Page 32 of Amplify


  The friend jerked his chin up at me. “What’s up? Hey, did you fall from the sky because let’s have sex.”

  I stared at him for a moment before scrunching up my face and saying, “Seriously?” Really, who talked that way?

  Gable’s eyes narrowed then. “I know you.” I squinted my eyes right back at him then he snapped his fingers and pointed at me. “Tire girl. Miss Priss.” And he gave me that lopsided grin.

  I rolled my eyes and turned away because I was embarrassed by the whole encounter. I was also flustered at the fact that my heart was beating ninety-to-nothing and my nipples had gotten hard at just seeing him grin at me. God.

  The professor had now come in and started taking roll, so I kept my attention on her, ignoring the fact that I could feel Gable’s eyes burning a hole into the side of my head. I wanted to turn to him and frown, maybe even give him the finger, but I knew that’d just get me another nipple-hardening grin so I stayed facing forward. But as I sat there, using every ounce of restraint I could to keep from looking at him, I realized I was actually flattered by what he’d said about me, and it horrified me that I’d feel that way about being objectified and I wanted to smack myself in the head as I tried figuring out where my self-respect had gone.

  During roll call, I learned that his last name was Powers. Oh, boy, he was one of them. The them I’d been hearing about since stepping onto campus. And he was flirting with me. Well, wasn’t I the lucky one. Unable to help being curious about this latest bit of info and wanting to know if he really was as good looking as everyone had been saying (I mean, I’d seen him but hadn’t known who he was so I hadn’t really seen him seen him), I risked a glance over my left shoulder at him only to find him gazing right back at me with a lazy grin. Holy crap! I turned around quickly and promptly swallowed my gum on the breath I’d sucked in at getting caught. As I choked out a cough, I decided he was as hot as everyone had been saying, and I also decided I was an idiot to mess with him. Although very handsome, he was uncouth, rude and too wild for the likes of me and I needed to stay far, far away from him, which I told myself I’d do.

  So why the hell did that make him even more intriguing?

  AVAILABLE NOW

  ***

  I am numb. As I sit here and stare at the coffin in front of me, I don’t understand how we got here, how I got here. My gaze is fixed on nothing in particular, just the sight in front of me. My mind isn’t sure if this is really happening.

  The church pew is hard under my bum, and both of my hands are being held and squeezed tightly. My mum is on one side of me, and on the other, my best friend Rachel. Neither one of these women have left my side since the accident.

  Although I know all this, although I’m aware of everything around me, it doesn’t feel real. It feels like I’m not really here, like Nate isn’t lying in that coffin, and this is one fucked-up nightmare.

  Listening to the pastor read aloud the letter I wrote for Nate, reality comes crashing down around me, stabbing me in the heart. I know this is real. I know I really am here, and I know Nate is lying in that coffin. This isn’t a fucked-up nightmare but reality. The new fucked-up reality which is my life.

  I listen to the words I typed and printed onto a beautiful champagne-coloured card, the words I’d bled onto the computer screen. I’d cried massive amounts of tears wishing Nate were here and wishing I could tell him how I felt, how much I loved him and how much I needed him.

  My chest is tight and pain flows through me. My heart has shattered into a million tiny pieces. I’m not sure how it’s even still beating. I’m numb to the world around me, numb to all feelings.

  I keep replaying that day over and over in my head, wondering how it all went wrong. How did something so precious get ripped out of my hands in the blink of an eye?

  After Nate and I made love, we lay in bed, wrapped up in each other’s arms while talking about anything and everything to do with babies. What gender we wanted and why. Would we find out the sex, and the positives and negatives of having a daughter versus a son. How would we decorate the nursery? What stuff did we need to buy?

  Our hands had never left each other as we chatted and discussed all our thoughts and feelings on the subject. Nate had rubbed his strong hands up and down my back, caressing my ass cheeks and the backs of my thighs, then working his way up to start the whole process again.

  My hands had pressed up against his chest, grazing over his pectorals and down his strongly-defined stomach, sliding my fingers down to his sexy V. I’d said to Nate I didn’t know why we owned a king-size bed when we always ended up wrapped together right in the middle taking up hardly any room at all. He’d laughed and replied it was room for all the kids we were going to have to jump in with us. He was so excited about us starting a family, which made me wonder if he had been holding off for me, waiting for me to say I was ready.

  When Nate had finally unwrapped himself from around me to go to the bathroom I watched as he strolled in. He was walking lighter, and I knew he was on top of the world. Before entering, he’d turned his head and given me the widest smile and a sexy wink.

  It was later that morning when I received the knock on my door which altered my world forever. Nate had been in a car accident on the way to the office. An older gentleman had run a red light and hit Nate’s car, driver’s side. The impact killing him instantly.

  I wish I could stay in our last perfect moment. Instead, I’m pulled back to the hell that is now my life. No longer able to ignore the blubbering and sniffling, I look to my left and see my mum holding a handkerchief to her nose, tears running down her cheeks, her eyes pinched shut with pain.

  For a fleeting moment I wonder what she has to be so sad about. I know my parents loved Nate; they welcomed him into our family with no reservations. This surprised me at the time, being that I’m their only child, and a girl at that. I thought my dad was going to be a bit tougher to conquer, but really I should’ve known: Nate could charm anyone. Not in a used-car salesman type of way, but in the way which was just Nate. He was honest and sincere with everyone he met. Respectful of his clients, fair to his employees and loving and loyal to anyone who was special and meant something to him.

  So yeah, I knew my mum was upset, knew she would feel the loss of her only son, but what had she really lost? She had Dad to go home with. When she felt sad or lost, Dad would hold her and comfort her. Who did I have? What would I do tonight when the pain became so overwhelming that I was throwing up in the bathroom? When I couldn’t think of living another day without him and struggled to breathe remembering Nate wouldn’t be the first thing I see in the morning?

  The guilt settles in and I give Mum a light comforting tap on her knee. Mum’s eyes pop open and meet mine for a brief moment before I turn my face back towards the wooden box my soul-mate lies in.

  The heat of Mum’s stare burns the side of my face while searching, looking, and wishing to see something. I could save her the time and tell her there’s nothing left. Anything I had lies in that coffin, and I am broken beyond all repair.

  Normally, I’m an emotional person. Nate would laugh at me all the time when I would cry at silly advertisements on the TV, like the one with the war heroes returning home to loved ones, or the one where the cutest dog ever rolls around in the toilet paper. Don’t ask me why. Or the one about funeral insurance where the old couple are walking down the street holding hands, and suddenly the man disappears leaving the woman walking alone. I wonder if our reactions would’ve been different if we knew then it would soon be us.

  Nate wouldn’t recognize me sitting here today: eyes dry of tears, face blank, and body numb. I don’t know why I’m having this reaction. Part of me thinks it’s because deep down I don’t want everyone to watch me fall apart, the other part of me thinks it’s because during the last week I have cried myself out of tears, but most of me thinks it’s because I’m broken.

  No longer the Brooke I once was. The happy Brooke, the vibrant Brooke, easy-going, laid-back
, and positive Brooke. I’m missing something, and I know exactly what that is: my partner, my conscience, my brainstormer, my handyman, my therapist, my negotiator, my cheer squad, my best friend, my other half ... my soul mate.

  The pastor calls the pallbearers, and I watch as Saxon leads Nate’s father, Mark, along with Logan and Jake, who are Saxon and Nate’s other best friends from college. It means a lot to me that they flew in on such short notice. I know they’re both busy in their own careers as well, Nate being the only one of the four who has settled down ... or had settled down.

  I guess I’ll need to get used to talking about Nate in the past tense, as he was instead of as he is. In thinking that notion, a lump forms in my throat and a tightness pulls in my chest.

  I watch as they carry my husband out. This will be the last time I see him, walk with him. Standing to follow, there is relief as both my hands are released. Rachel gets to her feet and wraps her arm tightly around my waist, as if she thinks she may have to lead me, help me walk, or carry me even.

  My knees weaken, and I think perhaps she may be right. My dad rushes to my side and grabs a hold of me by my elbows. I lean back into him and let him hold my weight. He may be the only man left in my life to support me. The only man left who I can lean on, rely on ... depend on.

  I decided to have the wake here at the funeral home since I hadn’t determined exactly what I wanted to do with Nate’s ashes yet. I was pretty sure I was going to purchase a memorial plot at the cemetery, but I knew whatever I decided it would be something I would do alone.

  Walking down the aisle, I glance around in amazement at how many people are here, considering Nate doesn’t have a huge family. He only has the one sibling, his younger sister Molly, and his parents’ families all live out of state. I shouldn’t be so amazed. I knew the perfectness of Nate better than anyone. He never met anyone who didn’t like him.

  I always wondered why he had chosen me, chosen me to love and to cherish, to spend forever with, and to make a home and a family with. Tears build in my eyes as I place my hand protectively over my belly.

  Once we reach the foyer I pull out of Rachel’s grasp and head for the bathroom. I look up, willing the wetness in my eyes to dry and not fall. The sedation and numbness begins wearing off as the tightness in my chest expands. I can’t go on like this.

  Entering the bathroom, I quickly check the stalls and then proceed to lock myself in one. Using some toilet paper I push the seat lid down, dropping myself onto it as I lean forward with my head between my legs.

  I know it won’t be long before they come looking for me, never leaving me alone for more than five minutes to even shower or use the bathroom. I know they think they are being helpful and looking out for me, but I feel like I can’t catch a breath. I haven’t been able to feel the air in my lungs for nearly a week. Will I ever be able to breathe properly again?

  Trying to pull myself together, I stand, brush off, and straighten my semi-fitting simple black dress and head towards the kitchen. Feeling somewhat maintained and put together, I push open the kitchen door and stop mid-step. The small amount of breath I was holding leaves me; the ominous lump in my throat and the tears in my eyes return.

  I meet his eyes and stare as he looks so deeply into mine. His eyes are like a mirror, a reflection of my own. Loss, anguish, affliction, and sorrow pour out of them. He gives me a small, sad smile, which causes my stomach to coil in a tight knot.

  Before I even have time to think, I’m running to him. Throwing my arms around his waist I hold on for dear life, letting everything I feel leak onto his dress shirt. Saxon tenses before he slowly wraps his arms around my back. Being that I only stand at five-foot-three, and he is at least six-foot-four, I am cuddling his waist like a small child.

  Saxon bends his knees as he leans lower to meet my gaze and places two hands on my cheeks. Wiping my tears with his thumbs, he whispers, “Oh, baby girl.”

  Looking into his eyes, I know why I’ve broken down. Why I’ve let him see me at my most vulnerable. Saxon is the only one who truly understands ... the only other person here who has lost their other half ... their best friend ... their soul mate.

  He breaks our stare like he can’t possibly stand to see anymore and stands up straight. He wraps his arms around me again somehow even tighter than before, like this time he is the one holding on for dear life. I let him, placing my face back against his chest.

  We stand like this for what feels like hours, but is probably only minutes. His pain and heartache seep out of him and flow over me. It’s strangely comforting, and not at all unsettling.

  Eventually my tears settle, and I’m finally able to take a deep breath. I have been waiting all week for some break from the crushing pain, and for a small moment, I have it.

  The kitchen door opens and there are mumbled voices, but I am too disconnected to discern them. Suddenly the heat of Saxon leaves me as he hands me over to my father, who hugs me tightly. Someone kisses the top of my head and mumbles something, but I’m not sure whether it’s my dad or Saxon.

  ***

  AVAILABLE NOW

  .

  “HEY, GRACE, YOU READY TO roll? I don’t want to go and have all the hot guys snatched up by skanks before we even get there,” Faith complained, banging on the bathroom door.

  “Geez, I’ll be out in a second. Don’t get your panties in a bunch,” I yelled, trying not to smudge the eyeliner I was applying. I heard her grumble something as she walked away.

  Faith and I looked a lot alike; we both had long blonde hair and brown eyes, but she was about two inches taller than me and drop dead gorgeous. It used to bug me; but now I tell her she got all the height, but I got all the boobs.

  We went out every Friday night, mostly for fun, but I was always looking for Mr. Right. What I would do if I actually found him—I didn’t know for sure. Tonight we were headed into the city to see what kind of trouble we could find. Faith, of course, was slutting it up, dressed in a micro mini dress that barely covered her lady bits. She had a model’s frame, long and lean, and she could wear whatever she wanted. I, on the other hand, dressed a bit more conservative and made sure my skirts landed no shorter than three inches above my knee. I didn’t feel comfortable on display for all to see. I needed my cardigans and longer skirts.

  We hit the town running, and in no time, we were sitting in the The Violet Hour, a swanky lounge, surrounded by some serious eye candy.

  Faith was already off hitting on some hot guy at the other end of the bar, leaning in close as they spoke. Her hand on his bicep, a playful look in her eyes. Pure Faith. I shook my head; she was shameless when it came to getting some.

  I was sitting by myself, sipping some fruity, girly drink with an obscene name like “Screaming Orgasm” or something.

  “Can I join you?” a warm voice asked from behind me.

  I turned around and had to look up because the man was a lot taller than me, even on a barstool. My breath caught in my throat— he oozed confidence and sex appeal. Dressed in a navy suit, he was by far the most attractive man in the bar. I chewed my lip nervously, why would he want to sit with me when there were so many beautiful women ready to throw themselves at him?

  “Please do.” I smiled at him and took a big gulp of my drink before smoothing my skirt down over my knees “Scotch, neat,” he said to the bartender before turning to me. “Logan.” He took my hand in his and brushed his lips across my knuckles.

  “Grace.” My heart beat a little faster as he released my hand. I could still feel the tingle of where his lips had been. I was for sure out of my element here.

  “Are you from here?” he asked casually, his green eyes studying me. His finger tapped against the edge of his glass.

  “Yeah, born and raised. What about you?”

  “Here on business.” He didn’t elaborate further. I sighed inwardly, of course he wasn’t from here. He was too good to be true.

  Logan intrigued me. He was not the typical guy I normally went for. I
liked surfer-looking guys; yeah, I know, Chicago was not exactly on the coast, but we all had a type. Logan was sexy as hell, though, his tan skin and dark hair perfectly styled in the Mad Men style that all the guys seemed to be wearing these days.

  “How long are you here for?” I hoped he’d say at least a week.

  “I fly out tomorrow afternoon.” He set his drink down next to mine and our hands touched. It was electric. Whatever this was that was happening between us, it needed to be explored, and now. Something about him brought out the shameless side of me, like I had no control. He was making me crazy. This wasn’t me. This was Faith. Maybe the fact that this couldn’t go anywhere was making me brave.

  I slipped forward a bit on my bar stool, letting my legs touch his. “Tell me something about yourself, Logan.”

  He shook his head. “Nothing personal, this is just about tonight.” His eyes smoldered. He clearly felt exactly what I was feeling

  Nothing personal. Could I do that? Go into this without knowing anything about him? I watched as he brought his drink to his lips again. How he savored the scotch. My nerves were like live wires. I had a sudden insane thought that I wanted him to savor me like he did the scotch.

  “Fine, I’ll go first. I like kittens more than puppies, my favorite TV show is Friends, and I love wearing heels, but my feet hate me for it. Now you go.”

  Logan grinned at me. “I happen to love kittens, too. Only a monster would pick puppies over kittens.”

  Oh, God, I was in serious trouble.

  “My favorite TV show is Pawn Stars. I know it’s not The Wire or some other manly show, but I like to know how much things cost.” He shrugged.

  I laughed and motioned for him to continue.