âIâm not even going to respond to that, because I know thatâs what you want. You want a fight and I wonât give you one.â I grab one of my T-shirts and stalk out of the room. Before I exit, I turn back to him. âBut let me make this clear: if you donât get your shit togetherâlike nowâIâm gone.â
I head to the couch and lie down, grateful for another space to be where he isnât. I allow a few tears to fall before wiping my face and picking up Hardinâs old copy of Wuthering Heights. No matter how bad I want to go back in there and make him explain everything to meâwhere he was, who he was with, why he got into a fight, and with whomâI force myself to stay on the couch because that will bother him much more.
Though probably not half as much as the level of control he has over parts of my life is bothering me.
Chapter ninety
I put down my book and check the time on my phone. Itâs a little after midnight, so I should try to force myself to go to sleep. He already tried to get me to come to bed earlier, saying he couldnât sleep without me, but I stuck to my guns and ignored him until he left.
Iâm just about to drift into sleep when I hear Hardin scream, âNo!!â I jump off the couch without thinking and rush to our bedroom. He is thrashing in the thick blanket and covered in sweat.
âHardin, wake up,â I say gently and shake his shoulder, moving a soaked curl from his forehead with my other hand.
His eyes snap openâthey are full of terror.
âItâs okay . . . shh . . . it was just a nightmare.â I do my best to soothe him. My fingers play in his hair and then brush over his cheek. He is shaking as I climb into bed behind him and wrap my arms around his waist. I feel him relax as I press my face against his clammy skin.
âPlease. Stay with me,â he begs. I sigh and stay quiet, tightening my grip around him. âThank you,â he whispers, and within minutes he is asleep again.
THE WATER DOESNâT SEEM to get hot enough to relax my tense muscles no matter how high I turn it up. I am exhausted from the lack of sleep last night and the frustration that comes from dealing with Hardin. He was asleep when I got into the shower, and I pray he stays that way until I leave for my internship.
Unfortunately, my prayers go unanswered, and he is standing by the kitchen counter when I get out of the bathroom.
âYou look beautiful today,â he says calmly.
I roll my eyes and walk past him to grab a cup of coffee before I have to leave.
âSo you arenât speaking to me, then?â
âNot right now, no. I have to go to work and I donât have the energy to do this with you,â I snap.
âBut you . . . you came to bed with me,â he pouts.
âYeah, only because you were screaming and shaking. That doesnât mean you are forgiven. I need an explanation for everything, all the secrets, all the fightsâeven the nightmaresâor Iâm done,â I surprise him and myself by saying.
He groans and runs his hands through his hair. âTessa . . . itâs not that simple.â
âYeah, it is, actually. I trusted you enough to give up my relationship with my mother and move in with you so soon; you should trust me enough to tell me what is going on.â
âYou wonât understand. I know you wonât,â he says.
âTry me.â
âI . . . I canât,â he stutters.
âThen I canât be with you. Iâm sorry, but I have given you a lot of chances and you keepââ I begin.
âDonât say that. Donât you dare try and leave me.â His tone is angry, but his eyes are hurt.
âThen give me some answers. What is it that you think I wouldnât understand? About your nightmares?â I ask.
âTell me you arenât going to leave me,â he pleads.
Standing my ground with Hardin is proving to be much harder than I imagined, especially when he looks so broken.
âI have to go. I am already running late,â I tell him and go to the bedroom to get dressed as quickly as I can. Part of me is happy that he doesnât follow me, but part of me wishes he would.
He is still standing in the kitchen, shirtless, and gripping his coffee mug with white and busted knuckles when I leave.
I mull over everything Hardin said this morning. What could I possibly not understand? I would never judge him for something that causes him to have nightmares. I hope that is what he was talking about, but I canât ignore the feeling that I am missing something very obvious here.
I feel guilty and tense almost all day, but Kimberly emails me the links to one too many funny YouTube videos for my sour mood to last. By lunch, I almost forget the problem at home.
Iâm sorry for everything, please come home after work, Hardin texts while Kimberly and I eat from a muffin basket someone sent Mr. Vance.
âIs that him?â she asks.
âYeah . . .â I tell her. âI stood up to him, but I feel terrible, for some reason. I know I am right, but you should have seen him this morning.â
âGood. Hopefully he learns his lesson. Did he tell you where he was?â she asks.
âNope. Thatâs the problem.â I groan and eat another muffin.
Please answer me, Tessa. I love you, he sends minutes later.
âJust answer the poor guy.â Kimberly smiles and I nod.
I will be home, I respond.
Why is it so hard for me to hold my ground with him? Mr. Vance lets everyone go a little after three, so I decide to stop by a salon and get my hair trimmed and a manicure for the wedding tomorrow. I hope Hardin and I can work this out before the wedding, because the last thing I want to do is take an already angry Hardin to his fatherâs wedding.