Yours Truly: Chapter 14
Yours Truly (Part of Your World #2)
When I got home, Alexis was sitting on the porch swing in front of my house.
âWhat are you doing here?â I said, closing my car door. âI thought you werenât coming until tomorrow!â I ran to hug her.
âIâm staying the night,â she said with her chin over my shoulder, her pregnant belly pressed into mine. âFigured you needed emotional support. Jessica came down today to do a free clinic at my office and she mentioned something about the forest reclaiming the land?â
I laughed and let her go.
âYou all right?â she asked, eyeing me.
I sighed. âIâm fine. Sort of.â
As fine as anyone could be on the eve of their divorce.
Tomorrow was the nineteenth. It was finally here. D-day. Iâd planned on working and acting like it was any other Wednesday. Iâd told Alexis numerous times over the last two weeks not to come. But she came anyway.
I loved her for it.
She looked great. Her red hair was in a ponytail, and she had on a dark green fitted T-shirt and jeans. Small baby bump. No makeup. Everything about her was relaxed. So different than she used to be, back before Daniel. I was also different than I used to be, but not in a good way.
She grabbed a duffel from the swing bench and a brown paper bag. âI brought you muffins,â she said. âI made them from scratch.â
âOf course you did. Youâre a country girl now. Did you churn your own butter?â
She laughed. âShut up,â she said, following me in.
Justin, Bennyâs friend, met us at the door on his way out.
âHey,â I said, surprised and happy that someone was here.
âHey.â
Benny was in the living room behind him on the sofa. He looked up at Alexis with that flat expression he always wore these days before staring blankly at the TV again.
âDid you guys have a good day?â I asked Justin, my voice hopeful.
He pressed his lips together in a way that meant no.
âWeâre gonna go to GameStop tomorrow, right, buddy?â Justin called over his shoulder.
Benny didnât answer. Justin looked back at me as if to say, This is how he was all day.
âThanks for trying,â I said quietly.
âYeah. Of course.â He glanced at Benny again. âWeâll try again tomorrow.â
Justin was a good friend. Brad too. The three of them were tight. Justinâs dad had died a few years ago and Benny and Brad had been there for him during that, and now the guys were here for Benny. Both had been tested to see if they were a kidney match. All of Bennyâs friends had. But after that, they started to drop off one at a time. With the exception of Justin and Brad, no one else really came around anymore. I was infinitely grateful to the ones who did.
Justin left. I put Alexis into the guest room, and then we went to set Benny up on dialysis. Alexis helped me get him situated. We spoke without saying a word the whole time. After ten years of working together plus med school, we had our own language. She was concerned about him.
His physical deterioration had to be shocking for her. Heâd lost at least thirty pounds in the six months since sheâd last seen him. He was in shorts. His legs were so thin they looked like ropes with knots in the middle. He hadnât shaved, his eyes were sunken. Heâd barely said two words to us the whole time we were setting him up.
Alexis made eye contact with me while she checked his blood pressure. It was the same look she gave me back when we worked together, the one that meant we needed to discuss the patient in private.
I had to look away from her.
I hated that this was the state of things now. That I didnât have a better life to show her, happy news to share. That she had to come here because I was going to be divorced tomorrow and she didnât want me to be alone and then when she got here, this was my life. This old, worn-down house, my sick brother. My broken heart.
It was pathetic.
I peered around my living room, trying to focus on anything other than my best friendâs worried gaze and my languishing patient, but the rest of the scene wasnât any betterâthe ugly, tired couch, the brown shag carpet, the fucking cat tree.
A sudden surge of despair washed over me.
There were times when my protective shield cracked down the middle. When the anger parted and the sad seeped through. I hated when it did. At least when I stayed mad, the emotion was directed outward and not in. But it was too heavy today. The feelings collapsed onto me and I broke.
I pretended I needed to go get a blanket for Benny in the linen closet and excused myself. The second I got around the corner I stopped in the hallway and burst into muffled tears.
What was my fucking life? How had I ended up here?
Everything had gone wrong.
Once the tears started, I just couldnât get them to stop. It was an avalanche. A tidal wave. Proof that I really, really wasnât okay.
Nick.
It was over. It was officially over.
I didnât want to celebrate my divorce. I didnât want to pop champagne or hit the town and act like I was happy to be done with my marriage. I wasnât happy. I was living a nightmare. Some alternate reality that I was never supposed to know.
Nick and I were supposed to grow old together. It was good. We were happy.
But I just wasnât her.
I think I always knew something was there. She was his partner at work. Theyâd never dated. She had a boyfriend when I met Nick and then she had a husband. We went to BBQs at each otherâs houses, we went on couplesâ trips together. I liked her. She was my friend.
And now I saw the truth I couldnât recognize then.
I saw Nick at her wedding, drinking more than Iâd ever seen him drink and passing out on the bed in our hotel room, still in his clothes.
I saw them whisper-arguing in the kitchen the night of our ten-year anniversary dinner, and he said it was about work and I believed it because I wanted to believe it. I saw all the times he was moody and distant because I wasnât her and that annoyed him.
It was like finding out you have cancer and finally connecting all the dots and realizing youâve been seeing the symptoms for years and wondering how something so horrible could be something you missed. And now I wondered how Iâd been so stupid. How I didnât know until that day.
Mom was right.
Only an idiot puts all their eggs in a manâs basket. And Iâd given Nick everything. Now I had nothing, not even hope. Because he broke the trust in men that Iâd need to ever be with one again. There wouldnât be a next time for me. There wouldnât be a second husband, another love of my life. There would only ever be this.
âHey. You okay?â Alexis asked gently from behind me.
I turned around, wiping under my eyes. âYeah. Sorry. I justâ¦â
I shook my head, doing my best to regain my composure. âIt just all sort of hit me.â
She reached into the bathroom and pulled some tissues from a box and handed them to me. Then she leaned on the wall opposite me.
âThanks.â I sniffed, dabbing at my eyes.
She waited, peering at me quietly.
I took a deep breath and let it out slowly. âDo you remember teleporting when you were little?â
âWhat?â
âYou know, when you were a kid and youâd fall asleep in the car and your dad would carry you to bed and you wouldnât remember it? Youâd just have a foggy memory of floating through space. And then youâd wake up in bed the next morning not remembering how you got there, but sort of remembering it at the same time?â
She narrowed her eyes like she was thinking. âYeah. Only it was never my dad. It was the nanny. But yeah.â
I sniffed. âMy dad was gone by the time I was eight. I never teleported again after that. There wasnât anyone strong enough to carry me.â I paused for a long moment. âMen have only ever left me, Ali,â I said quietly.
She waited, silent.
âYou never realize youâre living the best time of your life,â I said softly. âIt happens and then it ends, and you only see it for what it was after. I gave Nick the part of me I donât give anyone. I gave him the kind of stupid, innocent love that you can only give before you know better. He got the best of me. And Iâll never find that me again.â
âYes, you willââ
I shook my head. âNo. I wonât. Because Iâll never be that trusting again. Iâll never give myself to someone else with the complete abandon that I did with Nick. I donât have it in me. He was the exception. He was me saying âOkay, so Dad left. But this one wonât. I picked right, not all men are like Dad. This oneâs going to carry me. All my broken pieces.ââ I paused. âAnd he didnât. He did exactly what Mom always warned me that men do. He validated every cautionary tale I grew up hearing. Always have a separate bank account. Make sure your name is on the house. Trust but verify.â I shook my head again. âI didnât listen,â I whispered. âAnd now Iâll never teleport again.â
She looked at me, her eyes sad. âThis isnât your life, Bri. This is just a shitty chapter in your story. You know, I didnât think Iâd ever date again after Neil, but then I found Daniel. There are good men out there, youâll find someone too.â
I scoffed dryly. âThat ship has sailed. I am no longer a reliable source of judgment when it comes to picking men.â I wiped under my eyes and took in a deep breath.
âSpeaking of husbands,â I said, changing the subject. âI canât believe you actually left yours home alone.â
âThe sex is better when Iâm gone for a bit.â
âOh, so now I get why you came to see me. This is foreplay.â
She laughed.
I sighed. âI wish marriage came with an app that makes it so your husbandâs penis only works for one user. Like a phone that only you can unlock? I would have given it to you as a wedding gift.â
âI donât think I have to worry about that with Daniel.â
I nodded. âYouâre probably right. Heâll make a good teleporter one dayâbut just keep a separate bank account. Trust me on this one.â
She smiled. Then she gave me a playful eyebrow. âYou know, Doug is still single.â
I gagged and she cracked up. Her husbandâs crusty best friend had followed me around with a guitar at their wedding.
âIâm not that desperate,â I said. âYet.â
We were giggling at this when the screaming started.
Benny.
Alexis and I looked at each other for a split second before we bolted.
Everything moved in slow motion after that.
Down the hallway, around the corner, into the living roomâI was braced for something awful. A disconnected tube, blood everywhere. But when I got in the room, he was right where we left him, still hooked up to the machine.
He was crying, hysterical.
Alexis and I both darted to his side, going into ER mode, frantically checking wires and screens on the dialysis machine while he screamed.
âWhatâs wrong?â I said, touching dials. âBenny!â
He was so worked up he couldnât even form words.
Alexis shook her head. âThis looks fine. Itâs not the machine.â
I turned to my brother, frantic. âBenny, what is it?!â
And then I saw he wasnât just crying. He was laughing. Manic, high-pitched laughing between sobs.
âZanderâ¦â he managed, looking up at me with tears in his eyes. âHe just calledâ¦Iâ¦I have a donor.â