Fractured Love
“Fuck. How’d Hamm take it?”
I shrug. “You know how the older surgeons are. I guess you have to be. I couldn’t even tell that he was upset. He had to go and tell the family, obviously.” I fold my hands around the warm cup, shaking my head. “I don’t know. But I guess that’s normal, that he kept things professional?” Losing a patient in the OR on a non-emergent surgery is somewhat uncommon, even in our field. I’ve only seen it happen one other time so far.
Landon looks down at his clasped hands, then back up. I love his gray eyes. Right now, they look thoughtful. “Probably. We lost a guy at Hopkins last year on a glioma resection. Attending was female. I saw her mouth do that little wobbly thing—you know, the little crying twitch—right when we were scrubbing out, but that was it. He had a young wife she went and told. Now I don’t know what she did that night,” he says, implying maybe the attending cried at home.
“So anyway…” I shake my head and bring the cup’s rim to my mouth. “I really need this.”
I feel a growing buoyancy as I peer down at him: freshly showered, rested Landon, here on his “off” day to bring me tea.
I cried half the night, and it was really therapeutic. Acknowledging what happened to us. Thinking about the time between then and now. Sometimes, it’s good to do that. When I woke up, though, I felt hollow, as if time was suspended until I saw which way this thing would go. I half figured he’d avoid me, considering he didn’t stay long after. I wondered if that was for the best. I knew for sure if he did dodge me, there’d be no way I could pursue him. Not in good conscience.
Landon stands up, hands going into pockets. “You finished?”
I nod, pulling my briefcase out of my locker. I slide my tablet inside and dare to look back at him. “Did you come just for me?” My stomach twists as I ask.
“Should have waited on your steps,” he says as he moves toward the hall door.
I take another sip of tea to stifle a giddy smile. We walk past the nurse’s station. I’m surprised when no one looks twice at us. Can’t they see the magnitude of this? Landon gets the stairwell door, and we start down the stairs, with him a step behind me.
“So,” I ask over my shoulder, “you still drink your chamomile?”
He smirks. “Ever since some bossy girl got me turned onto it.”
I feel my face go hot at the words “turned on.”
“Tell me you’re not blushing. From me saying turned onto it?” He gives a low laugh. “Oh, Evie. That’s not good.”
“It’s not?” I whisper.
Landon drags his palm down his lower abs...and over his pants. Where there’s a tent. It makes me giggle. “Landon…”
“Hey, it’s not my fault. How sheltered are you, Evie?” It’s half growled.
“I’m not sheltered. I think you noticed that last night.”
“Don’t mention last night.”
I turn around to face him. “Why?”
Alarm flickers over his features before they darken. “Do you want to get fucked in this stairwell, Evie?” His tone is quiet, controlled. It’s a tone I’ve never heard from him before.
My heart thunders. “Is that on the table?” I whisper.
“Do you want it to be?”
I swallow, holding his intense gaze. “I think I always would,” I answer honestly.
I’m going to pay for this…I almost know I am. But there it is: the truth of my heart, laid right at his feet. It feels so simple, this confession. How could I deny it? Loving Landon changed my life, and here he is again, and it feels fated. I’ll say yes as long as he’s asking.
It won’t be forever, a voice in my head says.
“Why do you make me feel like this?” The words are out before I get a chance to censor them.
“Like what?” He steps closer, close enough to touch a lock of my hair. When I fail to answer, he says, “Like what, Evie?” His face is gentle, even though his eyes are burning.
“We should leave the stairwell,” I say, glancing around. Someone could see us. That would really not be good.
“How do I make you feel, Evie?”
I exhale. “Like doing something stupid,” I say softly.
He gives me a funny, eyebrows-raised look, then leads me by my hand down to the second floor, into a hall, and to a door. He looks both ways down the hall, then, seeing no one, opens it, revealing…a storage room for stretchers?
As soon as he shuts the door behind us, he presses me against a wall and kisses me: my mouth, my cheek, my forehead, then my mouth again—a hard, rough kiss as he pushes his cock against my hip.
“You think,” he says, between kisses, “that this is stupid?” I answer with my mouth, and when we stop to pant, he murmurs, “Do you?”
“I…don’t know.”
He urges me down onto the nearest stretcher, stroking my hair as he kisses me more gently. “Does it scare you?”
“Yes.”
I grab his neck. We kiss the way that people drown—helpless and frantic: Landon’s body over mine, his fingers in my hair, his mouth forceful on mine.
In between our kisses, whispers.
“I missed you.”
“Landon—”
“Forgive me.”
“Why?”
“For leaving.”
We kiss until we can’t breathe, then we hold onto each other.
“Christ, Evie. Why can’t I stay away from you?”
“I’m irresistible?” I laugh.
“You’re right, this is reckless,” he says, leaning over me.
“I know.”
“We could lose our jobs.”
“I know.”
And so much more. Landon doesn’t even know how much we stand to lose. How much safer—how much smarter—it is for us to steer clear of each other. Especially me. I need to stay away from him, because at some point soon, I’ll have to tell him. I’ve only kept it from him this long because I thought he’d be better off not knowing. I haven’t been around Landon in ten years. Now that this is happening again, the weight of my secret make my heart feel like it’s breaking.
An how ironic that it hurts so much. For years, I used to think that he and I were star-crossed lovers, soul mates held apart by circumstance. As we pull each other’s clothes off in that second-level closet, I revisit that idea…but twisted. I wonder if there’s a dark version of soul mates: people meant to hurt each other. No amount of love, regret, or effort can change that now. Just like no amount of sense can keep me from him.
He wraps his arms around me, so we’re sitting on the stretcher, holding onto one another. His face brushes over my hair.
“God, Evie.” We start to kiss again. Landon lays me on the stretcher. With a dark smile on his mouth, he straps my arms down, unbuttons my pants, reaches a hand into my panties. He kisses me and makes me come with probing fingers and a thumb that skates around my slick and swollen clit.
I’m gasping, my heart pounding. “You’re so good…” Tears gather in my eyes as he looks down on me.
He gives a small smile. “You are, Evie.”
He looks down, and I see that his cock is rock-hard, bent in his pants. I reach for him. “Let me help you. Let my arms go.”
He does. There’s only room in here for one of us to sit or lie down, so I slide down off the stretcher and unzip Landon’s pants, freeing his gorgeous cock.
“Sit up there. Let the doctor take a look at this.”
He chuckles, but it’s strained. He does what I said, sitting with his legs hanging off the edge, his cock jutting upward, his gray eyes glassy.
I’ve never seen anything as hot in my whole life as Landon sitting on a stretcher with his undone face as I pull down his boxer-briefs, exposing cock and balls.
I grab him, fondling his head and giving hard, fast strokes to his thick shaft as Landon groans and grabs my shoulders. Lust spears through me as I feel his balls bounce underneath. I want him in me, and for that reason, I kneel in front of him instead and take him in my mouth
. I can’t reach him if I’m kneeling, so I crouch, my knees and thighs aching as I give him the most exquisite pleasure, till he’s got his teeth clamped on his lower lip to keep from moaning, and I taste the salt of just how close he is to losing it. He does moan, finally, and grabs my hair and tries to thrust his hips toward me, and when that fails, he tries to hold onto my head.
“Ahhh, ahhhh—Evie.”
As I blow him, I wonder how many other girls have in the years that I was gone, and whether they were worse or better. Whether their hands knew him like my hands do, whether their hands cared enough to stroke his balls and squeeze him just the way he taught me, suck him deep into my throat so tears streamed down their faces and they wondered if they might pass out from choking on his cock.
And I hope they didn’t.
This is mine. This man is mine. And even if he breaks me—and I know he will—I cannot let him go.
The sound he makes as he comes in my mouth is music to my ears. The way his hands go gentle in my hair…
He tilts his head back, and I stand and wipe my face and warp my arms around him, easing his damp head against my chest. He pants there, and I stroke his hair. I touch his face. I run my hands down his strong arms and kiss his hands. I look down at them. His hands look the very same.
“Why Knoxville?” I whisper.
He looks at the door. “Let’s get out of here,” he says quietly. “I’ll tell you.”
I watch as he puts himself in place and zips his pants. I can’t help smiling as he gets down off the stretcher.
“How am I?” he asks with a crooked grin.
“That was a stiff, hard case you had there, but I think you’ll live.”
“Thanks, Doc.” He rubs a hand over my hair. I have to smooth it down as we step out into the hallway—thank God, empty.
I feel like we should part ways to walk downstairs, but realize if we hadn’t just done what we just did, no one would think one thing of it. As we step into the stairwell, I brush his hand with mine, and Landon’s fingers squeeze mine for a moment.
“Do you have a car here?” he asks.
“Actually, I don’t this time.”
He nods, and we walk in silence through the lobby, to the parking deck, and to—what else—a Ford Focus, just a little newer than my old one.
“What do you need most,” he asks me as we buckle, “sleep or food?”
“Mmmm, food, I think. I’m starving.”
Landon takes me to another parking deck a few blocks down, and to a nondescript door on a busy city street, with just a simple, green and white striped awning over it.
“Back entrance,” he explains as we step into a cozy, candlelit Italian place. I inhale the delicious scent of buttered noodles, and he grins, as if to say, Yeah—right? “I got takeout from here the other day.”
We claim a booth near the back of the dining area. A server comes. I notice that our table has a curtain, and, with a small smile, I pull it shut. How strange that as we browse the menu and place our orders, I can flirt with him, my feet rubbing his legs under the table.
As the waiter leaves to place our orders, I slip my foot from my shoe and find the spot between his legs, and Landon hisses. “Evie—fuck.” He leans over the table. “You want me to come in here?”
I giggle; it sounds more like a cackle. “Just checking on your eggplant.”
He grins, and the feeling I get in my chest is sharp. Last time we knew each other, Landon almost never smiled this big. Our waiter brings bread and oil, and I watch as he pulls a piece of bread off the loaf…the way his fingers move…the way his throat looks as he swallows, those keen eyes on me.
How different he seems now, and how the same. What has he been through in the time we’ve been apart? What kind of person is he now?
He must be wondering the same, because he tilts his head; his lips curve up. “Do you still eat asparagus barely cooked?” he asks.
“You know it.”
“And plain avocadoes?”
“They’re not plain with salt and pepper.” I stick out my tongue between stuffing my face. “Do you still read the paper?”
“Did you doubt it?”
“Nope, I guess not. I do too, now—if I want to be depressed.” I smirk, and Landon rests his forearms on the table. “Tell me, Evie, everything about you.”
My stomach bottoms out. I feel ill at the depth of my deceit—but how can I tell him? I just…can’t. Not yet. I need him in this moment…even if it’s wrong.
“What kinds of things?” I hedge.
“No less than ten,” he says. “One for every year we’ve been away.”
I find it curious the way he phrases it, as if we both just took vacations.
He leans forward slightly, his expression darkening. “What happened when I left, Evie?” He clasps his hands and watches my face with those eagle eyes, and I feel like I might be sick. “You said you didn’t get my letters? None of them?”
His face looks pained. I have to lie. I nod, because were I to tell the truth, my story wouldn’t add up. And if my story doesn’t add up, this is over.
He shakes his head. “Tell me everything.”
Seven
Landon
I listen as Evie talks. I watch the way her fingers start to pick at her bread. When our food comes, she delays her first few bites until I prod her. Then she goes on, telling me of how her parents hid my letters from her. How they told her if she went to Cambridge and stayed with her aunt and got her head screwed on straight, she could come home and reach out to me again.
“I guess they thought I was obsessed with you or something. I don’t know. They thought I needed time away.”
I search my memory for impressions of her parents. This makes sense. They weren’t unfair. I was never given the impression that they hated me or that they thought she shouldn’t see me again.
“They were worried, you know? I guess to them…it seemed excessive.”
Her soft words make my throat ache so much I have to swallow. “Was that what it was?”
“Of course,” she says. She smiles and shakes her head. “What’s the point if not? I wouldn’t want something that seemed like it was just barely enough to hold my interest, you know?”
She tells me about going to Harvard, how she missed me the two times I was on campus there, the way she freaked out after she saw my name in the program for an organic chemistry keynote. My mentor, Dr. Ryn, from UNC, where I did undergrad, was speaking, so of course I’d gone with him in hopes of glimpsing her.
“When I realized that you might have been there at the keynote, but I missed you, I really lost it,” she says. She takes a small bite and chews. My gaze holds her face the way I want to hold her body up against me. “I had a hard time not finding out what happened to you. When you ran away…” her eyes tear up. “I felt so helpless.”
Guilt thickens my throat. I open up my mouth to inhale, feeling my chest tighten like it does from time to time.
“I didn’t want to leave,” I manage. All I really wanted was to be near Evie, but… “I couldn’t stay there. That place was a hell hole, Ev.” I struggle to find words, to say enough but not too much. “I wouldn’t have survived it. Not on top of missing you.”
She doesn’t know what I mean, and that’s okay. The bastard didn’t get to me—I fought him off that night I left—so why tell her? Not now. If she ever hears me dream about it, maybe then.
“I hitchhiked, out of state, because I thought I would be safer that way. I wound up in Knoxville, with a bunch of college students. Stayed there long enough to read the papers—” I wiggle my eyebrows, smirking— “and see that the group home I was at got shut down. Then I came back to North Carolina to apply for college, for the scholarships. They’re pretty generous with foster kids, at least if you have the right kind of grades.”
“You went to UNC.”
I nod, hesitating a moment before I make my next confession. “I looked you up, Evie. I followed you. I liked to know what you
were doing, so I saw you didn’t graduate from Creekside.”
“I stayed up in Cambridge,” she whispers. Her eyes are full of regret.
“Did you like it there?”
She laughs, and it’s a small, sad sound. “I don’t know,” she hedges. “Did you enjoy UNC?”
“I fucking hated it.”
“You did?” I see her sadness on her face, and want to take back what I said. I shrug, trying to play it off. “That was dramatic. It wasn’t that bad. I worked and studied. It was fine. I finished in three years.”
“You did? Then how are we…” She means how are we in the same class now.
“I did a year of research between undergrad and med school, saving money. Did an internship at Pfizer in New York. The science side.”
“Oh wow, that’s cool. Did you like it?”
“Hated it.” I grin. “Too tedious.”
“So you wanted something medical, but not research. How did you get from there to surgery?”
“At Hopkins they were pretty good at guiding us. My adviser took one look at me and knew, I think.” I laugh. “Hungry little asshole, loved competing, nice chip on the shoulder. Surgeon—right?”
She smiles. “You’re not a stereotype, Landon Jones. You won’t fool me.”
I press my lips together. “No. I guess I won’t. Anyway…” I have a bite of my eggplant parm, “it didn’t take much for me to realize—surgery.”
“You always did cut like a surgeon.”
I laugh at that memory. “I remember how you used to say that.”
She shrugged. “I could spot one.”
Could she, though? What did Evie think became of me? I’m almost scared to ask, but I do. “Did you know what I was doing…before now?”
She shuts her eyes, then blinks down at her lap. “I don’t know the right answer,” she confesses. “No, I never cared to look…or yes, I knew, but didn’t reach out.”
“Yes, you knew.” I swallow, looking into her eyes. Fuck, they’re sad.
“I knew. One time my sister thought she saw you jogging near the house in Asheville around Thanksgiving time. I rode around for hours looking for you. Couldn’t find a Maryland plate.” She gives a sad smile. “It was you, though, wasn’t it?”