Page 219 of Catch Me

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Chapter 70

Roman

The bedroom smelled like sex and Travis’s cologne, a mix that should’ve been comforting but wasn’t. Not tonight. My feet dragged on the carpet as I paced. The phone was still warm in my hand from the second call with my mom. Her steady voice had cracked me open at the bar, helping me spill all the shit about my dad I’d kept locked up. Now, back here with Travis, it wouldn’t stop leaking out.

I felt bad that this was overshadowing his win. It should’ve been the best time of his life, yet here he was, trying to hold me together.

He sprawled on the bed, propped on one elbow, and watched me like I was a wild animal he didn’t want to spook. The empty cartons from our ice cream run still sat on the nightstand with a sticky spoon beside it. I’d laughed then, high off the World Series win and his arms around me, but the buzz was gone now, replaced by this gnawing thing I couldn’t name.

“Roman.” His voice was low, and he sounded tired. “Sit down. You’re making me anxious.”

I stopped, wanting to say something snarky, but I dropped onto the edge of the bed. Planting my elbows on my knees, I raked my hands through my hair. “He’s such a fucking asshole.”

Travis shifted closer. “He’s still going off?”

“Yeah.” My fingers tightened, pulling at the strands. “Mom said he’s been ranting since the game.”

“What’s he saying?”

I didn’t want to repeat it, but there was no point keeping it all inside. I knew from experience that it would only make everything worse.

“He called it disgusting,” I whispered. “He’s angry that I made it public. He had friends over for the game.”

He didn’t say anything as he watched me, his brown eyes steady. I hated that look sometimes. It was too calm, too patient. I didn’t deserve it.

I grabbed my sketchbook from the floor, flipping it open to a blank page. My pencil moved fast, jagged lines forming the Idaho house with its peeling paint, the wood porch, the shadow of him looming in the doorway.

“He’s always been like this.” My voice was as rough as the sketch my shaky hands created. I focused on the drawing, using it to keep going when all of my instincts were telling me to run fast and far. “He always knows best, and god forbid you disagree.” Shaking my head, I sighed. “He demanded to know what was going on with me and why I’d done that ‘faggot shit’ for the world to see.”

Travis’ jaw twitched, the first crack in his calm. “He said that?”

My nostrils flared. My mom had tried not to repeat it, but I’d asked her to—needed her to, really. Hearing it in her calm, mournful voice might’ve softened the blow. Or so I thought. It hurt plenty that way, and I could only imagine what it’d feel like when I heard real venom in it.

“He told her I’m an embarrassment and ruining my life. He blamed her, but my mom doesn’t tolerate his attitude anymore. She told him that my life is my own and she’s proud of me for all of my accomplishments. She said that as long as I was happy, she was too, then she hung up on him.”

I laughed at that, but it felt wrong, bitter. The pencil scratched harder, tearing the paper where his face should’ve been.

“I’m twenty-three, but that doesn’t stop him from trying to control me. He always has.”

He slid closer, peering at the sketch. I tossed the pencil down and ripped the paper down the middle.

“Hey,” he said, taking it from me. He held onto my hand tightly, and my eyes closed.

“Fuck, Travis, what if he shows up?”

“Then we deal with it,” he said, simple as that, like it wasn’t a bomb waiting to blow. “Together.”

I shook my head. “No. I don’t want you near that shit. He’ll—” I stopped and looked away. “He’ll say things about you. To you. I can’t let that happen.”

Travis’s hand landed on my shoulder firmly. “I’m not fragile, Roman. I can handle it.”

“You shouldn’t have to.”

“Neither should you or anyone else.”

I shrugged him off, standing again, and resumed my pacing. The room felt smaller, the walls pressing in. “You don’t get it.”

“Then help me understand.”