Echoes of You: Chapter 17
Echoes of You (The Lost & Found Series Book 2)
I pulled on my softest sweats. I needed the warmth and comfort because Nashâs disappearing act had left me way too cold. A kind of chill I wasnât sure you could ever get warm from.
Tugging the throw blanket over myself, I burrowed under it as if that could somehow protect me. It was nothing but fluff, but it was all I had.
The deep ache in my chest reminded me why Iâd fled Cedar Ridge in the first place. Because hoping over and over again that things were changing between Nash and me left me devastated every time. People didnât realize what a dangerous emotion hope could be. How brutal.
Each time it smashed at my feet, it took a little piece of my heart with it. Iâd started to fear that Iâd eventually lose it all and wouldnât have even a single shard left to give to someone who might want it. Hope would have destroyed them all.
It wasnât Nashâs fault. He hadnât promised me a danged thing. Hadnât ever kissed me in the way I yearned for. Hadnât told me he wanted me as anything but a friend. But, sometimes, I caught him looking at me, his gaze tracing my lips or the curve of my hips, and that damned hope flared to life again.
But it was always cut down. Nash would pull away or take someone on a date. Or Iâd hear some woman in town talking about how sheâd had him in her bed. Each time, I died a little inside. It happened through high school, as we commuted to our local college, and in the years after. But I paid the price for each tiny wound of disappointment.
I wouldâve given anything to turn it off and stop feeling this way about my best friendâthe one who had always been there for me no matter what. But nothing I tried ever worked. And my last endeavor had almost gotten me killed.
My phone buzzed on the nightstand, and I reached over for it, my traitorous heart hoping it was Nash.
A shiver ran down my spine as I stared at the phone.
Tears pooled in my eyes as memories battered at the walls of my mind.
Nash wanted good The sound of a door opening jerked me out of the memory. I did my best to uncurl my fingers from the blanket wrapped around me. The memory hadnât even been a particularly bad one. It was what it symbolized. That handful of moments when the tides had started to turn from good to so very bad.
Footsteps sounded in the hallway. I did my best to brace. Iâd never been good at hiding my emotions. They played over my face for all to see. Theyâd gotten me in trouble with my father and with Adam. But Nash could read me better than anyone.
He filled my bedroom doorway, his broad form eating up the space. The moment his eyes landed on me, he stilled. âWhatâs wrong?â
My fingers twisted in the blanket. âNothing. Just tired.â
Nash strode across the space, lowering himself to the mattress. âYou sure about that?â
I blew out a breath. âJust memories.â
âYour dad?â
âAdam,â I confessed. Just saying his name reminded me that I hadnât told Nash about the latest barrage of texts. But, honestly, what good would that do? It would only piss off my best friend all over again.
Nashâs jaw tensed. âHe doesnât deserve a single second in your brain.â
âI know that. But that doesnât mean I can stop it.â My words had a bite to them. Annoyance that heâd think I to think about Adam combined with hurt at him taking off.
âShit. Iâm sorry. I didnât mean it like that. I just hate the idea of you thinking of him at all. I want your mind to be a clear and happy place.â
A little of my frustration bled away. âI want that, too, but I think itâs going to take time. Knowing that my dad might be out on parole just makes things harder.â
Nash toyed with the edge of my blanket. âTalked to Law.â
I looked up from Nashâs hands, needing to see his eyes.
âYour dad was granted parole. Thereâs been an overcrowding issue, and theyâre looking to release prisoners with good behavior.â Nashâs words sounded mangled, as if he could barely get them out.
And what he said hit me like a physical blow. Iâd come back to Cedar Ridge to feel safe, and now that might be taken from me, too.
âHeâs not out for another two weeks, and Law has the paperwork ready for an order of protection. Heâll have to keep one hundred yards from you at all times.â
âAnd how the heck is that going to work in a town the size of Cedar Ridge?â
âIf he enters somewhere you are, heâll have to leave.â
I pinched the bridge of my nose, feeling a headache coming on.
Nash slipped his hand under my hair and kneaded my neck. âI picked up the papers at the station. All you have to do is sign. Itâs a level of security you need right now. If he screws up and breaks it, heâll go back to prison and have to serve his full sentence.â
I rolled my lips together, my teeth biting into them. It would be worth it for that. It wasnât as if my dad wouldnât know where I was living. He could find out in two seconds. âOkay.â
Nashâs brows rose. âOkay?â
The shock on his face startled a laugh out of me. âYouâre shocked at me being agreeable?â
âHonestly? Yes. Youâre the most stubborn person I know.â
I pinched his side. âI am not.â
Nashâs lips twitched. âDo you remember what happened the first day of middle school when you were determined to carry all your books?â
Iâd filled my backpack so full that Iâd fallen right over. I glared at Nash. âItâs rude to bring up embarrassing moments.â
He snickered. âYou almost knocked yourself unconscious.â
âYou have a few zingers, you know. How about the time your mom found the magazines under your mattress andââ
Nash clamped a hand over my mouth. âWe never speak of that day. Ever.â
I couldnât hold in my laughter. Soon, tears were streaming down my face, and Nash had to let me go. âShe got you condoms.â
âIt was the most traumatic sex talk imaginable. She tried to use Graeâs old Barbies to demonstrate things.â
The tears only came harder as I tried to get myself under control. âYou couldnât look at her for like a month.â
Nash threw up his hands. âWould you have been able to?â
I only snorted.
âThanks for bringing this up. I got us burrito bowls, and now my appetite is ruined.â
I rolled my eyes. âNothing has ruined your appetite in the history of time.â
âThis might.â
I swung my legs over the side of the bed and stood. Taking Nashâs hand, I pulled him up. âCome on. Letâs eat. Iâm starving.â
âIâm glad one of us is,â he mumbled.
âSuch a drama queen.â
I came to a stop at the picnic table in my dining room. There was a massive bag of takeout with a stack of papers next to it. âIs that the restraining order?â
Nash nodded. âYou just have to sign. We donât have to deal with it now. We canââ
âNo. Letâs get it over with. Do you have a pen?â
He fished in his pocket and pulled one out, handing it to me.
I didnât bother reading what Lawson had written. I trusted him. I simply wrote my signature across the line at the bottom. Staring at the looping scrawl of my name, I just hoped this flimsy piece of paper had a prayer of protecting me.