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Craft

Page 25

by Adriana Locke


  It’s the wee hours of the night when I wonder if I’ll ever fall in love again. They say it happens once and it wasn’t with Eric. I know that now. I fell in love with Lance. I’m in love with Lance. And if I never feel this way about another man, that’s a soul-crushing realization to consider.

  With Eric, I thought we’d go through the motions of life—engagement complete with photos that would make me cringe in ten years, marriage with overpriced wedding hors d'oeuvres, honeymoon, kids, blah, blah, blah. The blahs though were filled with enough excitement to make me think I wanted it. Maybe I really even did. But with Lance, if I let myself consider what life would be like with him, there were no blahs. With him, it wouldn’t have been about the milestones and checking off each box that adults are supposed to check. It would’ve honestly been about the journey—the cuddles on the couch and arguing over what movie to watch, the snowy afternoons in front of the fireplace spent reading books and discussing thoughtful passages. It would’ve been a life filled with fountain Cokes and Bluebird Hills and maybe some of Nana’s Pyrex dishes brimming with leftovers. Maybe I could’ve made Sunday dinner with her and gossiped about her grandsons and really have become a part of that family.

  “Ma’am?”

  I jolt back to the present, stuffing the change in my pocket. “I’m sorry. I dazed off,” I tell the cashier.

  “No problem. Have a great day.”

  The sun shines happily through the door and I have to squint as I approach. When it opens, the glare goes down just enough for me to focus my vision. Then I stop.

  Peck with his floppy blond hair and adorable grin stands in front of me. Beside him is a darker, stockier version of Lance on one side and a slightly shorter, huskier version on the other.

  My throat goes dry, my drink almost falling from my hands. “Shit,” I mutter, getting it right side up.

  “I have that effect on women,” the stockier one smirks.

  “Shut up, Machlan,” Peck laughs. “How are you, Mariah?”

  “Oh,” Machlan nods, a look of approval shifting over his rugged features. “You’re Mariah.”

  “I am,” I say, looking back at Peck. “It’s nice to see you.”

  “It’s nice to see you. This is Machlan Gibson,” he says, pointing to the darker man. “And that is Walker Gibson. Lance’s brothers.”

  Walker twists a toothpick around his lips. “This explains a lot.”

  “No shit,” Machlan laughs. “It’s nice to meet you and I’m sorry for whatever idiotic thing my brother has done.”

  “What makes you think he’s done something?” I ask.

  “Because you don’t look crazy.” Walker shrugs.

  “I’m not following you …”

  “Look,” Machlan says, waving at someone across the store, “Lance is all kinds of fucked up right now. Your boy is drinking more tequila than I’ve ever seen and I can’t even add it to his tab because he’s so pathetic.”

  Peck winces. “Pathetic, Machlan? Let him keep his balls.”

  “Fuck his balls,” Walker snorts. “He’s driving me nuts. Whatever he’s done, Mariah, just forgive him. Make him grovel and buy you something nice but just get on with it.”

  “Before I go broke,” Machlan adds.

  I can’t help but laugh at their camaraderie, the easy way in which they play off each other. Being with them seems like the best family vacation ever, filled with lots of ribbing and jokes and overall shenanigans. I also can’t help but notice how every woman who walks into this place immediately looks our way.

  Individually, they’re all incredibly good-looking. Together? Together it’s hard to take.

  “I hate to break it to you guys,” I say, gathering my pride, “but I don’t know why he’s being an asshole.”

  Walker looks at Machlan. It’s Peck who looks at me.

  There’s a kindness resting there that gives me something to latch onto for a moment. I have no idea if he knows Lance broke things off with me, but something tells me he does. Maybe he even knows why. But there’s no pity in the pools of his irises and I appreciate that.

  “I need to get going,” I tell them. “I have a bunch of cupcakes in the back of my car to deliver to the nursing home over by the church.”

  “Lance is outside,” Walker says, twisting that toothpick again. “He’s especially irritating today, so be warned.”

  My heart clamors around my ribs, pattering so loud I struggle to block it out. I look out the windows, shielding my eyes with my hand, but I don’t see him.

  “He’s in that truck over there,” Peck tells me, pointing to a silver truck.

  “Feel free to take him with you,” Machlan jokes.

  I suck in a breath to steady myself, keeping my eyes peeled on the truck. “I might just wait in here until you leave.”

  “I’d say you have a minute before he comes busting in here looking for you,” Walker notes. “Might be easier having a conversation outside.”

  Naturally, my car is parked right beside the truck so I can’t even sneak out a side door. Besides, I feel his gaze on me through the glass and it only makes me miss him more.

  “It was nice meeting you all,” I say. With a quick smile at the Gibson Boys, I step into the sun.

  Keeping my head down, I make a beeline for my car. I can’t hear anything over the steps of my shoes against the asphalt—that is, until Lance says my name.

  Despite my brain saying, ‘Don’t look up,’ I look straight up into his eyes.

  They’re the same beautiful green I remember, and the ones I see every time I close my own. There are bags underneath them, lines creasing from the corners announcing that he hasn’t been sleeping well. Or at all.

  I hate seeing him like that. I hate him making me feel like this. I hate this whole damn thing.

  “Hey,” I say as evenly as I can manage. It’s not even at all. It’s a shaky mess of a voice that I’m half embarrassed about. “How are you?”

  He leans against my car as I unlock the door. “Shitty. How are you?”

  “Fine.” My cup goes into the cup holder. The little buzzing sound that drives me crazy starts chirping, reminding me I just stuck my keys into the ignition. I want to ask him about the tequila, ask him if he lost his comb, but I don’t because those things are none of my business. “I need to go.”

  “Where you going?” he roughs out.

  “I baked for the nursing home. I need to get them over there before their dinner time.” I look at the blacktop beneath my feet. I’ve given him more information than he deserves, even though none of it really matters. Still, I need to stop this and get on with my day. “I really do need to go, Lance.”

  He shoves off my car and stands just a few feet from me. “Talk to me.”

  “Why?”

  “Why not?” he sighs. “Why’d you put a lock on your door?”

  “To keep you out.” I lift my chin and look at his five o’clock shadow. “I need some space, okay?”

  “Mariah, I—”

  “No.” My answer is firm, my tone strong. It’s a good launching point. “I’m not mad at you. I don’t hate you. But I’m very tender right now and I need to shore myself up some before you come back in. Okay?”

  I put my hands behind me just so I don’t reach for him as he skirts his fingers over his face. He lets out a low, frustrated groan and I want to kiss his cheek and make him laugh, but I don’t because it’s not my place.

  “This is the best thing for you.” He blows out a breath as I wonder if he meant that for me or for him. “I know you don’t understand that, but it’s true.”

  “You know what I don’t understand?” I ask. “I don’t get why you let me in so much, knowing you didn’t want to keep me there.”

  He looks at the sky, stretching his neck all the way back.

  “You knew my reservations,” I tell him. “And if I didn’t know you better, I’d think you drug me in just to see if you could.”

  His eyes fly wide. “That’s bullshit.�


  “I know it is,” I say, biting back a lump in my throat. “But pardon me for feeling like you made me fall in love with you and then slammed that door shut.”

  The words are into the universe with no way to reel them back in. His mouth hangs open like it’s some kind of epiphany and that just annoys me more.

  There’s a bubble threatening to burst, one I’ve held back from exploding since he broke things off with me. But standing here in this parking lot, looking at him like he’s the hurt one, makes me want to scream.

  “I have to go,” I say, climbing in my car with a hurried frenzy.

  “What did you just say?”

  I turn over the engine. “You heard me.”

  “Mariah …”

  With a final look his way, I smile sadly. “Goodbye, Lance.”

  The door shuts as he continues his protest and I pull out with only a quick glance in the rearview mirror.

  Thirty-One

  Lance

  I hate this fucking place. It’s no place to spend a Saturday morning.

  My shoes sink into the soil. It’s never solid. For whatever reason, the ground is always soft here and I don’t even want to imagine why that is.

  Machlan comes here a lot. He makes sure the stone is decorated for each holiday and that the crew that mows the cemetery doesn’t damage the headstone my siblings and I had designed when our parents died. Machlan says he finds peace here. Well, he doesn’t say it like that, but it’s what he means. It doesn’t do that for me.

  My steps fall with trepidation at seeing the black stone sitting near the back. There are purple flowers in the urns. It was Mom’s favorite color and although Machlan acts like a badass, and is one, really, he’s the one of us who remembers things like that.

  “Hey,” I say to the stone, a flock of birds taking flight at the sound of my voice. “I know you aren’t here and that I’m talking to an inanimate object. Yes, Dad, that worries me too.”

  There’s a bench Mom’s bowling league asked to place on their grave perched right next to the stone on the slab. I sit, feeling the sun on my face.

  Despite the warmth, I haven’t felt alive in days. It’s funny, really. I’ve always been a guy who springs out of bed in the morning fairly excited about my day. But since Mariah and I stopped talking, since she goes out of her way to avoid me, none of that is true.

  “You always taught us to be a blessing to others,” I say out loud, wishing my parents were here to answer me. “Told us we had so many advantages, so much to offer that was given to us by no work of our own, and we had to share that.” I stroke my chin, trying to get my thoughts together. “How do you decide what’s a blessing to someone and what’s a curse?”

  “Depends how you figure.” The voice rings out behind me, making me jump. I spin around to see Machlan standing a few feet back. “Didn’t mean to scare ya.”

  “What are you doing here?”

  “The landscaping crew left a bunch of trash the mowers cut up around the cemetery, so I picked it up and threw it in the garbage over there,” he says, motioning over his shoulder.

  “Where’s your truck?”

  “I walked down here. Not too far from my house.”

  “Yeah. Guess not,” I say, getting to my feet.

  “What were you talking about?” he asks. “Yeah, being nosy, but you have a lot of shit going on and I’m starting to worry a little. You haven’t told us one fuck story in weeks.” He looks at our parents’ stone. “Sorry, Mom.”

  Shrugging, I look at my little brother. “I’ve been thinking a lot.”

  “That spells trouble.”

  “Right?” I sigh. “Mom always preached about blessings and all that, but …”

  “Look,” Machlan says. “If you take one thing away from our parents’ lives, take this.” He bends down and circles the date of their death. “Take that.”

  The numbers are etched into the stone, a stark reminder that the end of their lives was marked on a certain day, month, and year. Still, his point is lost on me.

  “I don’t get it,” I tell him, still looking at the etchings.

  “Did any of us expect them to die that day? Hell, no. If you would’ve gone with them, you would’ve been right beside them in the ground and I’d be sticking flowers on your grave too.”

  The thought makes my skin crawl. We were all supposed to be with them that July afternoon on the boat. We all opted out, choosing instead to do our own thing. When the news reached us, it was devastating to a degree I didn’t know existed. Every time I think it could’ve been me sends a shock wave up my spine.

  I look at Machlan. He doesn’t flinch.

  “How different do you think things would’ve been if they’d lived?” I toss the question out there, not sure if he’ll answer. It’s all a guess anyway.

  “Who knows? I think it’s safe to say it’s changed us all in one way or another.”

  “I’ve been thinking about Mom a lot,” I admit. “I wonder what she’d have to say about the choices we’ve made in our lives.”

  “She’d be pretty happy more or less. More about Blaire’s successes and Walker settling down, less about my arrest record and your fighting this thing with Mariah.” He gives me a look, begging me to argue with him. I don’t. He sucks in a breath and blows it out slowly. “We can keep pussyfooting around whatever the reason is you’re here or you can just tell me. But I do have shit to do today.”

  “I didn’t come here to see you. Let’s remember that.”

  “Guess it’s your lucky day I showed up then, huh?” He sits beside me, his elbows resting on his knees. “What’d she do?”

  “Nothing.”

  “Nothing as in you aren’t telling me or nothing as in it was you that fucked up?”

  I hang my head. “Nothing as in it was me who lied to her.”

  He works his head in a circle, realizing this is a little deeper than some one-night stand I have to figure out. “What’d you lie about?”

  “Listen, if I tell her the truth, it’ll put her in an impossible situation.”

  “Fair enough,” he says. “Answer me this: did you cheat on her?”

  “Nope.”

  He seems shocked but continues on without commenting. “Did you hurt her in some way?”

  “Nah, but I’m trying not to. If I tell her the truth, she might get hurt eventually.”

  “Lord, you’re such a girl.”

  “I am not,” I say, tossing him a dirty look.

  “We’re in the twenty-first century, bud. Women can make choices. They like them. And, quite frankly, they get a little pissy if you try to take them away. Just throwing that out there.”

  My stomach knots up as I consider what he’s saying. Mariah is an intelligent woman. She’s capable of handling her own business. Should I have just laid it all out there, no matter how embarrassing to me it is?

  “I don’t know,” I groan, still unsure.

  “Even if it means not getting her back?”

  I hate the way he put that. It feels … final. I’m considering that when he taunts me more.

  “Even if it means never feeling her—”

  “Our mother is right there,” I say, motioning towards the ground. “Have a little couth.”

  “Fine. Even if it means never feeling her in your arms again,” he says with a mock-sweetness. “I don’t know what you lied about. But I know you’re in love with that girl and you’re going to feel this way for the rest of your life if you don’t grow a pair and at least come clean. Maybe she loves you too.”

  I’m zapped right back to a couple of days ago at Goodman’s when she said she loved me. She glossed right over it, but it’s the only thing I remember hearing her say.

  I’ve replayed that single line over and over and held onto it like a life raft.

  Women have said they loved me before. Lots of them, really. But even when they were looking me in the eye and professing their undying devotion, it didn’t register like Mariah’s words did.
It didn’t feel the same. Not even Britt, the woman I thought I loved. The woman I’m sure now I didn’t. Not even close.

  “You’re overcomplicating this,” Machlan tells me. He ponders this for a second. “Let’s go back to the blessings, okay?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Mom didn’t say all blessings were pretty. She just said to find them, identify them, and use them. That they were given to us so we could do something with them, right?”

  “I guess …” I try to follow him, but the surge of adrenaline in my veins starts to make it difficult.

  “Take Britt, for example. If you hadn’t had that accident, you’d be married to her sure as shit. If that happened, we wouldn’t be here right now all pussy-whipped over Mariah.”

  I turn my head to react to that, to smash him in the arm, but the weight of his words stops me.

  Oh.

  My.

  God.

  He’s right.

  “What if Mom and Dad had lived? Yes, we’d all make that happen if we could, but we can’t,” he continues. “Let’s look for the blessings. Well, Blaire is a hotshot at her law firm in Chicago. Walker happened to be at my bar the night Sienna rolled into town. Us kids are really fucking close, something that might not have happened had we not had to rely on each other.” He looks at me. “You feel me, Lance?”

  “Yeah,” I say slowly, trying to keep up with the thoughts pouring through my head. “I think I do.”

  “Good.” He stands and stretches his arms over his head. “I got shit to do. Come by and see me at Crave if you need more professional opinions.”

  He cackles to himself as he walks away, leaving me on the bench alone.

  I consider everything that’s happened over the last few weeks, the things that have really affected me. Getting to know Mariah, hearing Ollie’s story, seeing Brandon start to turn around—all of those are blessings. But what if my story took a turn the day I had the accident? What if the one thing I considered a stain on my manhood is actually a blessing in disguise?

  I plant a kiss on top of the tombstone and let my gaze linger on that date for a long moment. Then I turn and head to my car, my shoes sinking into the ground once more.

 

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