But she just smiled. âIâm nearly twenty-one, and it doesnât make sense to wait. Iâve been fortunate enough to find the person I want to spend my life with at a young ageâwhy waste any more time when heâs right in front of me asking that I do just that. Iâm honored that he wants to make me his wife; thereâs no greater expression of love than that.â As she explained, I could hear Tessaâs voice saying the words instead.
âI guess youâre right,â I told her and she smiled.
âOh, there he is! I have to goâIâm freezing and pregnant, not a good combination.â She laughed before picking her bags up off the sidewalk and greeting a man in a sweater vest and khakis. His smile when seeing his pregnant fiancée was so bright that I swore it lit up that dreary day in England.
Day seven was long. Every day has been long. I kept thinking of Natalie and her forgiveness; it couldnât have come at a better time. Sure, I looked like hell and she knew it, but she was happy and in love. Pregnant, at that. I didnât ruin her life the way I thought I had.
And I thank God for that.
I spent the whole day in bed. I couldnât even bring myself to open the damned blinds. My mum and Mike were out all day, so I was left alone to sulk in my misery. Each day got worse. I constantly thought about what she was doing, who she was with. Was she crying? Was she lonely? Had she returned to our apartment to find me? Why hadnât she called me again?
This isnât the pain I had read about in novels. This pain isnât just in my mind, this pain isnât physical. This is a soul-aching pain, something that is ripping me apart from the inside out, and I donât think I can survive it. No one could.
This must be how Tessa feels when I hurt her. I canât imagine her fragile body withstanding this type of pain, but clearly sheâs stronger than she appears. She has to be to put up with me. Her mum once told me that if I really cared about her I would leave her alone; I would hurt her anyway, she said.
She was right. I should have left her alone then. I should have left her alone from that first day she walked into that dorm room. I promised myself that I would rather die than hurt her again . . . this is what this is. This is dying, this is worse than dying. It hurts worse. It has to.
I spent day eight drinking, the entire day. I couldnât stop. With each drink I prayed that her face would leave my mind, but it wouldnât. It couldnât.
You have to get your shit together, Hardin. You have to. I have to. I really do.
âHardin . . .â Tessaâs voice sends chills down my spine.
âBabe . . .â she says.
When I look up at her, sheâs sitting on my mumâs couch with a smile on her face and a book in her lap.
âCome here, please,â she whines as the door opens and a group of men step inside. No.
âThere she is,â says the short man who torments my dreams each night.
âHardin?â Tessa begins to cry.
âGet away from her,â I warn them as they close in on her. They donât seem to hear me.
Her nightgown is ripped off as sheâs thrown to the floor. Wrinkled and dirt-stained hands travel up her thighs as she whimpers my name.
âPlease . . . Hardin, help me.â She looks to me, but Iâm frozen.
I am immobile and unable to help her. I am forced to watch as they beat her and violate her until sheâs lying on the floor silent and bloodied.
My mum didnât wake me, no one did. I had to finish it, all of it, and when I woke up my reality was worse than any nightmare.
DAY NINE is today.
âDid you hear about Christian Vance moving to Seattle?â my mum asks me as I push the cereal around the bowl in front of me.
âYeah.â
âThatâs exciting, isnât it? A new branch in Seattle.â
âI suppose it is.â
âHeâs having a dinner party on Sunday. He thought youâd be there.â
âHow do you know?â I ask her.
âHe told me, we talk from time to time.â She looks away and refills her coffee mug.
âWhat for?â
âBecause we canânow eat your cereal.â She scolds me like a child, but I donât have the energy to come up with a snappy remark.
âI donât want to go,â I tell her and force the spoon to my mouth.
âYou may not see him again for a while.â
âSo? I barely see him now anyway.â
She looks as if she has something else to say, but she keeps quiet.
âHave you got any aspirin?â I ask, and she nods before disappearing to retrieve some.
I donât want to go to a stupid fucking dinner party celebrating Christian and Kimberly leaving for Seattle. Iâm tired of everyone always talking about Seattle, and I know Tessa will be there. The pain at the idea of seeing her tackles me and nearly knocks me out of the chair. I have to stay away from her, I owe it to her. If I can stay here for a few more days, weeks even, we can both move on. Sheâll find someone like Natalieâs fiancé, someone much better for her than me.
âI still think you should go,â my mum says again as I swallow the aspirin, knowing they wonât help.
âI canât go, Mum . . . even if I wanted to. I would have to leave first thing in the morning and Iâm not ready to leave.â
âYou mean you arenât ready to face what you left,â she says.
I canât hold it in any longer. I bury my face in my hands as I let the pain take over, I let it drown me. I welcome it, and hope it kills me.
âHardin . . .â My mumâs voice is quiet and comforting as she hugs me and I shake in her arms.