The Second Chance (Inferno Falls Book Three) (22 page)

“Why don’t you trust me?”
 

“Twenty years of knowing you.”
 

“See, now,” he says, “that hurts.”
 

“Why now, Tommy? Mackenzie is almost ten years old. You didn’t want to help when I got pregnant, and you haven’t wanted to help since. So why are you so goddamn interested in mending fences now?”
 

“I got to thinking about what matters in life. I’m trying to be a better person.”
 

I feel my face contort, like I’ve bitten a lemon. “Oh,
bullshit.”
 

“You said you didn’t want my help. Didn’t need it because you had Grady.” His lip curls up into a sinister smile. “How did that work out for you?”
 

“It was a mistake.”
 

“Trying to be with Grady?”
 

“What we did. One little slip, nothing more.”
 

“Hmm. And you regret it. Even after that beautiful little girl of ours?”

“Don’t twist my words, Tommy. This isn’t about her. This is about you. You’re here because he’s back, aren’t you?”
 

“Grady?” Another fake-thoughtful nod. “Yes, I guess he is back. Ran into him the other night. Apparently, for some people, no time’s passed. He hasn’t changed. Kind of sad, really. I just wanted to talk. But guess what Grady did?”
 

“Goodbye, Tommy,” I say, starting to turn.
 

“He ran away.”
 

I shouldn’t engage, but I almost have to. I began this encounter turned on, and the hideous thing is that I still am. I don’t know what kind of self-sabotaging voodoo is living inside me, but the more fury I feel, the hotter I get. He can fight with me. Or he can pin me down and have his way. Either would make me happy until I’m miserable.
 

“How dare you come in here,” I say, moving closer than I should, my voice practically a hiss. “How dare you even talk to me after all that’s happened.”
 

Tommy gives an annoyingly casual shrug, as if he doesn’t notice my vitriol. “I’m just trying to open a dialogue. After talking to Chadd, I got this intense impulse to renew acquaintances with the girl from my past.”
 

“I’m not interested.”
 

“How about in the bathroom? Would you be interested in there?”
 

I can’t speak. I can’t move. I just stand there with my mouth hanging open.
 

Tommy stands. There’s a small satchel in the booth beside him, and he takes his time gathering it, checking the flap, making sure it’s closed. I gape for maybe ten seconds, but it feels like an eternity before we’re standing face to face, Tommy finally ready to do what I’ve asked and get out of my sight.
 

“Tell your boyfriend I said hi,” Tommy says.

Then he’s gone, and I sit in his vacated booth before I fall.

CHAPTER 25

Grady

The auction guys show up the next morning. They don’t call first, which was supposed to be the deal. I don’t know any of the people who arrive, so I have to pick up the phone and call Greg, who I’d spoken to before. He refers me to my signed contract, for their most all-in-one package.
 

You can auction anything, but the better the place looks, the higher price it’ll fetch. Higher, in the real estate world, by tens of thousands of dollars for the cost of a cleaning and a fresh coat of paint. A price I’m paying with my higher-than-normal commission, and a price they’re willing to pay to inflate our mutual bounty.

I can stay in the house while they’re rearranging, cleaning, painting, and doing small cosmetic repairs, but it’s obvious once things get moving that I’d be in everyone’s way. The chemicals reek, and paint fumes have always given me a headache.

“I’ll just leave for a bit,” I tell the woman who seems to be in charge.

“Good idea,” she says, as if she’s been walking around waiting for me to find my senses the entire time. “Come back Tuesday.”
 

“Oh. I meant I’d just leave for a few hours or something.”
 

She looks at me like I’m an idiot — the same look you’d give an obnoxious third wheel trying to invite himself along on an intimate evening for two. “If you want.”
 

“Should I not?”
 

“We’ll be covering everything with drop cloths. I noticed the air conditioning doesn’t work, and you won’t be able to open the windows since it’s expected to rain. It won’t be comfortable in here.” She looks at her paperwork. “Greg said you understood?”
 

“I should leave then.”
 

“If you don’t like being asphyxiated, then yes, I’d recommend it.”
 

I’ll bet she’s being dramatic. Chances are they want to move fast, trying to turn these auction spots as quickly as possible. The auction date is only about a week away, and they’re under the gun. If I stay, I’ll mess up preparations they make one evening to start early the next day. Probably, in most of the auction-estate cases, there’s not some homeless traveler using the place as a flophouse. They’re probably tasked with clearing the old-person smell from the building, knowing the octogenarian himself is finally gone.
 

But it does stink in here. It’s fine. I can get a motel room, and maybe some decent TV for a change.
 

And so, suddenly and unexpectedly evicted, I shower quickly, gather a bag, and head for the door. I’m at my truck when I realize something else then run inside and gather Carl, too. I don’t want to hunt for the carrier because they’ve already laid out a bunch of drop cloths over my carefully organized piles of random shit, but Carl looks as ready to go as a man wearing his hat, compulsively checking his watch. He tells me
Rowr
then steps into a half box I find as if I’m the asshole for thinking he’d want to stay.
 

It’s only 8 a.m. With an entire empty day ahead of us, I wonder what the hell Carl and I will do with ourselves.
 

I got up early because my mind was full of the day’s awkward event and I couldn’t sleep. I sense a renewing connection between me and Maya — and damn him, Joe is right that I can’t just flit off to Alaska because of it. No. I can stay, at least for a while, for Maya. She’s not the problem. Neither is Mackenzie. She seems like a sweet little girl, and if I forget the origin story she can’t help having, I see nothing in her but delight and joy. She can’t help that her father is a worthless, womanizing fucker. Or that her mother, who’s usually sensible, was fool enough to fall for him the second we were on a break.
 

No, today’s awkwardness has more to do with Maya’s parents. I always liked them, and they always seemed to like me before I split. I had an amusing chat with Arthur that first day, and got an okay vibe. But really, I have no idea what Maya has told them about me. She must have been furious — in that uniquely apoplectic way she has — when I skipped town after she told me she’d not only been with Tommy, but that he’d knocked her up. I tried explaining it to Maya back then (it was more about Ernie than her, though her cheating didn’t help), but I don’t know if that information ever made it to Arthur and Charlotte. They might think I’m a shit. It wasn’t my baby, but I did leave their daughter when she needed me most.
 

It hardly matters. That was almost a decade ago, and we’ve all moved on. I’ve forgiven Maya by default, probably because she’s suffered enough. I don’t know if she’s forgiven me, since my transgressions spanned the entire time we were apart.
 

I didn’t call. I couldn’t face the idea of speaking with her. Hearing, maybe, how badly she needed my help.
 

I barely wrote. Postcards don’t require a return address, which was fine because mine rotated like the wheels on a bike. They’re more like missives than correspondence. Broadcasts, not conversations.
 

For ten years, I thought only of me. And even though I technically didn’t do anything wrong (and might have been justified in my own anger), that doesn’t stop it from feeling like I’m the bastard. Like I’m the one who did wrong then made it worse by the year, refusing to so much as look back.
 

At 8 a.m. on a Sunday, Inferno Falls is strangely peaceful. The entire original cluster now called Old Town looks like a movie set — some designer’s conception of what Tiny Town, America looked like two hundred years ago, mixed with the wave of trendiness that’s found the Falls in the past few years. With few people around, the feeling of a quaint facade is even deeper. I feel, after I park in the public lot and start to stroll, like I’m on a Hollywood back lot, about to meet actors and grips instead of the everyday folks who live here.
 

I head to Hill of Beans for a coffee then kill nearly two hours making lazy turns and peeking in windows. After the town itself peters out, I wander on the old dirt road heading out to the slow rises and falls of land that eventually lead to Cherry Hill. Farther on, I see the main road, but stick to the path, my boots getting dusty.
 

I wonder how far I can walk. I never came out this way when I used to live here. Some of Maya’s friends knew this area, though; I see a sign for Ticket to Ride stables. I guess you can board and train your own horses, or you can hire one to explore the rolling hills on your own. I wonder how they know people won’t just abscond with their mounts? But then again, I guess they’re animals, not cars. They know who feeds them.
 

And this is Inferno Falls, where people still tend to trust each other, despite the modern world. There are seedy areas on the opposite end, as you bleed past Rum Street and into Tiny Amsterdam, but out here, it’s still quaint. From what I saw when Joe and Brandon were taking me around, even Tiny Amsterdam has had a facelift — porn stores now looking like classy lingerie shops, strip joints with valet parking, tits and asses in display windows not on DVD covers, but on clever, quirky pastries. Beyond, there’s still Dalton Park and the Regency and my old stomping grounds. Little has touched those spots. But here, it’s another world.
 

I realize where I am. I’ve come at it from another direction, but up there is Reed Creek. It’s not the spot Maya and I used to visit, and based on her description, it’s not the part near her new house. But the creek is there, and if I went to it now, I could follow it back. To Maya then to our old makeout spot. Like a march down the banks, back in time.
 

It’s nearly eleven by the time I’m in the middle of Old Town. More people have spilled onto the streets, and the diners appear to be hopping, gearing up for lunch. I look at my phone as if that will change the time, make it later, bring me closer to my only appointment now that I have nothing to do. But it remains nearly 11 a.m. And thanks to my shower and the clothes still in my truck, I’m more or less ready to hit the Hollands’ with five minutes’ warning.
 

With nothing better to do, I decide I’m hungry. I had breakfast much earlier than usual, so there’s no harm in an early lunch. I hoof it back to my truck so I can check on Carl. It’s not hot, and he’s stayed where I left him despite leaving the side windows halfway down, plus leaving the little slider leading to the bed all the way open. He could leave any time he wanted, and honestly, life would get simpler. If I stay in town, then fine, I guess I have a cat. But what the hell am I supposed to do with a cat on the road?
 

Carl looks at me through the half-open window as if to say that I made my cat-bed, and now I’ve got to lie in it. He does this feline squint that’s half content and half smug then looks at the open air between us as if reading my mind.
 

Yes, I could leave. But if I stay in this truck, you’ll continue to feed me.
And then, because he’s a dick, I imagine Carl adding, S
ucker
.
 

I head back the way I came, considering calling Joe or Brandon for the thousandth time since I started walking. But I’ve monopolized Joe’s time lately, and keep trying to remind myself that Brandon’s now married. If I stick around, I’ll have to meet her sometime.
 

If
I stick around.
 

I keep going back and forth on that. Sorting my own motivations is as tricky as sorting someone else’s. I think when I stroll. This whole morning, I’ve been mulling what Joe said against what I want to do against what’s true against the bullshit I keep telling myself because it’s comfortable, and I’m used to it.
 

What’s truly between me and Maya? Joe’s argument seemed to hinge on an assumption that may not be true. He’s assumed that Maya
wants
me around, that she’d appreciate having a father figure in Mackenzie’s life far more than she’d ever want the actual father. She might not feel that way. And, I think selfishly, Joe’s argument also bundled in an obligation that might not be mine. Even if Maya wants
help
, who says I have to provide it? It wasn’t kind to leave Maya when she needed me, but it was certainly within my rights. I’d always wanted to get out of this town, and the state putting me in Ernie’s custody (when I was perfectly capable of taking care of myself) provided an excellent excuse.
 

Other books

ARC: The Corpse-Rat King by Lee Battersby
Gator's Challenge by Eve Langlais
Death on the Ice by Robert Ryan
Innocence Taken by Janet Durbin
Lizzie's List by Melling, Diane
The Company of Wolves by Peter Steinhart
Necessary Detour by Hornsby, Kim
Death and the Lady by Tarr, Judith


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024