I shrugged. They didn’t stop the nightmares. They didn’t make it any easier to breathe when I thought about the woods.
“Dex doesn’t know,” I said.
He slipped a finger across his lips, then X-ed it over his heart. “Hope to die,” he said.
“You’re not going to . . . You won’t try to keep me away from Dex, now that you know I’m totally fucked-up?”
“I think maybe it’s good for Dex to be around some fucked-up people,” he said.
No one had ever said I’d be good for someone. “You really think that?”
He sucked down the last drops of whiskey. “I have to, don’t I?”
I reached out.
I took his hand.
For a few seconds, he let me.
“Lacey,” he said.
“Jimmy,” I said.
He let go.
“I shouldn’t have done that,” he said.
“I did it,” I said.
It’s just something dads do, right? They hold your hand. They hug you and let you lean against their chest and breathe in their dad smell and tickle your nose against the dad hairs poking out from the hole in their ratty dad shirt. There’s nothing fucked-up about wanting that.
SO THERE I WAS, THAT last night, everything I loved gone to ash in the backyard, the Bastard praying for my immortal soul, and when I got the hell out there and came to find you, there was no you there to find. You’d left without me, and the only one home was your father, beered up and dreaming in the still of the night.
He came out to the car, wanted to know what I was doing there, where you were if you weren’t with me, and that’s how I discovered that you didn’t sneak out; you just asked permission. Good girl to the bitter end. He was the one who’d broken the rules.
I would have left then—come for you—but he said, “You okay, Blondie?” and he looked so worried, so dad-like, that I couldn’t lie.
We sat on the curb.
“Tell me,” he said, and said again, and I couldn’t, because I don’t believe in breaking the fucking dam.
I wouldn’t have told you, either, probably, but only because if I’d told you about the Bastard, how I felt like Kurt was dead, like I was dead, hollow inside and just fucking done, there would have been a scene and you would have fallen apart; I would have had to be the tough one, all It’s okay, don’t cry, squeeze my hand as much as it hurts, and you would have been the one to feel better.
I’m not blaming you, Dex—you are what you are.
You are not the strong one. So I have to be.
“I can’t go back there,” I said.
“Home? What happened? You want me to call someone?”
“God, no! Maybe—maybe I can just live here with Dex.” I laughed, like it was a joke. He looked like I’d asked him to fuck me.
“Kidding,” I said.
“Let’s call your mom,” he said. “We’ll talk it all through. Figure it out.”
“No! Please.”
“Okay . . .” Maybe if we hadn’t been sitting out on the street, in front of everyone, he would have rubbed my back, like dads do. “Let’s go inside, then. I’ll call Julia. She’ll know what to do.”
“Your wife? The one who hates me?”
“She doesn’t—”
“Dex is forbidden to see me. Or did you forget?”
“She’s upset,” he said. “She’ll cool off.”
“Oh, yeah, I’m sure she’ll be real cool when she finds out her husband’s been palling around with the town slut.”
“Don’t call yourself that.”
“You know what I mean.”
“Lacey—”
“Face it, your wife hates me. And that’s before she even knows about this.”
“This what?”
“This.” Like I was going to spell it out.
“Lacey.”
“Jimmy.” I said his name the same way he said mine, heavy and patronizing.
“Lacey, what, exactly, do you think is going on here?”
I snorted.
“This”—he wagged a finger back and forth between us: me, him, me—“is not a secret. Dex’s mother is the one who thought you might need—”
“What? A new daddy? A good fuck?”
He cleared his throat. “Someone to talk to.”
I was on my feet then. Fuck him fuck them fuck you fuck middle-aged middle-class self-satisfied judgmental oh-so-proud of their charity to the less-fortunate fuckfaces.
“So she put you up to it? What, did she bribe you? How many blow jobs is an hour with me worth?”
“Whoa. Blondie. Sit down. Chill.”
Like he could just choose when to be a responsible grown-up. Like he cared about anything but making sure the neighbors didn’t hear. When I didn’t sit down like a good little dog, he stood up, but he couldn’t look me in the eye, not now that he’d admitted it—that I was some kind of chore for him, a way to get out of cleaning the gutters.
“I guess this is good-bye, Jimmy,” I said.
“Look, I’m obviously not handling this very well, but if you’d just come inside—”