Chapter 51 #2
Greyson bent over the crying boy and nudged him with a shoe. “Like I said. Leave my daughter alone. Or my other daughter will do that again. Only harder.” He turned to Lorelai and me. “Come on, girls. Let’s go.”
We headed back to the car and all climbed inside. Before putting the car in drive, Greyson pulled out his cell phone.
“What are you doing?” Karla asked him, warily.
“I’m calling the police station to report a noise complaint,” he said matter-of-factly.
When the call was picked up, Greyson cleared his throat.
“Hello? Hi. I’m calling to report a noise complaint at 1143 West Shore Street.
There seems to be a party taking place, and I’m pretty sure there is underage drinking going on. Thank you.”
He hung up the phone, and when I glanced back at the girls, I noticed there was a small smile on Karla’s face.
“Thanks, Dad,” she whispered.
“Always, Karla,” he replied. He turned around to face her, put a hand on her knee, and gently squeezed. “Always.”
“Why does it smell like farts in here?!” Lorelai shouted, making us all laugh a little.
“Let’s get home to shower,” Greyson said. “But first, Lorelai, I’m very proud of you for standing up for your sister, but in the future, let’s not kick people. And we can’t call people those names, OK?”
“But Daddy, he was a little bitch,” she insisted.
“Where did you even learn that word?” he asked, baffled.
Don’t say me, don’t say me.
“Eleanor said it to Caroline’s mom, but she said don’t tell you because you might fire her,” she said.
What a traitor.
I had to turn my head to keep her from seeing me laughing. Greyson glanced my way with a smirk before putting his grown-up voice back on.
“Yes, but it’s not kind or appropriate. Especially for a girl your age.”
“Which part isn’t kind? Little or bitch?” she asked, seeming truly confused.
“The second part,” he told her.
“So bitch?” she asked.
Karla started snickering. “Yeah, Lorelai. Don’t say that. But thank you for having my back.”
“I’ll always have your back, Karla. You’re my best friend.”
I noticed Karla smiling from Lorelai’s comment, and she whispered, “You’re my best friend, too, kiddo.”
We drove home in silence, other than Lorelai mentioning the smell, and when we pulled up to the house, we all climbed out of the car.
I was planning on putting Lorelai back to bed while Greyson and Karla took their showers.
As we were walking, all of our footsteps stopped as Greyson spoke from behind us.
“I owe you an apology,” he said, making us all turn to look his way.
His shoulders were rounded forward as he rubbed his hand over his mouth, and his eyes were locked on Karla.
“What?” Karla asked.
“I let you down, and for that, I owe you an apology.”
“Dad . . . I’m the one who sneaked out without telling you.” Karla rubbed her shoulder, nervously swaying. “If anyone’s sorry, it should be me.”
Greyson shook his head. “No, I haven’t been here for you this past year.
I checked out and fell into work just to keep from facing the fact of what I took away from you.
What I took away from us all. And I am sorry, Karla.
If I would’ve been around, maybe tonight wouldn’t have happened.
Maybe you wouldn’t have felt abandoned or lonely .
. . I, um, I know you won’t forgive me right away.
Truth is, I don’t deserve your forgiveness.
But I want you to know that I’m here now.
OK? I screwed up, and I abandoned you, I abandoned this family, and I am sorry, but I’m here.
So even when you feel lonely, I just want you to know that you aren’t alone.
I’m here, Karla. I’m back, and I won’t leave you again. ”
Karla appeared as if she didn’t know how to react. She bit her bottom lip and wrapped her arms around her body. “I hated you, you know. For leaving.” She sniffled and wiped the back of her hand against her eyes. “I needed you, and you weren’t here.”
He walked toward her, nodding. “I know. I can’t change the mistakes I made, but I promise you from this point on, I will spend each day trying to make it up to you.”
She still seemed unsure as she looked down at the ground, her figure slightly shaking. “You promise, promise?” she asked, glancing back toward her father. “You won’t keep working all the time?”
He held his pinky finger out toward her. “Pinky promise,” he whispered.
My heart about exploded when Karla walked over to her father and linked her pinky with his.
Greyson nodded over to Lorelai and held his other pinky out toward her. “You, too, Lorelai.”
She hurried over to him and locked pinkies with her father and with her sister, making a small circle. “What about Eleanor, Daddy?” she asked, glancing my way.
Everyone turned to me, and I stepped back, feeling fully out of place. That was their family moment, and in a way, I was intruding just by being there. “Oh, no, Lorelai. I think it’s just a family pinky promise.”
Karla gave me a halfway grin and slightly shrugged as she dropped her hand from Lorelai’s and held her pinky out toward me. My emotions began building up from the small gesture, and Karla sighed. “I swear to God, Eleanor, if you start crying, I’m taking my pinky back,” she warned.
“Sorry.” I laughed, wiping at my eyes and hurrying over to the circle. I linked my pinkies with Lorelai and Karla, and we all held on as Greyson spoke.
“From this point on, we work as a unit, OK? We’re a team, and we are there for each other all the time. Through thick and thin. If we fall, we fall together. If we break, we shatter as one. That’s who we are. That’s our promise. Promise?” he asked.
“Promise,” Lorelai replied.
“Promise,” Karla echoed.
Greyson looked toward me with those eyes that healed me, and I released a quiet sigh. “Promise.”
* * *
That night after I put Lorelai back to bed, I stopped by Karla’s room, just to check in on her. She was sitting on the edge of her bed, scrubbing her hair dry with such a somber look on her face.
“Hey, you OK?” I asked, knocking lightly on her door and making her look up.
“You’d be surprised at how hard it is to get the smell of fish out of your hair,” she grumbled.
“Karla, what those kids did to you was beyond disturbing. I know your father is going to speak to the principal come morning, but is there anything I can do right now? Anything I can do for you?”
She hesitated a minute before shaking her head. “No. I’m fine.”
“OK, well, if you need anything, just let me know. You have my number, and you can wake me up at any time. I’m here for you.”
Her bottom lip twitched a little. “Thanks, Eleanor.”
“Always.”
“You’re not just faking it because it’s your job, are you? You actually really care about us, huh?”
I laughed. “More than you know. Try to get some sleep.”
“Will do. And Eleanor?”
“Yes?”
“Thank you,” she said, running her hand through her hair. “You know, for bringing my dad with you to pick me up. I really needed him there. I needed you both.”
My eyes welled up. “Can I give you a hug?”
“No, probably not,” she flatly replied.
Oh, well, then.
That seemed about right.
* * *
“Hey, how are you doing?” I asked, checking in on the final member of the family.
Greyson was sitting on his bed with his hands wrapped tightly around the edge of his mattress. His foot was tapping repeatedly as he stared at the carpeted floor.
He looked up to me with so much emotion in his eyes. “She’s lonely,” he whispered before looking back down at the floor. “She’s lonely, Ellie.”
I sighed, walking into his room and closing the bedroom door behind me. His thoughts were probably spinning with everything that happened that night. How could they not be? His daughter was attacked, abused, belittled. All because she was lonely.
I sat beside him and noticed his shoulders were rounded forward.
I knew his looks so well. I knew when he was beating himself up. I knew when the world was too heavy on his shoulders. I knew when he was thinking the worst thoughts. “It’s not your fault, Grey,” I promised, but he tensed up as if he didn’t believe me.
“If I had been here, she wouldn’t have been alone. If I hadn’t abandoned her, this wouldn’t have happened. If my eyes would’ve stayed on the road . . .”
He couldn’t slow down his mind. He couldn’t hear anything except his rapid flawed beliefs, so I wasn’t certain any words would help him.
“What do you need from me?” I asked, placing a hand of comfort on his leg. “What do you need me to do?”
He turned his head toward me as tears streamed down his face. His lips parted slowly. His voice was so low and broken, I wasn’t certain that I even heard him. “Stay,” he breathed out. “I just need you to stay.”
So I did exactly that.
We lay down in the bed, facing each other.
We weren’t touching, but I swore I felt him.
I felt his heartbeats. When he hurt, my heart cried.
When he was in pain, my eyes were the ones to weep.
That’s how close the two of us were. Our love story was so much more than a romantic tale.
Our story was about friendship. About family.
About looking out for those who always looked out for you.
His soul was born to be loved by mine.
We fell asleep that night, and whenever he awakened from night terrors, I would be there to soothe him. I held him tightly as he hurt with empathy for his daughter.
I needed him to know it was OK to break. To fall apart. To crash and burn. Then when it came time for him to stand again, if he ever needed a hand, I’d always give him mine.
“Still here, Grey,” I whispered as his head lay against the curve of my neck.
Still here.