If you ever, for whatever reason, need the help of someone with a ton of self-control, Iâm not your girl.
Dinner. I invited him for dinner. With me.
Because, as I was leaving the clinic for the last time, I couldnât fathom the idea of not seeing him ever again. Of not talking to him, not giving him any more mandalas, not looking at that permanent scowl on his handsome face that looks chiseled by the gods.
There, I said it. Whatever.
I knew it wouldnât take much convincing, but itâs still uncanny how quickly Monica agrees to extend my break for a little longer so I can have dinner with James.
âYou can come a little earlier and finish your shift before you guys have your date,â she told me over the phone after I texted her my request.
âItâs not a date,â I was quick to amend. âJust a thank-you dinner.â
Monica made the kind of sound my brother makes after he asks Lila if she did her homework, she says yesâan obvious lieâand he doesnât believe her.
âI can be there at three,â I suggested to distract her. If she so much as plants the mental picture of James and me on a date again, Iâm not sure Iâll survive it.
âSure, honey. Iâll see you then.â
James arrives at the restaurant fifteen minutes before Iâm done for the day. And I may or may not start scrubbing the plates a little faster.
When Iâm done, I rush to Monicaâs office at the back and change out of my plain black T-shirt and put on a loose, baby blue sweater that goes just fine with my black jeans and sneakers. Itâs not the fanciest of outfits, but again, this isnât a date. Iâm not making an effort, although that doesnât stop me from fixing my hair and applying some mascara and a bit of lipstick.
After checking my not-so-bad reflection in the mirror, I square my shoulders, nod to myself, and remember Iâm not going to war so I shouldnât be so dramatic.
I mean, letâs be real for a second. This is Jamesâheâs seen me at my worst, during a panic attack. I have nothing to worry about.
The bar is loud and crowded, as itâs a Friday night, but itâs impossible to miss him. His blue eyesâhave I unconsciously matched my sweater to his eyes?â are glued on the TV, but as soon as I step out of Monicaâs office, they land on me like a missile on a target.
And I gulp.
Despite my usual confidence, my knees wobble at the sight of the trimmed beard that makes him look so much older, and my palms start sweating when I take in his black sweater with a roll neck.
Get it together, Maddie. This is not the first time youâve seen a man in a roll-neck sweater.
Itâs not, but itâs the first time I want a man to take it off. Would it be so wrong to imagine him shirtless now that heâs not my physical therapist?
Yes. Heâs still ten years older than you.
Right. That.
I shake my head, forcing myself to snap out of it, and make my way toward the booth heâs at. With a smile that hopefully doesnât give away my nerves, I sit next to him and then recoil once I notice my leg is pressed against his. âHi.â
âHey.â
I donât know whether the half smirk on his lips calms me down or makes me even more anxious.
My hands find the menu, and I pretend to scan it, even though I know it by heart. âSo, guess what?â
âHmm.â He puts his arm around the back of our booth, his fingertips almost touching my shoulder, and I take a deep breath.
Youâre overreacting. His arm must be tired, thatâs all.
I turn my head and give him one of my biggest smiles so he sees Iâm not being weird about our close proximity. âMy boss allowed me to clock in early, so Iâm done with my shift.â
That half smirk is still in place and his signature frown is gone, which throws me for a loop. âIs that right?â
âYep.â
His eyes donât leave mine as he takes the menu away from my grip with the hand resting on the table. âGood. I like to take my time when Iâm eating. Go slowly.â
My breath hitches at the innuendo that Iâm pretty sure isnât even one. My hormones must be on crack, because why am I imagining Jamesâs head between my legs right now, seeing firsthand how slowly he can eat?
For fuckâs sake.
This isnât happening to me. Iâm not having a sexual fantasy about my ex-physical therapist who is a decade older than me and happens to be sitting right here. I refuse to believe it.
âI liked the chicken wings you got me the other day,â he comments casually, scanning the menu as if he hadnât just turned me into jelly. âWhat should we order this time? I trust your judgment.â
Yes, Maddie, how about you focus on real food and nothing else?
âThe pulled pork sandwich is good,â I offer once my heart has calmed down enough to allow me to have a normal conversation like any sane person would. âThe chicken quesadillas too.â
He thinks about it for a moment. âThe sandwich sounds good. What are you getting?â
Itâs not like I can think properly yet, so I say, âThe same.â
He nods. âSoda?â
âSure.â
Monica arrives at our booth just in time to take our orders, and while James tells her what we want, I canât help but feel self-conscious by our age difference again.
That beard makes him look older, and even if I physically look older than twenty-one, Iâm still worried about what people think when they see us together.
I know itâs stupid. Who cares what others think?
Plus, itâs not like weâre together. Weâre just two people hanging out at a bar. Big deal.
âYou there?â
I blink. âYeah, yes. Sorry. Did you say something?â
That smug smirk almost kills me. âI asked if your ankle is giving you any trouble.â
âNope. Everythingâs fine.â I smile back. âIâm going back to waitressing next week, in fact.â
âThatâs good. Will you be taking more shifts?â
Monica comes back with our sodas and throws James a wink that makes me blush. That woman isnât subtle at all. I clear my throat. âIf I can, yes. The tips are great, and I donât want to keep living off my brother.â It comes out before I can help it. I donât want him to think Iâm a leech, but again, thatâs the truth, so why keep hiding it?
âI remember your brother coming with you to the clinic that first day. Does he live in the area?â
âThatâd be him. And no, he lives in Warlington, a few hours away. Thatâs why he stopped coming to the clinic,â I explain.
For a moment, Iâm afraid James doesnât care and Iâm oversharing, but he keeps asking me questions.
âWhat about your mother?â
My stomach jumps. âWhat about her?â
James rubs his jaw, and I canât help but follow the movement. Seriously, I must be coming down with a fever. I donât think itâs normal to be attracted to somebodyâs hands this much.
âI remember you mentioning her once. She couldnât take you to the clinic?â he asks but quickly adds, âSorry if Iâm overstepping. Feel free to tell me to fuck off.â
An honest chuckle escapes me. âItâs okay. My mom and I donât see each other much.â I take the straw on my soda between my fingers and play with it. âI grew up with my brother, actually.â
He raises his eyebrows. âOh?â
I can tell heâs curious but is too afraid to ask, so I keep going. Iâm not ashamed of the way I was brought up. âHe took me in when I was four. He was thirty. I lived with him and my sister-in-lawâand then with my niece tooâuntil I moved out here when I was eighteen.â
âWow,â he breathes. âI donât even know where to start. I have too many questions.â
I smirk. âShoot.â
He moves his arm from the back of the booth and laces his fingers over the table. Weâre so close, I can smell his aftershave, and now I want to climb him like a tree. Great.
âSo,â he starts. âWhen I saw your brother, I thought he was your dad. No offense. He just looks older.â
âHeâs forty-seven,â I tell him. âI was born when he was twenty-six. And before you ask, yes, my mom was very young when she had him. Sixteen, to be exact. Technically, my brother is only my half brother, but neither of us like to acknowledge it.â I smile at the thought of Sammy. âHeâs much more than a brother to me. He had to be.â
âI can imagine.â He scans my face like heâs looking for something. âWhatâs his name?â
âSamuel, but everyone calls him Cal because his last name is Callaghan. But I call him Sammy.â
âThatâs a lot of names for one man,â he teases.
âHe doesnât mind.â I smile. âAny other questions?â
James doesnât hesitate. âWhy did you move in with your brother in the first place?â
Against my will, my lips press into a thin line, but I force myself to tell him this. I want to do it, damn it. For whatever reason, I want him to know all of me.
âMy mom used to have issues with alcohol.â
He listens attentively, and even when Monica comes back with our sandwiches, he doesnât make a move to eat his.
âMy brother was always around because my mother was unreliable. Well, and because he loves me, I guess.â
âOf course he does,â he assures me, even though he doesnât know my brother or what our relationship is like. I appreciate it nonetheless.
âWhen I was four, my parents got into a big fight, and my father left. I havenât seen him since, but thatâs beside the point.â I take a deep breath. Strangely enough, I remember everything about that day. âMy mother got drunk in our living room after putting me to sleep, but she was crying very loudly, so I woke up. I got upset that my mom was crying, and I rushed to help her because I thought she was dying. And when I was running toward her, I tripped over an empty bottle sheâd left around, hit my head against the coffee table, and⦠Well, see for yourself.â
I pull my hair back to show him the right side of my hairline, where a tiny scar is still visible.
He hisses. âShit, Maddie.â
âI know.â I give him a sad smile.
He reaches up to touch it, and when his thumb makes contact with my skin, it lights up something inside me. Something that has never been awoken before.
His eyes find mine as he brushes the hair away from my scar. Zipping electricity passes between us before he draws back.
âWhat happened after that?â he asks, stealing a fry from my plate.
I glare at him and steal one of his, which makes him laugh.
âSocial Services got involved, and long story short, my mom went to rehab, and I moved in with my brother and Graceâhis now wife. My mom tried to get me to move back with her when she got clean, but apparently I had really bad separation anxiety from my brother, so they agreed that it would be best if I stayed with him.â
âDo you see your mom often?â
âNot much,â I admit. âShe⦠We arenât the best at keeping in touch, but I saw her not long ago. As you know.â
He nods. âYou looked upset that night.â
âI was.â I donât want to elaborate, so I donât. He doesnât press either, which I appreciate more than he knows. âLetâs eat before these get cold,â I suggest.
âIâve got more questions.â
I arch an amused eyebrow. âAnd here I thought you were a silent grouch. Take a bite and Iâll answer.â
He chuckles again, deep and husky, and itâs one of the most beautiful sounds Iâve ever heard.
Itâs also a sound that makes me press my legs together to alleviate some of the discomfort there, but Iâd rather not focus on that right now.
âSo, your questions,â I prompt once Iâve taken a couple of bites from my sandwich. His is halfway gone already, the monster. âI thought you were a slow eater?â I tease him.
He gives me a look I canât read. âIâm starving tonight.â
Oh, God.
He continues, âBut yes, I have another question. You moved to Norcastle at eighteen?â
âFor my ballet degree, yes.â
âAnd you moved here alone?â
I shrug. âThe school had dorms for students, and I was all for it. I didnât want to make anyone move here for me.â I wouldnât make them change their lives for me. Again.
âThatâs impressive,â he says. âYou werenât scared to move to a whole new city by yourself so young?â
âI was so excited.â I smile at the memory of my first day. âAll I wanted was to study ballet and be the best I could be, so I didnât care if I had to move out. I tend to make friends really fast, as youâre well awareâGraham and I are pretty much inseparable now.â
âSure you are,â he deadpans, but heâs smirking.
He follows the fry I steal from his plate with his eyes as it disappears inside my mouth.
âAre we friends, James?â
He takes the last bite of his sandwich and swallows it down with his soda. Now is his turn to steal not one but two of my fries. This means war. âI donât know if I want to be friends with a thief.â
âYou must hate yourself, then.â
Something passes over his gaze, but heâs quick to blink it away. âI donât befriend my patients.â
âEx-patient.â
âSame thing.â
âBut you drive them home after their shift ends?â
He lets out a deep breath through his nose, his cheeks flushing. âYouâre a menace.â
I make a show of batting my eyelashes at him just to piss him off. âBut am I also your friend?â
He pretends to think about it. âOnly because I get free mandalas.â
âOf course.â
It should feel weird, I realize, to joke with him. Not too long ago, he refused to say more than a couple of words to me, always keeping it professional, and now⦠I can almost believe weâre really friends.
Or, at the very least, he doesnât fully despise my company.
For the next hour, James keeps asking me questions about ballet and my time at college. It doesnât hurt to talk about it anymore, not as much. He doesnât bring up my ballet-related plans for the future, which helps.
I also ask him what he studied in collegeâphysical therapy, no surprise thereâand about growing up in Norcastle. Conversation flows easily between us, and before I know it, a different waitress has come back with our check.
âLet me pay for it,â James insists, already taking out his wallet.
âPut that thing away.â Without thinking, I shoot out my hand until it covers his. Warm, calloused skin meets mine, and something akin to nerves settles in my stomach. When breathing doesnât come so easily anymore, I pull away. âI told you it was my treat, didnât I? So let me pay.â
âYou donât have to.â
âI want to.â
He scowls but puts his wallet back in his pocket. âBrat.â
âGrouch.â
His only answer is some kind of growl that doesnât sound entirely human.
I take care of the bill while he goes to the restroom, and soon enough weâre outside.
âIâm driving you home,â he says as he closes the door of the bar behind us, the cold night air freezing my nose the second I step outside. âItâs nonnegotiable.â
I chuckle. âOkay.â I donât feel like taking the metro this late at night, anyway. Now that I can walk, taxis or Ubers are no longer an expense I need.
We are walking toward his car when his hand suddenly comes to rest against the small of my back. I stiffen at the unexpected touch, but I also feel grounded. When I tilt my head to look at him, though, his jaw is so tight Iâm afraid he might shatter all his teeth. âJames?â
He doesnât look at me, his gaze lost somewhere in the darkness of the parking lot, as he asks, âYou see that car over there? The white one.â He rattles off a model Iâm familiar with.
âYes,â I whisper for some reason. Suddenly I donât feel so grounded anymore. âWhatâs wrong?â
âWhen I was waiting to drive you home the other day, he was here too.â
A shiver of awareness travels down my spine, as if someone were burning their gaze into it. Itâs the same feeling I got when I thought I was being watched in the city.
âI went up to him and told him to fuck off. He thought I was a cop, so he did. My warning might have expired, though.â
I frown. âYou talked to him?â
âYes.â
âJames, that couldâve been dangerous.â
âI donât care.â His hand on me feels heavier, hotter. âI donât want him lurking outside your workplace, Maddie. Not when he might be a danger to you.â
Butterflies take flight in my stomach, and I force them to die immediately.
He doesnât mean anything by it. Anyone with common sense and a good heart would want to protect a young woman from a creep.
But as we pass by the mysterious white car, something inside me pulls me toward it.
Like a puppet being led by an invisible string, I turn my head toward the man sitting behind the wheel, bathed in shadows.
And I know.
I know itâs him.
The man whoâ
No. It canât be. It canât fucking be.
I move away from James so abruptly I almost trip over my own two feet.
He calls my name, but I barely hear him.
The only reason I know my heart is beating is because Iâm still alive and I am able to keep walking. Otherwise, I wouldâve thought I was dead and had gone to hell.
Because as I close the distance between me and his car, my eyes fall on the last person on this planet I ever expected to see again.
The first man to show me I wasnât enough.
The first person to leave me and never look back.
No matter how many years have passed, I would recognize that face anywhere. Itâs the one I see in my nightmares.
I stop.
He rolls down the window.
Itâs him, but I still ask.
A part of me doesnât want this moment to be real.
But I know it is, and my whole world crumbles.
âDad?â