Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Together Apart
Welcome to My World
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Author's Note
How I Survive
FREE STORIES
Together Apart
Lexi Maxxwell
Together Apart
Lexi Maxxwell
Copyright © 2014 by Sterling & Stone. All rights reserved.
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, businesses, events, or locales is purely coincidental.
Reproduction in whole or part of this publication without express written consent is strictly prohibited.
The author greatly appreciates you taking the time to read her work. Please consider leaving a review wherever you bought the book, or telling your friends about it, to help her spread the word.
Thank you for supporting Lexi Maxxwell
To my best friend and beautiful daughter.
I hope you find enduring love the first time around.
TOGETHER APART
Welcome to My World
I’m Lexi Maxxwell, Sterling & Stone’s smart but naughty storyteller. I write straight from my heart, and deliver unforgettable reading experiences to people who want to finish their books feeling deeply passionate and more in touch with themselves.
I believe that most books would have erotic elements if more writers were willing to tell the truth, and I’m never afraid of letting the camera roll in the intimate places were other authors would yell “cut.” I’m passionate, honest, and tell my stories to learn more about myself and see how sex and intimacy fit into our world. Then I share them with you.
I love all kinds of stories, as long as they have sex. From the refection on modern marriage in Anticipation, to the larger than life questions in The Future of Sex, to the laugh so hard you’ll cry of Adult Video or the cathartic thrill of MILF, I write to titillate and entertain you.
I want you to be a part of my world.
To get early alerts for my books, occasional freebies, and 101 short and sexy stories you can start reading right now, please visit the link at the end of this book.
THANK YOU FOR READING!
~ Lexi Maxxwell
CHAPTER ONE
Present Day
Sam paced the bathroom, certain of three things.
First, time meant more than it had at any moment before. Two more minutes would make a world of difference to her life, both of their lives. In two minutes, if she’d get around to taking the goddamned test, her future (their future) would fork in one of two directions, and change their lives forever. It was strange to think of all of the two-minute blocks she’d already used this morning, and how none had seemed particularly noteworthy. She’d spent two minutes checking e-mail on her phone. Another two pouring a bowl of muesli for breakfast. And at least a pair bent over the toilet, giving her cereal back to the world. Yet these two minutes — these urgent, must-hurry two minutes — would be different, and couldn’t happen soon enough because the anticipation was exhausting.
Second, she was sure that Morphine’s Cure for Pain was probably not an appropriate album to play during those momentous two minutes of waiting. Sam was still pacing the tiles, fidgeting with the toothbrush-sized cardboard box as if fidgeting would make time go faster, and through it all the moody, stuporous music poured into the bathroom from the living room stereo. Thursday ended, and the title track began, a song about infidelity replaced by one about sorrow and pain. It wasn’t right — the moment’s soundtrack shouldn’t feel like an opium den. But going out to change the music seemed 1) superstitious, 2) dumb, and 3) like yet another delay tactic. She’d already rotated every bottle in the medicine cabinet so that each label faced out. That was enough.
And third, Sam was scared as hell to start those two urgent minutes ticking.
She sat on the toilet in her pajamas, lid closed, and made herself breathe, internal voices warring within her.
It’s not a big deal.
It’s what we wanted anyway, in the end.
It could help. It could be fantastic.
Everyone gets scared.
And besides, it’s not like knowing makes the difference.
The last thought was perhaps the most relevant. If Sam was pregnant, the test made no difference. A positive result wouldn’t make an embryo inside her. But still, Sam was so afraid to know.
She held the e.p.t. test in her right hand, slapping the long cardboard box into her left palm as she stared at the pink pastel shower curtain. When she and Zach had moved in, the shower curtain had clowns. Sam thought it was hilarious in a kitschy way, but Zach thought it was creepy. He’d replaced it that first night. Bed Bath and Beyond was closed, so he drove to an all-night Wal-Mart across town. She had asked why he didn’t take the old curtain down and get a new one in the morning, seeing as they’d moved in on a Saturday and Sunday was their day for whatever. Zach had said “because fuck you” then asked if she wanted to come with him. After buying the only shower curtain in stock at that Walmart, they’d stopped for donuts, ate one each in the car and another three when they got back to the alien apartment with its couch along the wrong wall and its absent bed. Zach ordered coffee to dunk his donuts, but forgot to ask for decaf, and so they’d stayed up until 3, talking and making love on the floor, getting rug burn.
They both wanted kids. Really. Had talked about it even back in their college apartment with thin walls and rowdy neighbors. It made sense: two smart kids head to college, learn their trade, get job offers (well, Sam anyway), head off to a new city, get the house with the white picket fence and start popping out rug rats.
But somehow life got in the way, and somewhere in the move from Portland to Memphis the box holding their intention to start a family was misplaced along with Zach’s box of vinyl records. Starting a new job was always time consuming, Zach had seemed to wallow more as his job at the low-end graphic design studio (the best he could find) started to, as he said with his usual smile, “crush his mortal soul.” They had discussed it since their move, and it still made sense in the way things made sense on paper. But they’d need a few years to adjust, to find their feet again. Maybe to figure out whatever had shifted between them.
Sam tore open the box to a sheet of paper full of warnings and instructions. She opened the sheet, her heartbeat suddenly faster, and scanned it. She couldn’t concentrate. Those two minutes were pressing on her. Sam didn’t need comprehensive how-to. She was a big girl. She could figure out how to pee on a stick. Besides, the box itself had the Cliff’s Notes version — the How to Find Out if You’re Knocked Up For Dummies.
Pee.
Wait.
Assess.
She could do that.
Sam stood, stripped her PJ’s, opened the toilet so hard she thought the hinge might break, and sat. With a feeling like ripping a Band-Aid from skin, Sam stuck the test into her stream (careful to use it externally as directed), then shook it off. She looked at the time on her phone, then set the test on a tissue at the sink’s edge. It was a little gross, having a peed-on thing sitting on her sink, but she couldn’t think about that. The die had been cast.
The hard part was done. Sam felt better.
Sam ha
d an aunt who found a lump in her breast while showering, then ignored it for three years. She was terminal by the time she finally told her family she had cancer. She hung on for another six months, then the family buried her. Sam, then 7, asked her mother why God had taken Aunt Candace. Sam’s mother, always a straight talker, said through angry tears: “Because Aunt Candace thought that if she went to have her cancer treated, it would give her cancer.” Sam was confused by that, but her mother hadn’t been in a condition to say anything more. Only years later, thinking back, had Sam figured it out. Now, as she looked at the pee-dribbled tissue sitting disgustingly on her skin across from the pink shower curtain that held such delightful memories, she was proud to have crossed the bridge.
Taking a pregnancy test wouldn’t get her pregnant.
And a baby wasn’t cancer.
But in a way, Sam thought, her mind back in college, it was. Cancer was what happened when cells wanted to live so badly that they refused to die when they were supposed to. Cancer was like a life form. It didn’t have a heartbeat, and no one threw you a shower when you got it, but it was a life form nonetheless.
Sam rested on the toilet as she finished, then stood, pulled her pants back up, and turned the toilet back into a flushing chair. Even though alone, Sam felt guilty, thinking as she had been. How many people wanted children but couldn’t have them? And how many cancer patients would be insulted by the way she was comparing herself to them? How many family members would be excited by Sam’s news and aghast at her thoughts? Sam was 25, with professional velocity and a husband who loved her. The timing was perfect.
“Everyone gets nervous,” she said out loud. In the small, dingy apartment bathroom, with Morphine droning in the living room, her voice sounded strange. As if she were whistling in the dark inside a junkie’s hovel.
Sam checked her phone, certain that several hours must have passed. She was halfway there. A minute gone, one left. One minute to change her life. To change their lives.
And of course, it would change their lives. Regardless of whether Sam’s A.M. barfing turned out to be morning sickness, taking a pregnancy test mattered. They’d been at a strange impasse since moving to Memphis, moving neither forward nor back. In college, they’d been all hands and mouths, powerless to stop themselves from tearing clothing from skin, unable to walk anywhere not arm in arm. Even from the beginning, Zach was unafraid to discuss the future. He never wanted college at all; it was the well-meaning pressure from his life’s influencers that had sent him to UP in the first place, to find a marketable outlet for his substantial artistic talent. Meeting Sam, he’d said, was all that made those influencers correct and school worthwhile. He wanted to be with her, to fuck her, to marry her, to have kids with her, to grow old with her, and to be buried beside her. Back in college, that was all so sweet, forward-thinking. Marriage hadn’t slowed things at all. The job offer had, and Zach hadn’t wanted to leave Portland, and didn’t think an online newspaper job was worthy of Sam’s ample talents. Zach was an artist first and practical second, Sam was the other way around. It was all well and good for Zach to encourage her stories and novels, but how would that pay the bills? So they had moved, and she took the job. They’d lived in limbo since. Happy, not thrilled. In love, but not madly. Satisfied, but (at least in Zach’s case) not really satisfied at all.
Sam hadn’t told Zach how predictably she’d been throwing up in the mornings, and Zach, being a man, hadn’t connected any dots with the vomit he saw. He didn’t know Sam suspected a pregnancy, or how cowardly she felt for acting like Aunt Candace, unwilling to find out.
No matter how the test turned out, the results would break them loose from their rut of running through the motions. If they were having a baby, they would have to buy supplies, read up, and adjust their selfish schedules to accommodate a new arrival. If they weren’t having a baby, they’d know it as a clear and present fact rather than one of omission. There was a difference between never trying to have a baby, and hence never having one, and a near miss. Both scenarios resulted in no baby, but the latter added fresh questions: If they kept having sex, which they would (and fervently), would they keep their birth control in place and know it could fail? Or would they remove it and decide they were ready? Either way, the baby would be there, in their thoughts and bed, whether actually present or not.
Two minutes had passed. Sam pocketed her phone and left the bathroom without glancing toward the sink.
She didn’t want to know. Even after realizing the idiocy of her thought, she still didn’t. Something had been odd between her and Zach recently, and she was suddenly very aware that this could shatter it. She felt like the recipient of a bank deposit she didn’t remember making. She might be entitled to that money (she might have forgotten a direct deposit from long ago, after all) and she needed that money … but if she asked the bank, they might realize it was a mistake and take it back. Looking at the pregnancy test felt like that. Zach hated his job, hated the city, and perhaps as a result, they’d been fighting a lot more. If he found out that she’d had a negative pregnancy test (because of course she’d tell him; she couldn’t not tell him), was it possible that he might realize something that had never precisely occurred to him before: that there was nothing holding him here any longer?
But that was ridiculous. Sam was holding him here.
And that was a good way to think of a marriage, of course: as one person holding another in place.
Sam walked back into the bathroom. One quick glance, like ripping off a Band-Aid. She needed one second of strength, then she could go back to being weak if she wanted because one way or another, the bridge would have been crossed.
Sam saw the test sitting on its pee-dripped tissue. She thought of Erwin Schrödinger, who she had learned about in one of her college physics courses. Schrödinger, via some famous thought experiment involving a cat, said the act of observing influenced an event’s outcome. As Sam stepped closer, she felt like her own eyes and attention were about to turn that test positive or negative. It had no reality until her eyes gave it.
Sam, right here and now, would pop the bubble.
The test was positive.
Sam stared at plus sign, large as life.
She put her hand on her stomach and listened to Morphine on the stereo behind her.
And quite to her surprise, Sam realized she was happy.
CHAPTER TWO
Six Years Ago
“Really.”
Zach looked almost hurt. Of course he would. This was Zach. Between the two of them, Sam might have been manlier. She was also the serious one, the one who thought with her left brain and took the things in front of her as if they were (surprise, surprise) what they seemed to be. When Sam saw a rock, she saw it as a rock. When Zach saw the same rock, it could be a fossil, a skipping stone, or a paperweight. He was almost stupidly optimistic — a temperament that was a perfect foil to the darkness that, on occasion, he allowed himself to disappear into while buried in his art. Zach was the kind of guy who’d watch the “flying plastic bag” scene in American Beauty and say that he had to agree with the creepy kid about the beauty in ordinary things. Sam, on the other hand, was a journalism major and made fun of Zach when he said things like that. Most of the time, their back and forth was playful, but Sam had to be careful. When Zach did things that were sweet but maybe a bit over the top, she had to see the sweetness and ignore his hyperbole.
As he held the single rose, Sam could imagine a cartoon drooping as his face fell.
“Yes, really,” he said. “I’m giving you a rose.”
“A rose?”
“Yes,” said Zach, extending the flower. He pointed at it with his other hand. “That’s what this thing is. A symbol of romance. See also: hearts, chocolates, soft sheets.”
“Ooo-kay,” Sam said, taking the flower. She wasn’t sure what to do with it. Was she supposed to tuck it into her pants when they rode the Tilt-A-Whirl? Right now, she wanted a funnel cake. How would she eat a fu
nnel cake while holding a rose?
Zach stopped, making himself an island in the middle of fair foot traffic. He was holding Sam’s other hand, so she jerked to a stop and turned.
“What?” she said.
“Girls are supposed to like it when you give them roses.”
“I do like it. Thank you.”
“You didn’t act like you liked it.”
Sam resisted the urge to roll her eyes, reminding herself just how much Zach had grown on her over the month they’d known each other. The rose bit was a bit absurd, given why he was doing it, but it meant a lot to him. It was her job to play along, to take the intention of his gesture over its impractical reality.
“I love it,” she said.
“You acted like … ”
Sam pulled him forward and kissed him. A kid walking by in a green John Deere hat whistled. She held his waist, the awkward, single rose pressed into his hip in her hand.
“You don’t need to make gestures, Zach. I actually like you.”
“I like making gestures.”
And that was true, but it wasn’t why he’d given her the rose tonight. They’d been dating for a month, had gone out to five dinners, had hung out at each other’s dorms with one another’s roommates, had gone bowling, had seen a few movies including at least two that Sam had pretended to enjoy because they were Zach’s favorites. Tonight, though, they wouldn’t be hanging out with either of their roommates. He’d booked them a hotel room so they could be alone, after okaying it with her — following much wink-wink, do-you-know-what-I-mean doubletalk that was quite typical of Zach. That she found cute. The time had come for them to finally make love, but if anyone were to read a script of the actual words they’d used to set up the evening, they could just as easily be looking for a quiet place to watch Gladiator.
Together Apart: Change is Never Easy Page 1