Welcome to the Dark Side: Chapter 31
Welcome to the Dark Side: A Forbidden Romance (The Fallen Men Book 2)
The light cominâ in through the slatted curtains fell in fat grey fragments across the hospital bed, highlightinâ the gold of Louâs hair but shadowinâ the beauty of her face. I leaned back in the chair with my broad back pressed uncomfortably to the rigid plastic contours and raked a hand through my hair.
It was hard to look at her as she was, curled up and frail in a white room stripped of all personality. It was embarrassinâ, avoiding a bedridden face, like racism or sexism, any-ism. But I couldnât wrap my mind âround the fact that my girl had cancer.
Again.
And that she hadnât told me about it in the fuckinâ first place.
It had taken five hours of ridinâ my bike through coastal back roads to figure out where sheâd been cominâ from.
âCause she had a point.
If sheâd told me about the cancer from the get-go, thereâs no way I woulda let myself go there with her. I wouldnâtâa kissed, fucked or held her like she was my woman.
I woulda coddled her, told her to take care of herself and maybe watched from afar, like Iâd done the first four months after seeinâ her again at that party.
And then Lou wouldnât be mine.
That was somethinâ even harder to wrap my head âround.
Because that girl lying in that bed was mine the way a sculpture created by an artist was his. Iâd formed her soft clay shape with my words then cast it in copper with my hands and finally sheâd settled in her current shape. A little warrior rebel with the soul of an angel in the body of a sinner.
A contradiction and the most beautiful one ever born in nature.
A nurse came in with a soft, nervous smile at the huge biker sittinâ in his leather cut beside the bed of a teenager. She checked the machines and glanced at me like she wanted to ask for a minute alone to do something to Lou a man shouldnât see.
The plastic chair screeched as I pushed it back.
The woman watched me as I dipped down to place my hand across Louâs damp forehead and press a kiss to her cheek. âBe back.â
I walked the white corridors with my hands shoved deep in my pockets and my shoulders at my ears.
To occupy myself, I went to the vending machine âcause Iâd forgotten lunch in my quest to find Lou.
Took the side staircase and found it had that stale dead and dyinâ smell.
Counted the stairs as I took âem two by two.
Lingered over my choice of drinkâtea or coffee, milk or sugarâwhen I only ever drank coffee black.
Kicked my boot against the vending machine while it poured my drink then thrummed my fingers against my thigh when it took too long.
Anything to keep myself from thinkinâ about my little Lou up in that hospital bed sick and wrong with somethinâ I was helpless to fight.
I grabbed the coffee and took the stairs back up at a clip, reachinâ her room with a head fulla panic like somethinâ couldâve gone wrong in the three minutes I wasnât by her side.
The nurse was still there. Her startled expression collapsed with empathy when she caught the fear in me.
âSheâs good for now. Just got a little dehydrated. Weâre giving her fluids and after some rest, she should be just fine.â
âThanks,â I grunted, movinâ around to sit in that fuckinâ orange chair again.
I pulled it right up to her bed and took her hand.
The nurse left quiet.
I was lucky Betsy had been on staff that day or else I wouldnâtâa been allowed in when I found out Lou was even there. Iâd spent two hours thinkinâ worse, that the Nightstalkers had got âer or sheâd been hit by a car or some shit.
Itâd been her ex-boyfriend of all fuckinâ people who called H.R. to tell her that Louâd been taken away from school in an ambulance. No surprise that the kid knew âbout us at that pointâeveryone in Entrance fuckinâ didâbut I had to give the kid some grudging respect for pickinâ up the phone for his ex like that.
Itâd been Betsy whoâd had to deal with me when I started yellinâ at the bitches in reception who wouldnât tell me where my girl was.
It was Bets whoâd told me that Lou had Hodgkinâs Lymphoma again.
Loulou stirred slightly, unpeelinâ her heavy eyes to reveal those true blue eyes I loved so fuckinâ much.
âYouâre here,â she croaked.
I nodded, pulling our tangled hands against my mouth to give hers a kiss. âWouldnât be anywhere else.â
Tears wet those eyes and made my heart clench.
âEven though I seriously suck?â
I grinned despite the turmoil in my fuckinâ gut. âYeah, Lou, even when you seriously suck.â
She closed her eyes and dragged in a shaky breath. âThank God.â
âTold ya you were stuck with me,â I reminded her.
She grinned like that was the best thing sheâd ever heard. âCan you get up here with me?â
I eyed the little bed skeptically, which had her laughinâ.
âIâll lean up and you can sit behind me? Please, Iâm cold and all I want is you all around me.â
Immediately, I let go of her hand and gently helped her scoot forward so I could settle myself against the raised back of the bed and pull her against my chest. She rearranged the blankets against us and carefully pulled the tubes in her hands out from underneath them.
âSorry I didnât tell you,â she whispered as she tucked my arms tighter around her body.
I pressed my lips to her hair. âForget about it. I know now.â
âWhat does this mean for us?â she asked, her voice girlish with fear.
That fear wrapped cold fingers around my heart and squeezed like a motherfucker.
âNothinâ. Youâre still my girl and Iâm still your man. You need anythinâ, Iâm here for you. That includes puke clean up, pickinâ up drugs at the pharmacy, all that kinda shit. It also means you need someone to sit in the hospital with ya and your parents are too fuckinâ selfish to do it themselves, all the better for me âcause Iâm gonna be here every fuckinâ time.â
She sighed into me, settling warm and contented as a cat when I stroked a hand over her hair.
âI might lose it, you know,â she muttered.
My hand stilled on the masses of gold silk. âFuck, baby.â
âYou might not want me. Cancer isnât a pretty illness, Z.â
I gripped her chin and tilted it up âtil I could look into those scared eyes. Pressed a warm kiss to her lips and said, âDonât be a fuckinâ dumbass.â
âI might die,â she whispered even softer.
âYou might,â I agreed âcause I wanted to be honest with her but the thought had daggers shootinâ between each of my ribs, all angled at my heart.
âDo you think Iâll go to heaven?â she asked me.
âFuck yeah, which sucks for me.â
She shifted between my legs, tippinâ her head up so she could look past my bearded jaw and into my eyes. âYou going to explain that to me?â
I reached out to rub one callused thumb along the plump curve of her lower lip, my concentration so intense it felt like my eyes burned. âYou asked me any day âfore I met you, I woulda said there was no fuckinâ chance Iâd get into heaven. A man like me havinâ done the things I did, things I needed to do? Fuck no.â
When she tried to protest, I pressed my thumb harder against her lush mouth and felt my face turn to fuckinâ stone. âNow, I ainât makinâ you any promises here, little warrior, but if your fine ass is going to heavenâand it fuckinâ well isâIâll find a way to get there too. If I gotta move into that fuckinâ church and pay penance every goddamn hour, Iâll do it. If I gotta give up boozinâ, guns and drug runninâ, Iâll fuckinâ well do it and Iâd do it if it meant I got a place beside my girl behind those pearly gates.â
She bit her lip to keep from cryinâ because she knew I didnât like her tears and then she valiantly tried to lighten the mood. âYouâd probably have to give up cursing too. I think thatâs a pretty tall order.â
âFuck yeah, it is,â I agreed before jerking her even closer to me until we were fused together, until I could feel the reassurinâ beat of her heart against my chest. A heartbeat so much more important than my own. âDo it for you, Lou. Do anythinâ for you.â