“Okay, Bear.” I plant a kiss on his scruffy jaw. “Be careful for me.”
“Will do.” He wraps an arm around my shoulders, drawing me in close against his chest. His lips brush the crown of my head. “He said this time will be an hour and a half. I’m going to do something right before, so it might be more like two hours.”
I squeeze his hard waist, kiss his chest. “I hope it goes well.”
“Me too.”
I frame his face with my hands, thumbing his cheeks. “You know I think you’re brave for trying it.”
His eyes cut down before he raises them for mine. They burn a little. “Thanks.” I get the small half-smile, the one that lets me know he’s nervous.
“Love you.”
“I love you more.” He wraps me tight against his chest and shuts his eyes. I feel his heartbeat for an awesome moment. Love fills me. I hope he feels it, too.
TEN
BARRETT
“How much you want for it?”
“Won’t take less than nine hundred.”
The guy behind the counter peers down at my .380, shaking his head. “It’s real nice,” he drawls. “I’ll give you that. I can do nine hundred—if you tell me where it came from.” His eyes meet mine.
“I had it over in Iraq,” I tell him, shifting my weight. And a lot of other places, but it’s easier to stick to places troops were stationed for long stretches.
The guy nods slowly, knowingly. His Braves cap casts a shadow over his face, but I can see his chapped lips tighten. He touches something I can’t see behind the counter, and I hear a jingle. His hand lifts up dog tags on a chain that seems to be hanging from a nail in the back of the counter.
“I get that,” he says, nodding more. His hazel eyes meet mine. “I might keep this one for myself.” He looks down at the gun. “If you change your mind and not much time’s gone by, you let me know.”
I smile, because that’s kind, but I won’t need it.
“No worries,” I tell him.
We share a hard handshake—it still feels odd with my right hand—and the guy reaches over the counter to clasp me on the shoulder.
“Take care,” he tells me. As I head toward the door, he says, “Hang on.”
I turn to find him holding out a business card.
Gatlinburg Veteran’s Association is embossed in black across the front.
“It’s mostly younger guys,” he says. I look at the lines on his face, putting him at maybe mid-30s. “Me and a couple Marines. One Ranger. Just got started up.”
I look from the card to his eyes. “You work out around here?”
He steps out from behind the counter, lifts his pants leg. I see metal. “Not much working out these days.”
“I’m opening a martial arts place. Free for vets,” I hear myself say. “How long have you had the prosthetic?”
“Not long, man. About four months. Just got done rehabbing it around the end of summer.”
I look down at the prosthetic, trying to figure out if it’s transfemoral or transtibial without lifting the leg of his pants. I settle for asking him, “Knee, too?”
He nods. “Lost the whole thing from the thigh down.”
I nod. That does make it harder. “Ever ran on it?”
He laughs. “Hell no. Barely even walk on it.”
“You got another card?”
He grunts, not meeting my eyes as he moves back behind the pawn shop counter.
“I’m gonna give you my number, man. Let me know if you want to work out sometime. I could help you with it. Used to train a bunch of guys.”
He jots my number down and slides the card into his pocket. “Thanks, man. Means a lot.” He holds his hand out. “Patrick Rice.”
“Barrett. Drake,” I tack on. No reason to be evasive. Not anymore.
Sean Eddins is an old Ranger. He’s short and round around the middle, with a brown comb-over and delicate, silver wire-rimmed reading glasses. His office is on the second floor of a downtown office building where he’s the only mental health professional in the unit. To get to it, I have to walk by the offices of two CPAs, a masseuse, a pediatric dentist, and a cosmetic salesperson. There’s a small, gold nameplate on his door.
“Doc” it says. That’s all.
The door opens before I close my hand around the handle. I can’t help laughing.
“Good ears.”
He gives a deep, belly laugh, slaps me hard between the shoulder blades, and waves to a lumpy, corduroy couch in the small, dimly-lit office.
When he asks about my background, I say spec ops, and after a minute cop to Delta Force, newly known as ACE.
“I could kind of guess that way,” he tells me. Like most other people around here, the guy has a drawl. His voice is low and always kind of soft, I find. We spend the first half-hour talking like two new acquaintances, which he tells me in the second half-hour he did for my benefit, because he knew I’d want to know a lot about him.
“Just makin’ it easier for yeh.”
I find out he’s 53, an Army brat who graduated high school in Daytona Beach and went to boot camp as soon as he could to escape his dad, a Vietnam vet who had a drug problem.
When he says, “My mom had died when I was younger,” I feel chills race over my arms.
“Yours too?”
I manage to nod. He gives me just a second to say more, and when I don’t, he doesn’t miss a beat. I find it easy to tell him I’m here to get help with nightmares.
“Can you tell me more about them?” he asks.
My throat seizes up, and I’m stunned to find I can’t.
“Not the fun kind,” he says, jotting something down on a notepad.
I shake my head. My jaw is clenched. I haveto unlock it and take a slow, careful breath so I can say, “About my friend. He…” I swallow hard, fisting one hand on my knee. I shake my head.
“It’s okay. I’m not timing you.”
I feel my eyes get hot. My face feels hot too.
“I got myself into a bad situation. Stupid,” I choke out. “He got hit after he put me in the Bradley.”
I can tell by Sean’s face that I like him. He doesn’t look falsely upset, like he knew Breck, but he’s not wearing a poker face, either. I can tell he cares. I feel like maybe he gets it. I don’t know. I can’t seem to say anything more. There’s an awkward few seconds where I try to think of what else I could say, and can’t.
“What’s his name?” he asks evenly.
“Breck. John,” I add. “We called him Breck.”
“Breck from Breckenridge?”
I nod, impressed he knows. Most people wouldn’t think of Breck as a shorthand for Breckenridge. Most people probably haven’t been there.
“Great slopes,” he says quietly.
I grit my teeth. What is it about this place that makes me want to fucking cry? I decide as I tell him superficially about how I knew Breck that being here makes me feel like a fuck up. I knew it anyway, but this makes it seem official. I can’t control myself. I can’t stop the dreams. Not even with Gwen beside me.
“How long has this been bothering you? The nightmares?”
I take a deep breath. Let it slowly out. “A while.” I rub my head, remembering. “Breck used to wake me up.”
“Bunkmates?”
I nod.
“Long gun?” he asks, arching a brow at me. I’m impressed he knows the Operator term for sniper, though I guess I shouldn’t be surprised.
“Yeah. Both of us.” I tell him about Dove and Blue as well. How I met Breck and Blue—“his real name’s Michael”—at basic. They joined together. Families knew each other. They both went to boarding school at Carson Long.”
“John Ferrara?”
My throat locks up. I can’t even nod.
Doc nods, his features soft. “Good guy, I heard.”
I don’t even plan it. I just stand up and walk out of his office, right down the hall, jog down the stairs, and outside where I stand with my back again
st the wall and wonder what would stop the pain inside my chest, what sort of damage I could do outside that might ease the hurricane of pain inside.
Good guy…
He was. He was.
Breck was a good guy. Breck should be alive.
“Aw now, I thought I had lost you.” Sean’s right there, his hand on my back, tapping. I blink, turning to him.
“Sorry.” I look down at my feet. He must think I’m such a fucking loose cannon. Not much of an Operator if I can’t even—
“Want to come back up? Tell me what set you off?”
I swallow back the urge to snap at him—or turn around and run the other fucking way.
“I don’t,” I say stiffly.
“You don’t have to.”
“You said he’s a good guy. How’d you know that?” I look him in the face because I want to see his eyes.
“Read the obit,” he says.
“And the obit told you he was a good guy?”
I can see the hesitation on his face. “Just heard in certain circles. People talk, you know.”
“When an Operator dies. Yeah, they talk.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“People talk. Opinions, assholes…”
He chuckles. “Opinions are like assholes, and most of them stink. Come back upstairs with me, and tell me what the talk was about Breck’s death.”
I look him up and down. “How long were you a Ranger?”
“Thirteen years,” he says. He lifts his shirt up, revealing a long, jagged scar along his ribs.
“Blown up around the time that Baghdad fell. IED our bomb guy couldn’t get.”
I nod, forcing myself to look at the ruined skin. Because I know how much it sucks when someone looks away. If they can’t see it, how can you live with it?
I nod.
“It blows.” He chuckles. He heads inside, and I follow him up. Not because I have to, but because I know I need to try. For Gwen, and maybe me as well.
I feel like shit the whole walk up, and when I sit back on his couch, I feel that detached cold come over me.
I see him roll his chair over and feel him tap my forearm.
“Hey, guy. Look up here at me, will yeh?”
It takes some effort, but I do it.
“I’ve got white eyelashes. Blond, really. Since birth. Can you see them, or does it just look like I don’t have any?”
I look down at my hand, where his finger is tapping, then back up at his eyes. I can see eyelashes. I nod.
“See them?”
“Yeah.” Embarrassment moves through me, followed by a wash of prickly heat. Somewhere distant, I know I should say something to explain my weird behavior, but I can’t think of anything. My brain feels like it’s wrapped in cotton.
Sean moves away. “Can you tell me how many blue things you see in this room?”
I frown. Did he say blue things?
“Just look around the room and point if you see something blue?”
“The clock,” I manage. Then it’s just too hard to shake it off. I feel too numb.
I see him reach into his pocket. That makes me flinch.
“Oh, okay. No reaching into the pockets. I think I can handle that.” He hands me something small. “Can you open this?”
I feel a pinch of panic through the cool blanket that’s over me. I hold up my left hand, shake my head.
“That’s right. Let’s see…” He opens it and holds it out to me. “Smell that?”
It smells like peppermints.
My head starts to hurt. I’m startled when I look around, at where I am. At— Who is— Oh. Sean.
“Doc,” I murmur.
“How do ya feel? I think you took a little trip. Dissociated. People do that often here. Must be the décor.”
I give a shaky laugh. Is this guy serious?
“I’m going to guess you didn’t start doing that yesterday,” he says. “Keep that peppermint oil up by your nose. Smells can help. I want to ask you a few questions about your body, how it feels right now. They’re easy ones. Then we can talk about football.”
“Cold and…foggy. Like I’m under a blanket. Or a cloud.” I rub my forehead.
“Hard to talk?”
My chest feels heavy and numb, even now, but I manage, “Yeah.”
Doc’s face is kind without pity, blunt but not exaggerated. “Look,” he blinks and leans forward, “it’s not unusual. It’s a learned response to trauma. Anyone who’s been to war, they’ve got some trauma.” He lifts a shoulder, like we’re talking about sports. “It’s something I see all the time. Something we can work on.”
Fuck, that’s kind of good to hear.
“Hard to move around and think straight when it happens?” he asks.
I nod.
He points to a tall, blue mug on the table out in front of me. “I’ve got some crayons in there,” he says. “Next time we really talk, I’m going to have you color me a picture. That should make it easier to stay. We’ll go slower. Fast or slow as you want. I’ll know you better after a while. Then we can really work on things.”
We spend the rest of the session discussing the basics, like where I live and how I came to Gatlinburg. I have to be evasive about why I came here. I hope that doesn’t fuck things up, but I don’t feel like I have much of a choice. He asks if I know people here, and I tell him I’ve gotten to know my neighbor. It’s discreet, but not enough. I can’t downplay it that much.
Making an effort not to tap my leg or otherwise fidget, I keep my tone flat and tell him, “We’re seeing each other.”
His brows raise.
“What?” It’s sharper intended.
“How is that going?” he asks.
I rub my aching eyes. “Fucking good.” I let a breath out. “It’s the only thing that’s easy right now.”
I can tell by the twist of his lips that he is skeptical.
“You think I’m…what? I shouldn’t be with her? Because of all this shit?”
His eyes widen slightly.
I shake my head, my heart pounding. “C’mon, I saw your little mouth thing there. Why don’t you share your thoughts, Doc?”
His lips press together, like he’s thinking. Fury builds within me, sharp like fear but tight and hot like anger.
“Do you?” he asks. Both of his bushy brows lift. “Do you think you shouldn’t? Because my ‘look’?” He shrugs. “Sympathy.”
I blow my breath out.
Doc’s lips press together in a little smile. “Next time, maybe you can tell me what about this new relationship is worrying you. In the meantime,” he shuts his notepad and slides it into a pocket on his chair. “Write your nightmares out, after you have them. Every detail you can think of. Bring the notebook here. If you have problems with it, if it’s too much, let me know tomorrow.” He smiles. “Tomorrow? Do you have time and desire to come see me again?”
A tired feeling moves through me, painting me from my forehead down to my knees. I find myself nodding. My mouth opens, but no words come.
Doc puts a hand on my shoulder. “This was good.”
I move in to shake his other hand. He’s not a squeezer. Guess he doesn’t have to prove himself when he’s got that little notepad. “Sorry for…” I shake my head.
“No apology required. You good to drive?”
I snort, as if it’s funny, even though we both know that it’s not.
“I’m good.”
Before I get on the bike, I pull a knife out of my seat bag and make a little cut inside my ankle. Shit like that helps me keep from drifting, and I want to make it home to Gwen.
As soon as I get through the side door, I see soup and bread on the table. My stomach growls. Gwen is at the sink. She puts a towel down and strides toward me.
“Hey…” She grabs my hands and looks up into my face. “How did it go?”
I find I’m waiting for her to come closer. When she doesn’t, I step closer and pull her up against me.
I can’t
think of anything to say.
Her arms squeeze me. “I’m glad to have you back. It’s kind of lonely here without you.”
“Thanks.”
I’m surprised to find I want to talk to her. I want to tell her that he said Breck was a nice guy.
Oh fuck. My stomach seizes up. I let go of Gwen and lunge toward the sink. I shut my eyes and try to fight the sick feeling back down.
I feel Gwen beside me. “It’s okay. I have bleach spray underneath the counter.”
I can’t help laughing. Gwen’s trying to get me to barf in her sink. Somehow that pulls me out of it. I turn slowly to face her, smiling even though I still feel like someone scrambled all my insides.
“It was hard, huh?”
My jaw clenches, aching. I set my gaze down on my shoes. I don’t want this. I don’t want to keep being this way in front of her. Why can’t I just be normal?
Gwen’s hand catches mine, her pinky finger hooking through mine in this gentle, flirty way that makes me smile.
“Want me to tell you a funny story about my first time in therapy after my wreck?”
My stomach bottoms out again. I force myself to nod through it.
“Come sit down—if you want, that is.” We move toward the table together. Gwen guides me into a chair and takes the one beside me. “Beer cheese soup.”
“Smells amazing.”
“So,” she says, spreading a napkin in her lap, “I was taking anti-seizure meds, and something else too. Who even knows what. I was having bad headaches then, after the craniotomy I had those for a while, so could have been some kind of painkiller. They tried the low-dose thing, but that doesn’t really work for me, so I was out of it.” She laughs and shakes her head. “But I freaked out anyway and tried to run away. Of course, I was still using a wheel chair, so that didn’t work out well. I ended up rolling uncontrollably down this long ramp outside the building.” She cackles, covering her mouth. “And I crashed into this old man on crutches. He called me inconsiderate and asked what happened to my face. I was too doped up to think of something good to say so I said, ‘Your mom.’”
Gwenna’s silly face makes me laugh even though the picture she paints doesn’t. She howls and has to wipe her eyes.
“I wish you could have seen it. He was small and skinny, like this mean little old bird. Had to grab the rail to keep from face-planting.” Her eyes shut as she shakes her head. She’s smiling softly when she opens them, her eyes glowing as she looks at me. “So, did you mow anybody down?”