I threw my leather jacket on the chair in the corner and dug my cell phone out of my pocket, gazing through the forest of leaves to her darkened bedroom. No light, no movement, and no sound came from the house, but she had to be there. Her car was in the driveway.
Dialing her phone, I instantly caught sight of a small light—like a flickering star in a black sky—coming through the tree from her room. Her cell phone.
I watched as it flashed on and off with my rings, and then it went to voice mail, unanswered.
I squeezed my own phone, her silence hurting more than I wanted to admit. Tossing the phone onto the bed, I took off my shoes and socks and lifted up my window, slipping out, one arm and one leg at a time. I pressed my weight on the tree limbs, judging their strength.
After the damage done by the attempted cutting, I wasn’t sure how weak the tree might be or how much heavier I might have gotten since the last time I’d climbed into her room.
Holding on to a limb above me, the familiar feel of the bark under my fingers comforting me, I stepped across the limb we’d sat on the first time we met each other and the limb she’d scraped her leg on when she was thirteen when she slipped.
Reaching her French doors, I swung them open, stepped on the railing, and leaped onto her floor.
She bolted up in bed, breathing hard, with fresh tears covering her face. She looked confused and shocked as she supported herself with her arms on the bed behind her.
“Jared?” Her voice cracked as she sniffled. “What the hell are you doing?”
I took in the sight of her pained eyes, the tears reaching her chin telling me she’d been crying for a while.
God, she killed me.
Her sadness used to give me power, making me strong. Now it just felt like a pair of pliers pinching my heart.
Her light blue tank top hugged every curve, and from the sliver of pink and thigh where the sheet didn’t cover her, I could tell she was in her underwear. Her sunshine hair was parted on the side and fell over her chest in beautiful perfection. Even crying, she was the most perfect creature on the planet.
And just like twelve years ago when we’d sat next to each other in the tree for the first time, and I’d seen her sad about losing her mom recently, I didn’t care who stood in my way or what I needed to do.
I just needed to be in her life.
“I heard about your dad,” I told her. Every part of my body had relaxed, because this is where I was supposed to be.
She looked away, her defiant little chin lifting. “I’m fine.”
I instantly walked toward the bed and leaned down, gently turning her chin back to me and putting my forehead to hers.
“I’m never letting you go again, Tate,” I whispered, almost desperate. “I’m your friend forever, and if that’s all I get, then that’s what I’m taking, because only when you’re here”—I took her hand and placed it on my heart—“do I feel like my life is worth a damn.”
Her eyes pooled with more tears, and her chest rose and fell faster.
I cupped her face, rubbing circles on her wet cheek with my thumb. “Just let it go, babe. You wanna cry? Then, let it go.”
She looked up at me, the tears in her eyes shaking as she searched mine, and I hoped like hell that she could find some trace of the boy who loved her unconditionally.
And then, as if seeing it, she sucked in a breath, closed her eyes, and dropped her head, shaking with her despair and letting it all go.
I sat down and pulled her into my chest, lying down and holding her tight enough to convey that I would hold her forever if she wanted me to.
Her head rested in the crook where my arm met my shoulder, and her hand lay hesitantly on my stomach as she shuddered with the tears. I brought up my legs and just held her, suddenly warm with the realization that nothing had changed. I’d first shared a bed with her about ten years ago—two kids finding an anchor in each other when life had thrown us too many storms—and lying here, with the familiar shadows of the tree’s leaves dancing across the ceiling, I felt as if it was yesterday.
She sniffled and wound her hand all the way around my waist. I rubbed circles on her back.
“It’s so stupid,” she mumbled, the ache making her voice thick. “I should be happy, shouldn’t I?”
I just kept rubbing.
She inhaled a short, shaky breath. “I like Miss Penley, and my dad won’t be alone,” she cried. “Why can’t I be happy?”
“Because you love your mom,” I said, taking my other hand and lightly brushing the hair away from her face. “And because it’s been just you and him for a long time. It’s hard when things change.”
She tipped her head up and looked at me, her eyes still wet and sad but calmer now.
I caressed her face. “Of course you’re happy for your dad, Tate.”
“What if he forgets my mom?”
“How could he?” I retorted. “He has you.”
She looked at me, her eyes softening, and I pulled her in closer, tucking her head under my chin. Threading my fingers through her soft hair, I grazed her scalp and then dragged my hand down the strands over and over again.
Her body relaxed into mine, slowly melting like it always did.
“You know I turn dumb when you do that,” she grumbled, but I noticed the drowsy tease in her tone.
I closed my eyes, loving the feel of her slender leg sliding up over the top of mine.
“I remember,” I whispered. “Now go to sleep. Tatum.”
I might’ve heard her say, “Asshole,” but I couldn’t be sure.
Chapter 10
Tate
Cheesecake.
I flopped onto my back, the pillow under my head feeling as soft as a cloud in a Disney sky after sleeping so well, and I was strangely desperate for cheesecake.
Sweet and creamy and heavenly, and I swallowed, suddenly starving to indulge.
What the . . . ?
I glanced over at the other pillow—empty, but the remnants of his body wash had lingered, and I was glad he was gone. The smell that he’d left behind was so succulent that my mouth was watering for chocolate-covered cherries, champagne, cheesecake, and . . .
Him. God, I was hungry.