The Moment of Letting Go

“I … I want to help you,” I say, stepping up to him, his eyes red-rimmed and glistening with moisture. “But I think you’re so scarred by the guilt that you have to make this kind of peace on your own. Covering up the pain with me won’t heal it. I … can’t replace Landon.”


Luke sits back down on the edge of the bed, defeated, his legs apart, his hands dangling between them.

“This isn’t just about my brother, is it?”

“No,” I say softly and sit down next to him. “I know that this jump is important to you. I understand why, and as much as I want you to change your mind about it, I can’t ask or expect you to change who you are. I know that BASE jumping is part of your life … but the thought of being in love with you and losing you the way you lost your brother … I, well, I just can’t put myself through that. Not now. Not ever.”

He looks down at his interlocked hands, and I can’t escape the feeling that, judging by the wounded look on his face, he expected this, he knew it would end like this even though he tried so hard to have hope. And it just makes me feel that much worse.

After a moment I add, “But, Luke, I think more than anything, bigger than me, bigger than us, you need to find yourself again, find your way again and your peace with Landon’s death, before anything else.”

He glances over but doesn’t meet my gaze. He knows that I’m right.

“Y’know,” he says, “I would say that I shouldn’t have let it go this far, this thing between us, but I don’t regret a moment of it. Maybe I’m being selfish again, but even though I knew the day I met you that it probably wouldn’t work out, I don’t regret taking it as far as we did.”

I smile softly. “Neither do I.” I reach over and take his hand. “You did something for me that no one has ever come close to doing—my fear of heights, of course, but you did more than just try to help me overcome it. You helped me see everything else with a whole new perspective: my career; my family and financial priorities; my future.” I pause and look off at the wall. His fingers slip between mine, over the top of my hand.

“Landon may have been good, like you said,” I say, meeting his eyes, “but something tells me he learned it from you. Little brothers always look up to their big brothers.”

I stand up and step in between his legs. He gazes up at me and takes both of my hands into his.

“I want you to promise me something,” I say.

A brief moment of quiet passes between us.

“Anything,” he says, tugging on my fingers.

“When you go to Norway, before your feet leave that rock, promise me, Luke, that it’ll be for the right reasons.”

“The right reasons?” he asks, confused.

“Yes,” I say softly. “Luke, you can’t do something like this, take such a risk with your life, unless it’s for the right reasons. You can’t go through with this if you’re only doing it because you feel guilty, or because you’re holding on to”—I pause and take a deep, uneasy breath—“holding on to something you had with Landon that’s no longer there.” Mentally I hold my breath, hoping that my words don’t hurt him and that he won’t take offense to them.

For a split second, I see his jaw harden and a flash of pain shoot across his eyes. But he recovers quickly and pulls me closer, wrapping his arms around my waist and laying his head against my stomach. I spear my fingers through the top of his hair.

Then he raises his head and answers, “Yeah … I am doing it for the right reasons,” and that’s all the answer he gives.

Disappointment, thick and heavy, floods me. My shoulders fall with my breath, my heart with my hopes.

I want to believe that he’s lying to himself—I want to believe that I’m right—but if he won’t, or can’t, admit it to himself, then he can’t admit it to me. Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe I’m too blinded by my feelings for him and wanting nothing to stand between us being together, and he really and truly loves this dangerous sport. But if that’s the case, if that’s the truth, then I can’t stand in his way.

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