by Taylor Hart
Then there was the Kardashian of the group, Zoe. She was obsessed with her finger nails, and talking about the pressures of plastic surgery, which she’d clearly had her fair share of. Her face never moved; it was locked in a perpetual surprise.
The doctor started the group session by posing a question about strategies they personally used or could you imagine using for staying clean?
Surprisingly, it was a good discussion. Not surprisingly, Zoe said she liked to go to the beach as a distraction from the mirror.
“Stillness,” she said, in a somewhat nasally, uppity, diva sounding voice. “I need stillness and if I find a place to go when I get to feeling like I need a drug, it helps.”
Gary offered. “Sex.” He sniffed and gave a longing look to the women.
B.C. ignored him.
Tina, the soap opera star, gave B.C. what he could only describe as a cougar smile.
There were several other answers. B.C. didn’t respond. He hadn’t honestly thought about a strategy.
Most of the time, with his addiction, he’d gotten used to just berating himself. To thinking all military—you do or you don’t, you win or you lose. He should have the will power.
Finally, Dr. Schneider turned to him. “B.C., any thoughts?”
“Thoughts?" This was putting him out of his comfort zone.
The doctor smiled. “Think about your thoughts. We’ll talk later.” He winked.
They covered a few less interesting topics and B.C. remained just as quiet. They closed the session and then Dr. Schneider pulled him aside. “Can I talk to you for a second?”
B.C. nodded. “Okay.”
“B.C., I wanted to bring up the fact, you need to find some strategy to deal with your drug use. To replace it. Something to do in place of when you want to do drugs.”
He grunted.
The doctor looked sympathetic. “You’ve said before, ‘I’ll just quit, but that hasn’t worked for you.”
B.C. didn’t like the doctor pushing him. “I’m hitting a bag.”
“True.” The doctor agreed. “I think that’s a good place to start.” He exhaled and gave B.C. a concerned look. “In my experience, if a person comes here because it’s court ordered, one of two things will happen; they either buy in to recovery and really get clean or, they fail. The second group ends up right back on pills or drugs and this whole process was a waste of time.”
B.C. thought about the fact he did want to be clean. That desire grew inside of him. “I want to be part of the first group, doc.” He decided to be honest. “I just don’t know how.”
The doctor’s face turned compassionate and he nodded. “I’m glad you’re being honest, that’s the first step.”
B.C. nodded and sucked in a breath. “I look at people, I’ve looked at them for a long time and I’ve wanted to be free. Free from addiction. I just…” he broke off, feeling emotional. “I haven’t been able to do it. I’m just weak.” Self-loathing washed over him.
The doctor shook his head. “You’re not weak, B.C., but…this is a weakness for you.”
That made no sense.
The doctor gestured to him. “You obviously, don’t have a weakness for carbs or chocolate, like I do.”
B.C. swept his eyes over the doc, who was a bit paunchy. “Not the same.”
“True.” The doctor leaned forward, getting more intense. “Not as destructive, but not good for me.”
B.C. didn’t think they were on the same page at all.
“My point,” the doctor said, “is that all of us have to find reasons we want what we want bad enough. I’m sure for you, you have just made it your standard that you don’t eat junk because you don’t want to look like me.” He flashed a smile. “And I’m not offended by that.” The doctor smiled. “Hey, I haven’t made a choice I want to live your life, all buff and good-looking. I mean it would be horrible to have women stare at me the way they stare at you.”
B.C. let out a light laughed, because he could sense the doctor’s kindness.
“B.C., you have to find the reasons you buy in to your own recovery. You have to dig deep and find those reasons, no one can give them to you.”
B.C. suddenly thought of Kira and how she’d talked about her Nana and God. “Maybe I don’t have any.”
The doctor let out a breath. “I don’t think that’s true. I think you just need to think about it. You know, there’s a lot of good drug and alcohol programs that focus on tapping into a higher power. You might thing about that.”
B.C. thought about the last time he really felt God in his life. It’d been during the war. He looked away from the doctor.
The doctor moved toward the door, then turned back. “And, there’s another thing.”
B.C. felt nervous, instantly. “Okay.”
An intense look swept over his face. "Here’s the deal. I don't know what you have going on with Ms. Moonwater, but just let her be, okay?”
This took him completely off guard. “What?”
The doctor nudged him. “I may be a doctor of healing, but I can see a broken heart and when you two were looking at each other…” he broke off and shook his head. “I don’t know, I would just ask that you let Ms. Moonwater deal with some things first."
It was ridiculous that the doctor would even say this. The words came out before he could take them back. “Did she tell you that we kissed?”
Now the doctor’s eyes widened and he looked baffled. “How have you kissed her already?”
B.C., realizing all his ability to keep his mouth shut had obviously been lost when he’d quit the pills, threw his hands up. “I met her the night before coming here and I kissed her.”
The doctor let out a long breath. “This is not good. Lulubelle would not have liked this.”
“Lulu who?”
The doctor waved a hand. “Never mind. Just…” He let out another breath. “Please don’t kiss her in the class you have with her this afternoon.” The doctor shook his head. “Keep it professional, B.C. For your sake and hers.”
B.C. sat in yoga class, or better, he half-sat half-stretched his leg to the side and felt like he would die. She’d worked them amazingly hard.
Her body wasn’t just a long, lean body, it was trained to twist and turn in all sorts of ways. Clearly, she was trying to kill them.
“I want you to feel the stretch,” Moonwater said. He smiled as he thought of her last name.
Oh man, he could have fun with that last name.
Then he felt her hands on his shoulders, pushing him further into the stretch. “Let yourself breath and extend."
He liked her hands on his shoulders. How did he tell her everything he liked about her? The lithe, long, graceful way she moved around the room. The way her blonde, curly short hair seemed to flow with the pink flowy thing she wore over the black unitard. Everything about the woman felt feminine.
When they’d started the class, his heart had raced so fast he’d thought he was having a panic attack, but it had nothing to do with the exercise.
She’d been completely professional, introducing herself as Kira. He liked that name, too. He thought Yoga Moonwater had a ring to it also, no one could deny it.
She moved back to the front and went easily into the pose she had them planted in. “Okay, now I want you to move to downward dog.”
She easily bridged her body to that position.
There were five people, including him, in this class. There was light, flowing, water kind of music playing. There was the smell of something in the air. Something he wasn’t sure what, but he was actually feeling relaxed today.
He tried to go back to downward dog, grunting and knowing his body would probably scream at him tomorrow a lot more for this than it would for a three-hour punching, kicking session on the bag. He’d always resisted this type of instruction as much as he could. Some movie producers demanded it for technique and smoothness in movements, so he did it. He could tolerate it. It just wasn’t his favorite.
S
he continued her professional posture, taking them through all the moves. What could he say? He liked her style. It was just like her—lithe, lean, graceful. By the end of class, he found he was sweating but he felt really good. She ended the class with, “Namaste.”Which they all repeated back.
Most people started shuffling off, but the older nineteen-seventies guy, Gary, stayed back and tried to chat her up. “Have you ever watched Three’s Company? I was on the sixth episode, the fourteenth, the twenty-sixth.”
She gave him a very curt, unimpressed look, then succinctly put things away, turned off the diffuser, then turned the music doc off of her phone. “Well, nice to meet you, Gary, I must go now.”
She sounded nurse-like. Why did he think that? Maybe like she was trying out to be a nurse in a movie. She was just being orderly.
He waited until Gary left, crossing his arms when Gary looked at him expectantly, saying 'we have to leave' without using words.
He gave Gary a ‘take off and I won’t rearrange your face’ look.
Luckily, Gary took the hint and left.
Suddenly, all the pretense was gone. She turned and asked quietly, “How are you?”
Her words melted inside of him. It was strange at how soft they sounded. It sounded like she really cared. “I’m okay.” He felt himself smile and realized it was a real deep down type of smile.
She nodded.
He coughed. “Anyway, how’s Kevin? How’s the ranch?” It was funny to him, that she’d been part of his other life and now this life.
She shrugged and turned to the large window that overlooked another section of the mountains. The sun was still high in the sky. “He’ll be happy I got a job today and can stay out of his hair a little bit." She shrugged. “We're still trying to figure out what to do with the ranch.”
He wanted to say something. To ask something else, but he didn’t know what to ask. “I’ve thought of you.” It actually didn’t sound as lame as it could have.
She didn’t respond.
“How’s … the Africa guy?” he didn’t mean to say it like a checkmate, but he couldn’t help it.
It was even better when their eyes met and she looked bugged. “None of your business.”
It actually made him feel better she was just treating him like a normal person. He grunted. “I was wondering if you were all right. You’re the only thing I’ve thought about besides my own problems.” He didn’t like being vulnerable or even sounding that way.
Their eyes held and finally she blinked and shook her head. “I can’t talk about that kiss.”
Man, she was breaking his heart. He full on grinned. “Proves you’re thinking about it.”
She let out a loud laugh and turned for the door, but didn’t leave yet. “Oh, the movie star ego."
He liked that he felt more himself with her. The past couple of days he’d felt not at all like himself and he knew it was the absence of pills. All the thoughts he'd been having seemed foreign. He followed her to the door. It was just nice to flirt for a minute. “How’s Spence again?”
She hesitated. “You remembered his name.”
Dang, that did show he was paying close attention to the stupid boyfriend. “I remembered he’s an idiot.”
She walked out of the room and waited for him. “I shouldn’t be talking to you about that.”
He shrugged. “Why?”
“I don’t know. I work here. I need to keep things confidential.”
It felt like she was grasping for a reason not to talk to him. “Is Spence confidential?” He was humored that she clearly felt a bit nervous, too. “I mean, the guy’s not even in the country, so I don’t think he’d qualify as a confidential topic.”
A look of what was hopelessness or misery washed over her face. “I don’t want to talk about it." She put her yoga master face in place.
He felt like a puppy begging for a treat at her side but he didn’t care. “Have you heard from him? Did he even call yet?” Was he really pushing her for information about her boyfriend?
“I have to go, see you tomorrow,” she whispered and took off fast down the hall.
He watched her go and thought of that first night on the dance floor with her, twirling her around in the air. He thought of the freedom he’d felt. The realness. The grace and the beauty.
He kept watching as she gave Clark and Tricia a key then turned for the front doors.
It was stupid how happy it made him when she turned and looked back, catching his eye before walking out.
Happiness surged within him. Things at Red Rocks Acres just got a bit more impactful. He wondered if he really recovered and got clean … could he have a woman like her?
Chapter 6
Four days later, Kira was just finishing the day around three o’clock when she thought, again, about the fact she hadn’t seen B.C. It’d become his kind of joke to come to all her classes. He said he had to get ‘special permission’ to add all of her classes to his schedule. It was more than a bit unnerving, but also, she had to admit she liked it.
Most of the time he’d stay and flirt after. Too bad the seventies guy, Gary, also liked to stay and flirt. She could tell it was grinding on B.C., which made it kind of funny.
B.C. had become such a meaningful, fun, flirtatious part of her days. In fact, it had actually surprised her that Doctor Schneider had asked her to start doing a night meditation class, too. She’d agreed, of course, because it paid another forty bucks an hour.
She checked out at the front desk with Clark and Tricia when Clark did his patented hit-on that she’d also grown accustomed to.
“What are you doing tonight, Kira?” He looked her up and down.
She was tired of him acting like he could just stare at her all the time. She pulled her shrug tight around her shoulders.
Tricia smiled at her, but rolled her eyes at Clark. "We’re all going out, meeting at the dance club your cousin works at. Want to meet us?"
She didn’t. “Uh, can’t.” She couldn’t. It was exhausting going through all Nana’s records and she was still trying to figure out the system and the recipes and learn how to fill all the orders Doctor Schneider had been asking for.
Clark’s gaze swept her from top to bottom. He was one of those guys who looked clean cut, but he always gave her a weird vibe. “Are you sure?”
She tried not to look creeped out. “I better go.”
That’s when she heard the shouting before she saw him.
“You selfish, ungrateful, brat!” There was a woman stalking down the hall from Dr. Schneider’s office.
B.C. was there, following her, his jaw tight, and his eyes bloodshot. If she didn’t know better, she’d think he’d been crying. “Don’t do this, Mom. Do. Not. Walk. Out.”
She clicked down the hall in her stilettos and tight, gold pants. Kira was shocked to notice extremely long fingernails and very eighties hair-band hair, like it had been Aqua-Netted. She had a fierce scowl and looked like she would rip someone’s head off.
“Mom.” B.C. caught up to her.
She spun on him. “How dare you say that to anyone.”
Dr. Schneider appeared. “Mrs. Knight, please. Come back to my office and we can sort this out.”
“I will not!” she shouted. She shook her head and looked exasperated at B.C.
Kira saw B.C’s anger turn into a cool, calm face.
He’d slipped into a mask so easily. It was impressive, really. It also made her feel bad for him.
He narrowed his eyes at his mother and took a step back, putting up his hands. “Fine, Mom, do whatever you want."
She huffed and looked around at everyone in the hall. "What are you all looking at?” She growled, looking like a cat cornered in an alley. “Haven’t you seen a dysfunctional son before?” Her eyes stopped on Kira and flashed even more anger. She pointed at her. “You…you’re the one he met the night before he checked in here.”
B.C. was instantly next to his mother, taking her forearm and pulling her
back. “Mom, stop.”
She kept her angry glare on Kira. “Be careful, my pretty. He told me about how you talked beneath the stars.”
“Mother!” B.C. looked angry.
She let out a witchy laugh and turned back to him. “I bet you were stoned, drunk, and out of your head, like you always are.” She let out another laugh. Her gaze turned back to Kira, she glared at her. “I won’t even tell you what he said about you.”
Kira was speechless.
For a brief second, B.C.’s eyes flashed to hers. His mask actually slipped. She saw…neediness, desperation … pain. The guy from the first night, the one who had told her about his friend Troy when they were sitting on the boulder “I” on top of the Dixie rocks, looking out over the town. He reached for his mother, putting a hand on her shoulder. “Please stop.”
His mother yanked away and rushed to the doors yelling back to him. “Just get your butt out of here and get the bills paid!”
In the aftermath everyone was quiet.
Kira’s heart was racing and she couldn’t believe how horrible it had been to see that. Kira thought about the fact Litsea was currently diffusing in the background. Nana always said Litsea would help one rise above the fear of rejection and being misunderstood, B.C. needed that right now.
Her mind flitted back to his mother. What had he told her?
B.C. looked at her, then a ticked-off looked washed over his face and she saw his hands clench into fists.
She wanted to reach out to him, to soothe him somehow.
“B.C.” Dr. Schneider was next to him, putting his hand on his shoulder. “Let’s go back to my office.”
They disappeared down the hall toward the doctor’s office.
Kira walked out, thinking about B.C. It might be stupid or completely insane, especially since he was a movie star in a drug rehab facility. Not to mention the fact she was in the middle of a semi breakdown in her own life, and she’d probably lose her job over it, but…she had to know if he was okay. To do that, she’d have to get closer to him.