Chapter 40

FORTY

Eric

? Heavy Is the Crown – Linkin Park ?

When I left rehab, I wasn’t ready to be back home in L.A., so I went back to my parents’ place in Texas. I woke up that first morning to the smell of coffee brewing downstairs and immediately felt guilty.

It’s weird how something so simple can feel so foreign. I should’ve been the one making the coffee, the one getting the day started, but there I was—still stuck in the rut of my own making.

One Saturday morning, I woke to the sunlight sneaking in through the edges of the blinds in my room, casting long, lazy shadows on the wooden floor.

I rolled over, rubbing my hands over my face, as if I could somehow erase the last few years by scrubbing harder.

The scars were all still there, some in places I could see, others buried too deep inside to reach.

I rolled out of bed and went downstairs to join my parents in the kitchen for breakfast. My mom wrapped me in a hug, and I was grateful for her steady presence. Thankful that when I asked if I could spend some time here before going back to L.A. alone, they didn’t hesitate in their answer.

After breakfast, I went to the basement door and walked down the stairs, stopping at the bottom and staring at my kit, still tucked away in the corner where it’d always been.

I wanted to play—to get back to the one constant in my life—but I couldn’t.

Every time I tried to sit down behind them, my hands froze.

My mind would tell me to play—to just hit something, to drown out the silence—but my body refused to cooperate, and I didn’t know why or how or when it’d gotten so hard.

I closed my eyes for a moment, leaning my hands against the kit. A deep breath. That’s all I needed. One deep breath and I could do this. I could play again.

I lowered myself into the familiar seat and tried to reach for the sticks, but I couldn’t make myself move, so I stood up and started pacing. My hands were shaking.

It was ridiculous. I’d been playing drums since I was a kid. Hell, my dad used to tell me that it was in my blood. So why couldn’t I bring myself to play now? Why did it feel like I was just going through the motions, pretending to be someone I wasn’t?

I closed my eyes and saw Amy’s face. I missed her.

I missed the way she could make me laugh when everything felt like it was crashing down around me.

I missed the way she held me when I felt weak.

I missed the way her fingers would tap on my chest to the beat of some song only she could hear.

I missed the sound of her voice. The sound of us together.

I pushed my palms against my eyes, wiping away whatever tears had started to gather.

It’d been two months since I left rehab.

Two months since I’d admitted that I couldn’t do this on my own, and I still couldn’t look in the mirror without seeing someone who wasn’t me.

I saw a stranger—someone who’d made too many mistakes, someone who didn’t deserve to be alive.

I thought back to the night of the accident. The bike skidding, the road tearing me open, the world spinning faster than I could process. The sound of metal crunching, glass shattering, then nothing. Just darkness.

I should’ve died that night.

But instead, I woke up in a hospital bed and had to listen to the doctors tell me that I was lucky.

Tell me that I’d been millimeters away from a fatal head injury.

They acted like I should have been grateful, but they didn’t know what it was like to feel your life hanging by a thread and still come out the other side.

To survive but have no idea why you were spared.

I heard the creak of the floorboards at the top of the stairs, and my mom’s soft voice drifted down. “Eric? You alright down there?”

I closed my eyes for a moment, but I knew I couldn’t lie to her. Or to myself. Not anymore.

“No,” I said. “But I will be.”

I wanted to scream. I wanted to let it all out. To sit down behind my kit and lose myself.

“Fuck it,” I mumbled, sick of wallowing in my own self-pity. No, my life wasn’t the same as it’d been a few months ago, but that didn’t mean it was over. The silence had been too loud for too long, and I was sick of it.

I sat down on the throne, my heart pounding in my chest as I placed the sticks on the snare.

My hands hovered above the kit, trembling slightly, and for a moment, I thought about standing up again.

About walking away and pretending I didn’t try.

But then something inside me shifted, a small spark of defiance.

I wouldn’t let this thing—this silence, this depression—win.

I hit the snare and the sound cut through the air—sharp and clean and familiar—and for a moment, I forgot everything else. The grief. The guilt. The fear. For that brief moment, it was like I was back in that space where I was free. Where the drums were my voice. My escape. My release.

It wasn’t perfect. It was jagged, like I was fighting against the pattern and against the parts of me that still felt broken, but I kept going. One hit, then another. Slowly, painfully. It was imperfect, but in that moment, it was enough.

I closed my eyes and let the sound fill me like it used to. Like it might eventually heal some of the pieces of me that were still shattered.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.