Total pages in book: 42
Estimated words: 39338 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 197(@200wpm)___ 157(@250wpm)___ 131(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 39338 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 197(@200wpm)___ 157(@250wpm)___ 131(@300wpm)
I want to beg him not to continue, but I can’t find my voice.
“You found this way to overcome the past, right? This place became your purpose. You kept people at a safe distance. But now? Now, the past is beating you. It’s winning.” He drops a heavy fist onto the table. “So come on. Don’t let it do that.”
“I can’t just give up everything familiar and move across the country for him. We married so he could stay and play hockey. So he could get his green card—”
“You’re lying to yourself, Britta.” That pronouncement catches me off guard, because I have no idea what he means. All I can do is wait for him to elaborate. “We all know it was love at first sight for Sumner. Maybe it took you a little longer to fall for him, but there has always been something there. The whole team saw it. You’ve always smiled more when he’s around. You relax. Maybe something inside of you knew you could trust him, even before you loved him. Otherwise, you never would have agreed to the marriage.”
I’m beginning to feel slightly dizzy, because snippets of time are playing in my head, and I . . . Is he right? Did I have a thing for Sumner long before I accepted it?
“I notice you’re not denying that you love him,” Bryce remarks dryly. “Go on, admit you wouldn’t have agreed to marry anyone else.”
“I wouldn’t have,” I whisper, staring at the bar and seeing Sumner there. Leaning forward on an elbow and watching me work, oblivious to everything around him. How safe I feel whenever he is around. I’m going to lose that. I’m going to lose him. Unless I take some terrifying leap that I am not even remotely prepared for.
“You love him.”
“Of course I do.” I throw up my hands. “He made me.”
Bryce snorts. “What a dick.”
I shoot him a dark look.
“Britta,” he says, corralling the package until it’s sitting in front of me. “Come to the game tonight.”
I force my numb fingers to move, ripping the wrapping paper—and I slowly reveal an Anaheim jersey, tags still attached. My throat tightens like a bow. “I assume . . . he is going to be there?”
“Our father.” He doesn’t ask it like a question, because we both know who I’m referring to. “Yeah. He’s coming. But you have just as much right to be there. Or anywhere. You matter, Britta. And it’s okay to let someone matter to you. It’s okay to matter to someone else.” He regards me thoughtfully for a second, as if wondering if he could say more but deciding against it. Rising from the bench, he puts a hand on my head, ruffling my hair. “See you tonight, maybe.”
“Maybe,” I croak, still staring down at the jersey. “Either way, Bryce . . . thanks. I guess.”
He smirks, stuffs his hands into the pockets of his jacket, and leaves.
I sit there for a long time. In fact, I remain at the table long after Sluggers is due to open, the teal and white blurring in front of me while I consider everything Bryce said to me. While I replay every moment I’ve spent with Sumner over the last year and ten months, wondering how someone so freaking huge could get under my skin so easily.
Into my heart.
Because that’s where he is. In a deep, tangled way I don’t think I can undo.
Love doesn’t erase the fear of the unknown, though.
I look around the bar, at the divots in the tables, the broken floorboard by the kitchen, the jewel-toned bottles reflecting the early afternoon sun, the brass bell we ring when someone buys a round. Every piece of this place was once so beloved, but my fear is turning it into a prison. And Sluggers is not a person. It can’t love me back.
It’s not him.
With a heavy swallow, I finger the tags of the jersey. I can smell the newness of the thick mesh, and it symbolizes a fresh start for Sumner. Is this . . . a new start for me as well? Is Bryce right, and I’ve been shielding myself from any further damage by hiding within these walls?
Maybe I am stronger than that.
And I’ll never know unless I test myself.
SUMNER
I’m here, but I’m not.
I’m standing in the bench area, helmet on. Can’t feel the stick in my hand.
A local veteran is singing the national anthem, and though my arm feels too heavy to keep my palm flattened over my heart, I keep it there, trying to focus despite the horrible buzzing in my head.
I shouldn’t have let Britta leave.
I’m flying to California tomorrow morning, which gave me approximately twenty-four hours to convince her coming with me is the right choice, but now I’m worried I squandered every minute of today. I was flattened after she left. Then my family convinced me to give her some space to think. That she would make the right decision with a little time and consideration. Now, I’m worried that idea was garbage. I should have gone to Sluggers, carried her into the office, and kissed her until we were on the same page. I should have been more understanding. More patient. I should have, should have, should have . . .