“I get it,” Regan said finally. “I understand.”
Hope. The first he’d felt it since he discovered his journal was missing. That seemed like ages ago. But there it was now—a tiny sprout still curled into itself, nestled snuggly in the soft, warm tissues of his heart. It wasn’t sure of opening completely. It needed more sunshine words from her lips—assurances that she trusted him.
“I would never do those things,” he whispered. A gentle lie. He realized he needed to treat her like a skittish horse. Lots of cooing and verbal petting.
She thought a moment, watching the ground as she drew crude stick figures in the dry dirt: one female, one male. She fought a gender battle in her heart—the feminine part of her wanted to trust him immediately. After all, she pitied him. But the masculine part of her fought against those supple emotions, demanding she scrutinize the evidence and keep feelings out of it.
She glanced at the journal once more, then at Jeremy who sat pulling weeds.
“Why not tell a therapist?” she offered. She immediately regretted the words.
Jeremy snorted but said nothing.
“I . . . I just mean, maybe they could help you work through some of this.” Her face burned. Shut up, already.
“So telling someone all of this instead of writing it down would have changed what exactly?” he asked, looking straight into her eyes.
She wanted to blurt out, “I would have never read it! I wouldn’t be responsible! That’s what would have changed!” But she shook her head instead, keeping her mouth sealed shut.
He knew her thoughts.
“You didn’t have to read it, Regan. If you would have just minded your own business, then you wouldn’t be dealing with this enormous moral issue.” He paused a moment then added, “Moral issue that you completely made up, by the way. I’m not planning on shooting people. They were just words. Words don’t mean anything.”
“Words mean everything,” Regan countered. “What’s the point of them if they mean nothing?”
Jeremy chewed his lip.
“When my dad tells my mom he loves her, does that mean nothing?” Regan persisted.
Jeremy shrugged. “How should I know?”
“If I told you I trusted you completely, does that mean nothing?”
He had no choice but to shake his head.
“You filled an entire notebook with your thoughts and feelings about how those assholes treated you. The things they said to you. Their prejudice. Your hurt. Do your words and their words mean nothing?”
A strong wave of heat rippled through his muscles. She could have stopped at the “I trust you” argument.
He clenched his jaw and hung his head.
“Words matter,” she said decidedly.
“So what?” Jeremy said. “So now it’s my job to sit here and try to convince you with my words that these—” He waved his notebook in the air. “—don’t mean anything?”
“I don’t know.”
“What the fuck do you want from me?” he barked.
“I don’t want anything from you,” Regan shot back.
He knew he was making a mistake, but the anger rose up fresh—one very pissed off Lazarus whose bones still ached, whose knees buckled and jerked when he tried to walk.
Jeremy stumbled over his next words. “Y-you c-could have given . . . sh-should have left me . . . had no r-right . . . !”
He jumped off the ground and towered over her.
“You could have given it back! You could have left me alone!” he roared.
Regan scrambled backwards once more, grimacing at the feel of a sharp stick that pierced her right palm. She thought absurdly that he might hit her, and she thought even more absurdly that she’d deserve it—deserve to be punched in the face by a boy twice her size.
“I don’t think you’re a killer!” she cried.
He said nothing.
“I don’t,” she insisted. “I believe you.”
“Because you’re afraid of me,” he replied.
“No! No, I’m not!”
He looked at her, unconvinced.
“Well, you hovering over me like that doesn’t help,” she confessed.
He backed away.
“I know you would never hurt anyone,” Regan whispered, and despite the evidence, her brain began to believe it. Because she wanted it to. She felt her masculine side concede victory and recede into the depths, her feminine side crowned queen and conqueror.
Jeremy wasn’t angry because he’d been caught, she realized. He was angry because she violated him. She took his words when he never gave them to her. There. That made a lot of sense.
He studied her carefully. She stared back, unblinking, and he knew she told the truth. She made the decision to trust him. His heart faltered with the knowledge, shaking his sturdy resolve. He’d resolved long ago to kill. It was a just mission. It was the right thing to do. They deserved to die, and he deserved to take them out. But the look in her eyes forced him to ask a question he’d never entertained: Are you sure?
Well, that pissed him off.
His muscles swelled and contracted at the image of a boy being pummeled over a scar. A fucking scar. He ripped in two as the image played on and on in a continual loop. Pudgy fist to his arm. Elbow to the thigh. Slaps and scratches to his face. Little boy fingernails were the worst—jagged and chewed—making the perfect razor-like weapons. He clung to the image as he split. Two people abiding in one man: gentle, quiet victim for her and justified vigilante for them. He had no choice but to swing on the pendulum—a dangerous ride that would challenge his sanity. Back and forth. Side to side. Victim. Vigilante. Victim. Vigilante.
Victim, for now.
He twisted his face in mock pain, watching her eyes soften with sympathy. He felt mildly sorry for her, staring at him with those doe-like eyes, sharing in his hurt and humiliation. He would never call her stupid. Na?ve, yes. But never stupid. She trusted him, to her detriment, and that was the end goal.
“I’m sorry for tackling you like that,” he said.
“You scared me half to death,” she admitted.
“I can’t believe I did that. I’d never hurt you,” he replied. He wanted to believe it.
She smiled. “I believe you.”