: Chapter 24
Birthday Girl
âYou donât look so good, sugar.â
I look up from the cooler where Iâm loading beer bottles from a case and give Grady a weak smile. âNothing a box of Thin Mints wonât fix,â I tell him.
Or a vat of sherbert ice cream or Pike walking in here right now, taking me in his arms in front of everyone, and telling me he loves me.
God, Iâm so tired. And weary. I couldnât stand to look at him last night, and I wanted nothing more than to be away from him and out of his life.
I took my newly repaired VW and crashed at my sisterâs, and then I came to work at ten to get ready for the lunch shift, and Iâve been here for twelve hours now, staying long after the schedule dictated.
My anger and resolve are still there, but so is the sadness now. I miss him.
But I hate myself more.
I love him and want him, butâ¦
I canât be around him.
He makes me laugh, and when Iâm with him, Iâm home. Like heâs the only thing in my life I understand.
But I donât understand myself anymore. Someone has to fight for me for a change.
Iâm not going back.
âYou clocked out without closing the tab before you left last time,â Grady says, pulling cash out of his wallet. âHereâs your tip.â
He slides a couple twenties across the bar, and I close the cooler and laugh under my breath, my eyes feeling heavy with fatigue.
âGrady, it didnât even occur to me,â I tell him. âDonât worry about stuff like that. Iâm just happy youâre here.â
Which is the truth. He saves me from having to force conversation with anyone else while Iâm working. He doesnât flirt or make crude comments, and he likes my music on the jukebox.
I leave the money and clear off his empty bottle, popping the top of a new one and setting it in front of him.
âHey, can I have two Buds?â someone calls, holding out money at the bar.
I head over, hearing the phone ring and seeing Shel grab it.
Opening the cooler, I pull out the two Buds.
âJordan?â Shel repeats into the phone.
I glance over at her, setting the two beers down in front of the guy.
âWhoâs calling?â she asks.
I keep my eyes on her, my breathing going shallow as I take the guyâs money and ring up his drinks.
âPike?â she says.
She casts me a look, and I shake my head. Itâs late, Iâve been gone since last night, and Iâm actually surprised he hasnât come looking for me, making his pushy demands as usual.
âYeah, sheâs not here,â Shel lies. âHer shift ended. Try her cell phone.â
She hangs up, probably not waiting for him to say anything else and definitely not knowing that Pike has already called my cell a few times today. He didnât leave messages, though, and he hasnât texted.
She approaches me. âWhat is going on?â
âNothing.â
She cocks her head, not believing me. âYou look exhausted.â She gently pushes my hair behind my ear as I wipe down the bar. âHave you eaten anything today?â
âIâm fine,â I tell her. âJust tired.â
âIs Cole causing you more problems?â
I sigh, feeling my stomach grow shaky. I want to talk to someone, but Iâm sick of being the girl with guy problems. Iâm tired of Shel worrying about me, and I donât want her to know. She already thinks Pike is an ass, and for some reason, I hate that. I donât want to give her more ammo.
âWhy is his father calling you?â she presses me.
I avoid her gaze, drop the dishcloth in the bucket of hot water, and grab a fresh one, wiping off the same liquor bottles I already did this afternoon.
I feel her eyes on me. âJordan, what have you gotten yourself into?â
My chin trembles, and tears sting the backs of my eyes. âNothing,â I say, still not looking at her. âIâll be okay.â
A server comes out of the kitchen with food, and I step around one of the other bartenders coming back with a new bottle of Captain from the liquor closet. I think for a moment, trying to figure out what I can do next, and finally bend over to retrieve a package of napkins from a cabinet. Tearing it open, I start to refill one of the containers on the bar.
âGo home,â Shel says, putting her hand over the container. âGet some sleep.â
âIâm fine. Iâd rather be here.â
âIf you donât go home, then go to your sisterâs,â she suggests. âJust please get some rest. You work any more hours today, youâre not going to be able to drive yourself home at all tonight. Iâll see you tomorrow.â
I open my mouth to argue, but she just shakes her head at me, knowing what Iâm about to say.
âIâm not your mom,â she points out, âbut Iâm as good as. You need sleep. Get some food from the kitchen and go. Please.â
I do as Shel says, make myself a sandwich I donât feel like eating, and climb into my car, turning on the engine. An Alice Cooper song is playing on the 80âs station Iâm tuned to, but I turn it off, not in the mood at all for the escape I usually crave.
Home. It takes me a good twenty minutes of driving aimlessly around town, lost in my head, before I commit to whose home Iâm going to. I need clothes and my school books, and even though I donât want to see Pike, Cole, or his mother, I canât use my sisterâs make-up for another day. Everything has glitter in it.
As I pull onto Windy Park Place, I take in the stream of cars and trucks lining both sides of the street, as well as Pikeâs full driveway. Some vehicles I recognize, some I donât, but I slide into a slot between two cars in front of Cramerâs house, spotting the lights coming from over Pikeâs fence in his backyard.
Cole must be having a party. Super.
Leaving my purse in the car, I take my keys, lock it, and walk toward the house, wanting to be anywhere but here, but knowing I need to do this. My skin buzzes with awareness, and the hair on my arms rises as the music floods my ears. But I charge up the porch steps, still dressed in my backless blouse from work. I tighten my high ponytail and just hope with all the people here, Pike and Cole donât notice me come and go.
I enter the house and look around, seeing the back door bob closed as someone walks out, and then I hear the bathroom door close in the laundry room. The light under the door to the basement is on, and the chatter outside is almost as loud as the music. At least Cole is keeping people out of the house, for the most part. Pike is most likely not sleeping through this.
Gently stepping up the stairs, I walk quietly down the hallway, seeing Pikeâs bedroom door closed and the light off inside. Coleâs door is also closed, and I open mine, peeking inside and seeing it empty. My bed is unmade from Coleâs mother sleeping in it last night, and I look around, using the light streaming in from outside to see. None of Lindsayâs things are in here, so maybe her apartment is done then. Leaving the light off, I grab my leather book bag and stuff in books and notebooks from my desk and start loading a duffel bag with clothes and anything else Iâll immediately need.
âThought I heard someone come in,â a voice behind me says.
My heart stops, and I hesitate, instantly recognizing the voice. I close my eyes, willing him to go away.
Cole wouldnât have invited him. He must be crashing the party.
Scissors sit on my desk in front of me, and I eye it, instinct kicking in.
âCole broke up with Elena,â Jay tells me. âYou gonna take him back?â
Broke up? Were they really together? I look down at my thumb, seeing the small scar in the darkness and barely feeling anything anymore. How he could always tug at my heart, but now, it seems like ages ago Cole gave a damn about me. I canât even muster an ounce of longing tonight for the connection we once had.
Survival mode has kicked in. My brain is in control now, and it wonât give me the keys to my heart until itâs sure it can take it.
âYou want a little revenge first?â Jay taunts, and I can hear his voice growing closer. âCome on, Jordan. Iâll give you a good fuck right now, right here.â
âAs opposed to the terrible lay you always were?â I retort.
He says nothing, but I can just imagine the little snarl playing on his lips and the tingle heâs feeling in his hands thatâs begging him to make me pay for that remark.
Taking the scissors in my hand, I turn and twist it around in my fingers, playing with it as I look at him.
He stands just inside my doorway, dressed in his jeans and T-shirt with his cold eyes glaring at me under dark brows.
âWhat you must have told yourself to convince that pea brain inside your head that you made me come so good,â I say coolly. âThe three times we did it were so bad, I would lay there confused, and then amused, before finally breaking into tears that there was nothing about you that wasnât absolutely pathetic.â
His top lip twitches, and right now, heâs gauging how likely he is to get away with what he wants to do to me with a backyard full of witnesses right outside my window.
âNow Iâm simply terrified for every woman I see you with,â I continue, âbut also secretly smiling, because I know after they fake how much they love your cock in bed, theyâre in the bathroom, fingering themselves to a mental image of any guy in town whoâs not you.â
He lurches forward a step, and I straighten, dropping my hands and squeezing my fist around the scissors. His eyes flash to the tool, and he stops.
âGet out of my room,â I tell him, my tone calm and even, âand donât ever speak to me again.â
He hesitates a moment.
âNow,â I state.
His chest caves with heavy breaths, and I can hear the anger fuming inside of him.
He wants to rush me so badly.
But Iâm not even scared. I feel nothing.
It takes his pride a moment to realize he wonât get far if I decide to scream, but after a moment, he backs away and finally turns, disappearing down the hallway. His footfalls hit the stairs, and I wait to hear the backdoor slam closed before I risk moving again.
He may not stay out of my way for good, but he has a track record of deciding Iâm worth minimal effort before he moves on to someone else. Letâs hope he keeps doing that.
I finish packing my clothes and slip into the bathroom, collecting my toothbrush, razor, and shampoo, stuffing everything into my bag and zipping it up. Swinging both bags onto my shoulder, I leave the room, resisting the urge to look back, and head down the stairs and into the living room.
Pike stands just inside the front door, though, and I stop, both of our gazes locked on each other.
Shit. I was almost out of here.
âI was out looking for you,â he says. âJust wanted to make sure you were okay.â
His gaze drops to my bags, and his fist curls around his keys. His voice drops to a whisper. âDonât. Please.â
âDonât what?â I step forward. âDonât leave or donât tell Cole?â
The party rages outside, and we stand in the darkened room, locked in a no-win battle. Itâs simply a question of who gets hurt, and itâs a choice he still thinks he can get out of making.
He wants me, but heâs a coward.
âThis had to end, right?â he chokes out, speaking only loud enough for me to hear. âIn ten years, Iâll be nearly fucking fifty. Iâm not going to saddle you with that. This was going to end. You know it always was.â
I do now. My eyes burn, tears welling, but itâs strange. Iâm not sure Iâm sad. What he says is almost a comfort, because I know this story. Iâm used to it.
I walk for the door.
âIâm not ready to let you go,â he tells me, stepping in front of me. âJust not yet. Iâm not doneâ¦â He searches for the words. âTalking to you andâ¦loving you.â He takes my shoulders, moving us behind the front door, my back against the closet. âLetâs go somewhere. Just us. Thereâs a midnight showing tonight. Letâs go. Get out of here and away for a couple hours, and weâll talk.â
I peer up at him. âSomewhere dark, right?â
In a theater where we wonât be seen?
He looks at me like thatâs exactly what he was thinking, and heâs sorry for that, but itâs the way it is. âWeâll figure it out.â He plants his hands on both sides of my head on the door behind me and leans in. âJust not yet. Donât leave yet.â
The numbness Iâve been feeling since last night wavers, and I hear him in my head. Iâm not going anywhere. Iâm not going anywhereâ¦
I have no doubt thatâs true. And will always be true. Pike doesnât walk away from his responsibilities. Heâll always look out for me.
And I canât think of anything Iâd rather be less to him than an obligation. I canât be like Cole or his job, his house or his bills. Iâm not a duty.
Iâm everything else.
âDo you love me?â I ask. âAre you in love with me?
He holds my eyes, and even in the dark, I can see his eyes are red, tired, and hurting. But when he opens his mouth, no words come out.
I shake my head. âIt doesnât matter, I guess.â I give up. âYou have no courage, so you wonât be forever.â I stand up straight, tightening my hand around the straps of my bags. âAnd in the end, youâll wind up being nothing more than a waste of my time.â
His face falls, and he looks so completely deflated. He doesnât have the conviction to do anything. All he knows is he doesnât want me to go.
âOh, this is too good,â someone says. âSo thatâs your kink, huh, Jordan?â
Pike and I jerk our heads to see Jay has just come out of the kitchen and stepped into the living room. Pike drops his hands and stands up straight, fixing Jay with a hard look.
âCome on, baby,â Jay taunts me, and I can smell the beer on his breath from here. âIâll be your daddy and you can open your legs for me, too, for a little rent money.â
Pike lunges for him, and I gasp. He grabs Jay by the collar and whips him around, sending him flying through the storm door. Jay barely even flinches, probably because he knew what he was doing.
My heart stops, seeing him stumble onto the porch and Pike charge after him.
They both barrel down the stairs, a few people scattered around the lawn as they leave the party from the back gate or come in from their cars.
Jay shoves Pike away, but Pike grabs his arm, throws his fist back, and comes down like a hammer, pounding Jay in the face and sending him collapsing to the ground. I walk onto the porch, seeing the bystanders stop and watch, while others call out.
âWhat the hellâs going on?â I hear Coleâs voice.
Glancing over, I spot him come out from the side of the house. I step up to the railing and watch Pike, pulling Jay up off the ground and throwing him into a car.
âDad!â Cole shouts, rushing up.
But no one else seems to notice him.
âDonât worry.â Jay laughs at Pike, blooding trickling off his lip. âWe can share the little whore.â
Cole turns to me. âDid Jay hurt you?â
I guess it wasnât hard for him to figure out who the âwhoreâ was he was referring to. I say nothing.
Jay turns his gaze on me, shouting, âWhy donât you tell Cole how cozy you and his dad have been here without him?â
âWhat?â Cole looks between us, confusion etched on his face.
âIâll see you again, Jordan!â Jay calls out, shoving Pikeâs hand away and pulling out his car keys. âYouâll be working at The Hook just like your sister, and Iâll come in there and buy your ass. Thatâs a promââ
Another fist lands across his face, but itâs not Pike this time. Cole has rushed over to him and sent him tripping backward to the sidewalk.
Jay growls, spitting on the ground and bringing his hand to his lips and pulling it away, inspecting it.
âYou knocked out one of my teeth!â he barks.
âGet out of here!â Cole yells, throwing out his arms. âGo!â
Sweat glistens across Pikeâs brow, and he looks at me with the same eyes he had the night we first slept together. When I straddled him on my bed, and he gazed up at me, giving in and giving me everything he had.
Everything else around us disappears. He grinds his fists at his sides, and his body is rigid, like heâs about to charge me and pull me into his arms and carry me away.
âYou two?â I hear Cole say.
I blink, Pike drops his gaze, and the spell is broken. Cole stands between us, looking back and forth at us as people slowly disperse, and I see him start to connect the dots with the way we were just looking at each other.
âJordan?â Cole nudges for me to say something, but I just lower my gaze, unable to look at him.
Pike swallows, breathing shallow. âColeââ
âOh, fuck you,â Cole tells him, cutting him off and backing away.
Pike takes a step but Cole spins around and charges away, out of the yard and down the street.
Pike doesnât follow. He knows his son at least as well as I do, and Cole wonât hear anything tonight. And what would Pike say to make it better anyway? Damage is done.
Pike stands there, staring after Cole and looking like the life has been sucked out of him. What does he have now?
Pulling out my keys, I head down the porch stairs and walk to my car, not stopping or hesitating as I pass Pike Lawson.
And he doesnât follow me, either.
I now know he meant what he implied last night. Iâm not worth it.
I know everything is a mess, I type on my phone. Please know it wasnât about revenge. It just happened, and Iâm sorry.
Iâve been staring at my phone for twenty minutes, trying to figure out what to say to Cole. Iâm logging off social media and only talking to my sister and select few others for a while. I need space and quiet. I just didnât want to go silent without something.
Iâm not sorry it happened, but I am sorry if it hurt him. I reasoned with myself that he cheated on me, and I donât owe him anything.
But I donât want it to end like this. Iâm fine with leaving. Iâm fine with not seeing him right now.
I just needed him to knowâ¦. It wasnât about him.
Do you love him? His reply pops up.
Needles prick the back of my throat, and I press the Power button on the side of my phone, shutting it down.
I force the lump down my throat and stuff the phone in the side pocket of my bag and zip it up, closing my eyes to push back the tears.
Shel enters the liquor room where Iâm standing in front of a stack of beer crates, and instead of handing me my paycheck she went to go get, she takes a wad of cash and slips it into my bag without letting me see it.
After I crashed at my sisterâs again last night, I came here today to collect my pay before leaving. But judging by the stack of bills she just hid in my bag, she no doubt slipped me a lot more than what Iâd earned.
If I fight her, it would just be a waste of energy. I make a mental note to work extra hours when I come back. Whenever that is.
âWhat are you going to do?â she asks, resting her hand on her hip and peering at me.
âI donât know.â
âWhere are you going?â
âI donât know.â
She sighs, and I pull my bag up, swinging it over my shoulder.
âNormally that would scare me, butâ¦â I trail off, thinking. âI donât want to keep doing anything Iâve been doing. I just want to wake up tomorrow and not recognize anything about my life.â I raise my eyes, looking at her. âAnd please donât give me some lecture on how Iâm running away, floundering, letting others control what I feelâ¦â
She takes my shoulders, speaking firmly. âRun,â she tells me flatly. âRun far away. Just go. Call if you need anything, okay?â
I nod, thankful she understands. âCan you tell Cam not to worry? Iâm fine, and Iâll call her.â
âYouâre not going to see her?â
Tears threaten, and I veer around Shel and out of her grasp, walking out of the liquor room. âI canât.â
If I think too long, or I look at her face, Iâll chicken out. Pike told me once âhit the ground running.â Iâm sure this isnât what he meant, but Iâm going for it.
Jordan Hadley doesnât leave her job. She doesnât jump into a rundown, unreliable vehicle and hit the road with nowhere to go. And sheâs certainly too afraid to ever be alone.
If I think, I wonât do it. Iâm going. No turning back. Maybe Iâll come back tomorrow, the next day, or next week, but the longer I keep my foot on the gas, the farther Iâll be from who I was.
I stop at the bar and pick up my sweater that Iâd laid on a stool.
âI know it hurts,â Shel says, coming up behind me. âYou were happy.â
âIâll be fine.â I hook the sweater over my bag, avoiding her eyes. âHe wasnât my first.â
âYes, he was.â
I stop and look over at her, the knots in my stomach tightening.
âYou donât have to say anything, but you knowâ¦â she continues, âyou didnât feel this with Cole or Jay or anyone else.â
I look away again, biting the corner of my mouth to keep my feelings in check.
Iâll get over him. And very soon, every memory will fade, all his words and how every touch felt. Itâll all fade.
âBut let me tell you something, girl,â she goes on, speaking low and discreet for the few customers in the place. âWhat you feel for him or anyone else isnât what you need. Thisââ she taps my chest over my heart, âwhat youâre feeling right nowâis the best thing that can happen to you. Because when all the pieces of your heart start to come back together, and they will, theyâll be stronger. And much tougher for someone to pierce.â She pushes my hair behind my ear in the way she always does. âSo you can be sure that when someone finally does, heâll have worked for it. We donât need food to survive this life as much as we need our hearts broken at least once. But the best part is, the first break is always the worst. Itâll never feel this bad again.â
And for that, Iâm glad.
But it also makes me wonderâ¦. If my heart will never break this badly again, then will I love anyone like I loved Pike Lawson?