Authors: Jamie Canosa
Carefully peeling back the flap, she let the contents fall into her lap.
Paper. Plain white paper. Nothing scary there. Em flipped it open and gasped.
Chapter Twenty-one
Jay
“Hey, Jay? Can you give me a hand?” Ashlyn stood across the bar looking half miffed, half helpless.
“Sure. What’s up?”
“The stock room was not designed with someone of my . . . stature in mind.” Turning on her heel, Jay watched Ashlyn saunter off toward the swinging door next to the kitchen that led to the small room where all of the supplies were kept. He doubted the space was designed with more than a broom closet in mind.
Ducking under the bar, he followed after her, vaguely recounting the last time he’d followed some girl off to
help her out. The door bounced off the inner wall as he pushed his way inside to find her staring up at a shelf, hands propped on her hips.
“Tell me,” she huffed without bothering to turn around, “how in the hell am I supposed to reach those straws when some idiot piled them four boxes high? The shelf is already too high to begin with. There’s no way I can—”
“Let me.” Jay nudged in front of her, cutting her off before she could really get started. The girl was a great friend to Em. But she had a bit of a fiery side that could get carried away if someone didn’t put a damper on it.
She wasn’t wrong. There wasn’t a chance in hell she could have reached the top box. Jay could barely reach it even after he’d pressed onto his toes and
stretched as far as his body would go. He’d just closed his fingers around the bottom edges when a sharp gasp and a sudden flash of pain in his side told him he might have stretched too far.
“Jay!” He grunted, landing back on his heels with the box of straws in tow. Ashlyn’s eyes,
which were glued to his side where his shirt now once again covered the purple bruise spanning half his waist and up to his ribs, slowly crept up to meet his. “What is that?”
“Nothing.” He shoved the box at her, but she refused to take it.
“Jay, that is
not
nothing. What the hell happened?”
“I bumped into something. Don’t w
orry about it. And, Ash . . .” A new concern wormed its way under his skin. “Don’t tell Em. Please? She’ll only get upset.”
Ashlyn pulled her lower lip between her teeth and gnawed at it until he was afraid she’d break the skin. He was putting her in a difficult position, he
could appreciate that, but he knew that Em would demand an explanation, and there were some things he couldn’t tell her. Some things she was better off not knowing.
Releasing her abused lip on a sigh, Ash nodded.
“Okay. But, Jay?” She fiddled with her fingers for a moment. They’d never been particularly close, always having Em as a sort of buffer between them. Not that he didn’t like her, he’d just never been very good around people in general. She must have felt the awkward as heavily as he did, but she plowed ahead, anyway. “I’m Em’s friend, but I believe in you guys. I’m rooting for you both. I know there’s shit about you that I don’t know, and I’m not asking you to tell me, but just so you know . . . if you ever
want
to talk . . . I’m your friend, too.”
Jay blinked down at the short girl with pale blonde hair, chocolate brown eyes, and a
n uncomfortable smile.
His friend?
He couldn’t remember ever having a friend before. Literally,
ever
. Wasn’t even sure he understood the concept. He had Em, but no matter what they called themselves, she’d always be more than a friend. With her there were . . . He hesitated to call them ‘complications’, but that’s what they were. Things between them were a complicated mess.
He had some people out on the street that he trusted more than others, but he never would have been foolish enough to go as far as to call them friends. For the right price, anyone would stab you in the back o
ut there. Skunk had proved that in the worst way possible.
There was Sam and Greg. They’d both helped him out substantially with no strings attached.
Something he was still having trouble grasping, but they were both much older than him. It had made him feel like a child to need their help. But, to look at Ashlyn—someone his own age, stuck in the same kind of crap-ass job—and label her an honest-to-God ‘friend’ was something entirely new. And, if he was frank, a whole lot terrifying.
Jay had no idea how long he’d been standing there gaping at her like a creeper before she finally
shot him a ‘your turn’ look. Christ, he needed to get a grip. “I know.”
Ash graced him with a genuine smile and he realized just how rare those really were for her.
“Ash?”
She’d started for the door, but
paused with her hand on it to glance back over her shoulder. “Huh?”
“Thanks.” It didn’t seem adequate for what she’d just given him, what she’d been giving to both of them all along, but it was all he had.
A quick nod and she was gone, brushing through the swinging doors and out of sight. Jay shook himself. He’d have to take a deeper look at those fucked up issues some other time, he had work to do.
***
When Em was around, Jay could sense it on his skin like a static electric charge in the air, the kind you can feel right before a lightning storm. The kind he felt as he dug beneath the bar for an extra dish cloth. She wasn’t on the schedule, but he knew she was there the moment she stepped through the door.
As soon as
their eyes met, he also knew something was wrong. Very wrong. And when she flew straight toward him, his fears were confirmed. Meeting her at the vacant end of the bar, he was startled when she slammed her hand down on the polished wooden surface.
“What is that
?”
Em slid a plain white envelope across the bar. It was labeled only with
Em
followed by Ashlyn’s address. There was no return address, but he knew with a sickening certainty from the way she was reacting to whatever was inside, exactly who had sent it.
He glanced up to find her watching him. Waiting to gauge his reaction. He couldn’t hide from her any easier than she could from him. “Open it.”
He did, and slid out the news article printed on generic white computer paper. Jay’s stomach rolled at the sight of Em’s uncle. The image of that bastard in cuffs should have brought a sense of satisfaction, but all it caused him was dread because he knew why his father had sent her this.
Not just to prove to him that he could find her, or that he knew more about her than he should. It was the headline that went along with the
photo that was meant to do the damage.
47-year-
old Man Accused of Sexual Assault Involving His 12-year-old Neighbor.
And from the blatant pain
in Em’s eyes, he knew the son of a bitch had hit his mark with precision.
“Em.”
She squeezed her eyes closed, obviously trying to maintain her composure in public.
“Hold on, baby.” Jay
took her small fisted hand in his and squeezed, scanning the restaurant until he locked eyes with Mindy. “Hey, Mindy, can you cover for me for a minute?”
Without waiting for an answer he ducked under the bar, taking his coat with him
, and dropped it over Em’s huddled shoulders. Why the hell wasn’t she wearing one? She was still in her pajamas, for chrissakes, the bottoms of her pants soaked through like she’d walked there. And with Ashlyn busy covering the front section all morning, she must have.
Wrapping an arm around her back, Jay
ushered her out the door as Mindy called something about having her own tables to cover. Jay didn’t care. She’d figure it out. He had more important things to take care of.
Em didn’t hesitate to climb in when he opened the passenger side door to his truck.
When he slid in beside her, he found her staring distantly out the front windshield. To anyone else she would look calm and composed, almost serene. But he knew better. She was hanging by a thread.
“Em—”
“I looked it up.” Jay’s heart squeezed painfully. The more she knew, the more she’d torture herself. “Her name’s Tori. I sort of remember her playing outside when she was little. She said he . . . he . . .”
“Don’t, baby. Don’t let this—”
“It’s all my fault.”
And there it was. The pain, the guilt, the self-
loathing. She’d worn them like a shield when he first met her. Walls she could hide behind and keep everyone else out. Walls he’d worked so damn hard to break down. They were all shooting back up again.
“No. Em, this is
not
your fault. He’s a sick, twisted bastard.
He
did this.”
“Because I left.”
“No.”
“I left
knowing
what he was. What did I think? He would just stop? I-I didn’t even warn anyone.” A sob broke free as she buried her face in her hands.
“Shh.” Jay slid across the vinyl bench and pulled her into his arms. She went willingly, for which he was
undeniably grateful. “You didn’t cause this. You didn’t cause any of this, Em. You did what you had to do. You escaped. You survived. That’s nothing to be ashamed of.”
“But I knew she lived next door. I didn’t even—”
“No. I didn’t think of it, either. My first, last, and only thought was and always will be you, Em.”
“I should have said something.” Her body shook in his arms as she clutched his shirt, desperately pulling him closer like she needed him to hold her together. “I should have told somebody. If I had, this never would have happened to her. If I hadn’t been such a
coward
.”
T
hat word struck him hard. He hated it. Hated that she believed it. Dammit all to hell. He was working his ass off, doing his best, and still he couldn’t protect her from this pain. The anguish tearing her apart, bringing back all of that destructive crap she’d been hand fed and believed about herself for so long.
Cupping Em’s face, Jay gently lifted it until she looked at him.
He got lost staring into her tear rimmed eyes, wishing he could absorb all of the anger and fear and hurt churning in them. “You are
strong
. And
brave
. And
beautiful
. You are
not
, nor have you ever been, a coward. The son of a bitch who did this to you, to her, is the coward. And the asshole who left it in your mailbox is the coward. Not you. Never you.”
Em sniffled back the last of her tears as she gazed up at him. “You know, don’t you? Who left this?”
“I’ll take care of it.”
“Who was it? What’s going on, Jay?”
“Don’t worry about it, baby. I
will
take care of this. If anything else shows up at the house for you, any
one
. . . Call me. Right away. Okay?”
“What’s going on?”
“Nothing. It’s okay.”
“I’m scared, Jay.”
The cracked plastic seat creaked as she scooted closer until their bodies were pressed together.
“Don’t be. I’ll never let anything happen to you. Just promise me you’ll call.”
Defiance burned in her eyes with the desire to argue, to demand answers, but grief and exhaustion overwhelmed it and she shut them down, burying her face in his chest once again. “I promise.”
Jay
sat there holding her for he didn’t know how long. Screw Bart, and Mindy, and work. He was right where he needed to be. He was beginning to think she’d fallen asleep, when she stirred.
“I’m sorry.” Em brushed her hair from her face, rubbing at her tear stained cheeks. “I didn’t mean to—”
“Don’t be. Never be sorry for coming to me when you need me, Em. I’ll always be here for you. No matter what.”
“I know.” She nodded, but wouldn’t meet his gaze and Jay had to wonder if she truly believed that. “You should get back to work before you get fired.”
She was probably right, though it was the last thing he wanted to do.
“Are you okay?” Em looked at him out of the corner of her eye and Jay frowned. “No. You’re not.”
“No.” She didn’t even bother trying to lie about it.
“What can I do?”
“Nothing.” The cold hard truth stung like a slap to the face. “There’s nothing
to
do. I’ll get over it.”
That was a lie. She’d never get over this. Jay knew that deep down a part of her would carry the guilt forever. But there was something he could do and, God help him, he would do it. No matter what it
took.
***
After dropping Em off at Ashlyn’s, Jay stood in the bathroom at Bart’s, turning the paper over and over in his hands. He didn’t want to, he really didn’t, but he couldn’t stop himself. He read it. There wasn’t much. A few details about her uncle—no mention of Em—some statistics on pedophiles, and a short recounting of the report filed by the victim. It was Tori’s story, but as Jay read it all he could see was Em suffering the same atrocities. It made him sick. And sad. And pissed him the hell off. Balling up the sheet of paper, he hurled it into the trashcan, wishing there was a fireplace, so he could watch it burn.