Redeem Me (27 page)

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Authors: Eliza Freed

BOOK: Redeem Me
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I stop listening.

*  *  *

There are no signs of life at the farmhouse. Its owner and the work have halted. I should have halted him a long time ago. I’ll deal with Nick later, or perhaps he is at Annie’s and I can deal with him now. God, I want to kill him.

No truck in the driveway means Nick will have to wait. I ring the doorbell and even that pisses me off. Knocking on the door like a stranger. I practically lived here. There is no answer, so I go around back. Annie’s replaced the key under the turtle rock. It’s there, just waiting for me to come home. I open the back door and let myself in.

“Annie!” I yell. The last thing I want is for her to shoot me. “Oh, Annie.” No one’s home. I’m going to wait right here until she comes back. Back to this house and back to me. The police are going to have to remove me. I lock the back door behind me and make my way to the kitchen that’s exactly the same as when her parents were alive. I still remember walking up to her at the luncheon after her parents’ funeral. She was leaning against the kitchen counter. It was an endless wait for her to finally be alone, finished with trite, meaningless conversations. I wasn’t sure what I was going to say, but when she looked at me with her empty green eyes, I just knew I had to get her out of here. She didn’t belong here. I survey the room and see a dog’s water and food bowls. Were they here before? I was so drunk the last time I was in here I can’t remember. “What kind of dog did you get, Annie?”

I stop at the sight of the answering machine recuperating on the desk, bandaged with packaging tape. God, I love this girl. Apparently she does not like my messages. What I need is a shower. I walk through the house and grab a towel from the linen closet. The bathroom’s completely different. It’s navy with white wainscoting and those weird sinks that rise above the countertop. She has flowers in a vase by each sink and a brightly patterned towel hanging on the bar. The new tub is big enough for two with a ledge behind it and jets.
Oh, Annie, I wish you were here.
I turn on the water and remember how long it takes to heat up. While it runs, I borrow her toothbrush. If there is anyone alive who doesn’t mind, it’s Annie. I use her body wash, shampoo, and conditioner. I never knew the name but searched all over Oklahoma for a bottle that looked like it. I figured it was some fancy shampoo she got in New York. I just wanted to smell her. I adjust the showerhead to massage and rest against the back wall, letting it pound my back. She has to take me back. She has to…

I dry off and make my way to her new room. It’s like a different house in here. Paint, carpeting, a built-in shelving unit, crown molding; everything new except the bed. That has to mean something. She didn’t get rid of the bed for a reason. It’s still tilted down on the one corner. I mentally beat back a budding hard-on. I crawl naked into her bed and nuzzle my face into her pillow. It’s heaven compared to the hell that is Stephanie’s couch. I can’t wait until Annie comes home.

*  *  *

“What the hell?”

The noise is deafening. I roll over and hide my head under the pillow. The assault gets closer. Goddamn crop duster. I forgot how close they get to the ground. What the hell time is it? I uncover my head and find the clock on the side of her bed. 6:45 a.m. I slept over twelve hours. The ride must have taken its toll. Why do these freaking farmers have to get up so early?

And where the hell is Annie?

It occurs to me the dog isn’t here for a reason. She’s away, probably gone with that jackass Nick. How do I always miss her? Butch is probably thinking she murdered me. I hate to leave her bed, but I’m starving. Even though it’s not even 8:00 a.m., those meatballs sound good. I peel myself from Annie’s bed and put my clothes back on.

You can’t stay away forever, and I plan on being right here when you get back.

I go out the back door and lock it up and put the key back under the turtle rock. Who exactly does she think she’s keeping out? Why even lock the door? Everyone who knows her knows where the key is, and I think I demonstrated in November that anyone who doesn’t know about the key can get in pretty easily.

I pull out of her driveway and the sadness creeps up on me again. Her bed washed away the anger and left me melancholy. The ride home takes about five minutes and I’m no longer surprised to see the farmhouse empty.

I let myself in and rummage through the refrigerator until I find the meatballs from yesterday. I open the bread drawer and take out two rolls. I put seven meatballs in a bowl and cover them with a paper towel, and turn on the microwave for two minutes. As it spins, the calendar nailed to the wall catches my eye. It has my name with a line across this entire weekend. I look back over the past six months and every time I’ve come home has been written on the calendar. How did I not notice this before? There’s barely anything else on it: my visits, a few church meetings, the VFW pancake breakfast, and a few doctors’ appointments.

Then, on February 18, as clear as a piece of glass, is a doctor’s appointment for 1:00 p.m.—in Annie’s handwriting.

Eliza Freed graduated from Rutgers University and returned to her hometown in rural South Jersey. Her mother encouraged her to take some time and find herself. After three months of searching, she began to bounce checks and her neighbors began to talk; her mother told her to find a job.

She settled into Corporate America, learning systems and practices and the bureaucracy that slows them. Eliza quickly discovered her creativity and gift for storytelling as a corporate trainer and spent years perfecting her presentation skills and studying diversity. It was during this time that she became an avid observer of the characters we meet and the heartaches we endure. Her years of study have taught her laughter is the key to survival, even when it’s completely inappropriate.

She currently lives in New Jersey with her family and a misbehaving beagle named Odin. An avid swimmer, if Eliza is not with her family and friends, she’d rather be underwater. While she enjoys many genres, she has always been a sucker for a love story…the more screwed up the better.

Learn more at:

ElizaFreed.com

Twitter, @ElizabFreed

Facebook.com/ElizabFreed

Please see the next page for an excerpt from the first book in the Lost Souls series
Forgive Me
Available now!

~ 1 ~

 

“My soul is forgotten, veiled by a boring complication”

M
y foot will bleed soon. Judging by the familiar curve in the road, I’m still at least two miles from home. Of course I end up walking home the night I’m wearing great shoes. The pain shoots through my heel as the clouds flash with lightning in the dark sky.

Maybe I’m bleeding already. I mentally review the last few hours. Anything to distract me from the agony of each step. The texts, the endless stream of drunken texts, run through my mind.

We’re soul mates.
I roll my eyes. Brian deserves a nicer girlfriend, someone sweet like him. Someone who doesn’t roll their eyes at this statement.

We belong together.
Bleh.

What does it say about my relationship when the only thing I ever tell people about my boyfriend is, “He’s a really nice guy”? And how, after two years of being apart, did I ever take him back? The last three weeks have felt like years, years I was asleep.

We’re perfect together.
My mother thought we were perfect. Hell, this whole town thought it.

No one is ever going to know you the way I do.
He was watching me as I read this one and I had to work hard to keep a straight face. At the time I wasn’t sure why, but here on this deserted road, in the middle of a thunderstorm Brian would never walk through, I know it’s because he never knew me at all. Or my soul. It’s not his fault. I’d nearly forgotten it myself.

I stop to adjust the strap on my sandals and two sets of eyes peer out from the ditch next to the road. They’re low to the ground, watching me. I’ve always hated nocturnal animals.

“Anyone else come out to play in the storm?” I say to the other hidden nightlife. I move to the edge of the shoulder, facing the nonexistent traffic, and give my new friends some room. I wince as I step forward and watch as a set of headlights shines on the road in front of me and the scene around me turns mystical. The steam rises off the pavement at least five feet high before disappearing into the blue-tinted night. The rain lasted only twenty spectacular minutes, not long enough to cool the scorched earth.

I’m lost in it as the truck pulls up beside me, now driving on the wrong side of the road, and Jason Leer rolls down his window. I glance at him and turn to stare straight ahead, trying not to let the excruciating torture of each step show on my face.

“Hi, Annie,” he says, and immediately pisses me off. I might look sweet in my new rose-colored shorts romper, but these wedges have me ready to commit murder.

“My name is Charlotte,” I say without looking at him, and keep walking. The strap is an ax cutting my heel from my foot.
Why won’t he call me Charlotte?
Of course the cowboy would show up. What this night needs is a steer wrestler to confound me further. The same two desires he always evokes in me surface now. Wanting to punch him and wanting to climb on top of him.

“What the hell are you doing out here? Alone—” A guttural moan of thunder interrupts him, and I tilt my head to determine the origin, but it surrounds us. The clouds circle, blanketing us with darkness, but when the moon is visible it’s bright enough to see in this blue-gray night. We’re in the eye of the storm and there will never be a night like this again.
God I love a storm.
The crunching of the truck’s tires on the road reminds me of my cohort.

“I’m not alone. You’re here, irritating me as usual.” I will not look at him. I can feel his smartass grin without even seeing him, the same way I can feel a chill slip across my skin. It’s hot as hell out and Jason Leer is giving me the chills.

Lightning strikes, reaching the ground in the field just to our left, and I stop walking to watch it. Every minute of today brought me here. The mind-numbing dinner date with Brian Matlin, the conversation on the way to Michelle’s party about how we should see other people, the repeated and
annoying
texts declaring his love, and the eleven beers and four shots I watched Brian pour down his throat, all brought me here.

“If you’re trying to kill yourself by being struck by lightning, I could just hit you with my truck. It’ll be faster,” he says, stealing my eyes from the field. His arm rests out his truck window and it’s enormous. He tilts his body toward the door and the width of his chest holds my gaze for a moment too long.

“Annie!”

I shake my head, freeing myself from him. “What? What do you want? I’m not afraid of a storm.” I am, however, exhausted by this conversation.

I finally allow myself to look him in the eyes. They are dark tonight, like the slick, steamy road before me, and I shouldn’t have looked.

“I want you.” His voice is tranquil, as if he’s talking a suicide jumper off a bridge. “I want you to get in the truck and I’ll drive you home.” Thunder growls in the distance and the lightning strikes to the left and right of the road at the same time. The storm surrounds us, but the rain was gone too soon, leaving us with the suffocating heat that set the road on fire.

I close my eyes as my sandal cuts deeper into my foot, and Jason finally pulls away. My grandmother always said the heat brings out the crazy in people. It was ninety-seven degrees at 7:00 p.m. The humidity was unbearable. Too hot to eat. Too hot to laugh. The only thing you could do was talk about how miserably hot it was outside. By the time Brian and I arrived, most of the party had already been in the lake at some point. Even that didn’t look refreshing. The sky unleashed, and Michelle kicked everyone out rather than let them destroy her house.

I stop walking and shift my foot in the shoe. The strap is now sticking; I’ve probably already shed blood. Jason drives onto the right side of the road and stops the truck on the tiny shoulder. He turns on his hazard lights and gets out of the truck.
He’s a hazard.
I plaster a smile on my face and begin walking again. As soon as he leaves, I’m taking off these shoes and throwing them in the pepper field next to me.

Before I endure two steps, he’s in front of me. He’s as fast as I remember. Like lightning: always picked first for kickball in elementary school. His hair is the same thick, jet-black as back then, too. The moonlight shines off it and I wonder where his cowboy hat is. He’s too beautiful to piss me off as much as he does. He blocks my path, a concrete wall, and I stop just inches from him.

“I’m going to ask you one more time to get in the truck.” A lightning strike hits the road near his truck and without flinching he looks back at me, waiting for my answer.

“Or what?” I challenge him with my words and an “I dare you” look on my face. He hoists me over his shoulder and walks back to the truck as if I’m a sweatshirt he grabbed as an afterthought before walking out the door.

“Put me down! I’m not some steer you can toss around!” I yell as I fist my hands and pound on his back. He’s laughing and pissing me off even more. I pull his shirt up and start to reach for his underwear and Jason runs the last few steps to the truck.

“Do you ever behave?” he asks, and swings the truck door open. He drops me on the seat and leans in the truck between my legs. I push my hair out of my face, my chest still heaving with anger. “Why the hell are you walking alone on a country road, in a goddamned storm, this late at night?”

My stomach knots at his closeness and this angers me, too. Why can’t Jason Leer bore me the way Brian Matlin does? Jason raises his eyebrows and tilts his head at the perfect angle to send a chill down my spine.

“Brian and I broke up tonight.”

“And he made you walk home?” Shock is written all over his face. Brian would never make me walk home. He is the nicest of guys. Not great at holding his liquor, but nice.

“No.” I roll my eyes, calling him an idiot, and he somehow leans in closer, making my stomach flip. “He proceeded to get drunk at Michelle Farrell’s party and I drove him home so he wouldn’t die.” I think back to all the parties of the last six years, since Jason and I entered high school. Besides graduation, we were rarely in the same place. I’ve barely hung out with Jason Leer since eighth grade. At the start of high school everyone broke into groups, and this cowboy wasn’t in mine.

“Why didn’t you call someone for a ride?” He breaks my reverie.

“Because apparently when Brian gets drunk, he texts a lot. My battery died after the fiftieth message professing his love for me.”

“Poor guy.”

“Poor guy? What about me? I’m the one who had to delete them and drive him home. I thought he’d never pass out.” I’m still mourning the time I lost with Brian’s drunken mess.

“Why didn’t you just take his car?”

“Because I left him passed out in it in his parents’ driveway. I got him home safe, but I’m not going to carry him to bed.”

At this Jason lowers his head and laughs. My irritation with him twists into annoyance at myself for telling him anything. For telling him everything. I want to punch him in his laughing mouth. His lips are perfect, though.

“It’s not easy to love you, Annie.”

“Yeah, well, I’ve got fifty texts that claim otherwise. Judging from the fact that you can’t even get my name right, everything’s probably hard for you.” Jason leans on the dash and his jeans scrape against my maimed foot, causing my face to twist in pain. Before I can regain my composure, his eyes are on me. He moves back and holds my foot up near his face. He slips the strap off my heel and runs his thumb across the now broken and purple blister. I close my eyes, the sight of the wound amplifying the pain.

“My God, you are stubborn,” he says, his eyes still on my foot. Thunder groans behind us and he straightens my leg, examining it in the glimmer of moonlight. I’m not angry anymore. One urge has silenced another and has awakened me in the process. He pulls my foot to him and kisses the inside of my ankle, and a chill runs from my leg to both breasts and settles in the back of my throat, stealing my breath.

I swallow hard. “Are all your first kisses on the inside of the ankle?” I ask. His hands grip my ankle harshly, but he’s careful with my heel.

His eyes find mine as he drags his lips up my calf and kisses the inside of my knee. I shut up and shudder from a chill. There are no words. Only the beginning of a thought.
What if
arises in my mind against the sound of the clicking of the hazard lights.

The lightning strikes again and unveils the darkness in his eyes. He lowers my leg and backs up, but I’m not ready to let him go. I grab his belt buckle and pull him toward me. Jason doesn’t budge. He is an ox. His eyes bore into me and for a moment I think he hates me. He’s holding a raging river behind a dam, and I’m recklessly breaching it.

With a hand gripping each shoulder, he forces me back to the seat and hovers over me. Even in the darkness I can see the emptiness in his eyes and I can’t leave it alone. He kisses me. He kisses me as if he’s done it a hundred times before, and when his lips touch mine, some animalistic need growls inside of me. He’s like nothing I’ve ever known, and my body craves a hundred things all at once, every one of them him. With his tongue in my mouth, I tighten my arms around his thick neck and pull him closer, wanting to climb inside of him.

Jason pulls away, devastating me, until I realize there are flashing lights behind us. His eyes fixed on mine, he takes my hands from behind his head and pulls me upright before the state trooper steps out of his car and walks to our side of the truck.

*  *  *

“Charlotte, honey, are you going to get up? I heard you come in late last night.”

I roll over and put my head under the pillow. I don’t want to get up. I don’t want to tell my mom that I broke up with Brian…again.

“Is everything okay?” She’s worried.

I take a deep breath and sit up in bed. The sheet rubs against my heel and the pain reminds me of Jason Leer.

“I broke up with Brian last night.”

“Oh no. I have to see his mother at book club on Wednesday.”

“I can’t marry him just because you can’t face his mother at book club.”

“I’m not suggesting you marry him, just that you stop dating him if you’re going to keep breaking his heart.” My mom leaves my room. Her face is plagued with frustration mixed with disappointment.

I climb out of bed and lumber to the bathroom. My green eyes sparkle in the mirror, hinting at our indelicate secret from last night. I wink at myself as if something exciting is about to happen. My long blond hair barely looks slept on. I think breaking up with Brian was good for me.

*  *  *

“Jack, she broke up with Brian again,” I catch as I enter the kitchen.

“Through with him, huh?” My father never seems to have an opinion on who I date as long as they treat me well. Brian certainly did that.

“Dad, he just didn’t do it for me.” Jason’s eyes pierce my thoughts again, haunting me. The trooper sent us home and I left him in his truck without a word. There wasn’t one to say.

“Do what? What did you expect him to do for you?” my mother spouts. She’s not taking the news well.

“When he looks at me a certain way, I want to get chills,” I start, surprised by how easily my needs are verbalized. “When he leans into me, I want my stomach to flip, and when he walks away I want to care if he comes back.” My parents both watch me silently as if I’m reciting a poem at the second-grade music program. They are pondering me.

“What? Don’t your stomachs flip when you’re together? Ever?”

“Does your stomach flip when you look at me, Jack?” she asks.

“Only if I eat chili the same day,” my dad says, and they both start laughing.

“Charlotte, I remember what it was like to be young. And your father did make my stomach flip, but I think you’re too hard on Brian. He’s a nice boy.”

“Yeah yeah. He’s nice.” I butter my toast and move to sit next to my father at the table.
He is nice
. For some reason Brian’s kindness frustrates me. He’s a boring complication. “I ran into Jason Leer last night.”
And he kissed the inside of my leg.
I smile ruefully.

My mother’s eyebrows rise and I fear I’ve divulged too much. My father never looks up from the newspaper.

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