MY SKIN IS SO red, I look like Iâve been holidaying on the surface of the sun. I went hard at it in my buildingâs basement gym and then took a shower so hot; it was almost scalding. Anything to clear my head after this afternoon.
God, the look on her face.
I hurt her. I know I did. How could I have been such an asshole? Experiencing a night like that with a woman like Megan and then never called when I said I would. Then giving her mixed signals each time I have seen her since.
She doesnât deserve that.
I pull on a pair of sweatpants and rub the towel through my hair before grabbing a t-shirt and heading into the living area.
Martin is dropping over tonight to watch rugby. All I want to do is down a couple of pills for my cracking headache and go to bed. Who am I kidding, though? I know I wonât sleep. Plus, I canât let Martin down. I meant what I said to Megan; I donât go back on my word lightly. Not calling her afterwards was a huge mistake.
Iâm a jerk, and now Iâm paying the price.
I head to the fridge and pour myself a tall glass of ice-cold, sparkling water, gulping down half in one go. I put the bottle back in the fridge and take out the snacks I prepared for Martinâs visitâhummus, vegetable sticks, homemade sourdough bread, olives. I know heâll take the piss, but itâs good for him. His diet is an important part of building his immune system back up again. Heâs all bravado with his tough-guy act, but he knows, as I do, he must do all he can, be extra careful. If any friends have so much as a cold, he must stay away from them until theyâre better. A simple bug to most people can wreak havoc on someone going through cancer treatment.
I slide onto one of the bar stools and pick my phone up, tapping my fingers on the cool marble counter with one hand as the other brings Meganâs number up in my phone.
I never lost it, if thatâs what she thinks. Iâve stared at her number more than I care to remember over the last six weeks. I could just never bring myself to call it. I told myself I was being strong, doing the right thing.
What if Iâm just being a fucking coward?
My thumb hovers over the green call symbol.
âFuckâs sake,â I hiss under my breath as I drop it back onto the counter.
Iâm a grown man, for Godâs sake.
Okay, maybe not a call, but after her storming out of my office earlier, I should at least say something.
I type a message and hit send before I lose my nerve.
Me: Hi Megan, itâs Jaxon. I wanted to apologise for earlier. As I told you when we met, youâd think I would be better with words in my job. I just wanted to check you are okay. Can we meet up and maybe talk about it? J
I blow out a breath and stare at the screen.
Three dots show up, showing sheâs writing back. I bite one thumb as the other hand keeps up the tapping on the counter.
I shouldnât have suggested meeting up; itâs too much. Plus, itâs a bad idea. I lose control around her. Her and her pouty little lips. Iâm amazed I reined myself in after grabbing her chin earlier and seeing her sweet, pink lips part for me.
Fuck, I could have easily kissed her.
But where would that have got us? Back to square fucking one.
The dots are still on the screen.
Come on, Megan. Talk to me. Tell me Iâm a shit and to leave you alone. Make me stop. Itâs better for both of us that way.
The dots stop, but no message comes through.
Sheâs not going to reply.
âShit,â I mutter, dropping my chin to my chest.
Maybe she didnât need to type it. Her silence surely tells me. I need to keep away from her.
I must.
Even though itâs the right thing to do, it still feels shit.
âYes!â Martin shouts, pumping a first in the air as England score a try.
I plaster a smile on my face and try to look thrilled that our team is winning when really my mind is as far away from the game on TV as it can be.
âWhatâs got into you?â Martin eyes me as he plucks an olive out of a bowl of the coffee table.
âNothing, just busy at work.â I shrug.
âYouâre a shit liar, you know that?â Martin says as he reaches for another olive. âAlthough you do good snacks. Suppose I should have expected as such from a posh old dude.â
âWatch who youâre calling old,â I say, launching the remote at him.
He catches it in one hand and laughs.
âAnd Iâm not posh.â
âYou studied at Oxford,â Martin says, as though this proves his point. âYou had terribly posh boat races for fun. The rest of us went to the local pub and got twatted on cheap lager.â
âNice use of the English language there, my friend.â I shake my head with a chuckle.
âAt least I can talk about stuff, you know, like a normal person. You should try it sometime.â
I lift my gaze to his face. Heâs got one eyebrow raised in amusement.
âFine,â I cross my arms over my chest, âwhat do you want to talk about?â
âHow about, why you look like you can smell shit?â
âWhat are you talking about?â
He points at me. âThat look on your face. Yes, that one youâre doing now.â
âThis is just my face, Martin.â
He ignores me and carries on. âYouâve got your forehead all creased, and youâre glaring like you want to kill someone. Youâll deepen those wrinkles if you keep it up.â
I let out a low chuckle. âYouâre a cheeky fucker. Remind me why weâre friends again?â
âYou feel sorry for me because I have cancer,â he fires back.
I stretch my arms above my head and sink back into the sofa.
âDonât flatter yourself. Your cancerâs smaller than a pea now. Youâre not going anywhere soon. Not unless you say Iâve got wrinkles again, then Iâll kill you myself.â
Martinâs shoulders are shaking as he holds in his laugh.
I catch his eye, and he grins at me.
âWhat is it then, Jax?â
I wince. âIt was Dadâs birthday the other day.â
âAh.â Martin nods in understanding. âHow was your mum?â
I shrug. âSame as usual, upbeat, wore his favourite colour.â
âSorry, man. I know it doesnât get any easier.â Martin sighs.
I cast my eyes back to the scrum taking place on the pitch.
The gameâs almost over.
The kit of the England team, which was white at kick-off, is now covered in mud and grass stains. Kind of like a twelve-year-old me. Shiny and full of hope, until I was knocked for six in a tackle and came up battered and stained.
âNope, it still hurts like shit if you let it.â I reach forward and take a sip of my water.
âYou can say that again,â Martin agrees. âHey, do you think our dads are up there having a beer together, looking down on us?â
âYours would tell you to wash your feet,â I say, screwing up my nose as I push Martinâs socked foot off my coffee table.
He laughs. âYours would tell you to get yourself laid. Give you something to smile about.â Martin looks over at my face when I donât respond. âCome on, like I havenât noticed the lack of female company youâve had recently,â he says. His eyes dart around my apartment as though checking to make sure it really is only the two of us. âWhat happened to Sindy?â
âShelley,â I correct him.
âYeah, what happened to her? She had an impressive set ofââ Martin holds his hands up in front of his chest.
I throw a cushion at him. âThatâs no way to talk about a woman.â
âSorry, Dad.â He holds his hands up. âYou know what I mean, though.â
I smirk. Shelley certainly had assets that got her noticed before anything else she did or said. Too bad they were her best assets.
âWhen she asked me if Jane Austen was a brand of shampoo, I realised we had little in common,â I say.
His eyebrows shoot up as he grins at me. âSeriously? Even I know who she is! Abigail loves the whole Mr Darcy thing.â
âThatâs because Abigail is an intelligent, well-read woman. What she sees in you, Iâll never understand.â
The cushion flies back over and hits my chest.
âWeâre talking about you here, old guy. Surely your balls havenât shrivelled up yet?â Martin looks at me, refusing to let it drop.
âFine.â I look up at the ceiling. âThere is a woman.â
âI knew it.â He stares at me expectantly.
âDonât get excited. Nothingâs happening. It canât.â I reach up and rub my eyes.
âWhy not? Is she married?â
âGod, no, of course not. What do you take me for?â I tut.
âWhatâs the problem then?â
I blow out a long breath. âI work with her, for a start.â
âSo? Loads of people meet at work.â Martin shrugs, reaching for another snack.
âItâs just complicated.â
I drop my head back against the sofa and close my eyes. My headache has eased, but when I close my eyes, I can still feel the niggle lurking at the base of my skull.
âNothingâs too complicated with the right person.â
I peel open an eye and fix it on Martin.
âWhat? Iâm just saying. Abigail makes me see things differently.â
âIâm pleased for you, I am.â I smile, closing my eye again. Martin, the romantic whoâd have thought?
âIs she unaffected by the King charm then?â he asks, not letting it drop.
âThereâs no such thing. But if there was, then yes. She is. I swear she looks more pissed off every time Iâm in the same room as her,â I answer.
âI like her already! Whatâs her name?â
I open both eyes and look at him.
âFine, donât tell me if you donât want toââ
âMegan,â I cut in as I close my eyes again. âHer nameâs Megan.â
âMegan,â Martin repeats, saying her name slowly. Itâs ridiculous and unwarranted, but the sound of another man saying her name has the niggle right back at the front of my skull, taking centre stage.
What the hell has gotten into me?
After Martin leaves, I tidy up the living area, straightening the cushions before putting all the dishes in the dishwasher and setting it going.
Leaning against the newly disinfected kitchen counter, I bring up my text message to Megan.
She still hasnât replied.
Itâs a good thing. It will make this easier if she pushes me away, keeps me from getting close to her.
Because God knows, I am doing a shit job of it myself.
I close the messages and load up the website for the florist who did Dadâs forget-me-nots. I put through an order for twelve orange tulips. They symbolise peace and forgiveness. If Megan considers either, then I will count myself lucky.
But then⦠thatâs it.
I have to leave it, leave her alone.
I can smooth things over with a peace offering and then walk away.
Done.
Finished.
Move on.
I head to bed and set the alarm for six to get a workout in before I work from home for the day.
Sure, itâs a Sunday, but Iâve got a load of work piling up. Guess thatâs what happens when your head is invaded by a redhead who steals any coherent thoughts from you, rendering you useless.
I sink back against the pillows. The pounding in my head eases, but only marginally. I need to chill the hell out. Iâll be giving myself a hernia at this rate.
I lay on my side facing the floor to ceiling windows that make up one wall. Iâve left the blinds open tonight. Sometimes I like watching the city lights as I go to sleep. I donât know why. Maybe itâs because it reminds me that life is going on out there beyond these four walls.
Life always goes on, even when I feel like mine has stalled.