Itap my pen against the textbook laid out in front of me. Midterms are upon me. Halfway through my first semester of vet school.
I feel accomplished. I feel challenged. I feel over-fucking-whelmed.
I had a nice, safe job. Was on the path to make a great living. I had a man who loved me.
And I gave it all up for Stress. Never-ending reading. And late nights spent with that dick-wad voice who lives in my head and tells me Iâm not good enough. He sounds suspiciously like my dick-wad father, which makes me want to crush him even harder.
I lean back in my chair and press the heels of my hands into my eye sockets. Swear I canât even see straight anymore. Iâm about to hit that point in studying where you think For a change of scenery, I grab the stack of mail I pulled from the little locked cubby in the lobby of my building. I lucked out getting a furnished place near campus on short notice. I could have commuted the forty-five minutes to and from Emerald Lake, but with traffic I could have potentially added almost two hours into my dayâtwo hours Iâm now glad I have to study.
Burying myself in my books here means three things. One, I donât run into Griffin Sinclaire around town. Two, I donât read any tabloids that might discuss Griffin Sinclaire or his divorce, which, according to my brother, has become a popular tabloid storyâeven without the existence of a sex tape. And three, I spend slightly less time obsessing about Griffin Sinclaire.
My blood still boils at the memory of that woman. That spark of anger Iâve worked so hard to control dances in my chest.
Right around when I got here, Stefan called to tell me Griffin had checked himself into a twenty-eight-day rehab program and that they were pretty sure she didnât have a tape at all. When I hung the phone up, I cried. I missed him, like some part of me was left behind. But more than anything, I was He owes himself so much more than heâs been giving. I wanted that for him so badly that it hurt. I wanted him to know in his bones what I already doâheâs worth it. Heâs worth I shuffle the envelopes.
I stop with a pink envelope clutched in my fingers. The blocky all caps scribbled across it, not a match for the feminine color.
My heart races as I stare at it, already knowing who itâs from, even with no return address. I feel the hum of his touch on the paper as I slide a shaking finger beneath the fold and rip it open. On a shaky inhale, I pull out a small slip of paper and a smaller envelope with a photograph of a white flower that has light pink stripes on the wide petals adorning it. I open the smaller envelope, but itâs empty. Iâm sure it once held seeds for the flower labeled I flip the paper, where the blocky scrawl continues.
A tear drops onto the page, and I panic, wiping it off frantically. Not wanting to mar the note. I donât know what it means, but I know heâs called me Wildflower since the first day we met. And the nickname has become incredibly meaningful to me.
That night I sleep with the note clutched in my hand and pretend that Griffin is here with me.
I miss him.
Itâs been two weeks since midterms. The midterms I absolutely slayed. Iâve shed a good chunk of that self-doubt Iâve been toting around with me for years, and Iâm thriving.
I wipe the sweat off my brow as I walk into my building after a run. My new hobby. A way to burn energy and clear my head. Iâve always hated running, but I forced myself to keep going, and now I look forward to it. Itâs weird.
The key clicks as I turn it in my mailbox to check for another pink envelope. Like I have every single day for the past two weeks.
I burned off enough steam during my run that Iâve convinced myself already that I wonât be seeing one today. Which makes the sight of it in the slot so much better.
I donât even wait until I get up to my unit to rip the envelope open. Iâm too fucking excited.
This time I see a hot pink flower thatâs all fuzzy in the middle. I definitely dig the color. I swap it over for the note, smiling like a maniac before Iâve even read it.
I bark out a laugh.
I smile at the note the entire ride up in the elevator and into my unit. I smile all the way into the shower. Itâs not until the water scalds my skin that I let my tears pour out and wash down the drain.
I miss him.
Finals are upon me, and Iâm stoked. Like actually excited to prove how good I am at this. Iâm at the top of my class and not slowing down. What started out as a semester of me feeling scared and alone has turned into one of the best times of my life. Iâm learning. Iâm making new friends who donât know me from Adam. They donât know my brother. They donât know my reputation from high school. They donât know Griffin. The experience just wouldnât have been the same had I lived in Ruby Creek and commuted every day. Iâd have dragged a little bit of baggage out this way with me every day.
But now I just get to be Nadia Dalca. The girl who wants to be a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine.
Iâve been asked out a couple of times, and Iâve kindly declined. I donât even have to think about it. Are Griffin and I torturing ourselves and each other by taking this self-imposed time-out? Absolutely. But I know in my heart I needed this. I told him I didnât expect him to wait for me, which is true. But I try not to think about that.
Not waiting for him just feels wrong.
And I know in my bones that we arenât done.
Especially when I get home from my last exam and find another baby pink envelope waiting for me. This time I race up to my condo to open it in the privacy of my space. I plop myself down onto my bed and really savor opening this envelope.
I realize that I donât know how many of the wildflower themed notes he might send. He might stop one day. He might move on. He move on. I would never expect him to sit around twiddling his thumbs, waiting for me.
But the insecure girl inside of me desperately wants him to be okay with waiting for me.
I drag it out of the envelope. This time Iâm met with spiky red and yellow flowers at the top of tall green stalks.
My eyes burn, but I donât cry. Because his message isnât lost on me. Iâm whatâs keeping him going, and that motivates me more than anything he could have told me. Blinking rapidly, I put everything back in the envelope and tuck it into my bedside table with the rest of his notes. Then I go to my desk, crack my books, and get to studying. I focus on the task before me, but still . . .
I miss him.
My brother and Mira took off for a tropical vacation over Christmas. Hawaii. They begged me to come with them, but the thought of taking that particular vacation with their little family and without Griffin felt like more than I could bear. Iâve waited this long to take that vacation. When I do it, I want it to be perfect. As perfect as that day in the field.
Plus, one of my professors offered a student placement at their prestigious vet clinic in the city over the holidays. And by prestigious, I mean working overnight shifts, so the other vets and techs get their holidays off. No one wanted itâsurprise, surpriseâexcept me.
My memories of Christmas growing up arenât warm and fuzzy, so I guess Iâll work my ass off and run myself into the ground in celebration. At least itâll look good on my resume. And it seemed like the perfect way to pass the time between term one and term two.
On Christmas Eve, I sit at the emergency vet clinic, taking care of other peopleâs furry family members surrounded by employees I donât know. Itâs my doing, but I miss my family and friends something fierce. I miss my horse. Iâve gone back on the weekends to see him and cashed in on my riding lessons from Violet and Billie. Iâm getting pretty good.
When I go back, I avoid town and hole up on my brotherâs farm, not wanting to run into anyone. I spend hours grooming Cowboy to a perfect gloss, dreaming of the day Iâll be able to ride him. I massage him. I cuddle him. I tell him all my most embarrassing secrets.
If Cowboy were here right now, Iâd tell him I was secretly hoping Griffin would reach out to me for Christmas. I told Griffin a clean break, but I thought he might send me a text message or something.
According to Violet, who has reached out to me more than ever since I left, Griffin will be picking Cowboy up and taking him to his place to start his training in the new year. Iâve learned so much about rehabilitating racehorses since Griffin bought him for me, and I can see myself doing this over and over again with other horses in the future. Ones who need a second shot at lifeâa fresh start.
Kindred spirits.
Iâm at the front desk watching the clock on the wall move toward midnight. The ticking sound is almost hypnotic in the otherwise quiet clinic. All the staff has warned me Christmas is a real shit show. And that starts in the middle of the night usually with peopleâs pets who have eaten something they shouldnât have.
So, I soak up the peace while I can, watching Christmas Eve melt into Christmas Day. At a few minutes past midnight, the front door jangles and a tired-looking man walks through.
He holds up a pale pink envelope and says, âIs Nadia Dalca here?â
I point at my chest, right where my heart is rushing uncontrollably. âThatâs me.â
He smiles briefly and drops the envelope down on the countertop between us. âMerry Christmas.â
âMerry Christmas,â I say, unable to pull my attention from the best gift I could have asked for.
When I open the envelope, I see small blue and purple almost spherical petals growing along a tall stem in a spear-like shape. I recognize them from the field at Griffinâs house.
Sitting here, holding this note from one of the most profoundly thoughtful men Iâve ever had the pleasure of meeting, I feel distinctly smart. Smart girls wouldnât leave someone like this behind.
The question has crossed my mind more than once.
I tuck the envelope into my purse beneath the desk, and then I lock myself in the bathroom and let myself shed tears for one minute. I actually set a timer. And then I take a deep, deep breath and walk back out to the front desk and prepare myself to save some lives.
Because I am smart. Smart enough to know Iâm here to work hard and prove to myself that I can do this life on my own if I need to. That I donât toss away every hope and dream for a man. Iâll always wonder if Iâm capable of it if I donât do this. He knows it, and I know it, too.
Still, with every note he sends, I fall more deeply in love with him. The distance. The space. The unwavering understanding. It just makes me love him harder.
I miss him.
Itâs spring break, and a good chunk of my classmates are heading south for a vacation. But partying at a resort isnât my scene. One of the things Iâve learned living away is that certain settings work for me and my past trauma, while others do not. Big loud parties with heavy drinking will never be my happy place. People inevitably try to push alcohol on me and having to turn them down over and over inevitably gets awkward.
And annoying.
Every party Iâve been to in the past few months has just proved that there is a limit to what I have in common with people my age. Itâs why Iâve joined a study group of âmature students.â Or thatâs the running joke.
Marni is a mom of three who has stayed home for the past several years. Jin is already a medical doctor but has found his bedside manner may be more well-suited to animals. His intensely literal persona cracks me up. And Erin has been a vet tech for over a decade. Sheâs spent years thinking sheâd like to be the doctor in the room but was constantly told by her shitty husband she couldnât. That it was too expensive. That she was too old.
She ditched him and went back to school. I admire her fiercely. Needless to say, all the people who have become my real friends at school went back to their families for spring break. So here I am, doing the same. Hefting a suitcase out of my car and dragging it up the front steps of my brotherâs house at Cascade Acres.
Stefan throws the front door open and rushes out to take my bag. Ever the gentleman. âLittle sister.â He slings an arm over my shoulder. âNice to have you home.â
I love this place. But it doesnât feel like home. A cozy little house in the mountains, overlooking a rocky cliff and surrounded by wildflowers is what my mind conjures up when I hear the word. But the only reason that place feels like home is because of the man who lives there.
The one who lives rent-free in my head and heart. The one who makes me smile and cry all at once. Anywhere with him would feel like home.
âNice to be here.â I drop my head on his shoulder and smile. âIâve missed you, Stef.â
âAh, youâre just saying that. We both know I annoy you a little bit. Itâs almost like youâve been avoiding me these days.â
I chuckle. âA little bit. Itâs part of your charm.â
He gives me a gentle shove just before we hit the stairs. âYou love me.â
âYou know it,â I reply, meaning it.
When we get to the top of the stairs, just in front of my bedroom, he stops behind me and I turn to face him, wondering why he isnât keeping up.
âI love you, too. You know that?â He swallows, looking a little nervous.
âI know.â I smile and nod, eyes searching his face for some clue where this sudden seriousness is coming from.
âI feel like I owe you an apology. I feel like I overstepped.â My heart thuds heavily against my ribs, and the color drains from my face. âI feel like I forced you and Griffin apart without really understanding.â
My mouth is dry as I suck in a deep breath. âUnderstand what?â
He nods his head toward my bedroom, his expression almost stricken. âYouâve got mail.â
I turn, peering into the room. The bed is made perfectly. And on one pillow lays a pale pink envelope.
One hand falls across my chest, and when I look back at my brother, he winks before heading back down the stairs.
Suitcase forgotten in the hallway, I walk into the room and sit gingerly on the edge of the bed before picking up the envelope.
I havenât gotten one since Christmas but avoided thinking about why. Avoided thinking that he has probably moved on like I told him to.
When I peel it open, what looks like pure yellow daisies stare back at me.
In the field where he fell. The property between this one and Gold Rush Ranch? Where he first told me he loved me?
Iâm back out the door and racing down the stairs before I even settle in.
My brother calls out, âSee you tomorrow!â as I blow straight back out the front door and hop in my car, the small sheet of paper still pressed between my clammy fingers and the steering wheel as I speed down the back roads, trying to remember where the access is for that property.
Things are greening up in the valley. Itâs pretty much the definition of spring out my window. Bright greens, flowers blooming, pollen floating in the air. When I finally find the back road I think will take me closest, I gun it down to the spot where the trail weâd been on that day spat us out.
Itâs not until I throw my vehicle in park that I look out over the picturesque valley where Griffin told me the words Iâve spent my entire life desperate to hear.
And I sob, slapping a hand over my mouth in shock. Because the entire thing is full of wildflowers. A mosaic of bright spring colors. White. Pink. Red. Orange. Blue. Yellow.
Every single kind of flower he sent me in his notes.
On the top of the hill overlooking the field is a silver trailer and a pretty new barn. Small and picturesque. Blue and white. Freshly painted.
Iâm certain I see my shiny, dark bay horse grazing up there behind a bright white fence.
Without another thought, Iâm out of my car, ducking through the fence and walking through the field of flowers with my stomach in my throat.
And my heart in my hand.