Only Between Us (11 page)

Read Only Between Us Online

Authors: Mila Ferrera

Tags: #romance, #Grad School Romance, #College Romance, #art, #Graduate School Romance, #New Adult College Romance, #College Sexy, #art school, #art romance, #contemporary romance, #New Adult Sexy, #New Adult, #New Adult Contemporary Romance, #New Adult Graduate School Romance

BOOK: Only Between Us
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Then I walked away. He looked like he wanted to say something, but I didn’t want to hear it. I needed to get out of there and pull my thoughts together, put my armor back on. He’d shattered everything with his stroking fingers, with the hard, perfect lines of his body, with the sweet, insistent taste of his mouth.

Now I have to figure out what to do next. Are we good, or are there pieces I have to pick up? Markus knew exactly what had happened, I’m sure. He gave me a once-over that said
I can picture it all
. I’m sure it’s not the only time, though. Caleb isn’t the first one to let loose in his studio. When I was in college, the artists’ studios were prime make out spots. I’m sure it’s no different in the co-op. And we’re not in college anymore. We’re adults. We can do what we want, and we don’t have to explain it. I don’t care what Markus or anyone else thinks of me.

Except Caleb. As much as I try to tell myself differently, I think I care what he thinks. I care how he
is
. I need to find out. He said he was fine, but I’m not sure I should take that at face value. What made him destroy his paintings? Who hurt him this badly?

How will he look at me the next time he sees me? Will he avoid me? Smirk? Brag to Markus about feeling me up?

Is there any chance he’d want to do it again?

When my alarm goes off, I get up and go for a quick run, then shower, still mulling things over. But as I set out for Sojourner House, I put it from my mind. I have to focus if I want to help Laura decide what she wants to do. As I drive to the safe-house, I review what Dr. Greer told me to do. Pros and cons. No judgment.

We meet in the tiny sunroom, the only place in the house that offers some privacy. Laura has tan, freckled arms and an apple-shaped body. She doesn’t look fragile or broken. But as I tell her what I’d like to talk about today, she draws a shuddering breath. “I’m not sure I want to analyze it like that,” she says quietly. “It makes it too hard, if I think about it too much.”

“Aren’t you here to think about it?” I ask. “This is a safe place to do it.”

Her blue eyes search mine. “But if I do that now, it might hurt more, when I’m back there.”

“Laura,” I say, my voice catching. I’m getting the sense her decision is made, and it terrifies me. “That’s not the only choice you have.”

She nods, examining her hands as they twist together in her lap. “Romy, I really appreciate what you’re trying to do, but Michael needs me at home.” She chuckles. “He’s probably been eating boxed mac’n’cheese for the past week.”

I stare at her. I don’t care if he’s been eating shit from a can. It’s all I can do not to shout at her.
He rapes you. He hurts you.
“I get that you still care about him, but—”

“I have a garden,” she says to me. “In a few weeks, I have to plant the bulbs for next spring.”

I blink, watching the twitch at the corner of her mouth. “Isn’t winter coming?”

The twitch smoothes over, replaced by the crease of a smile. “You have to plant bulbs in the fall. Daffodils, tulips, crocuses. When the snow melts and everything thaws, they sprout the most beautiful flowers. It’s my favorite thing, seeing those green shoots poke their little heads out of the ground.”

“It sounds hopeful,” I say, my voice strained.
Don’t go, Laura. It’s just a garden. Your life is more important.

“It
is
hope.” She brushes her dishwater blond hair away from her face. “But only if I plant the bulbs in the fall,” she adds firmly.

She’s going to go back to him. Michael is going to get his chew toy back. “Is it really worth it?” I blurt. “He won’t stop, Laura. It might be better for a while, but he won’t stop.”

She lifts her chin and looks toward the window, through a crack in the curtains. It’s a sunny day, likely one of the last of our warm days before the long winter. “I have to go back for now,” she says quietly. “Winter is so miserable.”

And knowing those bulbs will come up when the sun shines again is what’s keeping her going. “You have choices,” I say. “We could talk about this.”

She turns her face away. “Is this our only chance?”

“No, of course not.” I lean forward and touch her hand. “No matter when you want to talk, we’ll be here. No matter what you decide, this is a safe place that doesn’t go away. It’s a place where you have choices.” I get it. If I were to tell her she has to choose—go back or stay here—I’d be doing the same thing Michael’s doing. I’d be forcing her into something. “This moves at your speed. As long as you understand that you’re important, that people here care about you, okay?”

She chuckles and nods. “Okay. I’m sorry.”

“You don’t have to apologize to me.”
I’m sorry
, I think.

Though all of me wants to grab her and lock her in a closet, I don’t. I let Laura get up, and I watch her go upstairs to pack her things. Justine comes out of the front office as I stand at the base of the stairs.

“She told me she was going back,” she says.

“Yeah,” I say hoarsely. “She has bulbs to plant.”

She nudges me with her shoulder. “And maybe you did some of that already. I know it’s hard, but you have to tell yourself that. She gets to decide what she’s going to do, but what you say matters. She’ll take it with her.”

I smile and nod, but all I can think about is what she’s going back to, how she can possibly endure it. “Then I hope it takes root.”

I grab my bag and head back to campus, but as I park, I get a text from Jude.
Have time to talk?

I text him back and we agree to meet for coffee before our afternoon class. I’m sitting down with an iced coffee when he staggers in, looking overwhelmed. He orders himself a double shot of espresso and carries it over to our little café table with shaking hands. “What the hell happened to you?” I ask.

“You remember my client, Catherine?”

I nod and watch him lift the mug to his lips. His black hair is windblown and he hasn’t even bothered to remove his shoulder bag. “The one you couldn’t figure out. The one with the abusive older brother.”

“I never said he was abusive.”

I shrug. “I got a feeling. I have experience with these things.”

He gives me a pained look and sets his mug on the table. “You might be right, actually. She was a mess this morning. Said yesterday was hell. She said she wanted to hurt herself, Romy. It scared me to death.”

I take his hand. “Did you assess for suicidality?”

He nods. “She doesn’t drive, thank God. She said he won’t let her. And she said she doesn’t have access to any firearms or anything. But she said she’d thought about hanging herself.”

I curse under my breath. “Was she actually planning to do it?”

“She denied an immediate plan. Just said she’d considered it.” He runs his fingers through his hair and takes another sip of espresso. “But she still won’t give me consent to talk to her psychiatrist or any of her family members … I don’t know what to do. Does that mean I’m the one who’s responsible if she does something to hurt herself?”

Jeez. I don’t know. “Have you called Dr. Greer?”

Jude nods. “And I left messages with the psychiatrist who runs the community clinic. Fuck, Romy, I had no idea it would be this intense.”

I squeeze my best friend’s hand. I can tell how scared he is. “Where is she now?”

“She said she was going back to work! I’m tempted to walk over there and make sure she’s actually there.”

“Where does she work again?”

“Library. But if I walk in, she’ll see me. It might upset her. I don’t want to weird her out.”

I sit back. The library’s nearby, only about five blocks away. “What if I did it? Would that make you feel better?”

He gives me a pleading look. “Would you? I feel like such a stalker. But until I hear from Dr. Greer, I’m going to be freaking out. I want to know she’s okay.”

“Let’s go.” I take a huge gulp of my iced coffee and stand up. “No time like the present.”

He downs his espresso. “You’re the awesomest.”

I take his arm and we head out. The sun warms my face as we stride down the sidewalk, a few blocks south of downtown. The co-op building looms in the distance, and I find myself wondering if Caleb’s there before I push thoughts of him away. As soon as I succeed, Jude says, “So. I told Eric he was an asshole.”

“What?”

“What he said to you on Saturday night, I mean. About using Caleb as a sex toy.”

The laugh bursts from my mouth, loud and crazy. Jude knows me so well that his eyes go wide. “Now you have to explain that, honey,” he says to me. “Did I hit a nerve?”

I shake my head. Then I nod my head. “Okay. Don’t tell Eric, please?”

“He’s my soulmate, Romy. I tell him everything.”

I give Jude a look, drawing my fingers across my lips and twisting them, then throwing away an invisible key. He gives me an exasperated look. “Fine! I won’t tell him. What happened?” He narrows his eyes, scrutinizing my face. “Wait. Was Eric right?”

I draw in a breath. “I may have taken his advice.”

Jude’s mouth drops open. “You didn’t jump into bed with our painting teacher, did you? Romy …”

“No! Nothing like that.” I pause, considering. “Okay. Maybe something like that. But not quite that drastic.”

Jude looks like his head is going to explode with stress, curiosity, awe, frustration, too many things to name.

“I kissed him last night. It was intense.”

We pass by a men’s clothing store, and it is a testament to Jude’s focus that he doesn’t even get distracted by the new winter garb in the window. “Did you … talk to him first?” he asks.

“There was a little talking. But not much. It happened pretty fast.”

He pulls up short and grasps my shoulders. “Romy, I know what Eric said, about reclaiming your power and all that, but there’s no such thing as no-strings-attached physical involvement. Not for you. Not after what you’ve been through.”

I pull away from him. “I’m not broken.”

“Of course you’re not! You’re just …”

“I’m not fragile, either,” I growl.

“I know!” He throws up his hands. “Look, I obviously don’t know what the fuck I’m doing anyway, so don’t mind me.”

I grab his hand. “Thank you.”

He relaxes and pulls me close. “I’m not sure what for, but you’re welcome.”

“I’ll be careful,” I promise him.

“You’d better. I’d hate to have to scare him like I did with Alex.” He makes a gruff, manly sort of noise in his chest.

“I think you did a damn good job with Alex.” But even saying that makes me feel hollow, because I didn’t do a good job. I let Jude stick up for me, let him speak for me, let him think for me. But that is not Jude’s problem, and he’s having a bad enough day as it is. We’re getting close to the library. This is my chance to pay him back. “What does Catherine look like?”

Jude looks at the entrance to the town library. “She’s got dark brown hair. Kind of wavy, shoulder length. Round face. She’s a little taller than you. Maybe a bit on the heavy side. A size fourteen, I think?”

I shake my head. Only Jude would know his clients’ clothing size. “What’s she wearing today?”

“Purple shirt, kind of a dark fuchsia? Long-sleeved. And jeans.”

I nod, secure my bag on my shoulder, and tell him to wait for me. Then I march toward the library. When I enter, the silence wraps around me, along with the scent of books, ink and paper. I squint, letting my eyes adjust to the dim light, and follow signs to the central desk, glancing around for any sign of a girl wearing a fuchsia shirt.

I spend a few moments talking to the lady at the central desk and applying for a library card. Then I head over to the romance novel section, pretending to peruse the titles while I keep looking for the mysterious Catherine. The squeak of a cart draws my attention, and I glance toward the noise. A young woman wearing a dark pinkish shirt pushes a cart piled high with books along the aisle. Her head is down, bowed over the books as she pulls to a stop. I slowly walk along the row, past pictures of busty half-naked women plastered against the brawny chests of Highlanders, tattooed sex gods, a few dudes in business suits … I pause at the end of the row and pick up the first book I see, pretending to read the back while I watch the girl.

She lifts her head and looks down a row, and I have to hold my breath. She has striking light gray eyes, and for a second they remind me of Caleb before I manage to shove him out of my thoughts again. Her gaze skims over me before she goes back to her task of reshelving. As she does, the sleeve of her shirt rides up a little, revealing thick scars along her wrists. Some are silver, some are purple. At some point in the not-so-distant past, this girl has cut herself. I’m sure she must be Catherine. “Hi,” I say to her.

Her eerie eyes meet mine. “Can I help you?” she asks.

“Any recommendations?”

She stares at me. “What do you like?”

“Something funny, maybe? I have enough angst in my life that I don’t want to read about it, too.”

She snorts. “Tell me about it.”

I smile at her. “You too, huh?”

She rolls her eyes. “Oh yeah. Have you tried Cora Carmack? Her stuff is hilarious.” She digs in her pile and pulls up a book, then holds it out to me.

I accept the book and look down at the cover.
Losing It
, it’s called. Sounds appropriate. “Is this what you read when you’re stressed out?”

She smiles, and it makes her pretty.  She looks much younger when she smiles. “Definitely. I’ll be reading one of her books tonight for sure. I could use the distraction.” She holds up another book by the same author.
Faking It
. Also appropriate.

“You’ll have to tell me if it’s good, then,” I say.

She grins. “I will.”

I thank her and head for the check out, then scoot out of the library, tucking the book into my bag. “Your girl’s okay,” I say to Jude when I reach him. “For now, at least. She said she was planning to read a book tonight. Even showed me which one. Planning for the future is good, right?”

Jude sags with relief. “Okay, so at least I have time to check in with Dr. Greer and find out what else to do.”

“Did you know she’s cut herself?”

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