Abby Road (47 page)

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Authors: Ophelia London

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary

BOOK: Abby Road
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“I know,” Todd finally said. His gaze held on me for a moment then moved up to the sky. He looked back at me and reached out his hand. “Here, come with me.”

When I placed my hand inside his, heat shot up my arm and my fingers tingled. Instinctively, I reached out and grabbed him with my other hand, too. I needed to feel that spark again.

He led me onto the front porch. The roof sheltered us from the rain. Once we were covered, he let go of my hands, and we sat on the steps.

“Do you need anything?” he asked, sweeping back his wet hair with his fingers. “A towel?”

“I’m okay.” I leaned forward and wrapped my arms around my legs, resting my chin on my knees. I hadn’t noticed before, but Todd’s soggy front yard looked like it was under major renovation as well. Fence posts were pulled up, leaving deep holes filled with muddy water. A pile of two-by-fours was stacked along the side of the house, mounds of dirt everywhere.

“I passed by your store,” I said, trying for polite conversation. “It looks a little like London after the blitz.”

He exhaled a chuckle. “I had some nervous energy to discharge. You remember how I used to be.” He flashed a flicker of a sheepish grin. “But I’m working on it. I’ve been taking yoga.”

“You?”

I couldn’t help laughing. Todd laughed, too. “And my store, well, it seems like a mess now, but believe it or not, it looks a lot better today than it did a few weeks ago. My life needed a shake up.”

I laughed again, mostly to myself, as I gazed out at the street in front of us. The scene was wide open, a new life, a real life. Messy, wet, and muddy, exactly the way I wanted it.

Last night, somewhere over Texas, that invisible cord that had been binding me to a warped and unhappy half life had finally snapped for good. As I was sitting next to Todd in the chilly, drizzly morning, I caught a glimpse of a brand new kind of freedom.

“I began my own shake up a while ago,” I said. “It was a huge mess at first, but it’s also looking a lot better today.” I blew my bangs out of my eyes.

“I like your hair,” Todd said with a smile in his voice. “What’s left of it.”

“Thanks. That was part of the shake-up. But actually . . .” I took a beat. “Actually, I wasn’t
just
storm tracking in your neighborhood.” I leaned back, crossing my muddy feet in front of me. “I came to tell you something.”

Todd’s eyes fixed on me in his hypnotic way. Even after months apart, it still managed to make my heart jump into my throat. We weren’t touching, but the heat between us was unmistakable. It burned my insides like a campfire; every part of me wanted to grab him, but I couldn’t even tell if he was happy to see me. His eyes, that weird semi-smile, his body language, were all a muddle of mixed communication.

“I was wondering when you’d get around to it,” he said as he leaned back on his hands. “Why are you here?” He took in a breath. His face looked troubled, hesitant, like he was preparing himself to hear bad news.

“I was drifting along,” I heard myself whisper in rhythmic cadence, “till something brought me to the sea. When I saw you, I found me.”

I couldn’t help noticing an air of appreciation cross Todd’s face. “Nice,” he said.

“Yeah, but that’s not even
my
line,” I admitted quietly, a little embarrassed by my lack of romantic originality, chagrined by the fact that I’d become my own worst chick flick cliché: girl running through rain to find her hero, then plagiarizing lines from a love ballad. “I stole it from a song Hal wrote.”

“‘Indian Summer.’” The teensiest of smiles twitched at the corner of his mouth. “It came by special delivery a few weeks back.”

I blinked, wondering if he could see the millions of questions behind my eyes and further wondering if he realized my heart was in his teeth.

His tiny smile grew. “We’ve been in touch.”

“You and Hal?”

Todd nodded.

“I hope he wasn’t bothering you,” I said, bewildered.

“Of course not. I always liked him. You know that.” His gaze left me and moved out to the street. “In fact, when he first called, you were never mentioned, so after a while, I figured he hadn’t told you. When we spoke a few weeks ago, he said he had to be quick because he was helping you pick out a TV.”

“That was
you
on the phone that day?” I asked, remembering how strangely Hal had behaved after he’d taken that call at the electronics store, looking both guilty and exceptionally pleased with himself.

“We spoke for only a second then,” Todd continued, “but later he managed to give me an earful about all the home decorating you’d been doing, and painting, I understand?”

I nodded.

“A few weeks before that, he mentioned you were in Tucson.” He turned to me. It looked like he was holding his breath. “Did you see your parents?”

I nodded again.

Todd let out his breath. “Good, Abby,” he said. “That’s really good progress.” His voice sounded relieved, but also a bit detached, like he was my academic advisor.

“I fired Max,” I blurted.

I wasn’t sure why right now was the moment I decided to broach the subject. My body responded to the new burst of adrenaline, and I sprang to my feet. “The guys and I, we’re going to run the band on our own. It’ll be different. Smaller, but better. Because . . .” I faced Todd, who was sitting with his arms on his knees, looking up at me. “Because I truly love it.” My throat started feeling thick, full with emotion. “I forgot that for a while, but I do. It’s what excites me and energizes me, and I just
love
it, more than almost anything.” I looked him in the eyes and swallowed. “But that’s not what I came to tell you, either.”

He tilted his head to the side, wearing a worried look again.

I turned around to stare out at the rainy street. “That night you left,” I quickly pressed forward before I lost momentum, “you said that ours was the most important relationship of your life. I wanted to tell you then that I felt the same way—
feel
, I mean. Feel right now.” I was still standing with my back to him, unable to face whatever his troubled expression had morphed into.

That was when I felt something on my shoulders. It took me a moment to realize Todd’s hands were resting on top of them. The sudden heat was a shock to my system. It burned through my wet clothes, soaked into my bloodstream, and spread warmth through my entire body.

“I love you,” I said, unable to stop myself.

But nothing came in return, only the splattering of rain.

It felt like hours were ticking by. I pinched my eyes closed, feeling my heart sink. Then suddenly I was spun around; Todd’s hands were on the front of my shoulders.

“What was that?” he asked, tipping his head down a bit. “I couldn’t quite . . .” He paused, the side of his mouth pulling back. “Hear you.” One hand left my shoulder and slid behind my neck. The feeling of his fingers on my bare skin snapped my senses to attention. Every hair on my body leaned toward the location of his touch, like a sunflower stretching toward the sun.

“Well?” he said, his eyes narrowing playfully.

“I love you, Todd,” I said, properly, staring into his eyes.

The next thing I knew, his arms were around me, hugging me so tightly that my heart banged in surprise. When I managed to inhale, I took in his scent, his dizzying pheromones.

I forced myself to speak. “Todd—”

“Shh.” He cut me off with a squeeze. “You had your say; now let me enjoy this.” He squeezed me tighter. His mouth moved down to the side of my neck; the three-day beard tickled. I heard my blood rushing behind my ears like the Gulf at high tide.

“So?” he breathed in a whisper, his nose on my cheek. “Was that all you came here to tell me?” His nose moved in a slow circle.

“I can’t rememb—”

Before I could finish, his hands moved to the sides of my face, his eyes so full of love. The way he was holding me, precious and protective, was like I was something lost. Lost, but miraculously found.

And then he kissed me, perfectly, with so much wonder and magic.

I had no words, but Todd had one. He whispered it.

The first moment I could, I threw my arms around him. The force of my enthusiastic, propelling body knocked him backward. We stumbled and fell onto the porch in a heap.

“How’s the head?” I asked, taking a breath.

One side of his lovely mouth curled up as an answer.

I hovered above him; drops of rainwater from my hair dripped onto his cheeks. With another kiss, we were rolling. I heard something fall off the side of the porch and crash onto the wet cement below. We’d probably kicked over some potted plants.

“What took you so long?” I asked, my face buried in his neck.

“Ha! Me?”

“Why make us sit in the rain like that?”

He stopped kissing me and pulled back, bracing his weight on his elbows over me.

“Why did you let me keep talking a blue streak when you knew why I came?”

Todd furrowed his brows and rolled to his side. “I didn’t know why you came.” He passed one hand across his forehead as something painful shadowed his expression. “Seeing you out my window, standing like that, frankly, I didn’t know what to think, and I could see you were crying.” He sighed, dropping his chin. “I knew a little about what you’d been going through the last few months, but I also knew there was a lot I
wasn’t
being told.” He lifted his chin, still wearing that dark expression. “I was so worried about you, Abby. Every day. Every minute. But seeing you here . . .” He took a beat. “I was more relieved than anything.”

My hands slid under his arms, around his back. Slowly, we sat up together. The end result was me on his lap.

“To be honest,” he continued, his voice lighter, “I was ready to pounce on you the second I stepped outside. It was all I could do to refrain as long as I did.” His strong arms tightened around me. “It looked like you had something you needed to say, so I let you talk first.”

“And then you pounced.”

From the street, a car honked. Todd unleashed his hold for just a moment as he tilted his head to one side, looking past me and out at the street. He raised one hand and waved.

I turned around in time to see Chandler’s silver pickup pulling away from the curb.

“Small town,” Todd said, and we both laughed.

I leaned in, laying my head on his shoulder. It was amazing how different I felt being with him now. I felt so good. So strong. So much more myself.

“I want you to know, I’m sorry, too,” he said.

When I pulled back, his expression was oddly rueful. “For what?”

“I wanted to tell you what Nate told me that night, about Christian, but I thought the situation was bad enough already for you. I didn’t want to make it worse, especially since you said you would never quit.”

“It wasn’t your fault.”

He shook his head. “There hasn’t been a day I haven’t regretted leaving you like that. It killed me.”

I didn’t let him continue. I took his face and drew the two of us together, our foreheads touching so we could see nothing but each other.

“I’m sorry,” he whispered once more.

“Shhh, it’s over.”

“I did try to forget you.”

This startled me. I pulled my face away.

His expression was teasing. “But my house still smells like you,” he added, repositioning me on his lap. “And there’s that twelve-foot-tall reminder in every Gap store window.”

“You saw that billboard?”

“This is America.” He smiled crookedly. “There’s a Gap on every corner. That first month away, I traveled a lot. Trying.” His voice faded out. He rubbed my hair and then my back in slow circles. “That red bathing suit of yours is still hanging over the showerhead in my guest bathroom. Pathetic, I know, but I never had the heart to take it down. I basically just stopped going in there.”

“You knew I’d be back,” I explained, leaving two strategically placed kisses on his dimple.

“I hoped you would,” he admitted, touching his finger to the tip of my nose and then sliding it down to my lips.

It felt like my pounding heart wanted to break through my chest and latch onto his.

“Abby.” His eyes flickered away and then back to me as a streak of lightning flashed through the sky. Thunder rolled a moment later. “Abigail Kelly,” he said in a rush. “I love you.” His lips pressed together, but not tightly enough. I could clearly see that they were trembling. “I was afraid,” he said, his voice low and hoarse, “that I would never be able to tell you that. And I wanted to. Every day.” When he pulled me in, only one arm was around me; his other hand might have been wiping his eyes.

But it was no use. He’d already showed me, unmistakably, that no matter how tough we said we were, no matter how hard we could punch or how high we could climb or how well we could sing, we were breakable, and we’d both been broken, broken in two.

I hitched my chin over his shoulder and hugged him with all my might, attempting to meld his broken pieces back together while fusing my own. Perhaps blending some bits of ourselves in the process.

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