Two days turn into four, and four turn into a week and still, Ariâs memory hasnât come back. Thatâs twenty-two days in total, and with each passing hour, my days grow a little darker.
The subconscious memory about orientation is the last and only comment Iâve caught that holds any kind of proof her memories are still in there somewhere. As far as Iâm know, itâs the only time sheâs referenced before, not that she realized it. Again, as far as Iâm aware.
A cold bottle of beer slips into my view, and I look up to find Mr. Johnson.
Not wanting to be rude, I plan to take it, but I hesitate a moment too long and a low chuckle leaves him.
âYeah, I know that face.â He lowers into the seat beside me, takes a slow swig and sets the second bottle between his legs. âThatâs the face of a man who found himself on a first name basis with the guy at the liquor store.â
My mouth curves slightly and I look to the wooden deck beneath my feet. âHis name was Darrel, and heâs got a thing for cherry soda.â
Mr. Johnson flashes a small grin, but it doesnât meet his eyes. His features smooth and he nods. âYou think you can be straight with me?â he wonders.
âI have no reason not to be, sir.â
He waves me off. âI like that answer, but no sir. No Mr. Johnson. Just Evan.â He lowers his chin and I nod.
âI wonât lie to you, Evan.â I look him in the eye. âI might choose not to answer based on the question, but only out of good intention. Nothing more.â
âWhat kind of question would you choose not to answer?â
I open my mouth, but he laughs it off.
âI just want to know how youâre doinâ, son, how youâre really doing.â
âIâm not really sure,â I answer honestly. âAll things considered, Iâm fine, but all things considered and uhâ¦â
âAnd youâre a fucking mess?â
My eyes snap his way and he grins, drawing a chuckle from me.
âYes, sir.â He lifts a brow and I raise my palms. âSorry, curse of an athlete. It you werenât a professor of mine, you were sir or coach. Itâs not an easy one to break.â
âItâs a good problem to have.â He nods. âAbout that whole athlete thing.â
I look away. âThis might lead to one of those âchoose not to answerâ questions.â
âBecause you donât want me to tell you not to walk away from your dreams.â
âIf thatâs what you said to me right now, sir, Iâd thank you for understanding why Iâm here and not anywhere else.â
His jaw clenches, and he looks away with a slow nod, attempting to shield the moisture building in his eyes. âEvan, son. Not sir.â He takes a long drink from his beer, and when he looks to me, he nods again. âHow you doing? Truly, Noah. I know your mama is still healing, youâve got your last semester coming up, and football is up in the air. And with everything happening with Ari, itâs worries me for you. Itâs a lot for anyone to handle, but where my daughter is concerned, I imagine your position is the worst to be stuck in.â
âI donât feel stuck, sir, or Evan. A bit helpless, a little overwhelmed, yeah, but not stuck.â
âI know itâs hard, and I donât know that I necessarily agree with her choice to keep all our mouths closed like this, but I appreciate you going along with what sheâs asked.â He scoffs, shaking his head. âPretty sure Iâd have locked my wife in a room with me and broke down every detail that first night.â
My laugh is low. âYeah.â
Iâd love nothing more than to do exactly that. Itâs on my mind all the time, how I would start and what exactly I would say. Iâve had the imaginary conversation with her a hundred times now, but at the end of each one, tears brim in her eyes, confusion swimming within them as she stares at the man telling her she loves him while internally swearing she loves another.
I wonât hurt her just to help myself.
I look to Mr. Johnson. âBiting my tongue has never been too hard for me, itâs just another thing that comes with being an athlete.â
âA coachable athlete anyway.â
I nod.
As an athlete, a coachable one, as he pointed out, you donât always like what you see, hear, or are asked to do, but you do it anyway for a number of reasons.
âThis is a lot different, Noah.â He speaks my exact thought out loud.
âYeah, it is, but itâs not the âholding the words backâ part thatâs hard for me.â
Understanding draws his features in and he sighs. âNo, son, I donât imagine it is.â
Both of our gazes lift then, pointing toward the ocean, toward the waterline, where Ari stands, her hair blowing around in front of her face, a wide smile spread along her lips as she laughs⦠at something Chase has said.
Tension builds in my sternum, and I force my eyes to my feet.
Sitting back this time means watching firsthand as my future grows blurrier by the day, but what she wants is what I want for her, so really, thereâs no decision to be made on my part.
Iâm here until sheâs ready for me.
Or until Iâm forced to let go.
âYou love my little girl.â Mr. Johnson speaks low, turning to me.
âIâm not the only one.â My lips press into a tightline, my eyes lifting to the sand once more. âIâm beginning to wonder if Iâll ever get the chance to tell her.â
His hand clamps onto my shoulder then, giving a little squeeze. âIf it begins to look like you wonât, you might have to go on and do it anyway.â His chin lowers, and I manage a nod.
Slowly, he pushes to his feet. âItâs an honor to have you here, son.â
âThank you, sir.â
He glares, and a low laugh slips from me.
Mason comes out of the house then, looking between the two of us, but his gaze is quickly pulled forward, to Chase and Ari. A deep frown pulls at his forehead.
Mr. Johnson chuckles, slaps his shoulder and heads around the side. âIâm walking down to snag my wife for lunch. See you boys.â
He leaves, and the two on the beach walk back this way, pausing not too far from us now.
Chase says something and Ariâs sweater-covered hand comes up to cover her laugh, but it still echoes in my ears.
My lips twitch, my body confused by the happiness her laughter brings, and the devastation bleeding through me that Iâm not the one who earned it.
âFuck.â Mason sighs, and we glance toward each other. âWhat are you doing, man?â
âWondering how to show a girl whoâs wanted one man all her life that she doesnât want him anymore.â
Mason winces, his glare sharpening more and more as he stares at the two. âFuck this.â
He jolts forward, and I dart to my feet, catching him by the wrist, halting him in place.
His eyes narrow on me. âNoah.â
âI need you to promise me something.â
His brows furrow. âDonât.â
âMason, come on. Please.â
Angry, he plants his feet. âWhat?â
âWhen he tells her he had a change of heart, donât interfere.â
âWhat the fuck?â he throws back. âAre you serious right now?â
âYes, and I know you donât want to hurt her. Going apeshit will do just that.â
âThis isnât about keeping my sister from my friend. It might have been before, but itâs different now. This is about her getting back the life she lost. Youâve got to get that.â
âTrust me, I do, but Iâm trying to do whatâs right here. This is what she wants.â
âWhat she wants is you.â
âMason.â
âShe loves you, bro! Thatâs whatâs right, end of fucking story!â
âKeep your voice down,â I warn him, but itâs too late.
Ari hears her twinâs shouts, and sure enough, her eyes are pulled this way.
She stutter steps, tucking her hair behind her ear as she tugs the corner of her lower lip between her teeth. Her chest rises with a full breath, and she doesnât look away.
She doesnât move at all.
But her eyes, they arenât on Mason. Theyâre on me.
âLook at her, Noah.â Masonâs whisper is desperate. âJust⦠fucking look at her. Itâs written all over her and she doesnât even know it. Sheâs yours, man. Donât let her lose what she always wanted and finally found.â
A knot forms in my throat, and I swallow past it. It does nothing to hide the turmoil in my tone. âIn her mind right now, she loves him. She wants him. I need you to let her figure it out on her own.â
Frustrated, he runs a hand over his face. âTell me why.â
âBecause sheâs lost, you said it yourself. She only has what she knows, and what she knows isââ I swallow. âWhat she knows is the way he makes her feel.â
Weâre both quiet a moment before I add, âHeâs the only thing that makes sense to her right now.â
âYou know this is fucked up, right? That it could backfire? If he really loves her and she gives them the chance they didnât get âcause Iâm a bastard, this could mean you losing her.â He faces me fully. âAre you prepared for that? âCause it could fucking happen.â
The arteries surrounding my heart squeeze and it gets a little harder to breathe.
Ari smiles then, waves, and everything fucking aches. Burns.
Clearing my throat, I turn away. I look Mason in the eye.
âIâm not asking you to push her to him. Iâm just asking you to allow her the chance you took away, if she decides she wants it.â
Mason shakes his head. âThis isnât some dude off the street. Thereâs history, family ties. Friendship that spans years.â He eyes me. âChase is a good man, Noah.â
âIf he wasnât, I wouldnât be standing here.â
He sighs, long and loud. âFine. But for the record, this is a bad idea, and you might learn that the hard way.â With that, he storms down the steps, cutting right and disappearing down the beach.
Ari and Chase both watch as he disappears, and as her attention moves back toward me, I drop back into my seat.
I press my knuckles into my eye sockets, hoping that Iâm doing the right thing, and wishing there was a way to find out, but how can I possibly find the answer when I donât even know the damn question?
Life has never been simple for me, but this is on another level and Iâm not handling it well.
I want my girl back.
I want the future I dared to dream about.
I want her.