I wallowed in my room the rest of the day. I alternated sitting on my balcony, but found no enjoyment in my usual activities. My thoughts kept drifting to Everett, but I kept my phone off, so I could avoid the temptation of seeing if he texted.
The following morning, I was working my shift at the restaurant. Doris was especially grumpy, so I did my best to stay out of her way. I ducked behind the counter, behind the cooks, anything to avoid her wrath.
There was something about me that deeply bothered Doris. Her husband had interviewed and hired me himself and ever since she’d made my cheap nametag with her label maker, Doris had made it her mission to watch me. Waiting for me to slip up.
I was ringing up a customer’s check when Misty, the hostess for that day, walked up to me.
“Who’s the babe at table ten?”
“What?” I asked, not really paying attention. I had to apply a discount to a portion of the customer’s bill and the computer didn’t seem to have the option I was looking for.
“He asked to be seated in your section. Tall, dark, scarily handsome? Ring any bells?”
I whipped my head up so fast that I felt a pop in my neck. My eyes scanned the tables until they landed on him, sitting at table ten and staring at me with his icy eyes. His journal was sitting on the table in front of him and he was wearing his trademark black clothing.
I couldn’t help the heat that warmed my core at the sight of Everett. Knowing what had happened when I’d last seen him, my heart skipped a couple beats and my mouth went dry.
“Boyfriend?” Misty’s voice pulled me from my inappropriate thoughts and I shook my head, tearing my eyes from Everett’s.
“He’s no one,” I answered, and focused my attention on the computer again.
“The way he’s looking at you makes that hard to believe,” Misty said, in her annoying little sing song voice. It was as if anytime I felt a foreign emotion, I reached out, desperately, looking for something to be annoyed about. Annoyance was safer, comfortable. Thanks to Misty, my heart rate was slowing and my brow was now furrowing.
“Yeah, well he’s a guy. They all look at us like a piece of meat.”
Misty’s gum popped in my ear. Keep it up, Misty, I thought. I enjoyed being annoyed.
“Oh my God, he’s coming over here!”
There went my heart again. I kept my eyes focused on the computer, though out of my peripheral vision, I saw him approaching, a tall force of black clothing.
“Parker,” he said. I bit my lip and tried to ignore him. His voice was like his drink: smooth, warm like whiskey. I could get drunk off his words.
He was so, so bad for me.
“Parker,” he repeated. “It’s rude to ignore someone.”
Hell. My lip twitched. Without moving my head, I glanced up through my lashes.
“I’ll get your drink order in a minute,” I said, trying to seem like my attention was on the computer, when it was actually completely on Everett.
He leaned forward, bringing his hands up to clasp on either side of the computer table. “You already know what I want, Parker.”
I felt Misty squeal a little next to me before I shot her a look. She winked at me and then scampered away. I finally looked up at Everett.
He looked tired. He always did. But the lines around his eyes were deeper, the shadows under them more pronounced. His hair was in its usual messy, glorious state and his lips were in a firm line. He looked more than a little impatient.
It annoyed me that he dared look impatiently at me. He was the one who’d kicked me out, and then let me back in. Then he’d helped himself to the pieces of my soul I unwillingly gave.
And plus, he’d reminded me that I had a conscience and made me feel things that were uncomfortable. The feelings he’d instilled in me were like wearing a wool sweater that had been washed and dried hot; they were itchy and they didn’t fit.
“What?” I asked, mirroring his impatience.
“We need to talk.”
I felt my jaw tick. “Nope.”
“Yeah, actually we do.” A second later he gripped my forearm in his hand and all but dragged me outside of the restaurant.
“You’re going to get me fired.”
“Do I look like I care?” he asked, exasperated. We stumbled together off the concrete stoop, onto the sidewalk. The air was annoyingly crisp and the street was mostly deserted. I finally turned my eyes to Everett.
“I don’t know why you would care,” I said, crossing my arms over my chest.
“Don’t be a brat, Parker. What the hell was that last night?”
I looked away, to the right, showing him the side of my face that was scarred. And then I shrugged, feigning indifference. “I need to get back inside before I lose my job.”
“F*ck your job. You don’t care about it. Why invest even a second of your life in things that don’t make you happy?”
I gritted my teeth. “Not all of us have the luxury you do, Everett.” I didn’t speak his name often. Speaking it now felt personal. My stomach rolled.
“What? The luxury of knowing you’re dying? Some f*cking luxury. Sorry for that.” It was the first time he seemed upset about dying and I couldn’t help it; my eyes moved to him, over him. He stalked away for a second, the sound of jingling coins and the smell of rain swirling around him. And then he turned back and pinned me with his icy eyes before stalking towards me.
I couldn’t help it. The way he was approaching was thrilling. My heart sped up and my lips opened in protest. But before I could utter a word, his lips were on mine, hungrily devouring them, devouring me. His hands held my face tightly, held me as if he was afraid I’d run.
He pulled back and breathed hard. His nose was pressed to mine, our lips still touching. I was terrified to open my eyes, so I just held on to his arms.
“You are wasting your life,” he whispered. “Why did you fight so hard to live so little?” He drew in a breath and then blew it across my face. I felt his fingers touch my scar and I flinched. “You fought, Parker. You are a fighter. But right now, you’re a coward.” He pulled away. “Open your eyes.” I did. His eyes were hard, his eyebrows drawn together. “What are you afraid of?”
“Parker,” a voice came from the door. I pulled away from Everett and reluctantly met Doris’ eyes. She stood on the stoop we’d fallen off of, hands on the hips hiding under her greasy apron. “I don’t pay you to lock lips. Get in here.”
I ran my tongue over my teeth. And then I looked at Everett. There was a challenge in his eyes, to prove him right – to prove I was wasting my life working a job I didn’t enjoy, living a meaningless life. To continue working, to continue breathing in the indifference.
I looked at Doris again. “I quit.”
“No you don’t. You’re fired.”
A smile threatened. I looked at Everett and then at Doris again. “Great.”
“You sure showed some balls,” Everett said on the walk home. My hands were tucked into my apron as we moved down the sidewalk.
“Why does everyone think an act of bravery is merely a male trait?” I asked, annoyed. As usual.
“Would it be better if I said you showed some ovaries?”
“Not funny – and no. It would be better if you said nothing.”
“Ouch.” Everett said, exaggeratingly holding a hand over his heart. “Your Native American name would be She Thinks She Wounds With Words.”
That annoyed me, as usual. I narrowed my eyes. “Your Native American name would be Man With Unkempt Hair.”
“You can do better than that,” Everett said, bumping into me from the side. I walked further out of his reach. “You did a number with your words two nights ago.”
My mind had replayed my words to him over and over, on a continuous loop. “It was the truth. You appreciate the truth.”
“I do,” he nodded. “But what you said? It didn’t bother me. You’ll have to try harder than that to hurt me.”
“Why would I want to hurt you? I don’t care about you, one way or another.”
He clicked his tongue. “Parker, I thought we’d established that I preferred the truth. You’re not very good at the lying thing.”
This conversation was elevating my annoyance with each one of his comments. “I barely know you,” I protested, careful to keep my voice even. “You’re just some guy who hangs around me like a lost puppy.”
“And yet, you met me at the bar. And you came to the restaurant the next morning, and you came to me for lunch later that day. And then you came to my house for dinner the next night. Who’s chasing who, Parker?”
My jaw was clenched so hard I was sure I was going to crack my teeth into tiny bits. I was unused to conversation, especially with a man who made me feel. It kept me off balance. Cloaking myself in indifference was impossible around Everett. I stopped suddenly and turned to him. “You’re an a*shole,” I said, looking him square in the eye. “Just because you say things that are true, it doesn’t make you an admirable person. Some people need to hear a lie.”
Everett motioned his hands in a circle. “Tell me more, tell me all of it Parker.” He looked amused, patronizing. And it only made me madder.
“You dare to call me a coward, when you’re the one who is giving up on life. How dare you tell me how to live, when you’re dying?” My voice had raised several octaves, but I wasn’t done. “You’re dying, Everett. Wake up.” I pushed a finger into his chest. “You’re a drunk, you don’t value the women you sleep with, and you stick your nose in business that isn’t yours.”
Everett walked towards me, invading the few feet that had separated us. “So let me get this straight. You think I’m an a*shole. Yep, I am. Get over it, sweetheart.” He took another step towards me. “You say I’m not admirable because I tell the truth even when it hurts. I agree. But,” he said, his voice lowering, “I don’t care. I don’t tell the truth for admiration. I tell the truth because lies hurt more. Lies wrapped up in pretty words don’t benefit anyone in the end.” He stepped closer and I backed up. “And you don’t know a thing about me, to say I am giving up on life. I spent years of my life fighting this disease. I wasn’t living, not really. And now I am living and I’m dying.” He stepped closer and I stepped back once again. “Don’t you dare criticize how I am spending the final days of my life when you’re not even living.” He brought a hand up and pulled on the hair that lay on my chest. “I am a drunk. You’re correct. But Parker? I always value a woman I sleep with. Charlotte and I are over. We never even really began. And before you assume how I treated her, maybe you should get both sides of the story.”
He tugged the hair hard enough to pull me closer. “I value women, Parker. But you don’t. You don’t value anyone.”
It hurt, the way he spoke to me, the way he invaded my space. But I refused to look away. I met his eyes and stared back. Indifference felt like another planet to how Everett made me feel, and there was no way I could pretend he didn’t affect me.
“And I don’t stick my nose in business that isn’t mine. You gave me the key. Did you expect me not to open the door? Not to find out about Morris Jensen?”
I didn’t know what to say.
“Listen,” he continued in the silence. “You think you hurt me with the things you say? You don’t. Nothing can hurt me. That’s the beauty of my death sentence.”
He was only making me madder. It bothered me that he could hurt me and I couldn’t hurt him back. “Why are you so focused on me then?”
Everett smiled and looked down at my hair in his hand. He twirled one of the waves around, twisting it and letting go. “Because I’m a self-serving bastard. Don’t get me wrong, I want to help you. But I also want to hurt you. I want to break you. I want to see you live.” He looked back at me. “I’m stuck on you, unfortunately. And my conscience won’t let me leave this earth seeing you live so half-heartedly.”
I sucked in air. I couldn’t breathe. “What if I like the way I live?”
“Ha,” he laughed humorlessly. “That’s just it – you aren’t living. And if you liked this life, you wouldn’t have asked me that question. You’d have told me to f*ck off.”
“F*ck off.”
“Too late now. I’m stuck on you. Which means you’re stuck with me.”
I slapped his hand from my hair and turned, walking down the sidewalk away from him.
“Not running away from me this time, Parker,” he said, catching up with me.
“Go away.”
“No.”
He made me angry. I wanted to hurt him. “I don’t even like you!” I yelled, turning to him, my fists balled with rage.
“You don’t have to like me.” He grabbed one of my fists and brought it to his chest, pulling me close. “But something about me gets to you. I can hear it in the noise you make when I get close to you. I see the look in your eyes, a combination of desire and fear.”
I tried pulling my hand from his, but he held tight. I yanked harder and he reached out, grabbing my other fist and pulling them both into him, pulling me so we were inches apart. I stopped fighting. “What do you want from me?” I asked, defeated.
“Come with me on the road trip.” There wasn’t even a moment’s hesitation.
“You barely know me,” I protested.
“You barely know me,” he replied.
I shook my head. “Why?”
“I want you to.”
I furrowed my brow. “That’s it?” I asked incredulously.
“Yep. Men aren’t complicated creatures, Parker. And we mean what we say. So come on, humor me. Come on the road trip. If you want to return home at any point, I’ll buy your plane ticket.”
I fidgeted. I couldn’t help it, but I did want to go on this road trip. And a bigger, scarier, part of me wanted to be around Everett as much as possible. If he thought he could make me value my life, maybe I could make him fight for his. Both were a losing battle, but the words fell from my mouth a moment later. “Okay.”
“Okay?” he asked.
“Yeah, fine.”
“Whoa, don’t sound too thrilled, please.” He let go of one of my hands and I brought it to my chest, self-consciously. “Just promise me something,” he said, a laugh on the edge of his voice. I looked at him and cocked my head to the side in question. “Don’t fall in love with me.”
I laughed. For the first time in years, I actually laughed. It sounded rusty and maniacal. But I actually laughed. My eyes bugged out of my head and I slapped both hands over my mouth.
Everett was looking at me curiously. “That sounded like a dying cat.”
I cleared my throat and removed the hands covering my mouth. “You’re rude.”
“I am, and your laugh is f*cking awful.”
“Yeah, well don’t worry, I’m not in danger of falling in love with you.”
He nodded. “Good.”
We resumed walking when a thought suddenly occurred to me. “Wait. Do you have a reliable car for this road trip? Mine is, well, not reliable.”
Everett scoffed, “Like taking your car was even a remote possibility. I don’t think you can actually call that piece of shit a car.”
“It is a car.”
“Don’t you mean ‘cars’?”
I narrowed my eyes. “Yes, actually, it’s two cars welded together. It still runs.”
“Really?” he asked.
I kicked a pebble on the sidewalk and looked down, avoiding looking at him. “Well, not right now apparently.”
“Like I said, piece of shit.”
“Like I said, you’re rude.”
“Are you in love with me yet?”
“Not even close.”