Home > The Problem with Peace(46)

The Problem with Peace(46)
Author: Anne Malcom

“I’ll follow you,” he continued. “I’d appreciate it if you don’t drive like a maniac in order to make it easier for both of us.”

I almost laughed. Easier for the both of us would require Doc Brown and an industrial amount of plutonium.

“I don’t drive like a maniac,” I said, finally lifting my eyes up and pulling my keys out of my purse.

He was staring at me with folded arms and the designated ‘tough guy’ stance with slightly widened legs. An eyebrow raised from beneath his sunglasses was his only response.

I huffed, hating that yet another thing he somehow knew about me was that I’d failed my driving test three times. Because I’d told him, in the middle of the night, or the day, in that everlasting weekend we’d spent tangled up in bed and in each other.

“Whatever,” I snapped. “I’ll endeavor to do everything I can to make this easier for you.” The attitude in my voice surprised me.

It must’ve surprised Heath too, because something flickered in his expression. He opened his mouth like he was going to say something, finally step all over the emotional eggshells we’d been pretending to be walking on. He closed it again. Took a visible breath.

“Much obliged,” he said and turned on his heel and walked toward his black SUV.

I watched him for far too long, checked out his ass when I shouldn’t have and then I got in my car.

 

“You said you weren’t gonna drive like a maniac,” a voice clipped at the same time my driver’s door was wrenched open.

“I didn’t,” I protested.

Heath stepped back in order for me to get out of the car. It was almost comical how much unnecessary distance he put between us in order to make sure there was no accidental brushing of our skin.

“You almost hit three cyclists, two buses and a BMW,” he said, voice tight.

I sighed. “Almost, but did not hit,” I clarified. “Maniacs hit things. Therefore I am not one.”

He did not appreciate this. “You ran three red lights.”

“They had an orange tinge.”

I locked my car, banishing my keys back into the depths of my purse and then bracing myself for another day—another moment—of Heath.

A grip on my hand paused my movements. Paused my fricking heart. Because it was Heath’s grip. Heath’s hand on my arm. And it wasn’t gentle, it was tight and almost violent, as was the movement that yanked me around to face him.

At some point, he’d shoved his sunglasses onto his head. The unobstructed view of his eyes hit me square in the chest. There was fury in them. Pure and utter rage.

“You drive like you bowl through life,” he accused. “Full of almost hitting things, near misses, almost disasters. You’ve been lucky, so far, Polly. But no one is lucky forever. The world doesn’t give almosts forever. One day, you’re gonna fuckin’ crash. I’m not gonna let you do that to yourself. So get your fuckin’ shit together and drive like you actually value your fucking life.”

“I do value my life,” I hissed back.

“Could’ve fooled me.”

I yanked my hand back from his, despite the fact his grip felt like home. “That’s the problem, Heath, I can’t fool you.”

And I pretended I didn’t see the emotion on his face before I turned around and stormed toward the hospital entrance.

 

We didn’t speak for the rest of the day. Which was good, since I didn’t know if I’d surprised another verbal assault from Heath.

He wasn’t pulling punches.

Wasn’t being gentle with my feelings.

But then again, I hadn’t been gentle with his when I’d married another man. So maybe I deserved it.

He had followed me silently from the car. He was my ghost in every sense of the word. Apart from the fact he was flesh and blood, of course.

But it didn’t really matter, he could’ve been incorporeal for all the difference it made. It’s not like I was going to touch him, kiss him, ever again.

So why was that all I could think about today? Even when I was reading to my kids in the rooms of the hospital? Even when I spent longer holding Ella’s hand—the little girl with leukemia who was still too ill to gather with the rest of the children in the reading room.

Even when I went out to get my favorite nurses donuts and the good coffee because I knew that their breaks weren’t long enough to leave the hospital. They were barely long enough to suck down bitter, scalding hot vending machine coffee and slurp some instant noodles.

I was supposed to be finished at the hospital at three, but it wasn’t until six that I was walking out the door. That we were walking out the door.

Heath had been a silent shadow.

Until the kids talked to him and every ounce of his ice melted with them. He smiled, he laughed. Told jokes. He transformed.

It was utterly beautiful.

And it somehow turned ugly and rancid on my insides. Not because I was jealous of those little children getting a part of Heath I’d never get, no, I was glad they got that. No, it was for an entirely different reason.

A reason that sent a conversation from six years ago hurtling into the forefront of my mind.

“Can I ask you something?”

“I thought we’d discussed that you don’t have to ask me to ask a question,” he replied, voice light and teasing.

I smiled into his chest. “Oh, yes, well my mind has been somewhat occupied since then.”

The tenderness between my thighs served as a beautiful reminder of this.

I didn’t think anyone in the history of the world had been introduced to sex as thoroughly and as often as I had in the course of this weekend.

I was talking to try to chase away the ever lighting of the previously pitch black sky. I usually liked sunrises. Loved them. As a girl who slept little, I was usually always up to see them, to welcome a new day, a new adventure.

I didn’t want a new day.

And no adventure could top the weekend I spent with Heath.

I didn’t want it to.

But it would.

Every day had a sunrise. And it just so happened the one coming in a handful of hours was going to signal the end of something bigger than the fricking sun itself.

To me, anyway.

Hence me trying to distract myself. Trying to fill myself up with as much knowledge about this man as I possibly could.

“Does everything you went through as a kid make you not want one?” I whispered.

His arms tightened around me. “Fuck no,” he said. “My parents controlled me when I was helpless. Until I got old enough that I didn’t let them. They don’t get that. They don’t get to take that shit away when they’ve already taken shit from me to turn me into what I am now. I want kids. Want a chance to be the father I never got. Give my sons and daughters the mother I never got. Want a family, ‘cause I never had one. Want to make a life I never had. Not gonna continue any fuckin’ cycle.”

I blinked away tears at his words. That didn’t work. They fell onto his bare chest.

He clutched my chin, bringing my head up to face him even though he couldn’t see me in the dim moonlight. His thumb wiped at the wetness on my cheek. “You don’t need to cry for my past, Sunshine. ‘Specially when my present is this fucking great.”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)