Page 117 of Now to Forever

Font Size:

Nail to the heart.

Slams the door.

Nail to the heart.

Leaves the house quietly loud.

Nail to the heart.

“She didn’t mean it,” Ford offers. “She’s ju—”

“Go,” I demand, jerking the door open with a shaky hand.

“Scotty, she didn’t mean it,” he repeats, reaching for me. “She’s just upset.”

I jerk his hand away and shove him onto the porch with both palms to his chest. “Stop, Ford.” His name is a soggy shout on my lips. “I know what I am. She’s right. This was a mistake. You need to go.” He opens his mouth. “Now!”

His expression is pure defeat. Because of me.

He might think he wants this, me, but he can’t. Not after this. I won’t let him.

“Scotty, she’s a teenager,” he pleads. “She didn’t mean it. I’ll talk to her. This will be fine in the morning, she’s just—”

“Stop!” I demand, looking at him, feeling so desperately empty all I can think of doing is lying on the floor and letting myself die. Wren is right—I’m too fucked up for any of this. His face . . . his beautiful face and familiar blue eyes shatter the final fragments of my heart. I’m twenty years old all over again, standing at a trailhead expecting to see him but instead finding the life I imagined completely obliterated. I should have never ever agreed to any of this.

“I love you,” I say, voice sounding far away.

“I lo—”

“I love you, and Wren’s been cutting herself,” I say over him, making him go deathly silent under the porch light. “And I never want to see you again. Either of you.”

“Sco—”

I slam the door in his face, and then I drop to the floor and cry.

Forty-Three

Iblinkatthefield, trying to remember how I got here.

After I called June, I hibernated into a cave of blankets and stayed in bed like a wounded bear. The house I had come to love like a cozy nest betrayed me by morphing into a depressing museum without permission. Every item was a memory belonging to Wren or Ford. When I contemplated burning the damn place down, I poured a drink.

Ford texted and called too many times to count; I smashed my phone.

Molly whimpered in the kitchen; I threw a turkey leg against the crooked tiled backsplash.

I went for a run; I cried.

I played some of Zeb’s records; I snapped four of them in half.

Finally, I climbed into the Bronco and just drove, without music or direction and with the windows down despite how cold it is.Muscle memory got me here because I don’t remember making a single turn.

The field is the one where Ford brought me on our date. The one I ruined like I ruin everything. Like the universe has preordained to be ruined because it’s me. Like no matter what I do or how I try to help, heartache is all I will ever have. Ever cause.

Where the landscape was filled with yellowing cornstalks and still mostly green leafed trees when I was here before, the corn’s been harvested and the trees are bare.Dead like me.

Unable to contain it, my mouth opens: I scream. I drop my head back and don’t stop until my throat feels like it’s bleeding. Until I can barely breathe.