âHEY, BUDDY, HOPE YOUâRE going to keep up.â Martin smirks.
âIâm sure Iâll manage.â I give him a half-smile and slap him on the back.
I love morning runs like this. When itâs early and thereâs hardly anyone about. The air has a distinct quality about it, a fresh scent. Itâs calming. Itâs not like I struggle to get up, either. Iâd have had to have been asleep in the first place for that.
We set off at a gentle jog to warm up.
I know we wonât take it too hard today. Martinâs building his stamina back up, now his treatment has finishedâjust as Iâm about to start mine. The world works in fucked up ways. We used to run a lot together before he got ill. We would push each other, neither wanting to admit defeat before the other. Him always joking about my age, me always proving him wrong. Itâs nice to be getting back into it together, for however long it lasts.
âIf you donât mind me saying, you look like shite,â Martin quips as we fall into a nice pace beside one another.
âAnd if I do mind you saying?â
âToo late, Iâve already said it,â he laughs.
We run in silence for a minute until he breaks it, as I suspected he would.
He can leave nothing alone.
âMegan?â
I glance at him, wondering how much he knows. If he knows about the⦠baby.
âItâs complicated.â
âWhen is it not with women?â He pauses. âLook, Abigail told me the two of you have had some kind of disagreement. She said Meganâs pretty cut up about it.â
I wince as I pick up the pace. Martin matches it with ease.
The idea of Megan being hurt because of me makes me sick to my stomach. None of this would have happened if I had just kept away. But then the night at the hotel, that first night when she fell pregnant, would have still happened. I didnât know my life was on a non-stop ride to crap-ville that night. It was the last normal night of my life. I had no reason to keep away from her that night. And it was an incredible night. Way to go out with a bang.
But a baby?
I still canât get my head around it.
Meganâs pregnant.
Pregnant with our baby.
âIâve screwed up, Martin. Iâve really screwed up,â I say, my voice low and weary.
âRelax, Iâm sure it canât be that bad.â
I turn my head and look straight into his eyes. âBelieve me, itâs bad.â
His breathing increases as we talk and run. âYouâll work it out, wonât you? Iâve never heard you talk about anyone the way you talk about her. Itâs just a bump in the road.â
I shake my head.
More like a bloody sinkhole.
Sweatâs running a trail down my back, underneath my running top. Only half of it is from the running. The rest is from the sense of impending doom thatâs been sinking its teeth into me since Monday. Tearing chunks out of me, so I canât even think straight.
âWe canât be together. She deserves better than me. Someone who will be there for her for years to come.â
âFinally admitting your age, old man?â he jokes.
I take a deep breath.
âIâve got cancer, Martin. Got the diagnosis on Monday.â
Iâve got to give it to him; he keeps running, his step doesnât even falter. He knows me well enough to follow my cue and keep going.
âFuck, man, thatâs⦠I mean⦠balls!â
âJust one.â
He looks at me in confusion.
âJust one ball. Itâs testicular,â I say, my voice thick.
We keep running in silence until the benches we use to do our cooldown stretches come into view. We used to run the route twice, sometimes three times, if we were pushing ourselves. Looking at Martinâs shoulders, heaving with the effort to get a deep breath, Iâd say one will be us done for today.
âIâm sorry,â Martin pants as he rests his hands on his knees. âThatâs shit, Jaxon. Really, fucking shit.â He swipes the sweat off his brow with his hand as we stretch. âIs Joanna your doctor?â
I nod, and relief washes over Martinâs face. âSheâs the best. Sheâll sort you out.â
Joanna has also been Martinâs doctor, and now heâs placed her on a pedestal and hero-worships her. He probably thinks if she can save him, then she can save me⦠save the entire world⦠one cancer patient at a time.
âAnd Megan, she didnât react well?â
âShe doesnât know.â
âWhat? Shit, Jaxon,â Martin groans, eyeing me as I drop into a calf flex.
âShe doesnât need to know. It wonât change anything.â
âYouâre kidding?â He looks at my face. âYouâre actually not kidding, are you? Jesus, for an old guy, you arenât that wise.â
âItâs for the best. She needs to live her life and not be tethered to a ticking time bomb like me.â
The colour drains from Martinâs face. âWhy, what did Joanna say? What are we dealing with?â
I put my hands on my hips and straighten up as a young woman passes us, pushing a jogging buggy. The little fair-haired baby inside leans their head out and watches Martin and me with interest, extending a chubby hand in a wave.
I wave back, my chest tight. âSheâs not sure yet. She thinks thereâs a good chance it hasnât spread. Theyâll know for definite after surgery on Monday.â
âThis Monday?â
I nod.
âHow are you feeling about it?â Martinâs eyes study me.
I shrug. âItâs the way it is.â
âYou sure seem calm? When I found out I wanted to punch the wall, hell, I did punch the fucking wall. I was angry and wondered why the hell it was me. What I did wrong to deserve it.â His eyes are wide, questioning as he looks at me.
âAnd then you started doing all your daredevil crap,â I deflect as I smirk at him.
He knows Iâm proud of him and all the money heâs raising for charity.
âYeah, after a complete load of self-pity and wallowing. Abigail pulled me through it. Kicked me up the arse and told me to get on with it. Said the sight of my sorry face every day was worse than me dying. She was what I needed. Maybe Meganââ
âNo!â I cut him off. âSheâs not to be involved.â
âI hope you know what youâre doing.â Martin blows out a long breath next to me as we finish up our cooldown.
I clear my throat as my scalp prickles.
âLook, I need a favour. Joanna suggested someone stays with me Monday night, assuming Iâm discharged the same day as I should be. I donât think thereâs any need, but sheâs insistent. You know how she can be.â
âStay in your sweet arse apartment? I can do that.â Martin grins. âSo long as I donât have to change your dressings or shit like that? I donât fancy touching grey pubes.â
I shove him in the side as he laughs. He knows I find asking for help hard. Iâm grateful he didnât make it harder than it had to be.
âMegan knows nothing, then?â he asks as his laugh stops, and he grows serious again.
âNo. And I intend to keep it that way.â I fix him with a warning look.
âHey, I just need to know the score. You know Abigailâs going to be fishing for info.â
âYeah, I know. Iâm sorry,â I groan, running my hand across my brow. âI donât want to make it awkward between you and Abigail. I can ask someone else⦠maybe Pen.â
âNo. Iâll do it.â He grabs my shoulder and gives it a squeeze. âI just donât want to put my foot in it. Iâll tell her Iâm coming over for a boyâs night. Watching sport or something, she wonât want to know any more if I mention sport.â
âThanks.â I place my hand over the top of his and pat it, my shoulders relaxing.
âWhat did you tell Megan?â
I sigh as I meet Martinâs eyes. âI told her it was my age. That I was too old for her.â
Itâs true, mostly.
I did tell her that.
I just canât tell Martin about the baby. Not yet. Not until Iâve spoken to Megan and discussed it with her. Itâs her news to share, not mine.
The realisation stabs me in the gut like a knife and twists.
It will never be mine. Megan and the baby can never be mine.
âOh,â Martin murmurs as he stares out across the park.
Itâs the first time heâs been presented with an opportunity to make a joke about my age and not grabbed it in delight.
He doesnât even smile.