Pieces of a Mending Heart (16 page)

Read Pieces of a Mending Heart Online

Authors: Kristina M. Rovison

BOOK: Pieces of a Mending Heart
11.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

             
Oddly enough, I’m not sure it’s Tristan I’m angry at: Maybe it’s the world, for being so unpredictable and unkind to those of us trying to get by.
Maybe I’m just angry at myself
for not being the sister David needed and contacting him more often. The doctors had told us he wasn’t in any condition to speak with us, so I could never call. A break with reality, that’s what they called it. My anger, no matter who it’s directed towards, sends the tears down my cheeks in a cascading river of confusion and sorrow.

             
“Katherine, please don’t be upset,” Tristan begged, frantically wiping the tears from my face. In this moment, I don’t want him to touch me, to take away my pain. I’m not the fragile, weepy girl that Tristan sees me as; I’ve let happiness soften me, and I don’t like feeling vulnerable.

             
I pull away from him, not out o
f anger, but out of necessity.
I cannot think straight when he touches me. David was never a permanent fixture in my life, but rather a memory that
has faded with the passage of time
. His letters made him seem real again, and now that I know that my brother was never really talking to me, telling me things that made me laugh and hope, I feel hollow.

             
Deep down, I always thought his letters were too good to be true. In the months following his initial check-in, David wrote me no letters at all. I can see where his path probably intersected with Tristan’s, but their relationship is still confusing.

             
“Why would you write letters to me? You didn’t even know me!” I say, wiping my face off and desperately wishing I had a tissue.

             
“When I stayed with Rachel, a few months after…” he trails off, looking down, and I realize that he’s uncomfortable speaking about his attempted suicide.

I can say words like “suicide” without cringing, because words are nothing more than letters. They are describers of actions, and these actions are what support our futures. It’s not words I fear, but what they stand for.

Tristan continues. “I felt like I was doing so well with the help of Rachel. She was so kind to me, and I was a new person within a matter of weeks. The only reason I was even sent to John Adam’s was because Rachel said it would look better, that people would believe
I
was better, if I went to a facility. Not only that, but Ad
am’s offers high school classes
and I was so behind I would’ve had to be held back. She sent me there because David was there, and she felt like I could… somehow connect with him because we shared her acquaintance in common.

“Once I got there, I immediately knew there would be no getting through to your brother. He…”

“What, Tristan? He what?” I say, anxiously awaiting him to continue.

He sighs, licking his bottom lip, making it shiny and tempting. “He wouldn’t even speak, Kat
ie
. We would be forcefully taken from his room to the dining hall, and I felt sorry for Rachel. I snuck into his room the first week I got there, and found a stack of unopened letters on his desk. I took the letters, left the room, and read them all.”

Tristan really does know me; everything about me. When I was experiencing a particularly difficult thing, I would pour my heart out in those letters I sent to David. Even if he wasn’t answering, I wrote to him. Tristan knows about the abuse from my father, my mother’s drinking problem, petty arguments with old friends… everything.

“Why? Did you even know I was Rachel’s niece?” I ask, trying to get as much information as possible.

“Yeah, I knew you were her niece,” his eyes take on a look of longing, and of sensitivity I have never seen in anyone’s. “Katie, you sent David a picture of you and him. Remember? That photo of the two of you on the steps?”

I nod; it’s the same photo I keep in my wallet. Tristan reaches into his back pocket, hand emerging a second later holding a folded piece of paper. He opens it, folds it over again so that the photograph is facing the outside, and hands it to me. Sure enough, it’s the photograph I sent David, upon his request.

“I don’t believe in coincidences, Katie. When I saw your signature at the end of each letter, saw your name, I couldn’t help but ask you to send me a picture of yourself, to validate what I suspected. It was you, the girl from my vision, the angel God told me he sent,” Tristan smiles, a weak one compared with others I’ve seen.

“And you couldn’t tell me because… I would never have believed you,” I whisper, still shocked.

“And because I just couldn’t bear to tell you about David… I thought that would be the final straw; that you would just give up,” he says, and I realize he fully believes he was doing the right thing.

“So you knew who I was all along. You knew I was Rachel’s niece, so why did you act so unknowing the first few days after we met?”

“Katie, I want everything to work out for us. I didn’t know how to explain all this to you without making you upset. And obviously, I haven’t done a good job, anyways,” he says, face taking on an apologetic grimace as he strokes my hair.

“So, David never talked?” I ask, sniffing.

“Yeah, he did, just… selectively. He didn’t like me very much; he thought I was some type of dangerous stalker because I tried getting him to talk about you. David was volatile, to say the
least,” Tristan says, smiling. “He only ever said the same thing, though. ‘
I want sissy happy.
’”

I
smile
, thinking of the David that taught me to ride a bike and had lemonade stands with me when we were children. That David is merely a memory now, if what Tristan says is true. And since I have no reason to doubt him, I believe him.

“So, when did you come home?” I ask, wanting to stray from talk of my brother for a few minutes.


About a week
before the first day of school. The last letter I got from you was sent from the hospital you were in, days after you tried to…” he struggles, but I nod so he knows I know what he’s talking about. “You said you were going to stay with Rachel, and you left an address. I called Rachel, who called my advisor, who let me come home.”

“Where is ‘home’ for you? I meant to ask earlier. I got the impression your mother was a… uh…” I trail off, unsure what to say to fill in the blank.

“Bitch?” he says, eyes hardening. “She changed after my dad died. A lot. But yeah, she and I aren’t on speaking terms. Rachel helped me get my own apartment, in her name, and I live there. It isn’t bad for a guy who
’s barely eighteen
. Granted I haven’t been able to do much with it just yet, but it’ll be great soon enough.”

I understand why Aunt Rachel wouldn’t have told me about Tristan; his past is too frightening to share with a niece she’s just
getting to know
. The fact that my aunt cares enough about Tristan to keep his past, and present, a secret shows mounds about her character.

             
A few minutes pass and I just sit, thinking
but not thinking. More like soaking, absorbing the information like a sponge. Tristan sits on the grass in front of where I’m sitting, and a slight breeze pushes strands of his hair into his blue eyes, which are assessing mine. I reach up and push the strands back, not wanting to have it as a barrier between us.

             
“I should get you back. We have dinner to eat, you know. I promised I’d stay,” Tristan says, voice quiet and sultry.

             
I nod, but make no move to stand. Tristan stands, towering over me, holding out both of his hands to help me up. I just stare at them, wondering when he’s going to poof into a cloud, proving he’s a figment of my imagination. I don’t know what’s real anymore.

             
Settling on reality, I grab his hands and stand, but he surprises me yet again by gently guiding me into a hug. Enveloped in his tanned arms, I inhale the strong, masculine scent that no cologne maker could ever perfect. We just stand there, his arms around my waist, mine around his neck. His build is athletic, strong and muscled, but
somehow tall and lean.
How I ever
thought of him as frightening is beyond me, because I have never felt s
afer than I do in this moment.

* * *

When we arrive back at the house, Aunt Rachel is in the kitchen, bumping pots and pans into countertops and stumbling on her own two feet. The
sight brings a smile to my face
and Tristan’s light kiss on my cheek makes me shine even brighter. He releases my hand and goes to help my aunt, and I sit in the chair at the little square table and watch as they make spaghetti.

“So, Tristan, what do you think of my niece?” Aunt Rachel asks, playfully rubbing the top of my head as she passe
s me on her way to the pantry.

“She’s the best friend I could ever ask for, Rachel,” he says, smirking at me from behind the steam from the boiling pot. “Wish she was around a few years ago, but then that would be a dif
ferent story, now wouldn’t it?”

Aunt Rachel looks surprised, mouth slightly open and head cocked to the side. Her platinum blonde hair is stacked on top of her head, making her look like a tiny troll-doll with its outrageous style.

“I told her, Rachel. It’s pretty hard to keep secrets from someone you’re so much alike,” he says, stirring the spaghetti. “Plus, it is better that
she heard it from me, anyways.

“Well. I’m glad to see you two got so c
lose so quickly,” my aunt says a
s she’s reaching in
to the cupboard to retrieve the
plates. “Me, too,” I chime in, smiling.

We sit at the table, and a feeling of ease washes over me. This is how it was supposed to be all along; this feeling of
happiness should have been more
present in my life.

“Oh, Katherine! I almost forgot, dear. You got a letter in the mail today from your
mother. I suggest opening
this one!” she says, trying to sound stern.

I fight the urge to roll my eyes. “Fine, I’ll do it now so I don’t forget. Be right back,” I say as I stand and dramatically walk over to the counter, which is less than ten feet away.
Aunt Rachel and Tristan laugh.

Tearing the letter open, my heart races.
I don’t know why, but it does.

Katherine,

             
You’re lucky
I
opened the letter you sent your father. I
burned it. Stop being foolish.
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
Mom.

             
My mouth drops open. I forgot all about the letter I sent! Anxiety rises up in me, my Punishment threatening to burst forth and set fire to my veins. I feel it, the buildup, but chase it away
with deep breathing. A strong hand on the back of my neck relieves my anxiousness, and I look up to see a stunning set of blue eyes analyzing my every move.

             
“Everything alright, Katie?” he asks, humoring Rachel. He is good at masking his true feelings; his voice is so light, so innocent, that I raise my eyebrows in shock at his great lying skills.

             
“Uh, yeah! Yeah, it’s all good,” I say, playing along, not wanting to explain the letter in my hands.

             
“I should probably get home. It’s weird, knowing we have school tomorrow. It feels like we were in a different world today,” he says, so low my aunt can’t hear.

             
“Yeah, I’ll walk you out,” I say, glancing at Aunt Rachel as I say so.

             
Tristan walks toward her before embracing her and whispering something. My aunt smiles and gives him a very maternal kiss on the cheek. As I said, she would be a fantastic mother if she would only settle down.

             
Walking Tristan to his car, I listen to the sounds of the nighttime, at peace despite knowing the information unearthed to me today.

             
He doesn’t say anything, but takes my hands in his and pulls them up so they rest around his neck.
This is it. He’s going to kiss me!
I think to myself.

But, he doesn’t, and I’m feeling rejected and a little frustrated. He must feel this, because he chuckles and leans against his truck, pulling me against him. Our bodies are lined up from our shoulders to our feet, and I’ve never stood this close to a boy. Technically I have, but I feel like I’ve never been close to anyone before Tristan.

             
Wordlessly, he tilts my head up so that my eyes meet his, and he leans in. Keeps leaning… and tilts my head up more, so that I’m looking at the sky. I f
eel a light pressure on my neck
just below my jaw, and my ey
es flutter shut. A second later
he stops, giving me a kiss on the forehead before gently moving me a few feet from his car. Dazed, I watch him get in, smile at me, and drive off. I just received the most passionate kiss I have ever received from a boy. And it wasn’t even on my lips.

Other books

The Grieving Stones by Gary McMahon
En la arena estelar by Isaac Asimov
The Silver Swan by Elena Delbanco
Define Me by Culine Ramsden
God of the Rodeo by Daniel Bergner
We Are Death by Douglas Lindsay
A Clean Slate by Laura Caldwell
Gaze by Viola Grace
Jaguar Sun by Martha Bourke