“I’ll settle for a mug of hot tea and some honey if you have it. It’s freezing out here.”
Inside, Ethan lit a fire while Ashlyn located a box of Earl Grey and saw to the tea. When she finished, they settled on the sofa with their mugs. They sipped in silence for a time, listening to the crackle and huff of the flames in the grate. Eventually the quiet grew heavy.
“So, what now?” Ashlyn asked, aware that he’d been waiting for her to speak.
“Well, we could tell ghost stories, like we used to do at camp. I think I’ve got a flashlight around here someplace for effect. Or . . . we can talk. I pretty much bared my soul to you out there in the driveway—which, by the way, isn’t usually my style. Now it’s your turn. You’ve given me scraps here and there—stuff about your dad and your divorce—but I suspect there’s more to know.”
“Like what?”
“Like why you’re so scared. Of me. Of us.” He set down his mug and reached for her hand, curling his fingers around her closed fist. “I’m assuming it has to do with Daniel. You told me he cheated on you, but there was something else, wasn’t there? Something worse?”
Ashlyn stared at their tightly furled hands, warm and comfortable. But inside her closed fist, she could feel the sting of old memories. Of broken glass and screeching tires.
Yes. There was something else. Something much worse.
She opened her mouth, then closed it again, shaking her head. “I don’t know how to talk about this with someone I’m not paying by the hour.”
Ethan gave her fingers a squeeze. “Maybe start from the beginning.”
The beginning. Yes.
“All right.” She closed her eyes, pulled in a breath. “I told you when my mother’s cancer came back that she refused treatment, that she chose to die, but I left out the part about my father going up to the attic a few months later and shooting himself while my sixteenth birthday party was happening.”
“Oh, Jesus. Ashlyn . . .”
She turned her face away, afraid if she continued to look at him, she wouldn’t be able to get through the rest. “I went to live with my grandmother after that. I changed schools and spent every other Thursday on a therapist’s couch. A specialist in family trauma. I learned coping skills, healthy grieving, they call it. In time, I adjusted. Or learned to pretend I had. I couldn’t bear to talk about it anymore so I pretended I was fine. I finished school and got accepted to UNH. And then I met Daniel.”
She extricated her hand from Ethan’s and stood, needing to put distance between them. She began to pace, arms clasped tight to her body. “I never saw him coming. He was always careful in his choice of targets, and a consummate actor. I fell for every bit of it. I told him everything, introduced him to all my demons. I gave him the power to hurt me—and he used it.”
“The student in your bathrobe?”
“Marybeth,” Ashlyn said quietly. “She was hardly the first. But she was the catalyst for me leaving. I filed for divorce the next day. He never thought I’d go through with it. When I told him I wasn’t coming back, he started hanging around outside the shop, watching me from across the street. He’d call at all hours, begging me to take him back one minute, calling me a bitch the next. His novel still hadn’t sold and he was on the verge of being fired from the university. His entire life was spiraling out of control. Naturally, it was all my fault.”
“Please tell me you called the police.”
The question made Ashlyn cringe. She hadn’t, but there hadn’t been a day in the last three-plus years that she hadn’t wondered if things might have ended differently if she had.
“I didn’t. He had enough troubles and I didn’t want to add to them. But I couldn’t go back, no matter how bad things got for him. I called him one afternoon and asked him to meet me for a drink. He thought I wanted to work things out. Instead, I handed him a list of how I thought our personal property should be divided. It was the last straw.”
Ethan was watching her closely now, steeling himself for whatever might be coming. “Last straw . . . meaning?”
Ashlyn moved to the fireplace, her back to him as she stared into the fire. “He started to make a scene, so I got up and left. I had already crossed the street by the time he came out of the bar. I heard my name and turned. He was standing on the curb, looking straight at me with this weird expression. There was a van coming down the street, the kind that carries those big sheets of glass. He watched it come closer . . . and then he stepped off the curb.”
She heard Ethan’s ragged intake of breath, his long, slow exhale. “My god . . .”
His expression when she turned to face him was one of genuine horror. She squared her shoulders, bracing herself to say the rest. “Just before he stepped into the road, there was a split second . . . He looked up at me and smiled; then he called out, Say hello to Dr. Sullivan.”
“Who is Dr.—”
“Dr. Sullivan was my therapist. The one I used to see every other Thursday after my father shot himself.”
Ethan’s face went slack. “You’re saying . . .”
“I’m saying he knew exactly what he was doing—and he knew I knew it. He knew what it would do to me, that I’d . . . come apart.”
“This is what you meant in the car,” he said softly. “When you talked about someone you love hurting you intentionally.”
“Yes.”
“I’m so sorry, Ashlyn. But at least the bastard didn’t succeed. I mean, here you are.”
“He did, actually. Or nearly did.” It was an uncomfortable thing to share, to admit that Daniel’s attempt to unravel her had nearly worked. But she needed him to know it all, to understand why they were a bad idea. Why she was a bad idea. “Three people,” she said thickly. “Three people who were supposed to love me, and they all left—on purpose. With a track record like that, it’s hard not to think it’s you—that something about you isn’t . . . enough. I ended up on another therapist’s couch. Tuesdays this time instead of Thursdays. For more than a year.”
Ethan was silent for what felt like a long time. Finally, he dragged a hand through his hair. “I get it now,” he said quietly. “I get it and I have no idea what to say, except that I’m sorry. For him to do . . . that. Knowing what you’d been through. It’s inconceivable.”
“For a while, I tried to convince myself I’d imagined it.”
“You didn’t, though.”
“No.” Ethan’s face became a watery blur as she met his gaze, the tears she’d been fighting suddenly spilling free. “It wasn’t an accident and it wasn’t an act of despair. It was about having the last word.”
“Damn it,” Ethan whispered, brushing at her tears with the back of his hand. “Damn the bastard. And damn me, too, for pushing you to talk about it.”