The Crush Collision (Southern Charmed)

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The Crush Collision (Southern Charmed) Page 16

by Danielle Ellison


  It’s not even seconds later when I get a text from Abby. Are you kidding me?

  She sends them one after another. A picture that’s screenshotted from the school Instagram account. It’s an innocent moment between us, but it doesn’t look like it. We’re too close. The caption says, “The quiet one and the messed-up jock.” There’s no way school administration posted this. Someone hacked the Instagram.

  You and Jake?

  JAKE?!

  HOW COULD YOU NOT TELL ME?

  I can’t believe you did that!

  You’re dead to me.

  Liar.

  I’ve been reading and rereading Abby’s texts all night. Chris hasn’t come out of his room. I’ve made a big mess of this. We made a mess.

  It’s nearly morning when Jake texts me and asks if I’m awake. Of course I’m awake. He and my brother got into an actual fight. I’ve spent the night awake, thinking about what that means.

  I want to see you.

  Those words would usually get my heart racing. Who am I kidding? They still do, but I think it’s different.

  Chris told me to think about it, really think about it, and I guess I hadn’t done that. Not fully. I’d been so swept away by the magic of Jake liking me back, of his touch, of his kiss, that I let it sway me. I lied to my brother and to Abby, and even though I knew it was wrong, I did it anyway. That’s not me.

  In the morning

  It is morning

  Geesh, he’s too cute.

  I’m already out driving around. I’ll stop by and get you.

  Okay.

  A few minutes later, he pulls up outside and I hop into his truck. His face is swollen from where my brother punched him, and I can’t look at it. I can’t look at him. He takes my hand across the cab of the truck. The Jake everyone else knows wouldn’t do that, yet he does. He does with me, and I like that.

  He drives until we’re sitting in his truck near the lake. The sun is rising over the water, and it should be really romantic, but there’s a thick tension around us. I don’t want to be the one who breaks it, but if I’m not, then he won’t, either. I already know that. I know how Jake avoids things.

  “I’ve been thinking all night,” I say.

  He looks at me, and his eyes are glassy. “Please don’t.”

  “I haven’t said anything.”

  “I know what you’re going to say, and I’m asking you to please not say it.”

  “You and my brother are in a fight.”

  “He’ll cool off, and I’ll explain it all.”

  “Will he?”

  “Eventually.”

  “And what if he doesn’t?” I ask, squeezing his hand tighter. “I can’t be the reason you and Chris aren’t friends anymore.”

  “You aren’t the reason. It will all blow over.”

  “Abby knows, too,” I say. “She’s really pissed. Like I don’t think she will forgive me pissed.”

  “She will forgive you. We’ll talk to them together.”

  “It’s too late for that now. We’ve already hurt them.”

  We’re both quiet, huddled together to stay warm.

  “Hals, we’ll figure it out. Everyone will understand.”

  “And in the meantime, what? I stand back and watch? I lose my brother, too?”

  “You won’t lose him. Neither of us will,” he starts, and then he adds, “I want to be with you.”

  “Why?”

  “Why? What does that even mean?”

  “Yeah, why do you want to be with me, Jake?”

  “You’re funny, you’re beautiful, you’re smart. You get me. You keep me focused on where I want to be. You make me happy. For once, I feel like I’m me again.”

  I nod. “I’ve been thinking about that, too. I can’t be the reason you’re okay.”

  “What?”

  “You stopped drinking because you wanted to be worthy of me, and that’s not fair to me. I never asked you to be worthy.”

  “But you deserve it.”

  “And I deserve being with someone who wants to be better for himself, not for me. I can’t be the reason you stay focused or don’t drink. I can be a catalyst, but not the reason.”

  “So what are you saying?” He sighs. “I mean, I know what you’re saying, but please don’t.”

  He kisses my knuckles and then drops my hands. Tears well in my eyes, and I want to kiss him, but I can’t. I want to cry, but I shouldn’t. I don’t want to do this, but there’s not another option. This is how it has to be.

  “It’s me, too, Jake. It’s not just you. I have no idea who I am or what I want to be. All I’ve known about myself forever is that I was Chris’s sister and I had a crush on you. I need to be my own person.”

  Jake closes his eyes really tightly. “Haley, I don’t want to lose you.”

  “Just take me home. Please. Do that for now.”

  I grasp his hand again, and he wipes his eyes with the back of his other fist. He doesn’t let go of my hand, not the entire drive back home, not even when we pull into the driveway.

  “Is this how we end? Tell me it’s not.”

  “It’s not our time right now, that’s all. And you have to know how much I don’t want to say that. Can you honestly tell me you think it is?”

  He sighs and shakes his head. “All I know is I want to be with you.”

  “I guess we’ll have to wait and see,” I say.

  I can tell he wants to kiss me, but if he does I will lose it. So I pull my hand away, and it’s stiff from not moving from his for so long, and I open the door. Even though I want to, I don’t look back at him.

  When the front door closes, I lean against it and cry.

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Jake

  I didn’t go back to sleep after she left me this morning. There’s no school today, and no game tonight, so I’ve spent the whole morning driving around to nowhere. I’m still not really sure what happened. We were good, great, even, and then Howell punched me and broke everything. Jamie told me to tell him. I reckon I should’ve listened. But I liked having Haley to myself. We were still figuring out what we were, what we wanted; now we’ll never get the chance to know what we could be.

  Dad’s car is in the driveway when I get home. He avoids this house like the plague, and he definitely never parks the Volvo in the driveway. The damn porch ramp is crooked again, but today I step over it the same way he probably did. He had to walk the same path; it doesn’t seem to be worth any of his trouble.

  “Jamie? Dad?” I call when I get inside.

  “Here,” Dad rumbles.

  It’s been a while since I’ve actually seen him.

  Dad’s sitting at the dining room table, suit jacket slung over the back of one chair. Sleeves on his shirt rolled up to his forearms. His tie is undone, hair mussed up, and a bottle of scotch in front of him. It’s not even 10:00 a.m. I haven’t seen him this way since Jamie had the accident.

  I stand on the other end of the dining room table, curl my fingers in the back of it. He looks at me, eyes really blue and the whites redder than usual. It almost looks like he’s been crying. My dad doesn’t cry.

  He twirls a glass with a tiny bit of amber liquid in his hand.

  “Rough day already?”

  He gives me this dark chuckle. “When is it not?”

  I’m not sure what to do here. Dad and I aren’t really the ones who talked. It was no secret Jamie was his favorite and I was Mom’s. They’re more alike. They get each other. Jamie was the one Dad didn’t expect, but when he came anyway he was the one Dad pinned all his hopes and failed dreams of football stardom on—I was the backup he never thought he’d have to use. It’s not really his fault, I guess. We came along his second year of college, the beginning of his football career lost by a blown knee and a pregnant girlfriend. Granddad brought him home, trained him in the family business, and all that cliché stuff that forces adults to take on roles they never wanted that you see in movies and shit.

  “I’m s
urprised you’re here,” I say.

  “I live here.”

  “Okay,” I say, and it sounds kind of like I’m an asshole. Maybe I am. I never see him here for someone who lives here. I see Jamie’s aides more than him. He’s always on business trips. I wouldn’t be surprised if he had a bed in the office.

  “I had to take your brother to his checkup with Dr. Rausch.”

  Shit. “That was today?”

  “Yup,” Dad says, swallowing down the rest of his scotch. He gets up to the bar, grabs another glass, and sets it down. “You want one?”

  I almost say no. I should say no. But everything kinda sucks right now, and this is the longest conversation we’ve had since I was five. So, even though I don’t want it, I do want it. “Yeah,” I say, and even the word is a betrayal.

  He pours in some of his scotch and slides the glass over to the seat next to him. I move to sit there. “Where is Jamie?”

  “Asleep,” he says.

  “I guess the doctor wasn’t good. What’d they say?”

  Dad takes a sip of his scotch. Even though he hasn’t played ball in years, he’s still got a player’s body. Wide shoulders, big neck, large arms. He almost seems like he’s strangling himself in that suit, even with the collar undone.

  “He’s never walking again.”

  I sigh. This fucking sucks. One more punch to the gut. “We both already knew that.”

  And even though that’s true, there was still room for hope. Dad clung to the hope, wrapped himself around the possibility and snuggled into it like a warm blanket. Jamie and I didn’t acknowledge it, but it was there. An escape hatch right under our feet, potentially ours if we could unlock it. Now it’s gone, forever.

  He downs the rest of his scotch, pours another, and looks at me. I haven’t touched mine yet. I want to, but I don’t want to. I shouldn’t.

  “I thought the treatments and the therapy might improve it. That’s what the doctors said. They gave me hope for something else,” he says, and then he pauses. “I wanted something more for him.”

  I nod, but the guilt builds up inside me. I can hear what he’s not saying. He wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for you. Or maybe he thinks it should’ve been me. Either way, we both know it’s on me—he can barely even look at me.

  “At least he’s alive,” Dad adds. “It’s not the life he deserves.”

  I can read the subtext there, too. I deserved this, not him.

  I pick up the scotch and look at it. It’s funny how so little of something has the power to make you feel everything or nothing at all. How long has it been since I had a drink? Like, a real drink? I don’t even know.

  I swoosh around the cup as Dad pours another. I think of Haley, of Jamie never walking, of Seth, of Howell hating me, and I look at my dad. He seems as lost as I am. I lift the glass. The smell almost makes my nose burn. I bring it up to my lips and pause as Haley’s face pops into my head. She said she can’t be the reason I change, and she’s right. I have to want it for myself.

  I lower the glass back down and slide it toward Dad. He stares at it, at me, then chuckles and downs it.

  Even though it’s Friday, I head to the rehab center. At least it gives me something to do. The kids are already up and moving around, and a volunteer is doing balloon animals and face paints in the rec room. I’m watching when little Gracie Ann Lewis runs up and hugs me.

  “Hello, Jake Lexington.”

  “Princess,” I say, playing along. “I love that butterfly.” I point to the painting on her cheek, and she grins.

  “I wanted it to look like a rainbow.”

  “It is very pretty, like you.”

  She giggles and runs away from me with another little girl.

  I don’t see Seth anywhere out here, so I head toward his room. I hope he’s not still on quarantine from the treatment. A bunch of kids stop me in the halls, and I give them high fives or talk to them. Seeing these kids every week makes you connect, and I’ve gotten to know many.

  Seth’s door is closed, but his mom is sitting outside. When she sees me, she stands, and I can feel in the air that something is wrong. “Oh, Jake,” she says.

  “Mrs. K. What’s going on?” I start.

  There’s a sigh, the shake of a head. I know she starts talking, but I’m not sure what she says because all the words don’t register. “Gotten worse” and “no positive outcome.” My mind is spinning, trying to keep up with what I hear; it can’t be real. Not Seth. He’s a damn kid. A good one.

  Her hand rests on my forearm. “I’m sure he’d love to see you. You mean a lot to him.”

  I nod, even though the last thing I want to do is go in there. I don’t want to see him like that. It’s like seeing my brother every day and trying to pretend I’m okay. I stand at the door while a nurse finishes up with him, and when she exits, I squeeze by.

  Seth looks tired, his eyes dark. He tries to smile when he sees me, but it doesn’t stretch as far as usual. “Hey, buddy,” I say.

  “Mom told me you wanted me to come to the game. I wish I could’ve.”

  “There will be other games. You can come when you’re feeling better,” I say. There’s a very telling silence that echoes in the room. Like I said the wrong thing, and he knows it.

  “I’d love to go to Homecoming. I used to want to be a football player so I could ride on the float. Is it fun?”

  “Yeah, man. It is fun.”

  “It’s my favorite, besides Christmas.”

  “Christmas in Culler is unlike anything else,” I say.

  “Mom loves it, too. She’s gonna be real sad without me,” he says, and he looks right at me. “Will you check in on her?”

  “Yeah,” I somehow manage.

  “And will you teach my brothers to throw a football? They’d like that. They were real jealous of all the stories I told them about you.”

  “I promise I will.”

  Seth nods real slow, and then his mom knocks on the door. “Can I come back in?”

  “Yeah, Ma,” he says. “I’m getting tired again.”

  She moves toward him and rubs his head. “You go to sleep then, baby. Mama will be right here.”

  I take the moment to excuse myself, and I feel that pulling at my chest. I want to cry. I want to do something that’s not this. He can’t die. It’s not fair. None of this is fair.

  I don’t talk to anyone as I leave, even though Ms. Nichols calls my name. Take a deep breath. I’m too mad to breathe, too sad, too tired of watching innocent people get hurt. Jamie, Haley, Seth.

  Outside, I kick the tire of my truck again and again and again. One for each of them. Once more for me.

  I climb into the driver’s seat and shove down all the feelings. I’m tired of feeling. I pull out my phone to text Haley, on instinct, then I remember I can’t. I do it anyway. Just a unicorn and a sad face.

  So I turn the car on and drive back toward town. Not Culler, though, toward Haymont.

  I’ve gone a whole fifteen miles and parked my car when Seth’s mom sends me a text that he’s gone.

  I stare at the words until they start to blur.

  I don’t know what to say back to her, so I say nothing.

  I jump out of the cab of the truck and stare at the sign on the door in front of me to Al’s Liquor Warehouse. They know me by Mike in here, since I doctored my dad’s old ID from when he was younger. I look like him.

  I’m lingering too long, I should just go inside. I don’t want to, but I don’t want to feel any of this.

  I get a text and I hope it’s Haley. I want it to be Haley.

  It’s not. It’s Jamie. Where are you today? Come home.

  Another reminder.

  I shove my phone into my pocket and walk into the store.

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Haley

  I’ve spent the whole Friday off of school in my PJs. I didn’t even brush my hair because that’s how little I care. I spent the whole night crying or watching YouTube gaming videos. I’m not ev
en a gamer, but I think I should be. Looks fun. More fun than my life. It’s a nice escape, and that’s what I need most.

  But now I’m hungry, and I had to come out of my safe haven into the kitchen. Lo and behold, my brother is here. He slams the cabinet door and sits as far away from me at the table as he can.

  “What?” I snap at Chris.

  He shakes his head and looks back down at his bowl.

  This is how we interact now. We haven’t talked about the breakup—can you call it that if we weren’t actually a couple? We haven’t talked about the black eye he gave Jake, or anything involving Jake Lexington at all. We didn’t even share pleasantries about the weather. Instead, we both exist in the same space. Neither of us have said a word to each other in days.

  I hate it.

  Chris and I never fight, not ever, not even when we were kids. I think it’s part of that freaky twin thing. We can read each other too much to stay angry. This time it’s different, though. This time, he’s not trying, and neither am I.

  I stuff some bacon in my mouth and stare at my phone. At the unicorn/sad face text from Jake that he sent an hour ago. I want to respond, but I can’t do it. I can only stare and reread our history and torture myself.

  “One question,” Chris says, breaking our silent war. “The party we went to, when you went with Griggs, which we never talked about. Were you drinking?”

  I shrug. “You do it.”

  “I heard it but I didn’t want to believe it. Since when do you drink at all?”

  I cross my arms. “What’s your point?”

  “You were never like that before you started hanging out with Jake.”

  “And?”

  Chris’s eyes are wide, and he throws his hands out. “He’s a bad influence.”

  I laugh. “I won’t even talk about the hypocrisy of that sentence. I will say I can make my own choices.”

  “And if those are the ones you’re making, then obviously you can’t.”

  I gather my robe up around me and start to walk away when he stands and the chair squeals across the floor. “God, my best friend, Haley!” he shouts. “Do you know what seeing that picture was like? You didn’t think of me, neither of you. To find out that y’all were sleeping together. My best friend and my sister. Out of anyone in the whole town, why him?”

 

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