Read The Truth About Letting Go Online

Authors: Leigh Talbert Moore

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance

The Truth About Letting Go (19 page)

BOOK: The Truth About Letting Go
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It’s just like in his bedroom. My hands slip into his soft hair, and I kiss him again, faster. He kisses me back, just as fast. His hands move to my cheeks, lightly holding them, almost, but not quite stopping us.

He kisses me again, and everything in me wants more. I want him to groan and tell me I’m beautiful. I want to slide my hands under his tee and feel his skin. But he breaks our lips apart. He places his chin on my head and puts his arms around my shoulders.

“Oh, man,” he breathes, before kissing the top of my head.

I sigh as I press my cheek to his chest, surrounded in his warm hug. His hands slide up and down my back slowly, and I slip my fingers under his shirt, finding the skin underneath.

That’s when he steps away and pulls the towel off his shoulders. “I’d better go.”

“Don’t!” I reach for him, and he catches my hand.

“Being alone with you is not a good idea.”

Frustration burns in my chest, and I have to fight getting angry with him. How can I be angry and yet so totally into him at the same time?

“You’re going to drive me crazy,” I say.

“Not as crazy as you’re driving me.”

I hop down and follow him to the back door not even trying to hide my disappointment. “But what about your shirt?”

“Bring it to me later.” He grabs the windbreaker off the peg and catches the door. Halfway out, he steps back. I’m still frowning, but his cute smile softens it. “This is really cool.”

“What?”

“Being here with you. Being sorry to go. You being sorry I’m going.”

“I’m keeping your shirt.”

He grins and kisses me quickly. “Deal.” Then he closes the door and sprints across the lawn to his waiting car.

I watch as he drives away. The lights grow dimmer, and soon it’s just me looking out into the shiny, wet black punctuated by the lights of a few houses. My eyes drift to the large Tudor, and I think about my fight with Mom. Anger tightens in the center of my back, and I look away, following the trail of lights closer to home, to a large brick house across the street and a few doors down. I think of Charlotte and our last words to each other. I was so angry—I’m still angry. But I think about what Jordan said about everybody going through hard times and being in this together.

I walk back to the kitchen and pick up my phone, quickly punching up directory assistance and then connecting. I listen to the ringing, and just as I’m expecting it to go to voicemail, a man’s voice answers.

“I’m sorry,” I say. “I was trying to reach Charlotte’s phone—”

“This is her phone, but she’s not able to talk,” he says.

“Is this her dad? I’m Ashley Lockett, two houses down? I wanted to speak to her. Maybe I could walk over? The rain’s stopped.”

“That’s… not possible,” he says.

My heartbeat ticks up. “Did something happen?”

“Charlotte’s at the hospital.

For a moment, I can’t breathe. “What happened?”

He hesitates before answering. “She’s diabetic. Her blood sugar spiked, and she had a mild seizure.”

“Oh!” I cry. “Can I see her? I need to see her.”

“Not tonight, but maybe tomorrow? I’m sure she’d like a visit from a friend.”

“Thank you.” I slowly lower my phone.

For several seconds I stare at it in my hand. A seizure. The hospital. I didn’t even know she was a diabetic. I wrap my arms around my waist and wish Jordan were still here. I’d give anything for him to circle his arms around me again.

I should’ve known this about her. I should’ve known she was sick. But I didn’t. I only thought about me, like she said. Me and my problems. And using her to make myself feel better.

“Tomorrow,” I repeat softly, thinking.

Maybe Jordan could take me. Then I shake my head. If I showed up with Jordan, she’d never forgive me. Besides him and me together… I’m sure she wouldn’t want him to see her in the hospital. I’ll have to go alone.

 

 

Chapter 15

 

 

Hospitals are officially my least favorite places on Earth. The one good thing about Dad’s cancer was that it moved so fast, he was only here a few times. The bulk of his painful decline happened in our home with hospice workers standing by and all of us watching. Day after day.

Maybe a hospital would’ve been better.

I shrink at the memory and quickly distract my thoughts. Information services gives me Charlotte’s room number, and as I make my way down the sterile hall, I focus on the patterns in the floor tiles and not the way my throat’s constricting or the stinging smell of disinfectant. Four white tiles, one black one. Four whites, one black…

At last, I’m here. I clutch the soft PeeWee Baby I picked up at the gift shop, a little purple-spotted puppy with huge, glittery eyes, and take a deep breath before lightly knocking on the door.

No answer.

A few seconds pass, and I reach for the handle, slowly opening it. A monitor’s humming next to her bed, and my stomach knots when I see her with clear tubes going to her arms and an oxygen tab under her nose. My chest is tight, and all I can think of is Dad. I’m just about to run back out when her eyes flutter open.

“Ashley?” her voice is a scratchy whisper.

Unable to flee, I put on a smile and slowly walk toward her. “Hey,” I whisper. “I tried calling and your dad said you were here.”

She almost smiles, but mostly she looks confused. “Why were you calling me? I didn’t think… I didn’t think we were friends anymore.”

“What?” I say, holding my smile in place. “Friends have arguments. That doesn’t mean they stop being friends.”

“But we weren’t friends. Not really.”

I’m beside her bed now, looking down at her large form with machines and tubes all around her. “I thought we could be. We have common interests.”

“Your dad and Jordan.”

“And exercising. I’ve kind of fallen off, and we’re at different levels, but we could—”

“You don’t have to be nice to me,” she says. “I think it’s best if we just leave things the way they are.”

I chew on my bottom lip and look down at the puppy in my hand. “I bought this for you.”

Her eyes go to the toy. She blinks a few times before speaking. “Purple’s my favorite color.”

“It is? I thought he was cute, and I don’t know. After Dad… I hate the smell of hospital flowers.”

“Your dad was really into wild flowers and fragrant shrubs.”

I smile. “Gardenias and hydrangeas.”

She’s blinking faster, and I see tears in her eyes.

“I’m sorry,” I say quickly, my own eyes going misty. “I didn’t mean to make you feel worse.”

“It’s not that. I was thinking about you being here and what happened. I was really a bitch to you.”

The word sounds wrong in her high-pitched voice. Like Cinderella swearing.

“You were right, though. I didn’t ask about you. I was only thinking about me and feeling better and talking about my dad.”

“You probably think it’s not fair someone like me could live when he died.” She’s staring at me with watery eyes, and my throat hurts.

“No,” I whisper trying not to cry. “I didn’t… I don’t. I mean, I thought it wasn’t fair. But that’s all. I didn’t think—”

She exhales loudly. “Of course you didn’t. Why would you think of someone like me.”

The small warmth we were just sharing evaporates just that fast, and her old bitterness is back.

“I’m sorry. I—”

“You want to know the truth?” she says. “I hated you. I hated how pretty you are, and how you had this great dad. When he died, I didn’t care if you were sad. I went to the creek that day hoping to see you cry.”

“Oh.” Her words are so mean. For a moment, I’m stunned, searching for something to say. “Maybe I shouldn’t have come.”

“And then when you stole Jordan, I didn’t want to be your friend. I didn’t even want to see your face.” She turns back at the ceiling, and her voice cracks. “I don’t know why you would come here. Why you’d still want to be friends with me.”

She stops speaking, and for a few moments, we’re silent.

I came here to clear the air, but… is that what we’re doing? I think about everything she just said. Then I remember my own questions about why I kept going back to the creek to meet her. I think about why I’m here now.

“Talking to you about my dad helped me somehow,” I say softly. “I guess I was selfish like you said. You helped me remember him, and I kept coming back for that. But I didn’t mean to hurt you or steal Jordan or whatever.”

For a few moments, the only sound is the monitor humming. I’m ready to go. We’ve talked, and things feel more broken than when I got here. She’s mean and cruel. And I don’t know what made me think we could be friends.

I stare at her for a second. Her eyes are downcast, her face is wet with tears. I think about these last few weeks and all the pain in me. All the things I’ve done and how I would’ve done more to make the hurting stop.

I think about the people who've been patient with me and about what friendship really is. I take a deep breath and place the purple toy beside her on the bed. What would Jordan say now? He’s the one who does hospital visits.

“You know,” I start, “Even if all that’s true, and we came to each other for selfish reasons… What happens now? Now that we know all this?”

“What does it matter?” her voice is barely above a whisper. “Now you know what I’m really like, why would you want to be my friend?”

I shrug. I’m not sure my heart’s in it, but somehow it feels like the right thing to say. “I don’t know. Maybe knowing what people are really like is how true friendships start.”

She doesn’t look up, but before I leave she speaks. “I’m sorry I hated you.”

I think about her parents, how she said they were ashamed of her, and about her being shipped off every summer. I think about why they moved her here and mean girls.

I imagine her hitting me with everything she’s got, as hard as she can, waiting for me to walk away. Wanting me to be mean right back at her. To meet her hatred and raise it. It’s sick and messed up, but I understand. And I think it has something to do with us being in this together.

“You had your reasons,” I say. “I should’ve been a better friend.”

 

* * *

 

Mom’s waiting for me when I arrive home. After the scalding honesty from Charlotte, I know I’m not up to facing my mom, not that I would’ve been under different circumstances. I walk through the front door and stop, studying her sitting on the couch in her black knit pants and long-sleeved tee. Several sheets of paper are on the coffee table in front of her. They look like bills.

“I’ve been waiting for you to get home,” she says. “Please come and sit down. We need to talk.”

For a few seconds I don’t move. She arranges the papers into three stacks, and I take a few steps forward. Not waiting for me to sit, she starts talking.

“Since you’ve decided the reason I work so much is because I didn’t love your father, I figured it’s time you were in on the family budget. I’ll need your credit card back please.”

That gets my attention, and I walk over to the chair, anger burning in my stomach.

“Fine,” I slam my bag on the table on top of the papers and dig out my wallet. “It was Dad’s idea anyway, wasn’t it? No reason you should treat me special now.”

Her eyes flash at me, and she picks up one of the stacks. “Your bill was almost six hundred dollars last month.”

“So?” I pull out the plastic and toss it on the stack.

“So you don’t seem to appreciate I’m the only one working now. Will’s tuition is due, and we don’t live in this house for free.”

“Dad made a ton of money with the magazine and the TV stuff—”

“It was cyclical, Ashley. You and your brother have expenses, not to mention me. I had to use most of what we’d saved for the memorial and the plaque. The hospice bills alone—”

“Dad had insurance!”

“Not enough, and we still haven’t gotten a check…” Her voice breaks, and she inhales a sharp breath.

She stands quickly and walks fast to the other side of the house, to her room. I hear her door click shut, and I’m left sitting in front of the coffee table alone and bewildered. I don’t know what this means. Other than I don’t have a credit card anymore. And I guess now I understand why Dr. James was changing our air filter.

Will we have to move? Sell the house? Slowly I stand and walk toward her door. Moving might be okay. I think of all the memories here. And how much they hurt now. How all I want to do every day is crawl into my bed and hide from all the things that remind me of him.

Every corner I turn in this house conjures an image of me with Dad, or images from before his death. Each day as he grew more thin and weak, I stopped wanting to come back here to the master suite. Every time I get near it now, all I can see is him getting sicker and sicker until finally…

Sharp breath.

This house is too big now anyway, especially if it’s just the two of us… I softly tap on her door. No answer. I try the knob, but it doesn’t turn. She’s locked me out. Again.

I lean back against the wall and stare at it. Hating everyone and the world and being self-destructive is so much easier than caring. It’s so much easier to break things than it is to try and put them back together. Caring means helping and loving even when it hurts. Even when people kick back at you. Even when they hit you in the very place where you’re hurting. It means frustration and heartbreak.

It’s so much easier to build walls and shut them out. And hate.

I knock on the door again. But either she’s all the way back in her bathroom, which is possible, or she’s just not letting me in. Also possible.

I try to think. If I can’t fix this with Mom, at least I can try and correct the mess I made at school. I pull on her doorknob one more time, but it won’t budge.

Exhaling a deep breath, I push off the wall and start back for my side of the house. I need to talk to Colt.

 

 

Chapter 16

 

 

I texted Colt and asked him to meet me at my locker Monday morning. I’ll explain it to him first before I go to Patty and confess. I can’t let Trevor Martin take the blame for what we did, but I won’t throw my partner in crime under the bus without at least giving him a chance to prepare. I know he’s going to be pissed, especially after Friday, but I’ll deal with that tomorrow.

BOOK: The Truth About Letting Go
9.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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