: Chapter 6
Birthday Girl
I havenât spoken to Pike since the argument yesterday. I refuse to call it a fight. We barely know each other. How can we be fighting?
I also havenât talked to Cole since yesterday, either, but for some reason, thatâs not bugging me. Itâs how we roll. He was gone yesterday, helping a friend with his car, and by the time he made it home I was at the bar. I slept in this morning, more as an effort to avoid Pike in the house, and only woke up once when Cole left a goodbye peck on my cheek before heading to work himself.
My stomach has been in knots all morning. Why the hell was Pike so angry? I thought we were getting along. I didnât do anything wrong. In fact, I was mowing his fucking grass, and the next thing I know heâs ripping into me like Iâm sunbathing topless on the front lawn while six-year-olds race their bikes down the street.
Heâs so volatile. Very unlike his son who never takes anything seriously.
I climb out of Coleâs car, him catching a ride with one of his friends this morning so I could get to the library. I grab Pikeâs lunch box he left at home and take a look around the job site. Itâs busier than the last time I was here.
Workers move about, dressed in hard hats with brown leather tool belts hanging from their hips, and dust kicks up from the trucks moving in and out of the area. Hammers hit steel and men with dirty boots and scuffed jeans straddle beams high in the air as they do whatever it is that they do to turn materials into a building. Not many get to see the bare bones view. I wonder why Cole doesnât work for his father. This job has to pay well. I know some of these guys, after all. They support families off this job.
My gaze wanders, looking for someone accessible to drop off the lunch box to, but Iâm kind of on alert, looking for Pikeâs tattoos, too. I donât want to see him, really. My plan when I saw heâd left his lunch at home this morning was to do a nice deed, drop it off, and leave the ball in his court to get over the argument by seeking me out to say âthank youâ. I want to get over whatever awkwardness is between us.
Stepping over the dirt and debris laying around, I make my way for the structure and spot his friend, Dutch, bending over to pick something up just inside. He notices me and rises.
âHey, Dutch.â I smile. âIs Pike around?â
His eyes drop to the black insulated bag in my hand. âHis lunch?â
âHe left it sitting on the kitchen table.â I hold it up for him. âThought Iâd drop it off while Iâm running errands.â
âThatâs nice of you.â But he doesnât take the lunch box. Instead, he tosses a tool down into a box and gestures to me. âCome on, Iâll take you up.â
âOh, no, thatâs okay,â I tell him. âI donât want to bug him. Iâll just leave it with you.â
âIf you leave that with me, Iâll eat it. Or lose it.â He chuckles and leads me toward some stairs.
My shoulders slump. Awesome.
We head up to the third floor, taking what I assume will be the emergency stairwell once the elevators are installed, and reach a landing with only frames for the walls, showing how the offices and work areas will be divided once itâs finished.
Pike is the only one on the floor, far off on the left side and hovering over a clipboard.
He hears us approach and looks up from his paperwork, turning his head.
His eyes narrow on me, and I blink long and hard, feeling stupid.
Heâs wearing a navy blue T-shirt, and the color on him brings heat to my cheeks. I love how it looks against his tanned arms and the curves of his biceps.
âWhat are you doing here?â he asks.
He doesnât sound annoyed like I was afraid, though. Just puzzled.
I lift up the bag. âYou left your lunch on the table.â
His expression relaxes, and the tension in his body eases. âOh, thanks.â He walks over, and I hand it to him. âItâs okay, though,â he tells me. âI couldâve grabbed something from the food truck. You didnât have to go through the trouble.â
The food truck? âWell, I couldnât let you eat crap from a food truck,â I say.
And to my relief, he smiles a little. âItâs basically the same stuff thatâs in there,â he points out, setting the lunch box on a work table.
But Iâm way ahead of him. âWell, I snuck in a turkey and cheese cucumber wrap, too, in case you want something different.â
His face falls.
âDonât worry,â I tease. âYour lunch is still in there. I just made too much and needed help finishing the wrap.â
The slight fear in his eyes dispels, and he takes a breath. âYouâre not going to be happy until Iâm eating hummus, are you?â
I try not to laugh. âIâll build you up slowly.â
He rolls his eyes, and I finally take a deep breath. I guess weâre over the argument.
I stand there, feeling his eyes on me, the sounds of hammers pounding and the breeze blowing through the structure slowly fading away.
Then I realize that Dutch is still in the room.
We both look over at him, his gaze shifting between us.
âIâll goâ¦â He swallows and clears this throat. âdo something,â he says and walks away, leaving us alone.
I look back at Pike, and I guess I should go, too, and leave him to it, but instead, I slide my hands into my pockets and gaze around. âThe sawdust smells good,â I tell him.
A smile crosses his eyes, and he nods, looking around. âYeah. Itâs like home to me.â
When our gazes meet again, heat pools low in my belly, and I forget to breathe for a moment. I quickly look away.
âI apologize for going off on you yesterday,â he says. âYou didnât do anything wrong. Cramer was leering, and it was creepy. I got aggravated.â And then he clarifies, âAggravated with him, I mean. Iâm sorry I took it out on you.â
âI work in a bar,â I point out. âIâm used to a little leering. I can handle it.â
Really, I can stand up and fight for my honor all on my own. And so can Cole. If it ever occurs to him. Pike doesnât need to feel responsible for me. Iâm not his to take care of.
âWell, Iâll get going,â I tell him and start backing away.
But he stops me. âYou wanna see?â he offers. âA little tour?â
Iâve already seen a great deal of the place, since I was here sandbagging last week, but I nod anyway. âYeah, sure.â
He leads me toward the back of the building, and I wonder if Iâm supposed to be wearing a hard hat, but heâs not wearing one, either, so I donât ask.
âItâs supposed to be office space for that casino riverboat thatâs coming to the area,â he explains. âThereâll be a pavilion at the dock with restaurants and event space, but theyâre going to run everything from here. Hiring, finances, advertisingâ¦â
He shoots me a smile, and I look away again.
âItâs like a skeleton,â I comment. âWhen do the walls go up?â
âOnce the plumbers and electricians get everything squared away,â he replies, âI install the insulation and then we start walling it up. Youâll see rooms instead of bones.â
We enter a large space at the rear corner of the building, and unlike the other rooms, thereâs an entire wall without beams. Like itâs going to be just one, huge picture window there. I step into the small adjacent space and peer over the beam in front of my face.
âWhatâs this space?â
He looks over at me. âItâs a private bathroom for this office.â
Must be nice. I stroll back into the office with him and walk over to the edge, looking out over the undeveloped land and green in the distance.
âNice view.â I smile and flip my hair, spinning around in my pretend office like I own the place. âYes, Christopher, would you please get Japan on the line? We need to discuss the production line in Malaysia,â I play.
He chuckles. âYou have a male secretary?â
âA man can be anything,â I retort. âDonât let your sex hold you back.â
He shakes his head at me, amusement curling his lips.
We settle into the ease we had the other night when we watched TV and ate pizza, and I follow him around the building, letting him explain the months to possibly year-long process of erecting a building from the ground up. He started doing this work before Cole was born and eventually formed his own company, able to make his own rules and have more control over the types of projects he takes on. It has to be a lot of responsibility, though, knowing youâre in charge of two dozen workers and the paychecks that support their families.
But stillâ¦heâs helping to grow our town, bringing work in, and getting jobs himself.
âYou must be so proud to build things you get to see every day,â I tell him when weâre back down on the first floor. âPlaces where people will spend their lives and earn their livelihoods.â
âI never really thought about it like that.â He stops at the rear of the building, looking out at the acres of empty space beyond. âItâs my livelihood, too, I guess.â
I look out and notice an outdoor space attached to the back of the building. Itâs large, and I can already see a marble fountain haphazardly placed for later setup.
âIs this going to be a courtyard?â I inquire, noting thereâs no roof. âThatâs a nice idea. Do you build that, too?â
âOh, no,â he replies. âA landscaping company will come when the building is nearly complete and take care of planting the grass, trees, and installing the aesthetics.â
Right up my alley. I love the before and after, seeing an outdoor space transform.
âIâll let you know when they start,â he offers as if reading my mind. âYou can pop in every now and then to see the progress.â
I smile. âThanks.â
Iâd like that, actually. Aside from my teachers, no one else I know really enjoys stuff like this. Our eyes meet, and I realize thatâs something Iâve been missing. I donât have a lot in common with the other people in my life, do I?
Weâre locked on each other but only for a moment. A worker passes by, carrying lumber over his shoulder, and Pike suddenly straightens, breaking contact with me and nodding a âhelloâ to him.
âWell, I shouldâ¦â I jerk my thumb behind me, âget going, I guess.â
âYeah,â he answers. âMe, too.â
I back away. âSee you at home. Iâll have dinner ready by five.â
He just nods and turns back to his work.
Home. Not the house? Itâs not my home, after all.
I walk back to the car and climb in, feeling more out of sorts than when I came here. Dinner by five? Cole doesnât get off until six. Did I suddenly just forget he exists?
I wrap the towel around my body and gather up my dirty clothes, the bathroom still thick with steam. Cracking open the door, I peek into the hallway to make sure itâs clear, and dash across to my bedroom, closing my door behind me.
I keep forgetting to take clean clothes in with me, so I can get dressed right after my shower. Iâm still used to having my own place and not caring if I crossed the hallway in my towel. At least Iâm remembering to put on pajama shorts if I go downstairs for water in the middle of the night. Doubt I wouldnât die of embarrassment if Coleâs dad caught me in my underwear and T-shirt.
Taking my brush, I comb out my wet hair and pick out something to wear to bed. I see a glow from outside and walk over to the blinds, peering through a crack. Itâs dark outâafter nine by nowâbut Pike is still at it, in the driveway, working on my VW.
Heâs pretty awesome. Coleâs been busy on everyone elseâs car but mine, although I suspect itâs just an excuse for him to get out of the house.
A bright shop light hangs from my propped-up hood, and Pike circles the VW and leans over, unscrewing something. Heâs been out there since after dinner. He wanted Coleâs help, but of course, heâs out again. I think heâs waiting for him.
A couple of women walk down the sidewalk, dressed in workout clothes, and stop, smiling and calling out something to Pike.
The brunette on the left jogs in place, even though she was just speed-walking a moment ago, while the redhead puts her hands on her hips and gives him a flirty smile.
âSeriously?â I mumble. Who the hell goes walking this time of night? âSmooth, ladies. Real smooth.â
Like they didnât see Pike out here working through their kitchen windows, shirtless with muscles flexing against his tanned skin, still looking every inch the bad boy hottie they drooled over in high school, probably. Then they gave each other a call up to hatch a plan to don their active wear and âjust happen to jog past his placeâ, right? I mean, it would be rude, after all, not to say hi, right?
I roll my eyes. Suburban housewives, bored with their husbands, looking to stir up shit like Pike Lawson is a pit stop to be used to excite them.
I release the blinds and back away.
Iâm being so mean.
So, theyâre flirting. So, what?
Iâve taken pride in the fact that Iâm a pretty level-headed, calm person, but my behavior has been erratic lately. The move, the bills, Cole⦠Iâm out of sorts, uncertain, and all over the place. I donât like it.
I start a playlist on my phone, Pity Party droning out to match my pissy mood as the bedroom door clicks shut behind me. I stop brushing my hair, turning my head.
Cole is suddenly standing in the room, leaning against the door, and staring at me with a look in his eyes I know all too well. When did he get home?
Heat rises to my skin, and I clutch my towel, but I donât know why.
He crosses his arms over his chest as his eyes scale down my body and back up.
âWhat?â I ask when he says nothing.
âDrop the towel.â
Now? But his father is still awake, andâ¦
âCome on,â I protest but try to keep my tone light and calm. âItâs getting late, and Iâm exhausted.â
âIâll get you in the mood.â He pushes off the door and moves toward me, his six feet easily crowding the small bedroom. âI never see you anymore. I miss you.â
He steps up and wraps his arms around my waist, gazing down at me. I canât help but smile a little.
I bite my bottom lip playfully and grip his soft blond hair on the top of his head, bringing him in for a quick kiss. âI was home last night,â I reply. âYou werenât.â
I pull away from him, and tighten my towel around me.
âI invited you out,â he points out.
âI was tired,â I say, but I can feel everything thatâs been building inside of me for days about to bust free. âAnd Iâve had to do your chores, soâ¦â
âI didnât tell you to do that.â
âIt had to get done.â
The desire I felt for him a moment ago has faded, and thereâs a wall rising between us now.
But he tries to navigate around it anyway. âMy dadâs not going to kick me out if Iâm a couple days late mowing the lawn, Jordan,â he says, trying to put his arms around me again. âYou take things too seriously.â
âNo, you didnât do it, because you knew I would.â I turn away. âAs usual. You need to get it together and stop doing the bare minimum.â
He lets out a sigh and releases me, turning toward the door.
âWhere are you going?â
âI canât listen to this right now,â he grits out. âYou know why Iâm always gone? Because of that.â He points at my face. âThe way you look at me. Iâm tired of not feeling good enough.â
âOh, thatâs awesome,â I shoot back sarcastically, grabbing a pair of his boxers out of a drawer and one of his flannel shirts off the chair. âIâm only here to be with you, and youâre always gone. You know, I spend more time with your dad! Donât you think thatâs a little awkward for him?â
âYou got somewhere else to go, then go if youâre so uncomfortable.â
My breath catches in my throat, and I glare at him. âAre you serious? Youâre actually saying that to me right now.â
I already feel like a pathetic freeloader when Iâm not the one who got us evicted. Iâve always been there for him. Weâre friends, dammit. Weâve always looked out for each other. I would never make him feelâ¦. Son of a bitch.
I pull on the boxers and throw off the towel, pulling on the red and brown flannel shirt and buttoning it. Tears spring to my eyes.
My sister was right. I couldâve sucked it up for a few weeks, worked at The Hook, and been able to stay in my place. At least I wouldnât feel like Iâm not wanted.
He moves toward me again, his voice softer. âAll Iâm saying is it would be nice to put the stress behind us once in a while and show each other a little attention. I canât remember the last time we had sex.â
And after the sex? Everything thatâs wrong would still be wrong.
âMaybe if I werenât doing all your shit around here and working until 2 a.m., I wouldnât be so tired all the time,â I tell him. âAnd maybe if you were helping me save money, so we could get our own place again instead of drinking your paychecks away every damn night, I wouldnât be so worried and stressed about money. I feel fucking alone. Where are you?â
He just shakes his head, and I canât help the tears from welling. But I refuse to cry. We need to talk, and he wonât. He wonât give me the one thing that will fix this.
He comes for me, taking my face in his hands. âJust shut up for a while and fuck me.â
He kisses me, and I squeeze my eyes shut, the tears now spilling over and streaming down my cheeks. Goddamn him. He steals my breath, covering my mouth and moving over my lips hard and forceful, and I want to give in. The stress and the worry have gone on so long and been too much, and if I could just forget for a while it would feel so good.
Gripping my ass in both hands, he lifts me up, forcing my legs around his waist, and we fall back on the bed, him coming down on top of me.
Something holds me back, though. Like Iâm back in the trailer park with my dad and stepmom. They donât see me.
Cole doesnât see me. I could be anyone right now.
I tear my mouth away and push at him. âGet off me.â
âBaby, please.â He kisses my neck, and I know him well enough to know that sound in his voice. Heâs upset, too. âJust be a girlfriend for tonight. We used to have fun. Letâs just have fun.â
âNo.â I shake my head, tensing. âIâm pissed at you. I need some air.â
And Iâll feel worse when itâs over.
He keeps kissing me, and I growl, shoving him off. He finally lets go and falls to the bed next to me. He barely hesitates and then heâs on his feet and yanking open the bedroom door, charging out of the room.
In moments, I hear his engine start, tires peel, and then heâs gone.
Asshole.
But part of me canât help but breathe easier now, too.
I feel like I belong here more when heâs not here.
He never used to treat me like that. Tears well in my eyes, but I blink, pushing them away.
Rising from the bed, I go over to the TV stand and pick up the stack of bills to be paid laying on top. A water bill from the old apartment, a doctor bill still not completely paid off from when I thought I broke my ankle last summer, a phone bill, and two of Coleâs credit card bills about to go to collection. I donât have medical insurance, and every day Iâm scared something is going to happen that will take me to the hospital for a twenty-thousand-dollar emergency room visit.
I have no working car, and even if I did, I can barely afford the insurance anyway, with whatever extra student loan money Iâll have after my tuition is paid in the fall going to living expenses. I can take out another loan, but I donât want to be weighed down with that bill for the rest of my life, so I try not to take out much.
And every time I check the mail, thereâs a new, unfortunate surprise.
Opening the top drawer of the bureau, I pull out my tips Iâd made the last week that I havenât deposited yet and spread out the wrinkled bills in my hands.
A hundred-forty-two dollars. The hole Iâm in keeps getting deeper, because Iâm not making enough to dig myself out.
I stuff the cash back into the drawer and pick out the wet T-shirt contest flyer Iâd hidden in there, as well, and look at it. Three hundred dollars isnât enough to make it worth it, but bartending at The Hook orâ¦doing what my sister does and bringing home that kind of money might be.
For a moment, I canât help entertain the idea. To be able to have cash in my pocket that isnât already the gone the moment I earn in. To have nice things. To have a car.
But then I think of Cole and Jay and the guys I went to school with coming in and watching me, and I shove the paper back into the drawer, wanting to throw up. Strangers might not be unbearable, but Iâm not dancing for the guys I went to high school with.
And bartending there would be almost as bad. The outfits Iâd have to wear, the customers Iâd be servingâ¦
Leaving the bedroom, I head downstairs and round the bannister, continuing into the kitchen, through the laundry room, and out the back door.
The air hits me, and suddenly, I can breathe again. The fragrant trees and freshly mowed grass fills my nostrils, and aside from the light illuminating the pool underneath the water, itâs completely dark back here.
I walk to the deep end and sit on the edge, submerging my legs in the water halfway up my calves. The cool water covers my skin like a hug, instantly easing my heated nerves.
Cole will be back late. By then, weâll both have calmed down, heâll climb into bed, Iâll spoon him, and heâll layer his hands with mine, our signal to each other that everything will be fine.
I need to relax. Iâm nineteen, and I have money worries and relationship problems. Who doesnât at my age? Iâm too hard on myself. Pike seems fine with me being here, so Iâll continue to pull my weight, and he wonât have cause for complaint.
And worse comes to worse, my father would never turn me away at the door. Everything will be fine. It might not be right now, but it will be.
I smile a little, almost convinced. Looking down at the blue surface of the water, and the white light illuminating the clean bottom of the pool, I feel a sudden urge to prove it.
I can do it.
Everything will be fine.
And I take a deep breath, close my eyes, and leap, pushing myself off the edge and into the water. Bubbles pour out of my mouth as I release air and sink to the bottom of the pool. My hair floats around me, the water caressing my scalp, and the flannel billows up as I cross my legs and sit on the floor of the pool.
I donât know when I started doing this. I didnât grow up with a pool, of course, but maybe it was summer camp when I was twelve or Cam taking me to the public pool as a kid that I realized how scared I could get of the unknown. I like to challenge that part of myself, because it boosts my confidence when I succeed.
Taking my laundry down to the seedy basement at the old apartment by myself. Sleeping in the dark without even the hall light on. Driving home at two oâclock in the morning after a shift and not checking the backseat to make sure Iâm alone in the car.
I look around, twisting my head and seeing nothing but water, but my vision only takes me so far and the view fogs into nothing. Anything could come swimming out of the distance and toward me. Anything could be behind me. Anything could come up from the drain or dive in from the surface.
I close my eyes.
If I can do this, Cole and I will be fine. Everything will be good, and Iâll just keep trucking.
My lungs start to ache, but I keep my eyes closed and remain still. Something is staring at me. And thereâs something slinking through the water, heading straight for me. I feel it. Itâs coming for me.
I know itâs my fear, so I keep my eyes shut, pressing on. I know everything will be fine. Itâs my imagination.
I can do it. I can do it. My lungs stretch painfully, and my throat burns, but I squeeze my fists. Just another second. One more second.
But suddenly, the water shakes around me, and I pop my eyes open, knowing that itâs not my imagination this time. I look up and see Pike just as heâs reaching out for me. He grabs me under my arms, and I bat at him, shaking my head.
My lungs are done, though, and I canât take anymore. Pushing him away through the water, I plant my feet on the bottom of the pool and push off, shooting for the surface.
I break through, coughing with hair plastered to my face. I hear him spit water out next to me.
âWhat the hell are you doing?â I growl.
âI thought you were drowning! What the hell? What were you doing?â
I cough again, wheezing as I draw in a lungful of air. âFacing my fears. Damn,â I grumble as I swim for the edge.
âAre you okay?â
âIâm fine.â I swing my arm up and over the ledge, my muscles weak from the scare he just gave me.
âAre you sure?â
He hauls himself up and climbs out of the pool, reaching out a hand for me to take.
I ignore it and the question, pushing myself up to sit on the edge again.
If he saw me go into the water, then I guess he was probably wondering what I was doing there, but stillâ¦
I almost beat the challenge.
The shirt hangs on me, heavy and wet, but I canât take it off. Thereâs nothing on underneath. I cough again, clearing my throat and catching my breath. He stands next to me, quiet.
âI heard you and Cole fighting,â he finally says.
From outside? Great.
He squats down next to me, facing the water, too. I canât imagine what he must be thinking. Iâm fighting with his son, and then Iâm diving fully-clothed into a pool. Yeahâ¦
I take a deep breath, making sure to calm my tone to ease him. âI make deals with myself,â I say to him but donât meet his eyes. âIf I can do something I donât want to do, then everything will be fine. If I do something that scares me, then I can beat whatever else comes.â I half-smile. âI donât like to swim alone. It creeps me out. Especially at night.â
I finally turn my gaze on him. Heâs staring down at the pool, listening.
âItâs a game I play with myself,â I tell him.
He nods, understanding.
âCole doesnât want me here,â I say, dropping my eyes as needles stab my throat. âI donât think he wants me at all anymore.â
I donât know why Iâm telling him this, but he listens. On the rare occasions we have talked, he seems to want to hear. Itâs easy with him.
âHeâs young,â he explains. âWe all do and say selfish things when we think we own the world.â
âDo I?â I shoot back.
I mean, Iâm no angel, but I know I treat Cole better than he treats me.
Pike doesnât say anything, but I can see him looking at me.
Iâm a pushover. I walked away from my ex and my parents, but I never let them have it. I never fought back. I just ran.
Aside from my sister, Cole is all I have, and I let shit slide, because he was more to me than just a boyfriend.
âCan I ask you a question?â Pike says.
I glance at him, my heart skipping a beat at seeing his eyes cast down and locked on me. The reflection of the water makes them look cloudy blue.
âHow did you and Cole meet?â he asks.
And despite my aggravation, I smile a little.
My eyes drop to the scar on my thumb, and I lick my lips. âWhen I was sixteen, I worked at a car wash,â I tell him. âNo other girls worked there, but it was all I could find, so I gutted it out with a team full of guys.â
I feel the heat from his body next to me, and I time the rise and fall of his chest, finding myself matching it.
âI got a lot of crap,â I continue, remembering the snide comments every time I bent over or leaned into a car. âTeenage guys can beâ¦â
âYeah,â Pike finishes for me knowingly, humor in his voice. We exchange a grin.
He used to be a teenage guy, too, after all, I guess.
âThere was a guy named Nick who always got people off my back,â I go on, remembering. âHe was nice to me and talked to me. He didnât leer or act immature.â
I absently rub my finger over the scar.
âOne day he invites me to hang out, and he brings Cole along.â I look over at Pike, the anger from earlier suddenly gone now. âWe all became friends, had a lot of fun, and I think I became closer to them than I have been to anyone. Except my sister, that is.â
He nods, looking like heâs thinking. And then he asks, âAnd you and Cole started dating? How did Nick take that?â
I turn my eyes back out at the pool, taking in a deep breath. âHe never knew,â I say quietly.
Pike remains quiet, the tension in the air thick now. I said he never knew. Not he doesnât know.
I clear my throat. âOne night, a couple years ago, before Cole and I were seeing each other,â I tell him. âHe and Nick were out together. Cole had too much to drink, and he passed out. Nick caught a ride home with someone else.â
Tears prick the backs of my eyes, and my mouth is so dry.
âThe driver lost control of his truck, it rolled, and all the kids in the back of the bed went tumbling out.â
âOh, my God,â he says under his breath, dropping his head.
I finish. âNick was caught under. He died a couple days later.â
I squeeze my fists to try to keep from crying. He was the only person I knew who died. It wasnât like my mom leaving. Nick didnât want to go. He lived for video games, and his hair was always hanging over his glasses, and I miss all of his quirks.
Sometimes I wonder what happened to his little brotherâs Nerf gun that we all used and all skinned our thumbs on.
âJesus Christ,â Pike mumbles. âHow did I not know about that? I faintly remember hearing something, but I didnât know Cole was friends with anyone in that accident.â
I sit up straight and nod. âYeah, Coleâ¦â I pause, trying to find my words. âHe had a hard time getting over it.â
Pikeâs eyes narrow on me.
âHe was supposed to be Nickâs ride that night,â I explain.
Realization crosses his face, and Iâm sure he feels like he should know all this, but it makes sense Cole wouldnât tell many people. He was ashamed.
âWe didnât let each other out of our sight after that,â I tell him.
I was hurting, Cole was hurting, and I was the only one who knew why he felt responsible, so I was the only one he could talk to.
And after a while, it just became habit. Us, side by side. Us, turning to each other. Us, wanting what was familiar, constant, and safe.
Us, holding onto Nick by holding onto each other. We both found ourselves desperate for one true friend. He and I hurting over Nick, but also me just getting away from my ex-boyfriend. It was so easy to dive into each other and escape. So easy.
âIâm so sorry, Jordan,â Pike says. âAre you okay?â
I peer up at him.
âSorry.â He falters, looking away. âItâs stupid to ask that now, I guess.â
No, not stupid at all. Itâs nice to have someone to talk to.
âEverythingâs fine. Or it will be,â I say. âIt has to be.â
He darts his gaze to me again, and I gesture to the pool.
âI sat at the bottom of a dark pool with my eyes closed until I couldnât hold my breath anymore. It has to be okay now, right?â I ask.
He snorts, his mouth turning up in a grin.
He rises and holds out his hand again, and this time I take it. He pulls me up, and we head for the house, but I notice the candle still burning on the wooden table.
Darting over, I lean across the table, close my eyes, and blow, the candle extinguishing. Turning back, I follow him up the steps.
âCan I ask you another question?â he prods.
âShoot.â
âWhy do you do that?â He glances back at me.
âWhat?â
âThe closing-your-eyes-to-blow-out-a-candle thing,â he explains. âIâve seen you do it a few times now.â
I shrug, not realizing heâd noticed. I thought Iâd gotten pretty good at doing it quickly and under the radar.
âJust a quirk.â I follow him through the screen door. âBirthday wishes donât always come true, so I donât waste a chance when I blow out a candle.â