Chapter Twenty One

I hear the words, but I have to silently repeat them several

times to myself before I can process their meaning. Sam's fingers

have stopped drawing on my shoulder and he seems just as stunned as

I am.

Jail.

The judge instructs the

bailiff to take the defendant into custody, and they handcuff Robin

right there in the courtroom, Cindy Forbes wailing like wounded

animal.

Seven years.

I stand when Sam does,

still staring blankly as the judge adjourns the court.

"Baby," Sam finally gets

my attention.

I turn to him and it's

when I register his smile, the utter relief coloring his cheeks,

that I finally understand.

This is real.

"He's going to jail." My

voice is shaky and disbelieving.

Sam nods. "He's going to

jail, Ror," he confirms.

I whimper a sigh of

relief, the weight of more than a year of fear and suffering

finally lifting off of my very sore shoulders, before I fall into

his arms. Sam lifts me from the ground, holding me so tightly I

think he's more unburdened than I am. When he puts me down Chip

musses my hair playfully like he used to do when we were kids and I

blink up at him. And then my mother is there with tears in her

eyes, and it's contagious. We hug and cry.

I'm so unbelievably

intoxicated with relief that the fact that I don't understand what

just happened, why Robin would take the plea deal for seven years,

doesn't even register.

Well, that is until I

glance back up at Sam to find him glaring over my shoulder with a

strange mix of hostility and awe. I follow his gaze, surprised when

it leads to my father, and even more surprised when I absorb his

own expression. It's one I haven't seen before, not from him…

humility. Regret.

I look back to Sam and eye

him curiously; he seems to know something I don't.

"Sam?"

He snaps out of whatever

had a hold on him, slinging an arm around my shoulder, and turning

me so that my father is no longer in my line of sight. "Let's go

celebrate, yeah?"

I offer him a small,

uncertain smile. "Yeah."

****

It was my father. I can't believe it, but it was.

He called the prosecutor's

office last night, and told them he was the one who told the

Forbeses I'd be in Miami. That he'd mentioned it to Mayor Forbes

over dinner, and that Robin was there. That there's no way it was a

coincidence, and that he would testify to the fact.

The prosecutor called my

mother early this morning and they decided to leverage it for a one

time plea deal offer. Seven to ten if he agreed today. They wanted

to protect me from enduring my cross-examination. And I guess they

agreed. And as the judge said, they were wise to, because

apparently otherwise he'd be doing fifteen instead of seven to ten,

but not without a long, torturous trial that would undoubtedly take

over much of my life for the next year.

Still, I can't believe

it's really over.

After court, my mother,

Sam, Chip, and I enjoy a jubilant late lunch at some fancy

restaurant in South Beach.

I feel lighter. It's

strange knowing without a doubt that Robin can't hurt me. That he's

locked up. For the first time in the longest time, I feel

free. Suddenly Miami

itself is a different place, the sun brighter, the ocean

bluer.

I can't help but think of

Lacey's old words, about how I ruined Robin's life. After all, A

year ago he was a football star on his way to a glorious college

career and then very likely to the NFL. It's ruined now for

certain. He's nothing more than a prisoner with a number as his

identity. For the next seven years, and that's with good behavior.

I'm not sure Robin even knows what that is. He's not even a

has-been. More like an almost-was-but-never-will-be-now.

But I can't feel any

guilt. Because his life may be ruined, but it wasn't me who did it.

He did it all by his damned self.

My mother suggests

changing our flights to tonight instead of tomorrow night,

apparently she has a lot of missed work to make up for. Sam has

another suggestion.

"Or, we could change our

flights to Sunday night."

My mother blinks at him.

He shrugs.

"I just thought that since

Rory had to cut her spring break short, it wouldn't kill her to

enjoy a few days vacation. We're already here," he shrugs

again.

I'm surprised by the

excitement I feel at the idea. My mother looks between Sam and

me.

"I—uh, I really do have a

lot of work to catch up on. I can't stay three more days," my mom

says.

"So don't stay," I reply,

surprising myself again. From the corner of my eye I watch Sam try

to fight his smirk.

My mother narrows her

eyes. "So you're suggesting I leave my teenage daughter alone in

Miami with her boyfriend?"

"It's not like we're going

to do anything here we wouldn't do at home," I retort, before my

hand flies to my mouth.

I'm getting way to open

with my mother.

Sam cracks up with laughter

before my mother's censuring look stifles it for him.

"I don't have anywhere to

be. I could get used to this free hotel room thing," Chip murmurs.

That's the thing about Miami in June. A great deal on a hotel room

price turned into zero price. At least for Sam.

My mother glares at Chip,

but her lip curls up into a mildly amused smile. "You know I've

always adored you, Franklin, but forgive me if you're not exactly

an ideal chaperone."

Chip shrugs, sipping his

soda as if he couldn't care less either way.

"I'm eighteen, mom. May I

remind you I'm going to college in a couple of months?" She knows

what I'm saying. What's the difference between hotel rooms and dorm

rooms—or in Sam's case, an Upper West Side apartment?

Sam and I are adults, we

love each other, and even though we haven't actually had sex since

we got back together, she must know we're not going to be celibate.

Particularly since she knows we've slept together before. I

confided as much to her on our last flight home from

Miami.

I stare at her

meaningfully, imploring her to support me on this. If anyone

deserves a few days vacation with her boyfriend, it's me, isn't

it?

My mom stares back. She's

actually considering me.

I try a little sincerity.

"We'll be okay. I… I'd really like to stay."

My mother pushes her chair

back, flinging her napkin onto the table. "Well, Rory, like you

said, you're eighteen. I suppose you're old enough to make your own

choices, and I suppose I'll have to trust your

judgment."

Holy shit.

She takes a step toward

the restroom, but pauses. "But, Sam, as much as I like you, you

should know, if you do anything to hurt my daughter, it won't be

jail you have to worry about."

Sam's eyes widen and he

chokes on his soda. My mother just threatened him. Chip chuckles

loudly.

"Oh, and Rory, this counts

as your graduation present," she adds, before walking

away.

I stare at Sam

incredulously.

"Did your mom

just—"

"Yup."

Sam leans over and kisses

me deeply. Chip coughs exaggeratedly.

"I'm still here, you

know," he reminds us, and I pull away, pressing my fingers to my

tingling lips, blushing scarlet.

"You know, I was almost

starting to like you," Sam retorts.

****

We agree to change our flights. My

mother to tonight, Sam and I for Sunday. Chip has no flight to

change, but he decides he will drive back to Linton

Saturday.

Chip offers to drive my

mother to the airport tonight and we all return to our hotel rooms,

my mother to pack, Sam and me to relax, and Chip—well, who

knows.

I'm still feeling

exhilarated as we enter Sam's suite, but he's putting off a strange

nervous energy that dulls my excitement. I change from my skirt and

blouse ensemble into a tank top and cutoffs, but Sam sits on the

sofa like a statue, still in his navy blue suit, eerily silent and

pensive.

I wait for him to snap out

of his unfathomable mood, but the more the minutes pass, the more

he only seems to sink further into it. When I finish washing my

face in the bathroom I check flights on my phone.

"There's a flight Sunday

at six," I call to him from the bedroom.

No response.

I make my way to the

living room and find he hasn't moved, except to hang his head, his

fingers massaging his temples. My stomach starts rolling, telling

me something is very wrong.

"Sam?"

His head jerks up. I sit

beside him and he watches me warily. "You okay?" he

asks.

Am I okay? I roll my eyes. "I'd be

great if you were. What's up with you?"

Sam licks his lips like he

does when he has something important to say and it puts me even

more on edge.

"I need to tell you

something. Before we change our flights," he says intently. He

seems ashamed, guilty of something, and I can't imagine what, but

it terrifies me.

"Sam, whatever it is, it

will be okay. Just tell me." I want to soothe him, I want my words

to be true.

Sam's fingers brush softly

over my cheek, following the frame of my face, and he tucks my hair

behind my ear. He looks at me as if he's trying to memorize my

features, as if whatever he's about to tell me is going to change

everything. It makes my pulse race.

"I don't know if it will

be," he admits. A few hours ago I would have agreed with him. I

thought nothing could ever be okay. But now, we're so close that

whatever this obstacle is, I need to believe it won't destroy what

we only barely almost have.

"Sam?"

"I never meant to hurt

you." His voice cracks. "You were never supposed to

know."

I don't understand. Did he

hook up with someone else? My stomach drops, my heart beating

erratically. Was it when we were broken up, or together? God, I

don't even think I want to know. Why would he tell me

now?

"The plan was for me to

borrow your phone, find the message, and show it to your mother.

Then she would—well, do what she did, just with the Facebook

message rather than your father's statement, but—"

"What are you talking

about, Sam?" Now I'm even more confused. This obviously isn't about

another girl, but… "What plan? How could you have known about the—"

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