She didnât answer my text.
I watched her house until her dad finally left, climbing into his SUV he had parked on the street and driving off. I immediately called her, but she didnât answer.
I didnât give myself time to debate whether it was a good idea or not before I was bolting out our front door and across the street to hers. I lifted my fist to knock, but the door opened before I could.
Julep was a wreck.
Her hair was matted and tangled, her eyes puffy and red and swollen. She sniffed, wiping the back of her nose with her wrist.
The sight broke my fucking heart.
âCome here,â I said, and then I pulled her into me as she started to cry again.
I held her there in the open doorway while she shook and clung to my hoodie like a lifeline. The last bit of good sense I had holding on urged me to scoot us inside and close the door, and once I had, I pulled back and framed her arms with my hands.
âHe lost it, didnât he?â
âDEFCON level one meltdown.â
âWith me, too,â I said, and then I sighed, wiping her tears with my thumbs. âCome on, let me make us some tea.â
Julep let me slide my arm around the small of her back and guide her to the kitchen. She slid into a barstool at the small island while I opened cabinets until I found a box of herbal tea. I filled her electric kettle next, and once it was on to boil, I leaned a hip against the counter and turned back to her.
âHe just doesnât know us,â I said. âHe doesnât understand. Once we get him to see that weâre good for each other, heâll re-evaluate.â
Julep didnât look convinced.
She stared at a dark spot on the counter, not blinking.
It was too quiet, even as the water began to bubble and boil. I turned it off once it was ready, placing tea bags in two mugs and pouring the water over them. I handed one to Julep and kept one on the other side with me.
âGive it a few minutes to steep,â I said.
Julep wrapped her hands around the mug and nodded.
I had already been thinking of what we could do, trying to come up with a plan while heâd been over here with her. I saw it the same way I saw planting and tending to a new vegetable or flower. I knew it wouldnât be easy, but I also knew nothing was impossible.
âI think we should invite him to dinner,â I finally said. âMaybe next weekend, with my uncles. Nathan can cook a big meal. Heâll see Iâm from a good family, that Iâm not just some punk trying to get in his daughterâs pants.â
âAnd find out Iâve already met your uncles behind his back?â Julep shook her head. âHeâd feel duped.â
âWell, Iâll ask them to pretend like itâs their first time meeting you.â
âYouâll ask them to ?â
âItâs not like that.â
âIt is.â
âMy uncles wonât care. They wonât see it like that,â I said. âThey adore you, and theyâll want to help.â
Julep was silent.
I blew on my tea, dunking the bag a few times. âWe donât have to move so soon, if thatâs what youâre afraid of. Letâs give him some time to cool off.â
âHoldenââ
âTrust me, I know heâs pissed,â I said, a flash of his red face popping into the back of my mind. âBut he was just caught off guard. We all were. Emotions are high.â
âI think we should call things off.â
I stilled, hand hovering with the string of the tea bag between my fingers as my eyes crawled up to meet hers. When I saw she was serious, panic seized my chest.
âWe need to call it, Holden.â
She looked impossibly tired.
âCall it,â I echoed, not as a question but as a repetition to make sure Iâd heard correctly. âI donât want to call it. Is that what you want?â
âOf course not. But we donât have a choice.â
âThereâs always a choice.â
âNot this time, there isnât.â
My heart thumped so loudly in my ears I could barely hear my own voice over it. âWeâll figure it out. Maybe not tonight, but we will.â
âThereâs nothing to figure out. I mean⦠maybeâ¦â She chewed her bottom lip. âMaybe itâs for the best.â
My ears started ringing then. âDonât say that,â I whispered.
Her face warped a little, but she looked down at her hands, doing her best to control the emotion threatening to take her under. âYouâre going into the NFL. What do we really expect to happen?â
âJulep, donât.â
âIt was nice, we had fun, butââ
I rounded the island and turned her in her barstool until she was facing me, my hands braced on either side of where she sat. I leaned down, waiting until her eyes met mine.
âNice? It was ?â
She tried to pull away, but I wouldnât let her.
âDo not do this,â I begged her, my jaw set, nostrils flaring. âDo not push me away.â
âI donât see any other way.â
âI do.â
âI know what he threatened you with,â she whispered, her eyes glossing.
I clamped my mouth shut, willing myself to breathe.
âHeâs not bluffing,â she continued, her voice soft and resigned. âHe will bench you. He will play Russo. You will lose everything that youâve worked your entire life for.â
âI donât care.â
âWell, thatâs part of the issue, then,â she snapped back, and she shoved my arm out of her way before standing and crossing the living room, her back to me as she folded her arms.
I stood rooted in place, trying to calm myself, to think clearly and not panic.
I was failing.
âLook, we had something real, Holden,â she said, using her thumb to wipe one loan tear. âAnd I care about you. But thatâs exactly we have to stop. You have a future that you dreamed of long before you even knew I existed. I donât want to ruin that for you.â
âYouâre not ruining it. Youâre making it better.â
Her little shoulders collapsed, and I wanted so badly to pull her into me, to hold her and force her to see things my way. But when I took a step toward her, she took a step back.
âItâs not just you who has something to lose, okay?â She sniffed. âHe threatened to send me to rehab.â
My jaw tightened. âHe ?â
âHe wonât,â she said quickly. âHe didnât mean it. I he didnât mean it. But he said it because how scared he is. Thatâs how much I have fucked him up with my actions over the last five years.â
âBut thatâs just it. Youâve turned a corner. He knows it, he said as much to me,â I said, and this time when I moved toward her, she didnât back away. âWe just have to get him to see that part of the reason is because .â
âItâs not that simple.â
I let out a long exhale, framing her arms with my hands. âJust trust me. Trust that I can make this right.â
Her eyes welled with tears again, and this time she let them fall freely as she swallowed. âI need some space.â
âJulepââ
âI need some space,â she said again, pleading. âAnd you need to focus on the game.â
âI donât want to focus on the game.â
âAgain, thatâs part of the problem,â she said, exasperated.
I wanted to scream. I wanted to bang my fists against the wall and tell her not to do this, not to push me away when I was trying so desperately to hold onto her. But it seemed the tighter I held, the more she resisted held.
âThe Holden I know would be focused on the game, on winning the championship with his team and securing his spot in the draft. Thatâs the man I met at the beginning of the season. Thatâs the man I fell for. The one who was determined, who was a leader, who would never risk any of it for some girl.â
âYouâre not just some girl and you fucking know it.â
Her bottom lip quivered, and she looked away from me.
âIâm still that guy,â I continued. âI am. I want the win. I want of it. But I donât want to lose you in the process.â
She quieted, fighting back more tears. âI donât see any other way.â
I shook my head, eyes stinging, heart thrashing.
âPlease,â she begged. âI want you to leave. I you to leave.â
I was so fucking angry and desperate I felt like a mad man on the edge. But I could sense how precarious the situation was, how if I kept on in this moment, Iâd only push her away. She was freaked out. She was scared. And I was making it worse by trying to rip away one last little bit of control she felt like she held onto.
I pulled her closer, tilting her chin until she looked at me.
âI will give you anything you need, Julep. Even this. But only on one condition. You have to promise me we will talk after youâve taken some time, some space. You have to that this isnât the end.â
She swallowed, her glossy eyes flicking between mine.
âI am not walking away from you,â I told her as my voice shook. âDo you understand me? I am not walking away.â
I silenced the cry that came from her lips with a pained kiss, one she met just as desperately, her arms threading around the back of my neck and holding me to her. I kissed her long and deep, holding her tightly against me, praying with every bit of religion I still held onto that she believed me when I said that.
âOkay,â she breathed, pulling away, her forehead pressed to mine.
âYou promise?â
She nodded, and I pulled her back in, both of us trembling as I pressed my lips to hers.
Then, just like she asked, I left.
And even though she promised, my heart was swallowed by the black hole of grief when I shut the door behind me.
As if Iâd never kiss her again.