Redemption Song (13 page)

Read Redemption Song Online

Authors: Melodie Murray

BOOK: Redemption Song
4.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“She’s probably not that busy right now if you want to go say hi,” Ben said, plopping down in the sand to begin work on another masterpiece castle.

“Who?” Ethan asked ignorantly, already knowing precisely who Ben was referring to.

“My sister, duh. I know you like her.”

Ethan chocked with a little cough, surprised by young Ben’s candor.

“And how do you know that?” Ethan asked.

“Because you stare at her with googly eyes.”

“Googly eyes?” Ethan wondered if googly was a real term or just a Ben term.

“Yeah, like this.” Ben tilted his head to the side and put on a goofy smile. He widened his eyes and batted them, doing an impression that Ethan hoped he never truly resembled.

“I don’t do that.”

“Well, maybe not that bad,” Ben giggled. His focus shifted back to his sand castle. “You do like her though, don’t you?”

As strange as it felt to be having this conversation with a child, Ethan felt the need to be honest. “Yeah, I do. Is that okay with you?”

Ben thought for a moment. “I guess so. Just as long as ya’ll don’t go around doing that gross kissy stuff.”

Ethan laughed. “Gotcha, dude. No kissy stuff.”

Ethan couldn’t help but feel a little bad for the way he had treated Ben when he first arrived in Fairhope. He’d been so ridiculously full of himself and his own self inflicted circumstances that he hadn’t even bothered to take notice of what kind of kid Ben really was. After spending time with him today, Ethan was beginning to realize that Ben was not like most little kids. Ben had this way of taking any situation, no matter how good or bad, and twisting it around until it fit happily inside his own beautiful world. There was no bad inside of him. Only pure, innocent truth, love, and loyalty.

“You wanna go swimming with me, Ethan?” Ben asked a few minutes later.

“Sure, kiddo. Let’s hit the waves.”

Ben jumped up and dashed to the water’s edge.

“I beat you!” he screamed as Ethan ran to catch up with him.

Ethan joined Ben out in the water and they jumped and splashed and swam around in the briny sea. Ben giggled and jumped up and down as if it was the most fun outing he’d ever participated in. By the way he acted, Ethan thought, it seemed Ben hadn’t left the house in months. But after thirty minutes or so, Ethan was beginning to notice a subtle change in Ben.

Ben was still playing as hard as he could go, but he was looking tired. Pale even. Ethan was several feet away when Ben suddenly stopped playing. Ben turned to Ethan, went to say something, but nothing came out. Ethan paused for only a second.

Something was wrong. Ethan didn’t know what it was, but he could see it by the terrified expression suddenly washing across Ben’s face.

Seconds before Ethan reached Ben to ask if he was okay, Ben’s eyes rolled back in his head and his little body went limp. He collapsed into the waves with hardly a splash. Ethan panicked.

“Ben!”

Ethan dove to where Ben’s lifeless body had been picked up by the rolling tide. He caught Ben only seconds after he submerged beneath the salty water.

“Ben! Ben!”

That’s when Ethan first noticed. Ben’s hat had lifted from his head in the rush of the waves and now floated next to them in the water. The cute messy brown curls that normally hung out of the bottom of the hat . . . continued to hang out of the bottom of the hat.

Ben’s head was nothing but perfectly smooth skin. Too smooth to have been buzzed or shaved. The little curls Ethan had grown so accustomed to seeing on Ben had been fake all along. Ben had no hair of his own.

Ethan swatted to grab the hat before the tide could pull it out to sea. His other arm was wrapped around Ben’s tiny little chest; Ben’s head was limp against Ethan’s shoulder. Ethan dug his toes deep into the sand and pushed against the current toward the water’s edge, all the while trying to keep from having a panic attack/mental breakdown. When Ethan reached the shore, he laid Ben down gently in the sand. Ethan racked his brain trying to remember anything he had ever heard or seen that would give him the slightest idea of how to handle this situation. Ben lay unconscious, but still breathing, at his knees. Finally, Ethan resorted to smacking Ben’s cheeks, trying to be forceful enough to bring him to without hurting him.

“Ben! C’mon Ben!”

Ethan’s heart did summersaults in his chest when Ben’s eyelids gave a slight flutter. Ben opened his eyes slowly. A guilty expression washed over his features as he realized what had happened. Ben sat up and his hands slowly reached up and felt of his bald head. His eyes darted around and Ethan knew instantly that he was looking for his hat. He handed it over and Ben rushed to put the hat back in its rightful position on his head.

“Ben, what the heck was that? What happened to you out there?”

Ben’s guilty expression only intensified, but he tried to hide it by flashing a fake grin, only it was too weak to fool Ethan. “Uh . . . I dunno . . .”

Ethan tried again. “Are you okay?”

Ben replied almost before Ethan got the words out. “Yep.”

Yep?
The kid almost drowns in Ethan’s arms and all he gets is a yep?

“Tell me what happened, Ben.”

“I got . . . tired . . .”

“You got tired.”

“Yep.”

Ethan had never heard of anyone being fine one minute and tired enough the next to cause them to lose consciousness.

“Ben, what happened to your hair?”

Ben thought for a moment and looked up, burning Ethan with his big brown innocent eyes.

“Bad haircut?” Ben suggested.

Ethan didn’t believe it for a second, but decided not to press the issue. Ben had never before held back on anything when talking to Ethan. If Ben wanted him to know, he would have told him.

Ethan sighed and accepted his defeat. “We better get back,” he said, trying to calm his racing heart. Ben’s . . . whatever it was . . . had scared him to death.

“Do we have to?” Ben pleaded. His voice was frail.

Ethan didn’t hesitate. “Yeah, we have to.”

Ben’s skin was pale and he looked exhausted. Ethan wondered if this was what Alaina had meant by not letting him overdue things. Well, so much for that.

Ethan helped Ben to the car and drove directly for Granny’s house. All he wanted to do was get Ben home before something else happened. By the time they reached the house, Ben still looked drained, but at least he wasn’t passing out again. Ethan helped Ben into the house and found Granny Mae in the living room reading from the Bible that she kept on the coffee table.

Granny took one look at Ben and it was as though she immediately understood something that Ethan didn’t. “Come on, sweetie,” She took Ben’s little hand in hers. “Let’s get you to bed. Did you have fun today with Ethan?”

“It was awesome, Granny Mae,” Ben said with weak excitement. “Ethan taught me to play guitar, and then we went to the pier and made sand castles, and then we went swimming and then . . .” Ben shot Ethan a pleading expression from behind Granny’s back. Ethan realized that Ben didn’t want him to mention what actually happened in the water. “. . . and then we came home because I was getting tired.”

“Well, I’m glad you had a good time, baby,” Granny Mae said gently as she led Ben up the staircase.

When they reached the boy’s bedroom, Granny helped Ben change into a pair of PJ’s before he climbed into his bunk. She asked Ben if he was okay and if he needed anything. Ben curled up into his pillow—his soaked hat was reattached to his head and left wet stains on the fabric. He insisted that he was fine.

Ethan watched the entire ordeal in bewilderment. It was obvious that Ben wasn’t feeling well, but Granny Mae acted as though she dealt with it every single day. As if it was no big deal.

When Ben was tucked in and comfortable, Granny Mae turned to leave the room. She squeezed Ethan’s shoulder on her way out and he caught a glimpse of something in her eyes.

When Granny Mae was out of earshot, Ethan spun back toward Ben. He decided to try one more time.

“Ben, what happened to you out there today?”

“I told you I got tired.”

Ethan wanted to press the issue farther, but Ben did look so tired and so comfortable snuggled into a little ball with his bedding. Instead, Ethan let it go with a confused sigh.

He turned toward the door when he heard . . .

“Hey, Ethan?”

“Yeah, Ben?”

“Thanks for hanging out with me today. I know you only did it for my sister, but I really had fun.”

Ethan paused. “It may have started out that way, little guy, but it didn’t end that way.”

He turned to leave and Ben spoke again.

“Hey Ethan . . . about what happened today . . . can you do me a huge favor?”

“What’s that, Ben?”

“Don’t tell my sister, okay?”

 

 

 

 

Chapter 15

Alaina

 

Alaina was down to the last hour of the longest work day she had ever experienced. Not only had the double shift been exactly double the amount of hours she wanted to be there, but the hours had drug by as if she was watching paint dry. It was such a beautiful day outside and Alaina could think of about a million things she could have been doing besides serving food to tourists.

No matter how busy they got, or how distracted she attempted to be, Alaina was never able to yank her thoughts away from Ethan. Ethan spending the day with Ben was one of the sweetest things any guy had ever done for her.

But then again, there weren’t many guys in Alaina’s past, and the worst part was that she wasn’t the only one who was aware of her previous lack of involvement with boys. The girls Alaina worked with were always trying to get her to go out with them to meet boys or to go on a double date with them. She always said no.

So after showing up out of nowhere last night with some guy they had never seen, Alaina naturally expected a few questions from her co-workers. What she expected, however, was nothing compared to what she’d been forced to endure the entire day. Alaina had been asked everything from “Who was that guy you were with last night?” to “Are you guys serious? to “How long have you been dating?” to “Is he the one?”.

Alaina didn’t understand what the big deal was. Could two people not have a nice dinner with one another without the whole world thinking they were making wedding plans? Her co-workers acted as if this was the first guy they had ever seen her spend time with, for goodness sakes.

Actually, now that she thought about it, she hadn’t been seen with a guy since her parent’s accident . . .

But still, Alaina didn’t understand what all the fuss was about. It’s not like she and Ethan were
dating
. Okay, sure, they had agreed to call their outing a date . . . but that was only a one time deal. One date did not connote dating. Their relationship was merely . . .

Alaina didn’t know how to finish that sentence. She did a quick mental reevaluation of the entire situation. Ethan was an extremely famous superstar who had, for some crazy reason, chosen her as the person to help him conceal his true identity from the world; which had led into dinner; which had led into him trying to kiss her and her freaking out; which had led into him hanging out with her brother for no apparent reason while she worked.

It all sounded very nice and “fairytale-ish” in theory, but no matter how Alaina looked at it from there, all roads led back to the exact same destination point.

Ethan leaving.

She sighed.

Nope, definitely not dating.

Alaina pulled her cell phone out of her apron pocket to get a quick time check. Only fifteen minutes to go. She and Gabby, the hostess from last night, were putting the finishing touches on the dining room so that the restaurant would be good and ready to go in the morning. Gabby had been one of the main interrogators thus far, and Alaina thought surely she was questioned out at that point. But that assumption proved too good to be true when Gabby’s voice rang out, yet again, through the dining room.

“So are you and Brandon going to go out again before he goes back home?”

At the beginning of her shift, Alaina had wondered who the heck Brandon was. It had taken several conversations before she became accustomed to Ethan’s new alias.

“I already told you, Gab,” Alaina said, trying hard to not sound annoyed. “We were just having dinner last night. That was all there was to it. If we go out again before he goes home, I’m sure it will just be dinner then, too.”

“Then why is he here?” Gabby persisted. “Why did Brandon come all the way down here from New York if he just wanted to have dinner with you? How did you two meet anyway?”

Alaina groaned under her breath. She hated having to lie to her friend, but she had no choice. It’s not like Gabby would believe her if she told her the truth, anyway.

“Our parent’s were friends. We’ve known each other since we were kids but haven’t gotten to see each other. He just came down to visit and get a little vacation time.”

“Then why was he holding your hand last night?”

Shoot.
Alaina had forgotten about Ethan holding her hand in the middle of the restaurant.

“Um, I don’t know. I guess he’s just affectionate.”

Gabby shook her head and cocked an amused smile. “Oh, Alaina, give it up already! You were on a date! You were on a date with a hot guy and you loved every minute of it!” Gabby paused, studying Alaina’s reddening cheeks. “Girl, you know I’m just giving you a hard time because I want you to be happy, right?”

Alaina laughed. “That statement kind of contradicts itself, don’t you think?”

“Maybe a little, but whatever,” Gabby said. “Alaina, I have watched you in this restaurant for the past year and I gotta tell ya, girl, you have less of a life than my grandmother.”

“You’re right, Gab. That’s very inspiring. Thank you.”

“You know what I mean,” Gabby continued. “You need to get out and go on dates with hot guys. I’m giving you a hard time so that maybe you’ll realize that it’s okay to have a little fun every now and then. Brandon seemed like a nice guy. What’s the harm in taking advantage of the time you guys have left together? I know he has to leave eventually, but he hasn’t left yet.”

Other books

The All-Star Joker by David A. Kelly
Raphaela's Gift by Sydney Allan
Master of None by N. Lee Wood
No Way to Say Goodbye by Anna McPartlin
Romancing the Storm: Second Chances by Hart, Alana, Claire, Alana
Self-Sacrifice by Struan Stevenson
Flowerbed of State by St. James, Dorothy
Sinister Barrier by Eric Frank Russell