Chapter 28

Moira

I close my laptop in

frustration and push it across my kitchen table, trying to get it as

far away from me as possible. It’s not providing me the answers

I want.

In particular, I

sent an email to Father Gaul two weeks ago, desperately hoping he

would see it. I’ve been going out of my mind with worry about

Zach, wondering if he made it back to Caraica.

I’m sure he

did. He’s the most self-assured, capable man I know. He’s

at home in the jungle, so there’s no reason he wouldn’t

make it back there.

No, my worry is

really about what happened after he made it back. Have the Caraicans

already gone to battle with the Matica? Is Zach still alive?

For the last two

weeks, I could barely eat, so sick with apprehension. I’m

sleeping maybe a few hours a night, but it’s a fitful tossing

and turning.

And I’m so

heartsick that I can barely function. I miss Zach so bad. I think

sometimes the best thing to happen to me would be if I just shriveled

up and died, then this misery would at least be ended.

Pushing myself up

from the chair, I pad over to the refrigerator. I open it up and

stare listlessly inside, noting the extreme lack of contents.

Shutting it with a sigh, I head for the living room, intent on

getting lost in a movie.

A knock sounds at my

door, and I jolt with surprise. No one even knows I’m back in

Evanston. I assume it’s someone soliciting something, so I

ignore it. The knocking continues, but I head to the couch and pick

up the TV remote.

A buzzing in my

pocket startles me and I pull out my iPhone, seeing a text from Lisa.

Open your damned

door.

What the hell?

I scurry off my

couch and run to the door, throwing it open. Lisa stands there,

holding a carry-on suitcase with a devious smile on her face. “Hey,

baby sister.”

Stepping backward, I

blink in surprise as Lisa walks in, setting her suitcase down. As I

close the door, I ask her, “What are you doing here?”

“Well…

see, I have this little sister who has been ignoring my calls, texts,

and emails for two fucking weeks, so I was worried about her.”

“How did you

even know I was here?” I ask, astounded that she’s

standing in my living room.

“Because I

called Randall and he told me what happened. How could you, Moira?

How could you go through all of that and not even tell me? Not even

let me help you?”

Her voice is laced

with chastisement but also a huge dose of sympathy. My lower lip

trembles. Then she’s opening her arms to me, and I’m

sinking in to them.

I start sobbing

loudly on her shoulder as she strokes my back and coos words of

comfort to me.

“Let it out,

sweetie,” she cajoles. “Let it out.”

And I do… for

the first time since Zach left me, I pour out every bit of my

heartache and loneliness onto her in the form of tears and a little

bit of snot.

When I am finally

able to get myself under control, I take a deep breath and pull back

from her. She eyes me critically. “God, you’re a hot

mess.”

I stare at her a

moment, and then we both burst out laughing. I cover my mouth with my

hand as the laughter dies down, and Lisa looks at me with soft eyes.

“Here’s

what we’re going to do. You’re going to go get a shower,

because damn girl… you stink. Then we’re going to go out

to a nice dinner, and you’re going to tell me everything.

Okay?”

I nod at her even as

a few stray tears leak out of my eyes. “I’m so glad

you’re here.”

“I’m

always here for you,” she tells me as she shoos me toward the

bathroom.

“The not

knowing what happened to Zach is killing me,” I tell Lisa as I

pick at the chicken primavera on the plate in front of me. The food

isn’t holding much interest, but I had managed to down two

glasses of wine before our dishes came, and I was pleasantly buzzed.

“Of course

that would be worrying you,” she sympathizes. “But you’re

also battling a broken heart that he’s gone. You have a lot on

your plate, baby.”

Nodding my head, I

spear a chunk of chicken with my fork and tentatively put it in my

mouth. Oh, damn… that’s good. After I chew and swallow,

I stab another piece of chicken, waving my fork in the air at her.

“He just left so suddenly… and he wouldn’t talk to

me other than to say he wasn’t coming back.”

Misery overwhelms me

and I let the fork fall from my hand, where it clatters loudly on my

plate.

“How long do

you think you’ll be sunk in this misery, because frankly…

it’s a little annoying?”

“Excuse me?”

I jerk backward, and anger rises within me.

“Oh, come on,

Moira. You’re not one to sit around and wallow in pity. Your

man left you… yeah, that sucks. He could be in danger, and

it’s worrying you silly. I get it. But my baby sister is a

dynamo. She’d never sit back and just wait around for bad news

to arrive.”

“What in the

hell do you think I should do?” I ask bitterly. “It’s

not like I can call him on his cell phone.”

“Well, no

shit, Sherlock. So get off your ass and go find out what happened.”

“Go find out

what happened?” I ask stupidly.

“Listen…

if he’s dead, you need to know. If he’s not, you need to

know. So go find out.”

“You mean go

to Caraica?”

“Why not?

You’re a freaking anthropologist. You’ve been to Amazonia

before and you know how to get there. You have the resources at your

disposal, the money with which to do it, because I know Randall will

pay for the trip, and you have nothing but time on your hands. Unless

you’re going to go ahead and go back to teaching in the fall?”

Shaking my head, I

reach over and grab my wineglass, knowing I’m going to need

more fortification. “No, the university has already arranged

for a temporary substitute for my classes. I’ll be starting

back in the winter.”

“Then there’s

nothing holding you back,” she asserts.

“Except the

fact that Zach left me. He didn’t want me to go with him, even

though I offered. He didn’t even say he was sorry… or

that he’d miss me… or that he wished things were

different. He barely said a word to me,” I grumble, now aiming

my anger at Zach.

“Come on,

Moira. Think about what the guy was going through. He’d just

found out his home had been attacked and his friends had died. You

know he was struggling with the desire to return home anyway. You

know, deep down, that it was impossible for him to even concentrate

on anything except his need to get back to his people. So give him a

break.”

Her words are hard,

but they ring with truth. I’ve been so immersed in my own

tortured feelings that I had given little credence to what Zach had

been going through when he got the terrible news. All I could think

about was holding on tight to him, and that did me little good.

“I don’t

know,” I hedge, because even though I’m terrified to

discover that Zach may be dead, I’m probably just as fearful to

find him alive and unhappy to see me. He made a firm decision that he

was returning permanently, his last words to me that he wasn’t

going to come back to me burning an acid-like hole in my heart.

“Maybe I just need to let it go.”

Lisa snorts, and my

eyes rise to hers. I ask angrily, “What? What’s with the

passive aggressiveness?”

“I’m not

being passive aggressive. I’ll just be aggressive, how does

that sound? Everything that is bothering you right now has to do with

the fact that you have no clue what’s going on. Fear of the

unknown is one of the worst feelings in the world. You have no clue

if Zach is safe. You have no clue if he returned your feelings. You

have no clue whether you would have worked out in the long term. You

need those answers or you are never going to have any peace.”

Now it’s my

turn to snort. “I know the answer to one thing… we were

never going to work out in the long run. He only committed a year

here, so in some respects, maybe this is easier. Imagine how much

harder it would have been when he left me after a year… after

my feelings had gotten even deeper.”

Lisa blinks at me,

and her mouth hangs open slightly. “You don’t know, do

you?”

“Know what?”

I sneer, the wine feeling warm in my veins. “That Zach was just

probably using me for sex, but even the prospect of returning back to

a bloody war was better than staying here to fuck me?”

“Oh, God,”

Lisa says with an eye roll. “Enough with the dramatics. No…

you don’t know that Zach had decided to stay here permanently,

do you?”

“What?”

I practically screech as I lean across the table. “Why would

you say that?”

Lisa leans back in

her chair and thoughtfully runs her finger over the rim of her own

wineglass. She smiles at me with mischief. “Oh, this is

delicious. You seriously have no idea that Zach apparently had deeper

feelings for you than you even give him credit for.”

My eyebrow arches at

her. “As evidenced by the fact that he left me?” I point

out snidely.

“As evidenced

by the fact that he had met with Randall and told him that he decided

to stay… here with you. He asked for Randall’s help…

a job so he could help contribute to the household.”

“Tell me

you’re kidding me,” I demand with a sickening feeling in

my stomach. “Tell me this is a joke, because I really don’t

need to hear right now that he had feelings for me. I was better off

being pissed at him for leaving.”

“Sorry, sis.

He and Randall came up with a plan to get his GED and then get into

college. Zach insisted though that he have some way to earn income,

so Randall was going to hire him at a Cannon’s store and sort

of start him at the bottom so he could work his way up.”

My mouth hangs

agape. “How do you know all this?”

“Because I

bothered to talk to Randall. You’d know this too if you had

responded to his calls and emails. He’s worried sick about

you.”

My head hangs in

shame. It’s true… I’ve been ignoring everyone.

After I dropped Zach off at the airport, I went back to his house,

packed my things, and left. I had sent Randall a brief email that I

was returning to Evanston and that the key to Zach’s house was

under the doormat. He had responded back immediately that he needed

to talk to me, but I deleted it. He sent me several more emails,

which I deleted without reading. I didn’t need his sympathy,

and I was better off handling this on my own. I also disregarded all

of his calls and wiped his voice mails from my phone without

listening to them.

“Zach really

told Randall he wanted to stay here permanently?” I ask, still

disbelieving… still refusing to hope he had deeper feelings

for me than I suspected.

“Apparently

the morning he left. He went to Randall’s office.”

I remember waking up

that morning and Zach’s side of the bed being cold. I had sat

up in bed, a bit gingerly because my hip joints were a little sore

from the way Zach had held my legs up, and my ass stung a little.

But, oh God. That

was the most incredible sexual experience I’ve ever had. I had

hoped Zach had found as much pleasure in it as I did, because I so

wanted to do that again. He was so primal and raw with me, but at the

same time, so tender and thoughtful. When he’d asked me if I

trusted him, and I answered that I did, his smile told me that that

had meant more to him than anything up to that point.

I had no clue where

Zach went. I had assumed out for a walk… maybe down to the

bakery we both loved to pick us up some breakfast. I made my cup of

coffee, sat down to read my email, and then everything started

spinning out of control when Father Gaul called me.

I knew when he told

me what happened to Paraila and the tribe that Zach was probably lost

to me. I knew that I could never compete with the type of love and

loyalty Zach had for his people.

So it sort of stings

just a bit more to know that Zach had made the choice to stay with

me. For one brief, shining moment, he opened himself up and put me

first, and I had no clue. He hadn’t bothered to wake me up and

tell me. He went off on his own, made his plans, and then kept them

from me. He didn’t even give me the courtesy of telling me that

before he left because maybe… just maybe, it would have given

me some hope for the future.

I can only guess by

the way he completely withdrew from me and told me he wasn’t

coming back, that he had once again changed his mind and determined I

wasn’t more important than what waited for him back in Caraica.

Sighing deeply, I

push my plate away from me. “I’m kind of tired,” I

tell Lisa in a soft voice. “Mind if we go ahead and leave?”

“Moira…

don’t withdraw. Let’s continue to talk about this. I know

you’re hurting.”

I give her a sad

smile. “I am hurting and I love you for your concern, but I

think the best thing to do is leave this alone. Zach made his choice,

and I have to honor it. Some wishes aren’t destined to come

true.”

“I don’t

believe that. I think there’s still a lot left on the table

here between you two,” she says adamantly.

“No, there

really isn’t. Actually… if I’m honest with myself,

Zach made the right choice. It was right for him to return. He would

have never been able to live with himself if he didn’t.”

“So, you won’t

go to him? Won’t even entertain that idea?”

Shaking my head, I

stand up from the table. “No. There’s nothing for me in

Caraica. Now, I’m going to go out to the car if you don’t

mind getting the bill. I need some fresh air and alone time right

now.”

I turn from my

sister and I hear her mutter, “Fool,” as I walk out of

the restaurant.

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