Total pages in book: 88
Estimated words: 82651 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 413(@200wpm)___ 331(@250wpm)___ 276(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 82651 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 413(@200wpm)___ 331(@250wpm)___ 276(@300wpm)
When I walk back into his room, he’s still staring at the ceiling. He doesn’t lift his head, but he must have heard me walk in.
“You ever been in love, Van?” he asks me, his words weirdly not as slurred.
“Nope,” I answer as I put the can beside the bed. I untwist the bottled water and ask him, “Can you sit up? You need to drink this.”
Lucas struggles, but manages to pull himself up so he’s half leaning against the headboard. I hand the water to him and watch as he drinks it, a good amount spilling down his shirt.
“Stephy called it quits tonight,” he mutters after drinking more than half the bottle. I just stand there, not sure what to say. I’ve never had a close enough friend that I’d ever talk about this shit to, so I have no clue if he wants commiseration, advice, or just quiet solidarity.
I hope it’s the quiet solidarity, because that’s all I got.
“Fucking told her I wanted marriage and a family with her,” he mumbles miserably. “And you know what she told me?”
“What?” I ask, because I honestly have no clue. I can’t even identify with this conversation.
“She told me she wanted space,” he says bitterly, the words starting to slur again. “Wanted to just be friends again.”
“That sucks, man,” I say quietly, and it’s my best guess as to what’s appropriate in this situation. I don’t know Lucas all that well, but I have come to learn that both he and his brother Max have hearts of gold. Everyone on the team knows that, and I know the guy has to be particularly broken up because Stephanie is pregnant. That’s something he shared with the team a few weeks ago and his excitement was palpable.
“She’s a loner, Van,” Lucas says, bleary eyes try to focus on me. “She prefers it that way.”
Now that is something I can finally identify with.
“Her parents made her into that,” Lucas continues.
Can also identify with that.
“Really did a number on her. In fact, I told her she’d probably fuck our kid up the way her parents fucked her up.”
That is something I so acutely understand I get a fucking lump in my throat. This I identify with on a goddamn cellular level. I am fully aware of the dangers of dysfunctional families and how that shit gets passed down from generation to generation.
I’m terrified of it, actually, and this is why I understand Stephanie and why she’s a loner like me. I empathize with her. I really do. But she fucked up by letting someone in. The dysfunction that’s bound to be inherited and later manifested will never be known if you keep yourself removed from others. I’m a firm believer in that, but Stephanie must have been swayed otherwise.
And looking at Lucas so completely destroyed by this, I can’t help but fucking feel sorry for him as well.
“Drink the rest of that,” I tell him. “Then you need to get some sleep. Things will look better tomorrow.”
—
I hear the front door open and then softly close. I finish swiping the mop over the bathroom floor a few more times before I turn the light out and exit. I meet Simone in the hallway.
She looks exhausted.
Sinfully hot as hell, but completely drained.
Her eyes take in the mop, and I’m sure her nose can identify the smell of Lysol coming out of the bathroom.
“Mopping at 2 A.M.?” she asks with a raised eyebrow.
“Cleaning up your brother’s vomit,” I say dryly as I jerk my head toward his bedroom door. “I think he’s done, though.”
“Vomit?” she asks with clear worry in her voice.
“Let me get this rinsed out,” I tell her as I walk past her to the kitchen.
She follows me in there, placing her purse on the small table. Her eyes take in reddish-orange stains of tomato sauce I’d wiped off the walls. I didn’t get to clean it well, though, because Lucas decided to start hurling his guts and I think he’s just now gotten it all out of his system.
“What happened?” she murmurs as I put the mop into the sink and start to clean it.
“He showed up a few hours ago drunk out of his mind,” I tell her. “Like blind, stinking drunk. Could barely walk.”
“His car isn’t out front,” she says distractedly.
“Thank God he must have been clearheaded enough to use a taxi or an Uber,” I remark.
“Why was he so drunk?” she asks.
I look over my shoulder at her. “Stephanie broke up with him.”
“Oh no,” Simone gasps as her hand comes to cover her mouth in surprise. “Oh, she can’t. He loves her.”
Yup. Got the whole story about it while I helped hold him somewhat steady over the garbage can, and then later in the bathroom when he’d tried to walk in there by himself. He puked all over the tiled floor and got very little in the toilet.