If You Leave
I hope you like the flowers.
All my love,
Kent
My eyes well up at the thought that they were once so happy, without issues or drama, without abuse or fights. I can hardly remember a time when my father’s temper wasn’t hanging over our heads.
“My mom used to tiptoe around my dad’s temper. She tried so hard to make sure he never got angry because she didn’t want to deal with the repercussions. We learned to do the same thing.”
I hand the letter to Gabe and pick up another one.
Nan,
I’m so sorry about last night. I’m sorry I lost my temper. It’s just that the thought of you leaving me makes me crazy.
If you leave, I’ll be nothing.
Please forgive me.
All my love,
Forever,
Kent
A tear streaks hotly down my cheek and I furiously wipe it away before I throw the entire drawer across the room, as hard as I can. It slams into the wall and everything in it explodes in a cloud of junk on the floor.
“Fuck you, Dad,” I tell him as though he were standing right next to me. “Fuck you, fuck you, fuck you.”
Gabe picks up the letter and looks at it, then stares at me. “Your mom almost left him?”
I nod, not even caring that the tears are flowing freely now.
“A hundred times. But she never did. She would tell us to pack a suitcase and to go get in the car, so we would. But we’d wait out there for hours because they’d scream and fight and then make up. And all the while, she’d forget that we were out in the car waiting. Waiting for her to be strong and change our lives. But she never did. And I hated her for that.”
I’m practically screaming now. As Gabe watches in astonishment, I rip open their closet door and start yanking clothing from the hangers and drawers, throwing each piece into a huge pile on the floor of the bedroom. I throw her shoes, his work shirts, his ball caps, her underwear.
Everything goes.
Everything.
After a while I glance at the pile. It’s enormous.
“You forgot these,” Gabe says quietly, holding a stack of old greeting cards held together with a rubber band. I gesture toward the pile.
“Throw it on.”
He tosses it and we both watch as it slides down the mountainous heap.
Gabe looks at me. “I didn’t think you’d throw all of this out in one fell swoop. You’ve got balls, Maddy.”
“But what the hell am I going to do with all this stuff?” I mutter. The answer comes to me immediately and it’s the only thing that makes sense. I look at Gabe.
“Bonfire.”
A strange light shines in Gabe’s eyes and he nods enthusiastically.
“That’s perfect. Let’s carry this stuff out down to the beach and burn it all.”
We lug every last piece of the pile down to the damp beach. As we do, I remember all the bonfires Mila and I had down here over the years with our friends. In fact, Ethan came to many of them with us. We’d sit out here in the dark and make s’mores, go swimming and cuddle up around the fire with whatever boyfriend we had at the time.
This bonfire is very different.
For one, it’s broad daylight.
For two, it’s burning in effigy.
I turn to Gabe, throwing him a book of matches and a bottle of lighter fluid.
“I’m going to burn everything about my parents that hurt me, everything that caused me issues. My mom might not have been strong enough to deal with it,” I tell him. “But I am. Fuck this.”
Gabe nods, satisfied and pleased by my attitude. “This is exactly what I meant, Maddy. Fear is a choice.”
He tosses a pair of my dad’s shoes on the pile.
“That’s your dad leaving after every fight, after every time he hit your mom,” Gabe announces. Even though he wasn’t there, it’s as if he can see right into my life and knows what happened. Because that’s exactly what my dad did. He left every time, leaving Mom at home to cry.
Leaving me at home to console her.
I glance at Gabe in appreciation, then throw a handful of mom’s clothing and belts onto the pile. “That’s for every time I saw my mom’s bloody nose drip onto her dress… after Dad hit her.”
Gabe nods and we take turns adding things to the mountain of memories.
Screamed words between my parents, a blurred memory of my mother curled up crying, an image of my dad slapping her… all of it goes onto the heap, piled like the rubbish that it is.
Dried flowers from her closet—sent as an apology for hitting her—go onto the pile as well. His apology wasn’t fucking good enough.
So I’m going to burn it now.
Broken promises that he’d never hurt her again, broken promises that she’d leave him if he did… all go onto the pile. There are a lot of them.
When there’s nothing left to add, I watch as Gabe squirts lighter fluid all over the pile, then turns to me, holding out a match.
“You do it,” he tells me solemnly. “You deserve to do it.”
I stare at the giant mountain and sniff at the acrid smell of lighter fluid as I realize that it symbolizes a monster, a monster that I have allowed to control my life for far too long.
It’s because of my parents that I’m afraid to get involved with anyone, it’s because of them that I’m afraid any relationship I get into will hurt me, like my dad hurt my mom. Even though my father loved me, he damaged me so much more than he ever knew.
I don’t deserve that.
I toss the match and watch as the entire pile explodes into flame. The heat singes my hair, washing over me, and I take a step back. Gabe pulls me to his chest and together we watch my bad memories burn.
It is surprisingly cathartic.
I watch the dark smoke curling and wisping into the white sky, carrying the toxic memories away with it. I try to imagine that everything that has lain heavily on my heart for years is floating away… far, far away from me. It’s not my burden to bear. It was theirs and they aren’t here anymore.
They aren’t here anymore.
But I am. I have my own mistakes to make… but I sure as hell won’t make the same ones they did.
We sit beside the raging bonfire for at least an hour. When the fire grows dim I squirt more lighter fluid on it, causing it to rage again. I want to make sure that every bad memory has burned completely away.
“Do you feel better?” Gabe asks quietly as we walk back up to the house.
I realize that I do. I feel surprisingly lighter. I’m no therapist, but what I just did was really fucking therapeutic.
“I do,” I tell him. “This was a good idea. Thank you. I’m sorry that you had to see me that way, that you had to see all of that… shit. But I thank you for making me face it. I’m sorry I got mad at you.”
Gabe rubs his hand on my shoulder. “You weren’t really mad at me and I knew that. I’m just glad it helped,” he tells me.
We heat up some frozen burritos and rice, then sit curled up on the couch until bedtime. After we crawl into bed, Gabe holds me until I go to sleep, but he leaves me afterward.
I know this because he wakes me up in the night, tossing and turning and mumbling on the couch. He calls out for Brand. He mumbles incoherently. This is the Gabe I saw that first night. This is the Gabe he wants to hide from me. This is the Gabe he doesn’t want to face.
I watch him for a while before covering him up and padding back to bed. There’s nothing else I can do. He gave me the push I needed to face my demons… because I was ready to do it. That’s the difference between him and me.
He’s clearly not ready to face his own. I just wonder if he ever will be. And if he’s not, what does that mean for me? Or for us?
It’s not something I have an answer to, so eventually I give up thinking about it and slip into a fitful sleep.
When we wake in the morning, the water has gone down. I’m not very happy about it. On the one hand, I’ll be able to g
o see Mila.
But on the other, this little bubble that I’ve been in with Gabe will burst and we’ll have to go back to reality. The problem is, I’m not sure that we’re ready for it.
Chapter Fourteen
Gabriel
What the fuck is happening?
My thoughts are a swirling mess as I work out at the gym. I can’t believe this is happening to me. I don’t get attached to women. Ever. I fuck them and I like fucking them. But attached?
No fucking way.
Why then am I all tied up in knots about Madison? It’s an exercise in fucking futility because I can’t stay with her. I’m too fucked up and she doesn’t even know the half of it. It’s not right.
But holy shit, it feels right.
Is everyone in the world broken, Gabriel?
I swallow hard as I punch the punching bag harder. Yes, everyone is broken, but I’m the most broken of them all.
Bile rises in my throat and I swallow it down. She has no idea what a monster I am. And if she knew, she would probably kick me in the balls and run hard in the other direction.
As well she should.
You’re someone who won’t hurt me.
Christ. The memory of her words has a visceral effect on me, tightening my gut. What the fuck am I doing here? Why am I fucking with her? It’s not right.
It’s not right.
But when I held her last night, everything felt right in the world. And when I think about walking away from her, everything feels like shit. Am I really selfish enough to want to keep her with me, even though I’m not fit to be with anyone?
The bad thing caught you.
I slug at the bag harder, hard enough that my shoulders strain from the effort.
The bad thing caught you.
I slug at the bag until I can’t slug at it anymore, until my shoulders are weak and my arm feels like rubber.
The bad thing caught you.
I slump to the floor, leaning against the wall as I catch my breath.
The bad thing didn’t catch me.
I’m the bad thing.
I hit the showers, then pick up the phone and call Jacey.
“Hey, Sis. Want to go shooting?”
“Sure. Meet me there in an hour?”
“Yup.”
I taught her to target shoot when we were both still in high school, back when I was still wet behind the ears. I thought that being a Ranger would be the pinnacle of my life. It would make me a man.
I had no idea that it would break me.
I swing by the house and pile a Colt AR-15 and several boxes of ammo into my trunk before I head in the direction of the shooting range.
Over the years Jacey and I have spent hundreds of hours blowing holes in targets, just clearing our thoughts. The repetition of shooting is comforting and familiar. It’s one thing that we can do together, one thing that we both enjoy.
When I arrive at the range, Jacey is already there and unloading her shit, including her pink fucking nine-millimeter that I always tease her about. She turns to me as I approach, her blonde hair pulled out of her face so she can see.
“So, what’s wrong?”
I glance at her as I set my bag down.
“What the fuck? Do you think I have ovaries now? That I’m going to talk about my feelings and shit?”
Jacey grins. “Nope. We’re going to blow some shit to pieces. And then we can talk about your feelings and shit.”
I shake my head and put my orange foam earplugs in.
For the next two hours we blow the paper targets to smithereens. It’s amazingly satisfying to blow holes through the center of the target, time after time. When Jacey is finally out of ammo and I’m damn close, she turns to me, pulling one of her earplugs out.
“You want some dinner?”
I nod. “Yup.”
We head to the little burger place down the road, where Jace practically orders a side of beef along with a margarita. I stare at her incredulously as I place what seems like a small order now: a double quarter pounder, onion rings and a beer.
“Have you not eaten in a month?” I ask her as we slide into a cracked vinyl booth.
“It’s ‘that’ time of the month, Gabe,” she tells me with a grin. “I could eat two cows and a calf too.”
Ugh. “TMI, Jace. Seriously.”
She just laughs.
“Why are we here, Gabe? Seriously. I know something’s wrong. You might as well just tell me, or you can let me badger it out of you. Either way is fine with me.”
I roll my eyes. She’d actually enjoy the badgering part.
“I fucked up, Jace,” I finally admit. “Big time.”
She raises a blonde eyebrow. “What happened?”
I sigh and swig my beer, enjoying the cold bite of it as it slides down my throat.
“Madison.”
Jacey instantly narrows her eyes. “What did you do? I swear I’ll castrate you if you hurt her. I mean it. I don’t want to see your junk, but I’ll do it.”
I shake my head, staring at the table, swirling my beer in the glass.
“I haven’t yet. But I’m going to.”
Jacey’s puzzled now. It’s apparent as she looks at me in confusion. “I’m not following you. If you haven’t hurt her yet, then you don’t have to do it.”
Our food arrives and Jacey dives into hers, eating with more gusto than I’ve ever seen a chick eat with.
“You don’t understand,” I finally tell her with a sigh. “I’m fucked up. When you look at me, you see your big brother, same ol’ Gabe. But I’m not that guy anymore. That thing that happened to Brand and me… it seriously fucked me up. Maddy doesn’t deserve someone like me.”
Jacey stops chewing and looks at me. “Why don’t you let Maddy decide that?” she suggests. “Have you told her what happened to you?”
I shake my head. “No.”
Jacey tilts her head, examining me. “How bad is it? Seriously, how bad can it be? I know you, Gabe. You’re a good person, through and through. I would never have wanted to set you up with Maddy if you weren’t.”
“But that’s what you don’t get, Jacey,” I answer. “I’m not good through and through anymore. I’m just not.”
“Did you kill someone while you were in the Rangers?” she asks curiously. “Is that it? Because that’s dumbass, Gabe. Obviously you had to know that you would kill someone if you joined the Army and went to Afghanistan.”
I shake my head. “That’s not it. And yes, I’ve killed people.”
“It’s worse than that?” Jacey is incredulous. “Then maybe I don’t want to know.”
I level a gaze at her. “Trust me, you don’t. But I have a problem now and I don’t know what to do. I didn’t mean to get so close to Madison. I really didn’t. I thought we’d hook up a few times and then I’d go back home. But…”