Fighting Silence (22 page)

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Authors: Aly Martinez

Tags: #promotional copy, #romance, #new adult, #2015 release

BOOK: Fighting Silence
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My eyes swung to Quarry as I tried to figure out what he could have possibly done to warrant this kind of explosive reaction, but when I turned back to Flint, his rage had homed in on me.

“Are you talking to me like that?” I asked, dumbfounded.

I’d seen Flint lose his cool before, but never like this. That just wasn’t who he was. Me or Quarry, sure. But with the exception of when he’d lost it at the gym on Derrick Bailey, Flint was pretty chill.

“You’re an idiot. You fucked us all!” he screamed, stopping only inches from my face.

I wasn’t sure what the hell kind of
Freaky Friday
bullshit had happened that had transported Quarry into Flint’s body, but clearly, something unnatural had taken place. I was so confused that I couldn’t even formulate a stern response.

“Me?” I asked one more time just for clarification, causing Quarry to laugh beside me.

“What the hell is wrong with you? You couldn’t get your shit together, so now, she’s dating Derrick.”

“Who?” I questioned even though I knew the answer. But my throat had suddenly closed, and it was the only word I could force out.

“Eliza!” he roared, shoving my chest with both hands.

I stumbled a few steps, but it had less to do with his physical push and everything to do with her.

“No.” I shook my head, rejecting his statement.

“Oh yeah. I just passed them strolling arm in arm to his Mercedes.” He stepped back into my face. “Why? Why? Why!” he screamed.

“Why what?”

“Why can’t you get your shit together? Goddammit, she’s going to leave us! He’s a fucking piece of shit who hates you. You might as well have wrapped her in a pretty, red bow and handed her to him.” He stepped away and started to pace a familiar pattern. “Till, he’s rich. He’s gonna take her to nice places and give her nice things. She’ll get a taste of that life and won’t want to come back to us. She’ll be gone. ”

He was irrational, yet I hung on his every word.

“He’s gonna charm her into believing that he’s something he’s not and then take her away.”

“She’s not stupid. She won’t fall for his bullshit.” I stated matter-of-factly, but in my head, each sentence was punctuated with a giant blinking question mark.

“Why would she go out with that douchebag?” Quarry asked, but I couldn’t focus.

“You have to fix this.” Flint stilled. “Start using the fucking door.”

I sighed and grabbed the back of my neck. “It’s not that easy.”

“Oh yeah?” He turned and stormed out of the front door only to immediately walk back in. He made a show of turning the knob and swinging the door. “I’m pretty sure it is that easy, brainiac.”

“You have no idea what you’re talking about,” I shot back.

“Oh, I don’t? Maybe you’ve forgotten that these floors work both ways. I’ve heard all your fantasy bullshit arguments with her.” He gave me a pointed look.

“Truth,” Quarry chimed in.

“Then you should understand that I can’t give her what she wants!”

“Pull your fucking head out of your ass and stop being such a pussy. You living in this ridiculous-ass fantasy world is fucking up reality for the rest of us. Including her.” He strode to his room, slamming the door behind him.

“Christ.” I dropped my head into my hands, feeling more lost than ever.

“For the record, are you not going to yell at him for cussing?”

“Get out of here, Q.”

“I’m just saying that—”

“Go!” I barked, and he wandered down the hall, joining Flint in their bedroom.

“What the fuck am I doing?” I whispered to myself, but Eliza wasn’t there to answer for me. She’d know exactly how to fix this.

I sat on those stairs for well over three hours. I repeatedly flipped through the pages of her sketchbook, tracing my fingers over the lines just because I knew her hands were the ones that had drawn them. It mildly calmed the chaos in my mind.

Finally, around ten, she came strolling up the sidewalk—surprisingly alone.

“Hey,” I said, taking in her sexy, red heels and hating Bailey that much more because he’d gotten to enjoy them.

“Hey,” she replied, nervously twirling her ponytail.

I sighed. “Really, Doodle? Derrick?” I shook my head in disappointment—at myself.

“He’s not a bad guy, Till. He’s actually pretty nice.”

“Sure.” I nodded. “But why him? Is this to get back at me? Some sort of punishment for not giving you what you want? Because you should know, it’s working. Really fucking well.” I laughed without humor.

“I’m not trying to punish you.” She stopped and tilted her head from side to side. “Well, maybe not completely.” She smiled, and it hurt so damn much.

That smile was an oasis for me. I knew it would vanish, but it would tease and taunt me while it lasted.

“Right.” I took a deep breath. “I don’t have the right to ask this, but I’m doing it anyway. Please don’t go on a second date with him. Doodle, that guy is no good. This is not coming from a jealous place. I just don’t want to see someone as amazing as you getting mixed up with a scumbag like that.”

She gave me a knowing look. “Not a jealous place?”

“Well, maybe not completely.” I chuckled, and tears sprung to her eyes. “Come here.”

She didn’t move, so I closed the distance between us and folded her into my arms.

“I’m so sorry I fucked this up. Just tell me how to fix it.”

She sniffled and backed away. “Open your eyes, Till. I’m sick of letting the Earth spin under my feet while you circle around me. We belong together, but if that isn’t going to happen, I have to start moving on.” She paused to wipe away the tears that were steadily dripping off her chin. “I don’t want to live in a world where the windows are locked and the Page boys don’t eat me out of house and home. So I am begging you, Till. Wake. Up.”

I didn’t have a chance to find the words to reply before she walked away.

I made my way back to my apartment and crashed into bed. I was exhausted, but I never found sleep that night. I also couldn’t figure out how to wake up either.

“Whoa! Take it easy. I just bought that bag.” Slate laughed as I pounded my aggression out. “I’m closing up in five. Go get changed and get out of here.”

I stopped and shook out my arms. “You mind if I stay for a little while longer? I’ll lock up when I leave.”

“What’s going on with you? You spent the better part of the night terrorizing my equipment, then you left with the boys, and less than an hour later, you’re back alone. Don’t get me wrong. I like the dedication. But there has to be more to this.”

I let out a huff and stared down at the ground. “Derrick’s car was parked at my apartment when I got home. I just can’t go back there right now.”

“What’s he doing at your place?”

“He’s not. He’s at Eliza’s.”

Slate’s eyebrows shot up as understanding crossed his face. “Did you two break up?”

“Who? Me and Eliza? We were never together.”

Slate barked out a laugh. “Sorry, buddy, but I think you were the only one who believed that.”

“No. Seriously. We’re
just
friends.”

“Well, of all the times I’ve seen you two together, she wasn’t
just
anything to you.”

“Whatever.” I blew him off, but only because I knew he was right.

“So, what’s your hang-up with Derrick being there, then?”

Now
that
I could answer. “I fucking hate that guy. I don’t want him anywhere near her.”

“Yeah, I heard you two went at it a few weeks ago.”

My head snapped to his.

Before then, he hadn’t mentioned a single word to me or Flint about that night at the gym. Slate had a strict “no fighting outside of the ring” policy, so I’d figured we would have for sure heard about it if he’d caught wind.

“Yeah. About that—” I started, but I was quickly interrupted.

“So, you’d be okay if it were any other guy at her place?”

“You got eyes for my girl, Slate?” I smarted back, and he laughed. “Nah. But it’s definitely worse because it’s him.”

“I get that.” He squeezed my shoulder. “Okay, stay as long as you want. Take it easy on my bag though.” He shot me a smile as he turned to walk away.

“She wants more,” I blurted. I needed someone to talk to, and the speed bag just wasn’t cutting it.

He turned back to face me, crossing his arms over his chest and signaling for me to explain.

“What if we took it to that next level and it didn’t work out? I’d lose her for good. But I can’t get her to understand, so I’m afraid it’s gonna happen anyway.” I tucked a glove under my arm and tugged it off.

“You want advice or you just want me to listen?”

“Advice. Please. Anything.”

“You’re going to lose her no matter what you do.”

“Wow. You are terrible at this,” I snarked.

“Till, she’s not the girl you hung out with in high school anymore. One of two things is gonna to happen. Either you take the next step and make her your woman or you sit back and watch someone else do it. It’s gonna happen regardless of how much you try to fight it though. If it’s not Derrick, it
will
be someone else.”

“No. She’s dated in the past, but she’s never gotten serious with anyone.”

“She’s not a kid anymore though. She’s twenty-one years old and starting to make plans for the future. People don’t stay the same forever, especially women. But you have to face the facts that you
can’t
lose that girl you’re so desperate to hang on to . . . She’s already gone.”

“She’s not gone!” I shouted as the panic began to set in.

“Yeah, she is, son. You need to let go of whatever you two had before and make something new. I’m not saying you have to marry Eliza, but I think you need to figure out what you want before you find yourself sitting in a church, watching her marry someone else.” Slate walked forward, swinging his keys around his finger. “And you better figure it out fast, because women like her don’t stay single long.”

I didn’t have a response as he backed away. The fact that someone hadn’t already swooped Eliza off her feet was a miracle in and of itself. But she’d always made it clear that she loved me. It was stupid and naïve, but I hadn’t worried that she would end up with anyone else. The scenario of watching her get married seemed so farfetched that I couldn’t even conjure the image.

So, instead of focusing on Eliza’s imaginary wedding, I closed my eyes and pictured
my life
with someone else.

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