(Once) Again (16 page)

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Authors: Theresa Paolo

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #New Adult, #General, #Contemporary, #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance

BOOK: (Once) Again
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“I didn’t really have a choice.”

I tucked a foam-drenched strand of hair behind her ear and ran my finger over her pearl earring. She smiled up at me and then she stepped away from me.

Eli picked Kat up and spun her. “You girl, are awesome,” he said and a pang of jealousy hit me low in the gut. That was something I’d wanted to do since I fell flat on my face in front of her.

“Do a shot with me,” Eli said when he put Kat down, and she eyed me.

“Go for it,” I said. Tonight wasn’t about me. It wasn’t about all the hardships Kat had been through. It was about Kat having a good time.

“What about Monica?” Kat asked.

“She won’t be bothering you anymore.” Eli said.

“You think so?”

“I know so. Let’s go do that shot.” I gave Eli a look as Kat headed back inside. “I took care of it. Don’t worry about it.”

Eli had always been good at diffusing situations, so I didn’t question him any further. Instead I patted him on the back and followed Kat back inside.

***

Three hours later, Kat stumbled down the street as we made our way back to my dorm room. She was going to feel like hell in the morning. But everybody should feel that sucky at least once in their lives. Despite what my sister thought, I’ve had my fair share of hangovers, but over time I’ve learned a Gatorade, a multivitamin, and an anti-inflammatory before bed is the best cure.

“Don’t you just love this time of year?” Kat asked as she danced in a circle around me. All traces of the foam were gone from her hair and clothes.

“The cold chill from winter is gone, the trees are becoming green again, and the flowers are sprouting all around. It’s beautiful.”

I glanced around, but other than a few weeds, I didn’t see any flowers. Plus it was two o’clock in the morning so there wasn’t exactly any light.

“There’s nothing more beautiful than you.”

Kat snorted. “You are such a cheeseball.”

“And you love that about me.”

She stopped circling and stood in front of me. “I do.” She leaned in and pressed her lips to mine. Her tongue swiped at the crease. She tasted of the lemon drop shot she’d done before we left. Sweet and delicious.

Her cold hands ran under my shirt and up my chest. My pulse raced at her touch and she bit my lip.

A branch cracked to our left. I turned to the noise but there was no one there. “Did you hear that?”

“Rabbits.”

“Rabbits. Really?”

“Uh huh.” She laughed, her hands trailing down my sides. “Touch me,” she said, lifting my hand to cup her.

“You’re drunk.”

“I might be drunk, but I know what I want. I want you.”

My pants suddenly felt too tight, and I pulled her close until she could feel what she was doing to me. She smelled of lemon and cotton candy, an intoxicating combination. Her hair fanned across her shoulder, and I pushed it back to press a kiss to her skin.

“Damn it,” I said against her.

“What is it?” Kat asked concern lacing her words.

I ran my hand through my hair. “I want to sweep you off your feet and carry you to my room, and I can’t. These fucking things,” I said, holding the crutches out, “are ruining everything. How am I supposed to be romantic when I can’t even fucking walk? I am so sick of not being able to do to you what I want. So sick of being held back from being the man you deserve.”

Understanding replaced the glassy drunk look. She inched closer to me and rested her hand on my jaw, rubbing her thumb across my cheek.

“Crutches or not. You’re everything to me.”

“But I should be more.”

“No. You shouldn’t. I love you just the way you are.”

“Are you quoting Bruno Mars to me?”

Kat laughed, and it was like liquid ecstasy to my ears. “I didn’t mean to.”

“Sing it for me.”

She bit her lip and shook her head. “Not going to happen.”

“Please.” I tickled her sides and instead of jumping away from me, she wiggled against my hands.

“Take me to your room.”

“Sing for me.”

“Why do you want to hear me sing so bad?”

“Because I remember the night in the back of my pickup.”

“Which one?” she asked.

“The last night we spent together. We were looking at the stars, and you started singing ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.’”

“I was joking around.”

“I know, but only you could make a children’s song so sexy.”

“Really?” she said, that seductive look flashing in her eyes. She dragged her finger down my lips and sang two lines of the chorus of “Just the Way You Are.”

Everything about her was amazing. Her voice. Her body. The silky feel of her hair against my calloused fingers. The way she put me in my place. I felt like such a fool for letting her go once, but I’d never make that mistake again.

When the time came to go back to school, whether she asked me to stay or not, I wasn’t letting her go. Not this time.

Not again.

Chapter 22

Sweat beaded on my forehead, and I felt like somebody was stabbing me. “Push through the pain,” Mike said as I took another step without my crutches, putting all my weight on my injured leg. I envisioned Kat and how badly I wanted to pick her up and carry her into the bedroom or hoist her onto the counter.

Determination surged through me and I took another step. And another. And another. I walked the entire length of the bar.

“Holy shit. What got into you?” Mike said and slapped me on the back.

“Sick of being a cripple.” After the words were out of my mouth, I wanted to smack myself. Mike would forever rely on mechanics to get around. “Sorry,” I muttered.

“No need to apologize. Despite what you may think, I’m not a cripple. I may need to depend on these things,” Mike tapped the metal of his prosthetic leg, “but it doesn’t mean I’m incapable of anything. The only person setting boundaries for you is yourself. I have no boundaries. I can and will do anything I want. Once you channel that in here—” Mike pointed two fingers at my heart “there will be nothing that’ll stop you either.”

I nodded. I was such a douche to him in the beginning, but he never gave up on me. I had the utmost respect for him and as much as I looked forward to finishing PT and moving on with my life, I’d miss him. I was man enough to admit that.

“Your girl’s here,” Mike said, pointing to Kat, who had just walked through the door in her purple Eeyore scrubs. The urge to go to her without my crutches flowed through me, and I glanced at Mike. I could tell he knew exactly what I was thinking.

“You got this, man. Remember, right here.” He pushed his fingers into my chest above my heart again. Between that and Kat, it was all the inspiration I needed. I let go of the bar and moved my good leg towards her, followed by my bad leg. I was still limping, but the pain wasn’t as bad as it was in the beginning. I didn’t feel like I had a hot prodder pushing into my thigh every time I moved.

I focused on my steps, not on the distance. Kat stopped moving towards me, a huge smile settling on her face. In that moment, seeing the happiness spreading through her, I knew no matter what life threw at me, I’d get through it as long as she was there with me.

One last step and she was directly in front of me. “Hey, Kit Kat,” I said like it was any other day.

She flung her arms around me and pulled me close. “I am so proud of you,” she whispered against my ear, and I knew without a doubt, the day had come when I no longer needed crutches.

***

My crutches were gone, but I still couldn’t walk without a little help, so I was using a cane like an old man. It was better than the crutches though. At least I had some freedom to my mobility.

My limp wasn’t getting much better, but Mike had faith that with more PT and more stretching, it would be. My doctor, however, suspected I would always have some sort of limp. Which only meant one thing—I would never play baseball again.

For the first time since I’d decided to put my education first and not try to go pro, I was truly happy with that decision. I couldn’t imagine how much worse my mindset would’ve been if I’d had everything riding on my ability to play.

I turned the TV on. It wasn’t exactly the best time to watch the Yankee game, but I had made the plans before the doctor delivered the news.

There was a knock at the door. “It’s open,” I yelled since I had already gotten comfortable on the couch.

“Lazy ass. You couldn’t get up?” Zach said when he walked into the den, a covered plate in his hands.

“I knew it was nobody important.”

Zach placed the plate on the table and plopped down beside me.

“What’s on the plate?” I asked

“Salted mudslide cookies. Your sister discovered Pinterest. She’s been baking nonstop. Don’t judge me if the next time I see you I’ve gained fifty pounds.”

I leaned up and grabbed the plate, taking a cookie. I took a bite. Damn. My sister could bake. “These are freaking good.”

“I can’t believe she stopped baking when I left. It’s always been her passion. I still hate myself for taking that away from her, even temporarily.” Zach rested his elbows on his knees and ran his hands through his hair. “I’m just happy she’s at it again.”

“Yeah, that’s all that matters,” I said and gave him a reassuring nod.

I left it at that and turned the volume of the TV up. Zach reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone.

“Hey, Lizzie,” he said, putting it to his ear. “Yes, I’m with him now. No I didn’t ask him.”

I didn’t need to hear my sister to know what she was saying.
What do you mean you didn’t ask him about his doctor’s appointment? Typical male. Can you ask him? Now. Please.

“Liz wants to know how your appointment went.”

I smiled and shrugged. I wanted to say fine, keep her from the truth like I’d been doing all along, but I was sick of hiding from it. “He doesn’t know if my limp will ever go away. So I’ll probably never be able to play baseball again.”

Zach’s mouth parted but no words came out. Liz was silent on the other end. Total buzzkill. Zach’s mouth closed, and I heard Liz start to talk again.

“She wants to know. You know what—hold on.” Zach handed me the phone, and I reluctantly took it. Telling my sister the truth was one thing. Hearing her thoughts was something entirely different. I didn’t want her pity.

“Hey Liz,” I said.

“You okay?” she asked, her voice softer than I liked.

“I’m fine. Honest.” I was. I couldn’t erase the scars where the bullet had entered my thigh. I couldn’t erase the limp. My life would be different and I would have a permanent reminder of that day, but I’d survived it. I wouldn’t look at my limp as a disability or an awful reminder. I would look at it and remember that although it had weakened me to my lowest point, it had also strengthened me, and in the end I’d come out on top.

“Are you sure?” Liz asked.

“Promise.”

“I’ll stop by soon.”

“You better bring cookies or don’t bother coming,” I said with a laugh.

“I’ll think about it. Talk to you later.”

I hung up the phone and handed it back to Zach. He was looking at me weird.

“What?” I finally blurted out.

“You sure you’re fine? I mean, shit, Josh. Baseball was your life.”

“Not anymore. Maybe I can coach or ump now.”

“You’re handling this pretty well.”

“I’m alive. I have to start celebrating that and stop dwelling on all the bad shit.”

Zach grabbed two cookies, handing me one. He held his cookie up at me, and I tapped mine against it. “To life,” he said.

“To life.”

Chapter 23

Kat pulled up to her house, and I leaned over and kissed her. She rested her hands on either side of my face and kissed me back.

“I had a great time tonight,” she said. “Dinner was delicious.”

“Dessert is going to be even better,” I said and hopped out of the car the best I could. Moving around was getting easier. Driving was even becoming a possibility. I missed my pickup. And more than anything, I wanted to bring Kat back to our secret spot.

Kat giggled as she ran around to my side and linked her arms around my waist. “Excuse me,” I heard behind us and I froze.

“Can I help you?” I asked the man who walked across Kat’s lawn, making sure to put myself between him and her.

He was in black jeans and a black T-shirt. I probably wouldn’t have noticed him in the dark if it weren’t for the white of his teeth.

“Hi. I’m Tim Harris. Sorry to bother you, but I’m a private investigator.” He handed me a card and I scanned over his information. “Your neighbor suspects her husband of cheating, so she hired me to follow him. Anyway I shouldn’t be telling you all of that. But every night between the hours of midnight and two a.m. a black Honda Civic sits outside your house, and I just thought you should know. I’m done with this case and couldn’t leave without telling you.”

My stomach rose into my throat. I pushed the rising fear back down. Kat went rigid in my arms and tightened my grip on her waist. “We appreciate it. Has he ever gotten out of the car?”

“No. He always stays inside.”

“It’s a he? Are you sure?”

“Positive. Dark hair, kind of scruffy. Pretty big dude.”

Kat stepped back, and I grabbed her hand, but she kept backing away.

“Thank you, sir. We appreciate it.”

“If you ever need me, my number is on the card.”

I shook his hand and hobbled after Kat into the house.

“Kat,” I called out, but she didn’t answer me. I walked through the den into the kitchen. She wasn’t there. I found her in the bedroom slumped against the wall staring off into space. “Kit Kat.” I shook her arm, but she didn’t move. Didn’t even flinch. “Kit Kat, talk to me. Please.”

Her big blue eyes looked up at me. “I’m scared.” Her voice shook.

Me too. I was terrified. I had seen evil. I knew what it was capable of and . . . I couldn’t think about it. I had to be strong. I had to assure Kat everything was going to be okay, even if I wasn’t sure myself.

I cradled her in my arms and pulled her against my chest. “You have nothing to be scared of. I’m here, and I’m not going anywhere.” Her body rocked against me, and I was pissed at that bastard for causing Kat’s fear, and even more so because there was nothing I could do to take it away.

We had come so far and it felt like we were being sent back to first base. I placed my finger under her chin and urged her to look at me. “You need to report this.”

“I know.”

I reached into my pocket and pulled out my cell. I handed it to her. There was no use holding off. The sooner she reported it, the safer she would be.

Reluctantly, she took the phone and dialed. She gave all the information, and I held her hand the entire time. “Yes, I have a restraining order. I understand,” she said. “Thank you.”

Kat handed the phone back to me. A tear fell down her cheek and she rested her head against the wall.

“What is it? What’d they say?” I asked and wiped the tears from her face.

“They said they can make a note of it, but unless I report it when he’s actually outside the house, there’s nothing they can do.”

The words jolted me back, and I stood up. “That is . . . that is bullshit.” I ran my hand through my hair and gripped the ends. “You have got to be fucking kidding me. What are we supposed to do? Just sit around and wait for this bastard to do something? I don’t fucking think so.”

Kat’s cool hand slid into mine. I looked down at her and the silent plea in her eyes. I inhaled a deep, calming breath and let the anger subside. “You’re not staying here tonight.”

Kat shook her head. “No. No. I don’t want to be scared in my own home. I’m not going to let him control me.”

“You can’t stay here. It’s too dangerous. You don’t know what he’s capable of.”

“I’m not leaving.” Kat stood up and went to her dresser. She pulled out her pajamas and locked herself in the bathroom.

I took her phone out of her purse and found Darren’s number. “Hey Kat,” he answered.

“It’s Josh.”

“What’s going on? Is Kat okay?”

I explained the whole story to him and how she was refusing to leave the house.

“That girl is so damn stubborn. What are we going to do?”

“I’m not leaving her tonight. No way in hell. She’s no longer my aide, and she’s starting a new job tomorrow. She won’t let me go with her, I’m sure.”

“I’m off from work. I’ll do a few drive-bys to make sure he isn’t following her. Just find out the address and text me.”

“I’ll do that. Thanks, Darren.”

“I knocked the bastard out once. I’ll do it again if I have to. Though I’m not sure I’ll be able to stop myself this time.”

“If I ever get ahold of him, I won’t stop.”

“Keep me posted,” he said, and we hung up.

Kat emerged from the bathroom, fresh-faced and wearing a tiny pair of white shorts and a white tank top. Her hair fell in waves on her shoulders.

She got into bed and lifted the comforter. “Are you coming or not?” she asked.

I didn’t exactly want to crawl into bed and go to sleep. I wanted to patrol the street. Watch the window and wait for the bastard to show up so I could call the cops on him and have him thrown back in jail where he belonged.

“Please?” Kat pouted her lip, and the vulnerability in her gaze drew me to her.

She needed me.

All those times I’d needed her, she’d been there. Now it was time for me to be the strong one. I slipped off my jeans, pulled my shirt over my head, and slid into the bed. I held my arm up, and without a word, she curled into my side.

I wrapped my arms around her and held her tightly against me. The night had been perfect before we’d gotten home. We’d had dinner and laughed the entire time. The shooting had finally started to fade further away. I’d gotten rid of the damn crutches and no longer needed Kat to babysit me. But now this.

That expression was right—when it rained it poured. Hadn’t Kat gone through enough? Did she really have to deal with this too?

“Josh?”

“Yeah, Kit Kat?”

“Can you make sure the doors are locked?”

I kissed her forehead. “Of course.” I got out of bed and went to the front door and turned the knob. It was locked. I slid the chain across the top. Though, one swift kick to the door, and that thing would rip right off. I needed to install a deadbolt. First thing in the morning.

Next I checked the back door, and then the windows. Everything was locked, but the sense of security was gone. If I’d had my pickup truck, I would’ve gotten the baseball bat from the bedbox. Unfortunately, my pickup truck was at home. There had to be something I could keep by the bed. My eyes travelled around the den, looking for something, anything. I settled on a decent-sized Maglite flashlight under an end table.

It was the best weapon I could find. Not that I planned to use it, but I needed to feel like I was in control.

With the flashlight behind my back, I walked back into the bedroom. I placed it on the floor within arm’s reach and crawled back into bed with Kat.

“What’s with the flashlight?” she asked. I couldn’t put anything past her.

“Precaution.”

“You don’t think he’ll break in, do you?” I had no idea what the answer was. I knew what I needed to tell her, but the truth was I didn’t know what this guy was capable of. But looking at Kat and how innocent she was in my arms, and knowing someone took advantage of that, made me believe he wouldn’t stop at anything to get to her again.

“No. I don’t. According to the PI he doesn’t even get out of his car. You have nothing to worry about. Go to sleep.” I stroked her hair until her breathing evened out and she lay peacefully on my chest.

My senses were on high alert. I tensed at every sound. When the clock on the nightstand read midnight, I slipped out from Kat’s grip and walked to the window. I held the curtain open and glanced out, but the street held the usual cars. Nothing suspicious.

I let the curtain close and limped back and forth into the den. The feeling of helplessness consumed me, and I loathed it. It reminded me of Nia dying in my arms and how there’d been nothing I could do about it.

A light fluttered across the window and dimmed. Despite the limp, I bolted to it and slowly pulled the curtain back. The black Civic came to a stop on the far right side of the house.

It took everything I had not to go outside and rip the bastard from his car. Instead I called the cops and reported it. Then I waited. And waited.

Where the fuck were they?

You call 911 in emergencies. This was an emergency, so what the hell was taking them so long? I glanced out the window again and the Civic took off down the street.

Son of a bitch!

Two minutes later the cops pulled up. Before they could knock on the door, I flung it open. “Nice of you to show up,” I snapped.

The cops squared their shoulders and the short one rested his hands on his waist. “We had a call about a suspicious car outside. Is it still here?”

I had all the respect in the world for cops. One saved my life by carrying me out to an ambulance, but I seriously wanted to deck this douche.

“No. You took so damn long he took off.”

“Did you get the license plate number?”

“Oh, I’m sorry I didn’t think to look for it in the pitch black. Maybe I should’ve gone out with a goddamn flashlight. Or better yet I could’ve just asked him.”

“We need you to calm down, sir.”

“I am calm,” I said through my teeth.

“Hey, aren’t you that kid from the news? The Springfield shooting.”

Because that was relevant right now. No matter how hard I tried to put the shooting behind me, it followed me relentlessly.

“Yes, but what the fuck does that have to do with anything?”

“Josh, what’s going on?” Kat stood in the doorway, a robe wrapped around her. Thank god.

“Nothing to worry about. Go back to bed. I’ll be there soon.”

She marched right up to me and waved to the officers. “Hi, I’m Katherine Singleton. This is my house.”

“I’m Officer Sully, and this is Officer Moretti.” The older cop said.

“You reported a car sitting outside your home,” Officer Moretti, the younger of the two said.

“He was here tonight?” she asked to no one in particular, but then turned and looked at me.

I rested my hand on her shoulder. “I saw his car.”

“Why is he doing this to me?” Tears spilled down her cheeks, and she rested her fingers on her lips.

I took her face in my hands and kissed her nose. “They’ll catch him. That’s why they’re here. Why don’t you go make a cup of tea, and I’ll fill them in on all the information they need.”

Kat nodded.

I turned back to the two officers. “She has a restraining order against the guy. Shouldn’t that be enough to get him arrested?”

“Unfortunately no. Unless you were able to identify the driver or the license plate, we don’t know who was in that vehicle.”

My hands curled into fists and I pushed them into my side to keep from punching something. I took a deep breath. Yelling wasn’t going to get me anywhere.

“I understand protocol. I get it. But that girl in there,” I said, pointing to the kitchen, “she means the world to me. That piece of shit almost raped her and now he’s stalking her and might do it again. I can’t let that happen.”

The older of the two cops rested his hand on my shoulder. “We’ll do everything we can to keep her safe. We’ll file the report and send a cop car by every night around this time.”

“I’d appreciate that. Thank you.”

“We’ll sit outside for a little while tonight to see if he comes back. I can assure you we’re taking this case seriously. If you see him, call 911 immediately and stay inside until officers arrive. Do not approach the suspect. We will get here as quickly as we can.”

I shook the officers’ hands and saw them to the door. I closed the door and locked both locks. Kat came into the den, two cups of tea in hand. “I thought you could use a cup too.”

I limped over to her and took the mug. “Thanks. The cops are going to sit outside for a little while just in case he comes back tonight.”

“I hope he does,” she said, and I narrowed my eyes at her. “Then they can catch him and this will all be over.”

“It’ll be over soon enough. Why don’t you come sit with me?” I eased into the couch and Kat joined me. I reached over and grabbed her word search puzzle book and a pen.

With a big smile she took it from me and kissed my cheek. “Thanks for not running away.”

“Why would I do that?”

“Haven’t you had enough drama in your life?”

“All the drama in the world couldn’t keep me away from you.” I tucked her hair behind her ear letting the soft strands fall through my fingers. “Come on, get comfortable. We have a word search to do.” I grabbed the blanket from the arm of the sofa and draped it over us.

As long as we had each other, we would be fine.

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