit of strawberries and granola that have sunken to the bottom of Mom’s yogurt. “I’m going to Cape Coral today. To see Alana.”

“Spend the money wisely,” Mom says.

“Aren’t you going to work?”

“I have today off. Go have fun. I’ll make dinner for you and Daddy, and maybe read a book or two. It’ll be a good day.”

I stare at her for a second, seeing my old mother, the one who made dinners from scratch and dressed me to the nines.

“Mom,” I say, “don’t do that. What you used to do, that’s what started this all.”

“Your father being too controlling is what started it,” she corrects me. “He loved it when I cooked for him. Go on and do something with that money, before I take it back.”

I do a Peter Pan jump into the bedroom and lower myself to the floor. Under the bed is a plastic box, stocked with craft supplies. I pick the laces out my new boots, push my bare feet into them, and then find a roll of duct tape in the box.

Tossing my laces under the bed, I put strips of duct tape over the tongue of my boots. They flare out at the tops without the laces to keep them in place. I press down in them, see how they feel. I twist my calves and decide I like my boots better this way.
Indigo likes them better this way.

I ditch my nightgown for a mini-skirt, cutoff tank top, and skin-tight leather jacket. Mom brought over the rest of my clothes from her apartment. My hair is wet but the wind from riding Harley will dry it.

Mom gives me a passing glance as I go out the front door; she sighs at my outfit but doesn’t make me change. Angel follows me to the motorcycle. I whistle a tune for him and muss up his fur. “Watch Mommy, okay boy? You make sure that baby inside of her stays safe.”

His tongue hangs out; in doggy language the gesture is the same as a nod of the head.

I high-leg over Harley and drive away from the apartment. Angel faithfully sits his rump in the gravel, watching as I go out of sight, his tongue suspended from his mouth.

•••

Indigo loves Harley even more than Bailey does. She relishes in the looks she receives from older men as her skirt rides up past her thighs and her charcoal black hair whips behind her back. Indigo is a wrecking ball, everything Clad asked of Bailey that she fell short of. Indigo would have gunned down everyone on Bailey’s Bullet List, including Clad. No mercy. No regrets. No remorse. When I’m thinking, I let Indigo deal with the thoughts because they won’t scathe her like they do Bailey.

Spencer’s truck is parked—third spot right of the door—in the same place he’s parked it every day I’ve known him. Bailey comes out of hiding; for the time being she locks Indigo away.

His truck looks odd not speeding away from me as I scream and cry. Now that it’s stationary, I feel like I could have stopped him. Could have stopped us from breaking up. But a stationary object can’t rewind hurt and a parked truck is no help, unless there is someone inside of it to hear my cries.

I slog down the muddy hill and splash through the dirty water that has collected in the ditch. The grass outside Thomas’s shed squishes beneath my feet. Starkey cries inside; hunger cries, sick cries. I knock on the door and the baby wails louder. Thomas lets me in but asks that I be quiet. I sit on some newspapers that have been put out for me like a chair.

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