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“The burning never stops,” he told me. “You just kind of become numb to it.”
“How long have you been lonely?”
He gave me a broken smile, which told me his deepest truths.
“Oh, Jackson,” I whispered, my hand gently brushing against his cheek. “You’re way too young to be this sad.”
He closed his eyes, and I felt his warm breaths falling from his slightly parted lips. “You’re doing that thing that you do, princess.”
“Doing what?”
“Putting others’ hurts before your own.”
I smiled and slightly shrugged. “It’s my gift, my curse.”
“It’s not a selfish thing, you know.” He opened his eyes, and the intensity I felt as he stared my way sent chills down my spine. He leaned in close, whispering against my ear as if he was revealing the biggest secret in the world. “You’re allowed to choose yourself first.”
What a wonderful thought, though the world I grew up in taught me the complete opposite. Where I came from, it was always give yourself to others first and whatever was left was what one used on themselves.
It just turned out that most of the time, nothing ever remained, and my tank for self-love was left on empty.
When it came time for me to leave, he offered to walk me home, and I once again declined. “But thank you for this…for helping me.”
He gave me a halfway smile, or at least I pretended he did. “Are you all right?”
“No.”
“That’s fine,” he declared. “You don’t have to be.”
Why did that make me feel a little bit better?
“Jackson?”
“Yes?”
“You’re nothing like your father.”
He frowned and cleared his throat as he looked down at the ground and crossed his arms. “I am when he’s sober.”
16
Grace
As I walked back to Judy’s house, I smiled as I saw a friendly face sitting on my front porch. “Hi, friend,” I said, walking up to Josie who had two extra-large cups from KitKat’s 1950s Diner.
“Hi, friend,” she replied, standing up.
“How long have you been waiting?”
“Long enough to finish two of these drinks and go back to KitKat’s to grab two new ones.” She frowned, studying my face. “What happened?” she asked, nodding toward the bandage.
I touched my cheek. “Just some emotional release.”
“Are you all right?”
“If what’s in that cup of yours is what I think it is, I’ll be better soon enough.”
She smirked, handing a cup my way. “If I remember correctly, you were a Diet Coke girl with a few shots of whiskey.” When we were younger, we always used the extra-large cups from KitKat’s Diner when we wanted to get wasted in town but didn’t want anyone to know that the perfect Harris girl even knew what alcohol was. It was, of course, Josie’s idea. She was pretty great at secretly letting me break free for a small bit of time.
I grabbed the cup and laughed. “Yes.” I took a sip and made a face. “Geez, Josie!”
“I might have been a bit heavy-handed with that whiskey,” she told me.
“This is straight-up whiskey with a splash of Diet Coke, I think.”
“Confession—there’s no Diet Coke in that.” She placed her hand on my shoulder and lightly squeezed. “If anyone deserves straight whiskey, it’s you right now. How are you holding up?”
“I could be better.”
“Want to go egg Autumn’s house? I have a dozen eggs around the corner,” she joked. Well, I thought she was joking until I saw the seriousness in her eyes.
“No, Josie, we aren’t egging her house.”
“But can we toilet paper it? I got two-ply tissue. Only the best quality, too. It’s quilted. Soft as a down comforter. If anything, it’ll be like we’re wrapping the jerk’s place in a soft blanket.” She bit her bottom lip. “And then we’ll throw egg yolks at the tissue.”
I laughed, which felt so odd. Josie had that ability, though, to make the saddest person find a second of laughter. “I think we’ll hold off on the revenge.”
“Okay, but when it’s time, just say the word.”
“I promise I will.”
“Want to go to our old stomping grounds where we would people watch and get drunk without them knowing?” Josie asked, wiggling her eyebrows in hopes that I’d agree.
“Sounds like a plan.”
We walked through town to Kap Park and sat down on the bench that faced downtown Chester. When we were younger, we’d see so many insane things from that park bench. The drama that unfolded as we sipped our “Diet Cokes” and laughed was always entertaining.
But that day, everything felt different. The small town that used to make me laugh felt like a foreign country to me.
“You’re okay, buddy,” Josie said as we stared out at the events of the night. “I mean, you’re not, but you will be.”
Part of me believed her, while another part thought it to be nothing but a lie.
“Josephine and Gracelyn Mae, I haven’t seen you ladies sitting on this bench together in what seems like forever,” Charlotte stated, walking over to us in her high heels. Her pink painted lips curved into a wide smile on her face, and my stomach turned. The last thing I wanted to do that afternoon was deal with Charlotte’s nosy self.