Chapter 30 Beth #2
‘I get it,’ I whisper, trying not to let her description of the Donovans and me land in my heart.
I know they cared about me, but they’ll move on.
I was just another Donovan stray, briefly taken in, then let go, because I committed the cardinal sin of falling in love with one of them. Of wanting more than was on offer.
‘I’m surprised you’re back,’ she says, reaching for her water bottle and opening it before taking a sip. ‘I thought you might have found a new place to hang your hat, so to speak.’
‘No,’ I demur softly. ‘It was just somewhere to escape to for a while.’ My smile is tightly forced. ‘A place to forget.’
‘I wish you didn’t have to forget.’
‘Me too.’
‘Beth, I don’t know how I can make any of this up to you—’
‘You don’t have to. I’m okay.’
She regards me for a long time. ‘You don’t look okay.’
Grief bursts through my chest. I twist my hands. ‘I’m going to be okay. I just have to work out what the hell to do with my life.’
‘Why do you have to do anything?’
I flash a weak smile at her. ‘Come on, Els. You know this isn’t really for me.’ I wave my hand around at the luxurious hotel.
‘Funny,’ she says, tilting her head. ‘You were always so good at it. You were the perfect socialite wife. At least, that’s what I thought, until I saw you out there. The way you looked when you ran up the road toward me, your hair flying behind you, all wild and—’
‘Unhinged?’ I supply with the first laugh I’ve experienced in days.
‘Free,’ she says. ‘That place really suited you.’
I glance away quickly, swallowing over my grief. ‘It’s just somewhere I spent time.’
‘And the guy?’
‘Cole.’ I say his name with a heaviness inside me that is equal parts crushing and hopeful.
‘Right.’
I sigh. ‘It’s probably best if we don’t talk about him.’
‘It’s okay,’ she says. ‘I mean, it’s weird, but okay.’
I shake my head. ‘He was kind to me when I needed it—he helped fix me, because that’s what he does. It wasn’t special. It didn’t mean anything. I think, because of everything I’d been through, I just couldn’t see that clearly, even though he explicitly told me.’
‘Mmm.’ She doesn’t sound convinced.
‘It’s okay,’ I repeat.
‘It’s just, he looked like he wanted to maul me with his bare hands,’ she says, thoughtfully. ‘He looked like he’d throw you behind him and take a bullet to save your life.’
My heart speeds up, because I can well imagine Cole looking like that. But the reality of Cole stops me from letting Elsie’s words lift my spirits. ‘That’s just who he is. He’d look that way for someone he just met. He’s a protector. I wasn’t special. Not to him.’
The more I say it, the more I hope I’ll finally get it through my head. That I’ll stop thinking about him constantly, remembering all the ways he made me feel like I was special. Like what we shared was the sum total of everything he wanted in life.
‘Anyway.’ I stand up, a little uneasily, moving to the window to look down onto the street below.
People are tiny little specks, flitting on the sidewalk.
Cars jerk slowly through the traffic. ‘I’ve decided I need to pack up our apartment.
’ I glance at her for her reaction. She’s nodding slowly, which gives me strength.
‘I can’t live there again. It’s too hard. ’
My voice cracks and Elsie is rushing to me and hugging me, telling me again how very, very sorry she is.
It’s not her apology to give and yet, somehow, it floods into the crevices of my body, gluing together parts of my pain, making me whole in different ways.
Healing is a multifaceted thing and this conversation has brought me a step closer.
Cole
There is a strange desolation that comes out of loss.
I knew it after Mom. That emptiness sat with me a real long time.
Hell, it’s still in me. With Dad, it was different.
That hollow feeling of grief was tangled up with anger at him for getting himself killed, even when I suspect I’d have done the exact same thing in his position.
Betrayal, too, because of what we’ve lost on the ranch, what he’s exposed us to.
I know he probably thought there’d be time to sort it out, that none of us would ever need to know.
Yeah, I’ve known desolation before, but this is different.
Departure isn’t death.
Beth not being here isn’t because she can’t be. It’s because I told her to leave. Sitting alongside this godawful sensation of having had my insides carved from my body, this feeling that I’m walking like a zombie through my life, is the knowledge that it’s because of me.
If I could have done what she asked and opened myself up to the risk of loss that comes from loving someone, if I could have just kept my big mouth shut and not suggested she leave, Beth might still be here and maybe all that love stuff would have blown over.
Maybe she would have loved me, but still decided to get back to her life. Who can say?
All I know is that there’s a localised apocalypse hanging over me. The sun has been extinguished, for all the light it gives me, and the nights are torture for how damn lonely I am. For how much I miss her. For how much I want to hold her.
The thing about Beth is, she’s right. Exactly what she said in her letter, about me breathing my way into her heart and soul: that’s how I feel.
I can’t take a breath without feeling her in me.
I can’t speak without hearing what she might say in reply.
And her letter is etched in my mind, the words tumbling over themselves all day long.
In one sense, I know she’s right. I don’t need to fight this battle on my own.
I pushed Beth to be honest, and she was, even when it hurt like hell. Even when it scared her. She faced that fear, that hesitation, and she did it anyway. So what kind of hypocrite does it make me if I can tell her to bare her soul but I’m not willing to do the same?
I called a family meeting in that spirit.
Everyone’s looking at me warily. I guess I’ve been different, ever since she left.
In fact, that night with the letters was the last time we’d all sat down at the table.
I’ve taken over the bookwork for the last two weeks, giving Reagan the rest of the time she asked for without putting the job onto anyone else.
Because sitting at Beth’s desk, doing what Beth once did, makes me feel close to her.
It’s all so fucking pathetic.
‘Cole, what’s going on?’ Nash asks, glancing at Beau. Yeah, even Beau’s come back for the meeting. That’s how seriously they’re taking this.
I stare at the table that we grew up having meals around.
The table that housed our full, loud, happy family when Mom was around, bustling in the kitchen.
The same table that heard our grief, our shouted conversations, as we tried to process what had happened.
The table Dad sat at the head of for so many years, and I realise it’s almost like Dad’s here with us now.
I take a deep breath, aware of what I’m about to take from my siblings, as well as Caleb and Mackenzie. The hero worship they felt for Dad. The way the scales are gonna fall from their eyes.
But I have to do it. The thing is, I just don’t know if I can save this place on my own, and if saving it is the most important thing in the world, then I have to put that first. Even if it means disappointing Dad. Even if it means admitting defeat.
‘What I’m about to say is going to come as a shock.’
Nash’s eyes narrow. ‘You’re quitting?’
I recoil, staring at him like he’s just said I’m half cat. ‘What the hell? No, I’m not quittin’. Why the hell would you say that?’
‘’Cause you’ve been acting like this is the last place on earth you wanna be these past couple of weeks.’
Yeah, I guess I had been doing that. I don’t deny it.
‘This isn’t about Beth.’ Saying her name makes my pulse rush. I look around the room, half expecting her to just appear. She was here for two months and yet, somehow, she became as much a part of this place as any of us. I swallow quickly, focusing. ‘This is about the ranch.’
And with another deep breath, I tell them everything. How Dad was conned out of all his savings, then took out a mortgage on this place to help someone from Mom’s old life. Because he thought it was a way to be close to her.
I can see their shock, their confusion as to why Dad didn’t tell any of us, and then why I didn’t. I explain it all, then sit up straighter, shoulders squared, getting the last bit out through a mouth that feels full of sawdust.
‘It’s why Beth started the social media stuff. She’s hoping it can build up to the point we get sponsorships, you know, earn some extra cash to rebuild.’
‘It’s a good plan,’ Cassidy says. ‘And the account’s gone crazy. Right, Mack?’
Mackenzie nods. ‘We’re almost at a million followers.’
I jerk my head to face her. ‘What?’
‘Yeah, a couple of the late-night TV guys shared Mack’s video,’ Nash says. ‘Then some ag companies started sharing the ranch clips.’
I let out a low whistle.
‘I’ve actually been looking at some talent managers,’ Nash admits. ‘It’s best if endorsement offers come through them, but it’s pretty clear that Beth’s plan might work.’
‘And if it doesn’t, whatever prize money I make is for the ranch,’ Beau offers.
‘We can all help,’ Nash agrees. ‘This place ain’t going anywhere, Cole.’
‘You’re such a dumbass to have carried this all on your own so long,’ Cass says with a roll of her eyes. She comes around behind me and puts an arm around my shoulders. She kisses the top of my head. ‘A big, sweet dumbass.’
Beth was right—telling them was the right thing to do. I just wish she was here to see that.
I wish she was here, period.