âMaddie.â
That voice.
That deep rumble I now hear in my dreams. And surely, that must be whatâs going on here. Because James is in Norcastle. Heâs at the clinic, working, and not at some random funeral home on the outskirts of my childhood town, five hours away.
But then I snap my head up, and when my eyes fall on the last person I expected to see today, everything around me stops.
No. It canât be.
I blink once, twice, screaming in my head at this cruel dream to go away.
But I know Iâm not seeing a ghost. This isnât my imagination playing tricks on me.
Heâs here, standing in this empty hallway at Better Place Funeral Home in this forsaken neighborhood in Warlington, and itâs real.
Heâs here for me.
For me.
I donât move from my chair, but I donât need to.
His long, muscular legs close the distance between us until heâs standing right in front of me. I donât look at him, my eyes locked on his dress shoes. He put on a suit to come to my fatherâs funeral.
My heart isnât doing okay. No part of my anatomy is, if Iâm being honest. The sight of James in a suit should be forbidden, and I donât allow myself to appreciate it.
He left.
But he came back.
The voices in my head are still fighting as he kneels in front of me, his face now at my eye level. My gaze still doesnât move from the ground.
âPain is an abstract feeling.â We havenât seen each other in two days, and I didnât know what to expect. Not these words. âWe donât always understand why we feel it, at least not right away.â
I think he knows I canât find my own voice right now, my thoughts all messed up and blurry, because he continues in that soothing rumble.
I want to be worthy of you more than anything else in this world.
Itâs the reminder of his words that makes me look at him, at those warm eyes that tell me so much without meaning to.
âThere are people in my life that I hate, Maddie,â he continues. âThat I loathe with every fiber of my being, but I canât stand the thought of their death. Itâs confusing and itâs frustrating, but I promise what youâre feeling is normal. It only shows you have a big heart with room for everyone, even those who never deserved it.â
Maybe I donât want to hold space for people who donât deserve it anymore. Maybe Iâm tired of always being reliable, being there for people who wouldnât do the same for me.
âWe canât control how we react to others or how much pain or love they leave within us.â He holds out his hand, twice bigger than my own, in a silent invitation. There are no regrets in my heart as I place my palm on his, and he closes his fingers around my hand, just holding it. âDo you know whatâs one of the things I admire the most about you?â
I donât answer.
âThat you donât waste your time with unworthy people. Look at your father. You didnât give him a second chance; you didnât fold when he begged to come back. That takes courage and determination, something not many people have when it truly counts. You take whatâs yours and donât apologize for it. Iâm so fucking proud of you for living your life how you want to, Maddie. Iâm learning so much from you.â
Me? Heâs learning from me?
His thumb draws circles on my skin, setting it on fire and calming me down at the same time. For a while, neither of us says anything. This part of the hallway is mostly silent, with no loud voices or music coming from any of the rooms. It gives me time to think.
His brother hit him in the face that night. His phone was broken. Thatâs why he couldnât contact you.
He didnât stand you up.
He spent the night sitting outside your door, waiting for you.
âWhat are you doing here?â My throat burns as I speak. âHow did you know where I was?â
âI found his obituary online.â He holds my hand a little tighter, his gaze searching every corner of my eyes until his protective urges are satisfied. âI needed to see you. I needed to make sure you were okay. Iâve been worried sick since you left, and I couldnât wait another second.â
âButâ¦but workâ¦â
âI took a day off. Told them it was a family emergency.â When his fingers settle on my cheek, cradling it like my face is something precious to hold, I donât pull away. âWhy are you out here, crying all by yourself?â
Iâm tired. Iâm so, so tired.
Iâm tired of being on edge all the time, on the lookout for the next person who will walk away from me. Because this is the thingâpeople have already done it. My parents left me to my own devices, forcing my brother to step in.
My worst fear has already happened, and I survived.
Iâm here, arenât I? Whole and proud of myself for never giving up, even when it got too tempting.
And what did I do? I kept pushing, kept meeting new people, kept making friends and living my life. In fear, yes, but no more.
Not when I could lose something that means so much to me. That means everything.
James didnât make it to our date, and it upset me, but he had a good reason for it. He went to speak to his brother, someone he hadnât seen in over a decade, and things took a turn for the worse. I know heâs telling the truth because his cheek is slightly purple and swollen under his stubble.
He said he was never going to leave me, and he didnât. He didnât.
Itâs not fair to punish him for something that was out of his control. Nobody is always going to do what I say, and that doesnât mean they donât love me.
But James doesnât love you. He doesnât feel what you feel.
Burying the unexpected pain piercing my heart, I say, âMy mother told me he was killed in a car accident.â I donât know what it says about me that I can recite the words back to him without feeling any real emotion. âHe was a junkie. Always has been.â
His thumb caresses the skin right under my eye, erasing the remains of my dry tears. âHow does that make you feel?â
I shrug, unable to tell him because I donât even know it myself. âI got what I wanted, didnât I? Iâm never going to see him again.â
His eyes look into mine with so much intent, Iâm scared of what heâll find there. âHe wasnât a good man, and he wasnât a good father,â he declares, his voice firm. âMaybe he didnât deserve to die for it, but it happened, and you donât have to feel one way or another right now. You need time to process this.â
I give him a small nod, his words caving in. âIâll be okay.â
That thumb rubs my cheek again. âI know you will, Maddie. I know.â
âMy mother apologized,â I blurt out, not really knowing why that nags me more than anything else. âI told her we could talk after⦠You know, in a few days.â
âThatâs good.â He gives me a small but reassuring smile that is so mesmerizing, I wish I could capture it forever. âTell me what I can do for you.â
My poor heart leaps. âYou donât have to do anything. Iâ¦â I shake my head, still incredulous that this is real life. âThank you for being here. You didnât have to, but I needed you, and Iâm glad youâre here.â
The softness of his gaze, so contrasting to all his rough edges, ends me. âI need you more, Maddie. Trust me on that.â
âI donât think fuck buddies do this for each other,â I say before I can even realize what my words truly mean.
Jamesâs expression sobers up, making my stomach knot. âNo, they donât.â
The air around us sizzles with a kind of magnetic electricity Iâve never felt before.
I can see the shift in his eyes, feel it in my bones, and I know this is where the doubting ends and everything else begins.
The healing, the patience, the excitement. The rest of our lives.
His fingers brush the strands of hair away from my forehead with such care, I forget how to breathe. âIt wasnât supposed to happen, was it? This thing between us.â
Slowly, I shake my head. âIt wasnât.â
âBut it did.â His words sound final but not resigned. Scared, maybe. Cautious. âWhat do you want to do about it?â
He doesnât need to clarify what he means. Iâve asked myself that question for weeks, maybe months now, and Graceâs words come back to me.
âI donât know if weâre on the same page,â I admit, my voice so quiet, I donât know how he even hears it. âHow do you see yourself in five years?â
âWith you.â
My heart stops. âDoing what?â
When did his forehead come so close to mine? âI donât care, Maddie, as long as Iâm by your side. I know youâre twenty-one and have many things to figure out still, but so do I.â
The way his demeanor shifts makes an alarm go off in my head. He moves back, a sigh parting his lips. âAfter what went down with my brother and my ex, I couldnât see myself opening up to anybody else. I didnât want to be in a relationship. And then you happened. You, with your strength and your fire, with that beautiful laughter that makes my heart soar even when I try to anchor it to the ground so it canât get hurt.
âOur age difference could be a problem, maybe, or maybe not. I donât know, Maddie, but Iâm tired of fighting this when all Iâve wanted since I laid my eyes on you was to be in your life. Take care of you, love you like you deserve. And if that means quitting my job to move somewhere else with you, or have a bunch of kids, or adopt a dozen cats, then Iâll do it with a smile on my face because itâll mean I get to have you.â
I donât think my heart is working anymore.
My throat is dry, my pulse so strong in my neck I wonder if he can hear it.
Is he saying�
âShit.â Iâve never seen him so visibly shaken up, but Iâm too nervous myself to tease him about it. âThis is definitely not the time nor place for this, but I donât want to pretend anymore, Maddie. Itâs tearing me apart.â
My voice comes out as a whisper. âWh-What do you mean?â
âIt means I love you,â he declares, inking his words permanently on my soul. âIt means Iâve fallen in love with you, and Iâm so scared to fuck this up, I canât think straight. Thatâs what it means.â
âJames, youâre not going to fââ
âI might. I already have, and I might do it again. Thereâs no way to know for sure, but I canât keep lying to myself.â He holds my face, and I drop my hands, wrapping them around his forearms. âYouâre my guiding light, Maddie. You have been since the moment I met you. Youâre admirable in so many ways, I would lose my breath if I dared list them one by one. Just the fact that youâre here today, facing the demons of your past, tells me I have a lot to learn from you. I feel like the luckiest man on this planet when you smile at me, and I want to make you happy, to love and protect you for as long as youâll want me. If you even do.â
The only reason Iâm able to find my words right now is because he needs them.
And for him, as I now know for sure, I would do anything.
Even the one thing Iâm most scared of.
âAll my life, Iâve been terrified of being abandoned again,â I admit out loud, maybe for the first time outside of a therapistâs office. And it feels so damn good. âI wouldnât allow myself to fall in deep because I needed to protect my heart, but⦠My heart doesnât need protecting from you. Youâre worthy of it, Jamesâof all of me. Donât ever doubt that again.â
If thereâs one thing my brother made sure I learned growing up, it was to recognize when love is real. To know when the person in front of me wanted to cherish all my rights and wrongs, despite the adversity.
I didnât know what he meant at first, but then I sat back and watched. For seventeen years, I watched my brother love his wife in a way I had only read about in books. I watched him show her how much she meant to him, how easily he would give her the world if she only asked.
I may not have been born into the healthiest of families, but Iâve always had my guardian angel with meâmy brother.
And itâs because of the way Sammy and Grace loved me and taught me that healthy, everlasting love is real, that Iâm able to look at James right now and see our future unfold before my eyes.
âMy heart is yours,â I whisper against his lips. âAnd I want your heart, James, all the dark corners that come with it. Will you give it to me?â
His charged gaze searches mine. âItâs always been yours.â
The moment our lips touch, every doubt Iâve ever had about us dissipates. The way he holds me like Iâm the most precious thing heâs ever had, how his tongue wraps around mine with a promise of forever, how my heart has never felt fuller.
I cling to him, and he holds me closer, deepening our bond.
Iâm not innocent enough to think we wonât ever face any challenges, but I know, I know we can get through anything together.
Because one way or another, we were meant to be.
âI love you,â I whisper against his lips as I pull away briefly, and only because I needed him to hear it.
âI love you. So fucking much. I will love you every moment until the day I take my last breath and all over again in my next life.â He squeezes my waist, hugging me impossibly closer, and I melt against him. âI brought you something.â
Itâs the slight change in his voice that makes me arch an intrigued eyebrow. âOh yeah?â
With an arm still locked around my middle, he pulls away just enough to reach his hand into the pocket of his suit jacket. âItâs not⦠Ah, itâs not perfect by any means.â Why does he sound nervous? Now Iâm intrigued. âItâs quite ugly, actually.â
âIâll love whatever you give me,â I encourage him, hoping he can hear the truth in my words. âCome on, what is it? Iâm dying over here.â
The faint blush on his cheeks kills me.
And then the folded napkin he hands me kills me some more.
âYou donât even have to pretend to like it,â he says. âI made it on the plane on my way here, and I know itâs shit.â
I donât even question why heâs handing me a paper napkin in the first place. âSo dramatic.â
But Iâm the one who gets the air knocked out of my lungs when I see whatâs inside.
Heâ¦
Oh my God.
He drew a mandala. By hand. In the shape of a heart.
âJames, this isâ¦â
âThe ugliest thing youâve everââ
I donât give him the chance to finish as I close the small distance between our lips again. He kisses me back without hesitation, bringing me closer until thereâs no space between us.
Now I understand why my perfectly mapped-out future didnât work out. Why it was never going to.
Everything happened the way it did so we could find each other, be here in this moment, and I will never regret a second of it for as long as I live.
âWhat the fuck?â
I jolt at the sound of that familiar voice, pushing James away as if he were on fire. He looks at me, confused, before we both turn to the man at the end of the hallway.
The man who looks one second away from killing both of us.