âWait, she made Dad you?â
I glare at Leo as he doubles over with laughter, clutching his stomach.
Dadâs belly shakes as he laughs, and even though Iâm furious with my brother, I canât help the relief seeping into my stomach. Seeing Dad happy makes the anger subside.
âGod, I wouldâve loved to see that.â Leo stuffs a piece of bread into his mouth. âThe almighty James Russo with his hands behind his back.â
âI did what I had to do. Poor thing was scared shitless.â Dad glances at me over the rim of his glass. âShe looks to be around your age.â
Leo shoves another piece of bread into his mouth. âSheâs hot.â
I shoot my brother another look.
âWhat? She is. Donât act like you didnât notice her in those spandex pants tonight.â He wiggles his eyebrows. âGirlâs got curves in all the right places.â
Long brown hair, plump lips, and those big doe eyes. And yes, she has a fit little body. Sheâs gorgeous. But my new neighbor also has a snarky remark for everything, telling me what to do with my own brother as if she knows better.
.
I shouldnât have snapped at her tonight. Maybe thatâs the reason why I made her a container of food and left it on her porch. Blame it on the guilt, instead of the fact that I wanted to provide her with a decent meal that hadnât come out of a freezer.
âLeave the girl alone, Leo.â Dad sets down his glass. âWhy donât you tell me about what happened to your face?â
Leo chokes on his bread and slaps his chest as he coughs.
I shake my head.
âThis bread is dry as fuck.â He chugs his water. âTell the chef he needs to do better.â
I kick his shin under the table. âYouâre lucky the chef is letting you eat any of his food at all.â
âDinner tastes great, as always.â Dad nudges my arm. âDonât listen to him.â
Leo smirks. âDoes your ass ever get sore from Dadâs head being up there?â
I squeeze the steak knife in my right hand. âI can ram this knife up your ass and show you what it feels like if youâre jealous.â
âEnough.â Dadâs voice makes us both jump. âItâs the first time weâre sitting down together in a long while. Canât we get through one meal without arguing?â
Leo and I exchange glances.
Dad sighs and glances at Leo. âYouâre fighting again, arenât you?â
Leo nods, and itâs not so much of a lie as it is a stretch of the truth. Heâd fight whether it was with me or someone else. âI like fighting. Iâm good at it.â
âDoesnât mean you should do it. Those underground rings arenât safe.â
âIâll be safe.â
âItâs not you Iâm talking about.â Dad balls his napkin in his fist. âPeople fight dirty. Iâve gotten calls about those fights down at the station. Itâs only a matter of time before someone dies.â
âI need to fight, okay? Just let me have this.â
âWhy?â
âIâm clean.â
My fork drops onto my plate, and Dad stops chewing.
âHave been for over a month now.â Leo rubs the back of his neck, looking between the both of us. âI know you think I wonât be able to stay clean, but I can. I want to.â
Dad watches him as if he doesnât believe him. âThatâs why you disappeared?â
He nods. âI didnât want you to see me detoxing. It was⦠ugly.â
âWhy?â I canât help the disbelief in my tone. âWhy now?â
Leo stares down at his plate, the muscles in his jaw clenching and releasing. âMy friend overdosed. The one Iâve been staying with. I found him in his basement.â
I shake my head. âSo, you came back home because you couldnât stay at your friendâs house for free and get high anymore.â
âNo, thatâs not it.â He lifts a shoulder and lets it fall. âI donât want that to be me. I donât want one of you to find me like that, cold, in a pile of vomit.â
âThatâs good to hear, Leo. Because I donât want to find you like that either.â Dad swipes a tear with the back of his hand. âIâm sorry about your friend. But sometimes it takes a loss like that to kick you in the ass and send you in the right direction.â
âWhat does you getting clean have to do with underground fighting?â Iâm not trying to be a dick, but I need to understand.
Leo wipes his palms on his jeans, something heâs done since he was a kid whenever heâs nervous. âSome people drink when they want to numb their pain.â His eyes flick to Dad before dropping back down to his lap. âIf Iâm not getting high anymore, then I need to replace that feeling. I need to feel⦠something.â
âAnd getting punched in the face does it for you?â
âItâs the rush of adrenaline when Iâm in the fight.â
I blink at him. âShit, I can kick your ass every night if you want me to. Why didnât you say something sooner?â
Leo flips me off, but heâs smiling. Dad laughs too, and thatâs all I need to see.
âI just want my boys happy and healthy.â Dad reaches across the table and covers Leoâs hand with his. âIâm glad you came home, son. And Iâm proud of you for wanting to get clean.â
Dad and his hopeful heart. We both know Leo declaring he to stay clean is much different than Leo actually staying clean. But I donât have the nerve to say it. Dad needs something good to hold on to right now. It feels like the three of us have been drifting through the underworld for years. Lost souls, barely alive. Or maybe Mom took them with her when she left us.
Maybe this is all our lives are meant to be without her.
Nighttime is the worst.
After dinner, I cleared off the table, washed the dishes, packed Dadâs lunch for tomorrow, watched a movie, and folded my laundry. Now I donât know what to do with myself.
I roll onto my back and stare into the darkness of my room. Sleep never comes easy. Not since Mom died. Itâs the reason I take as many night shifts as I can. I try to recall the happy memoriesâher bright smile, her warm hugs, the sound of her voice. Until the last vision I have of her flashes through my mind and destroys everything that came before it.
A soft light streaks through my window, drawing my attention. I sit up and lean over to see where itâs coming from. My room is on the side of the house, overlooking the alley I caught Leo smoking pot in earlier. But as I stare out my window, I realize Phoenixâs bedroom is on the side of her house as well.
Directly across from mine.
My eyes dart away on instinct, but curiosity gets the better of me and my gaze wanders back. Her long dark hair is wet, and sheâs wearing a white robe as she lowers herself onto her bed. I should look away. Iâm invading her privacy. But I canât bring myself to turn my head. Something about the way she sits there staring down at her hands in her lap calls to me.
I squint, moving closer to the window until it fogs up from my breath. She lifts her hand and swats at her cheek. Once, twice. She blows out a stream of air through her lips and looks up at her ceiling, as if sheâs sending up a silent prayer. Then she covers her face with both of her hands, and her shoulders shake as she bends forward.
My gut twists. Why is she crying? What happened? My first instinct is to go over there and find out, but how would I explain myself?
I shake my head. I donât know anything about this girl. Sheâs cryingâso what? Weâve all cried. Weâre all going through shit. Why should I care? For all I know, sheâs upset over something ridiculous, or insignificant.
But her voice floats through my head like a sad song.
Sheâs alone. So, I watch her until she lies down and cries herself to sleep. Iâm with her in this moment, even if she doesnât know it.
Since sleep isnât happening anytime soon for me, I trot downstairs for a late-night snack.
Dad and Leo are already sitting at the table.
âWeâre a sorry bunch.â Dad chuckles as he pulls out the chair beside him. âCanât sleep?â
I shake my head and dump the box of Lucky Charms into a bowl. âNot tired.â
Leo smirks. âJust go next door and bang the pretty neighbor. We both know thatâs whatâs keeping you up.â
Dad smacks Leo in the back of his head before I can get to him. âWhatâs wrong with you? Who taught you to talk about women like that? Youâre twenty-three years old. You should know better.â
I lower myself onto the chair. âWhat do we know about her? Did you run the background search?â
âSo you thinking about her.â Leo pumps his fist into the air. âFuckinâ knew it. I swear, I just know shit.â
Dad shakes his head and talks around the spoonful of cereal. âI didnât think we needed to. Sheâs not causing trouble, and itâs an invasion of her privacy if we poke around like that without a cause.â
I rub my temples in small circles. âYouâre right.â
âI think sheâs been through some shit.â Leo stares down at his bowl. âAnd she doesnât have anyone to turn to.â
I lean my elbows onto the table. âAnd how do you know that?â
âWe were talking earlier.â
Dad nods like he agrees. âThereâs a reason sheâs living in her familyâs shore house without her family.â
Leo wipes his mouth with the back of his hand. âIâm going to look out for her.â
I cross my arms over my chest, irritation spiking in my veins. âYou need to look out for yourself.â
âI have you for that, donât I?â
âBoys,â Dad warns. âI donât have the energy for your shit right now. Itâs after one in the morning.â
Leo holds up his hands on either side of his head.
âThe last thing we need is you two fighting over a pretty girl.â
âNo oneâs fighting over a girl.â Leo smirks. âBesides, she shot me down.â
An odd sense of relief blankets me. âYou already made a pass at her? Youâve known her for five minutes.â
âLike I said, sheâs hot.â He shrugs. âAnd she gets me.â
âShit.â Dad laughs. âThen we better get her a Nobel Peace Prize for figuring you out.â
Leo balls up his napkin and tosses it at Dad. âYou guys understand me too. You just donât want to admit it, because then that means you could end up like me.â
Dad and I fall silent. Heâs right. I donât blame Leo for turning to drugs. Iâd love to escape reality every once in a while. But I donât have the luxury of forgetting all my problems. Iâm the one who has to hold everything together. Iâm the one who has to keep Dad going. Which is why I canât let myself believe Leo will stay clean, because if he lets me down again, I donât know if Iâll be able to take it.
Sometimes, it feels like one more heartbreak will ruin me for good.