Chapter 61
Callie
I woke up the next morning to Farrah sitting on the edge of my bed holding a plate full of toaster waffles.
“I’m here to grovel,” she told me with a rueful smile, gesturing with the plate. “I’m not very good at it.”
I gave her a small smile, scooting up in bed so I could lean against the headboard.
“I’ve been a dick,” she said, handing me the food. “I know when I’m being a dick and sometimes it feels like I can’t stop it.”
“I’m sorry I yelled at you last night,” I answered quietly, setting the waffles on my lap. “I was freaked out about Asa and you were in the line of fire.”
“Yeah, but you meant what you said.” She raised her hand when I tried to interrupt. “No. I get it. You’ve stayed here to help me and I’ve been an ungrateful a*shole. I’ll try to do better.”
“I just want you to be okay.” I reached out and squeezed her knee.
“Yeah, I’m running out of skin anyway,” she told me with a shrug. “I need to get a job or something. I can’t live off your food and other people’s booze forever.”
I snorted and started choking.
“Shut up,” she laughed back at me. “I’ll get a job. I’ll figure something out.”
“I know you will,” I gasped, my throat still tickling. “I was more worried about the partying and pin cushion thing you’ve got going.”
“F*ck!” she hissed, falling backward on the bed. “I’m gonna have to take some of these out or I’m never gonna get hired.”
“Do you really care?” I asked seriously.
She raised her head to gape at me. “They hurt like hell and now I have to take them out!”
I started to giggle, my heart feeling lighter than it had in weeks.
“Well, maybe not all of them,” she replied, raising her eyebrows up and down.
We sat on my bed laughing for a few minutes before reality came crashing down with the arrival of Gram at my bedroom door. “Poet,” she mouthed silently, handing my phone to me.
“Hey, Poet,” I answered cautiously.
“Hey, girl. I just wanted to give you an update. Looks like they’ve got Grease on a probation violation. The suit says he should be able to get him out on Monday.”
“That’s days from now!” I argued.
“Shit takes time, darlin’. Don’t you worry; we’ll have your man out soon. You have another phone number?”
“What? No, just this one,” I answered, confused.
“He’s not gonna be able to call, then. Can’t make collect calls to a cell phone—has to be a landline.”
“I can go get one!” I answered almost frantically. “I’ll go today.”
“Saturday, girl. Nothing’s open. Just give it a few days and he’ll be able to call. I’ll let you know if anything else comes up.”
He hung up again without saying goodbye, and I dropped the phone to my lap.
“F*ck,” I whispered, raising my eyes to Farrah and Gram who were waiting. “Probation violation. I don’t even know what that means!”
“Just means they’ll hold him for a few days, maybe longer,” Gram reassured me, sitting down next to me on the bed. “You just worry about you and that baby.”
“I need to go to Oregon,” I responded, flipping my blankets back so I could crawl out of bed.
“What the hell would you do that for?” Gram argued. “Nothing you can do up there that you can’t do down here. You need to just wait until we know how long he’s gonna be there.”
“I can’t just sit here. I feel like I’m going to crawl out of my skin knowing he’s in there.” My nose tingled with tears as I rifled through my dresser, picking out clothes. “I have to do something.”
“Why don’t we go baby shopping?” Farrah piped up from where she was laying, covered by the blankets I’d thrown off. “Plus, you need some new clothes, that shirt is way too small.”
I looked down at the tee I’d put on and pulled at the hem to cover the sliver of belly I was showing. I’d gotten significantly rounder in the last month and I’d had to start wearing yoga pants and leggings constantly because I couldn’t zip my jeans.
“I can wait a little longer before I buy maternity stuff,” I answered, my nose crinkled in distaste. I’d seen some of the shit other ladies at my doctor’s office had been wearing. No, thank you.
“Dude, you’re like the Hulk; you’re busting out of that shit. We need to at least buy you some bigger regular shit—people are already staring because you look like an after school special. No need to look white trash, too,” Farrah told me seriously as she climbed off the bed.
“I’m not white,” I commented drolly as I followed her out of my room.
“Half-white trash then!” she called as she walked into her room and slammed the door behind her.
“It’s nice to have her back,” I said quietly to Gram, putting my arm around her shoulder as we reached the living room.
“It is, but don’t think that girl is all healed up just because she came in all smiles this morning. Nothing’s ever that easy,” she warned. “I’m going to go get my billfold from the house and let Cody know where we’re going.”
I brushed my teeth and hair, but didn’t bother with anything else before sitting down on the couch to wait for Gram and Farrah. I needed a moment, just a moment, to let everything from the last twenty-four hours sink in. The pendulum of my emotions had swung widely the day before, from worry over Asa to complete awe of our son, and I felt like I couldn’t catch my breath.
I hadn’t realized how much I still depended on Asa to feel safe until Poet had told me that he was locked away from me. The entirety of my need for him had come crashing down and I hadn’t known how to deal with it, so I’d picked a fight with Farrah. Our argument had been a long time coming, but I didn’t delude myself into thinking that I’d been angry with her. She was just the tip of the proverbial iceberg, not the solid chunk below the surface.
I felt lost knowing that Asa was unavailable to me, and scared that he was in jail worried out of his mind. I knew he could take care of himself, he’d made that clear on several occasions, but I hated that he’d missed our appointment and was probably beating himself up about it. I desperately wanted him with me.
“Okay, I’m beautiful! You ready?” Farrah called cheerily as she came down the hallway, slinging her purse over her shoulder.
“Who are you?”
“Your cool-as-shit best friend. Now get off your ass and let’s go,” she answered with a smirk.
“Gram got to you, didn’t she?” I asked suspiciously, narrowing my eyes at her.
“She ripped me a new one. It still hurts to sit down,” she told me with a grimace as I laughed. “That old broad knows just how to twist the knife.”
“Ha! You haven’t seen anything yet,” I told her as we walked out of the house and locked the door behind us. “She’s a freaking virago.”
“The hell is that?”
“Callie, stop jabbering and let’s go,” Gram called as if I hadn’t just been waiting on her. I shook my head and smiled as she started down the stairs.
“You need to read more,” I told Farrah teasingly as we jogged down the stairs behind Gram, only pausing slightly as we hit the bottom step. We’d gotten better about ignoring the spot where Echo had been killed, but I knew both of us still felt that jolt of fear whenever we reached the bottom. We could have moved into another place that didn’t make us cringe, but for some reason those shitty-ass apartments made us feel safe. They felt like home.
“Shotgun!” Farrah called as she ran toward my car.
“F*ck you! I’m the pregnant one!” I bitched back as I waddled after her.
God, I’d missed her. Even with my mind swirling with worry over Asa, I was still almost giddy at the thought of shopping for baby things.
And I refused to feel guilty about it.
Gram had been right when she’d spoken her words of wisdom at the doctor’s office the day before.
These moments would only happen once, and I could either let outside forces overshadow the joy I felt about my baby boy, or I could revel in the feeling despite those forces.
I was going to have a son. I chose to revel.