Burn It Up

Muffled words were exchanged outside the room, and then one set of steps faded back down the stairs.

“Come on,” she murmured, staring at the knob, daring it to twist. “Come on, come—”

A knock.

“Yeah,” she called.

The door swung in, and there he was.

James seemed shorter than she remembered, though perhaps that was merely a side effect of all her time spent around Vince and Duncan. He looked a little older, too, and she supposed prison must do that to a man. He was still handsome in his intimidating, fierce way, but weariness had etched fine lines across his brow and shadowed his blue eyes.

Mercy’s eyes. Darker than her own. Moodier.

He kept his gaze on her as he shut the door, expression guarded. His lips were set, as were his shoulders. He looked like a man entering a ring with a spook-prone horse, exuding an aura of forced calm.

She’d brought a chair up from the kitchen and set it facing the bed. The noise of it scraping on the floor as he took a seat felt so loud she flinched.

“Abilene,” he said evenly, planting his elbows on his thighs. She knew not to expect a cordial Thanks for agreeing to meet me or the like. Despite his psychotic move on Wednesday night, turning up and creeping around, she owed him whatever he was after—another apology, assurances, proof she had things under control. And she did have most of it under control, she thought. Beneath the jitters, she felt strong. She felt ready for this.

“You look good,” James said. He didn’t mean she looked pretty—he meant that she looked healthy. That she looked clean.

“I feel good. Just a little sleep deprived.”

“Where’s the baby?”

“She’s asleep. Someone’s with her.”

“Tell me I get to see her.”

She nodded. “Unless this all goes real badly, yeah, you’ll get to see her.”

That softened his jaw. And that jaw was coated in dark stubble—unusual for James, a man who rose each morning at the same hour, rarely drank, and never smoked, who thrived on routine and shaved daily. She remembered another time when she’d driven him to forsake his regimens and lose his focus. She remembered all the power she’d felt, seeing the strongest, hardest man she’d yet met reduced to a nervous wreck. Oddly, it made her curious to watch him when he held his daughter for the first time. Would that moment change him, soften him, as his worry and care for her had, once upon a time last winter?

“I know you must be impatient,” she said. “But let’s talk first. We both must have more things to say than we did on the phone.”

A silent, mirthless little laugh curled his lips. “Yeah, I’ve got things to say.”

She nodded to tell him to go ahead.

“You want to know why I needed to see you so goddamn badly?” he asked. “Why I’m so fucking angry? It’s because I’m scared to death.”

“I know. But the baby’s fine. And I’m a good mother, believe it or not.”

“You gotta understand, Abilene, you don’t want me to see you both, and my mind goes right back to that shithole I found you in.”

She felt her face turn hot. She didn’t remember much about the place, that beige trailer she’d called home for days or maybe weeks, at the rock bottom of her heroin addiction. She remembered how it smelled. Like struck matches and incense, like unwashed sheets. Like stale sex. She had no memory of James finding her, only of waking up in his house, in his clothes, bleary and confused and wanting nothing except her next dose.

“Who are you? Where am I?” she’d asked.

“My name is James. I found you in some hellhole of a double-wide in Lime. You’re at my place.”

“Why?”

“Because I bought you for six hundred bucks off some junkie in a stupid hat.” Her old dealer, and a buyer of James’s illegal firearms.

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