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Authors: J. Nathan

Until Alex

BOOK: Until Alex
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UNTIL ALEX

 

J. Nathan

 

 

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously
and are not considered to be real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

 

Copyright © 2014 by J. Nathan.

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means
without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

 

Edited by Stephanie Elliot

Cover
Design by L.J. Anderson, Mayhem Cover Creations

 

Manufactured in the United States of America

Fi
rst Edition June 2014

 

PROLOGUE

HAYDEN

Alive
.

You learn early on it means living, breathing, undead.

But d
on’t tell my mom that. She’d only hear the lyrics to her favorite Pearl Jam song. The one she’d been obsessed with since high school. The one that blared through the iPod dock speakers on her dresser.

I couldn’t remember the last time I’d seen her as happy as she was
tossing shirts and shorts into the open suitcase on her bed. Her long brown curls bounced in time to the beat of the song.

T
en minutes before, she’d woken me up. And in the most angelic voice she uttered the words I’d longed to hear. “We’re leaving, Hayden. We’re finally leaving.”

I jumped out of bed and stuffed my T-shirts, shorts
, and hats into my backpack and joined her in her room. If I’d forgotten anything important, it could be replaced wherever we ended up.

With all the excitement and hasty packing, my mom
shoved up her sleeves. Purple and yellow bruises covered her arms. Noticing my wide eyes from my spot on her bed, she shoved the sleeves back down, clearly forgetting what they concealed.

What they always concealed.

The last note of the song drifted through the speakers. I waited anxiously for the next song to begin—knowing her happiness and the twinkle in her eyes would continue.

But
the song never played.

“What are you doing?”
His emotionless voice traveled over my mom’s shoulder, sucking the life right out of the room.

Goose bumps scattered up my arms.

My mom froze. Her face drained of color. And though her body blocked me from seeing the doorway, the terror in her eyes told me what I already knew. We weren’t leaving. We weren’t getting our fresh start. 

She turn
ed around slowly, her shoulders slumped. Even at ten, I could tell she was defeated. We both were.

I
wanted to make a move, to tell him to leave us alone, but I sat frozen to the bed. It’s what always happened when he took that tone with her. I was so small, the smallest in the fifth grade. And weak. So very weak.

And as much as I
tried to be strong, tried to defend my mom when he became violent, he just tossed my feeble body to the side, oftentimes locking me in a closet to keep me out of the way. I was a nuisance. It’s all I’d ever been for him. 

“Hayden and I were just getting away for the night—”

Whack
.

“Liar.”
The word dripped with hate as he lowered his hand.

My mother cup
ped her cheek as she twisted around, checking to be sure I remained safely behind her. Her icy blue eyes misted over. Not from the slap. She’d endured worse and never cried. Her tears were for our missed opportunity. Our foiled chance to escape once and for all.

“Please let us go,” she whisper
ed.

He
leaned in closely. Now I could see him and the anger in his dark eyes. “Go? Go where?” The overhead light reflected off the shiny gold badge on the front of his uniform. The one that earned him respect from everyone in town. Everyone who didn’t really know him. “Who’ll want you?”

My mom
sniffled. Or it could’ve been me. At that point, we both wept.

Needing to be closer to her, and wanting to
keep him in my sights, I crawled to the foot of the bed. If I could see him, maybe I could protect her.

His white knuckles grip
ped her wrist like a vice. No wonder she hadn’t moved away from him.

“Please.” My voice
came out low. Or was it that I just couldn’t hear it with my heartbeat pounding in my ears? “I have a game in Austin tomorrow. Mom thought you were working late so we were going to make a trip out of it.” I prayed my lie deflected the attention off of her. Because given his cold empty glare, she needed me.

Whoosh.

His fist slammed into my stomach. The wind knocked right out of me as my body folded and I toppled back onto the bed.

“Hayden!” m
y mom screamed, breaking free of his grasp and rushing toward me. She braced me in her arms as I gasped for breath. “It’s okay, baby. Mommy’s here. It’s going to be okay.”

It wasn’t.
But I let her soothing words wash over me as I struggled to catch my breath and regain what little strength I had.

And then she
was gone. Ripped off me like she’d been caught up in a tornado. Perfume bottles crashed to the floor as her body slammed into the dresser. Her scream echoed as glass from the mirror shattered over her.

My eyes shot to the monster.

His
big hands were braced on his knees, his breaths deep like he’d run a marathon. He watched through beady eyes as my mother steadied herself to her feet.

I wanted to
hit him. To knock him back. To
kill
him.

I jumped down from the bed and lunged at him. A vicious
backhand to the face propelled me onto the floor. Black spots clouded my vision. My head spun. My nose was surely broken, but none of that mattered. I needed to get to the phone on the nightstand. If I could just call—

C
lick
.

My head
whipped around.

He
held something black in his right hand. He lifted it, extending it out in front of him.

S
hock seized every part of me. It couldn’t be real. It couldn’t be happening like this.

“Please,” my mother beg
ged as he aimed the barrel of his weapon at her. She edged as far away from me as possible. She always kept his attention off of me. Always protected me. “I’ll do whatever you want.”

A calculated laugh escaped his lips
. “
Now
, you’ll do whatever I want? Weren’t those the vows you promised me ten years ago?”

She
didn’t dare answer. She just took another step toward the bedroom door, stretching the distance between us.

“Then
he
came into the picture.” He spun around with his gun aimed at me. “He ruined everything. He took you away from me.”

I cower
ed to the carpet, preparing for the pain. For the nothingness. “Mom, run.”


Noooo
!” she screamed, racing across the room and throwing her body over mine.


He got your time. Your affection. Your love. It was all supposed to be
mine
!”

Three shots crackl
ed through the air. 

Three times my body jolted. I opened my mouth to scream, but the sound got cut off by the sight of b
lood spreading like a rush of ink through my mom’s shirt. Within seconds, her grip loosened and her body peeled away from me, sinking to the floor.

Sobs ripped through me as
I scrambled to my knees, slipping on the pool of blood surrounding her lifeless body. “Mom, wake up.” I draped myself over her stomach, unable to look at her head where one of the bullets hit. “I’m here. I’m right here.” With trembling arms, I tightened my grip, burying my face in her blood-soaked shirt. A putrid metallic smell replaced her floral scent.

God, please help
her. Please.

“You’re gonna be alright, Mom. Just stay with me.” I couldn’t hold her tight enough to stop her from hurting. To stop her from slipping away. To stop her from leaving me all alone. “
I love you so much.”

Guttural, unable-to-catch-my-breath, sobs poured out of m
e. And still, as my world crumbled around me and pain overwhelmed my being, I needed to get to a phone.

Click
.

A quiver rocked through me.

I closed my eyes with my arms still wrapped around my mom, the woman I loved more than anything in the world. The woman who’d carry me over to the other side. To the light.

I b
raced myself for the impact of the bullet, praying for a quick death. Praying to be far away from him and the nightmare we’d been living.

But
the impact didn’t come.

I crack
ed one eye.

The monster
stood over us with his gun to his temple and his eyes locked on mine. “This is all your fault.”

When
he was certain I heard him, he fired once.

CHAPTER ONE

ELEVEN YEARS LATER

HAYDEN

My eyes snapped open. I wished I could blame the mid-afternoon sunlight seeping into my living room for the sweat dripping down my face and my heaving chest. But I couldn’t.

Most people endured a rare nightmare. One that rocked them to the core. But not me.
The same two plagued every one of my dreams. Unfortunately, they weren’t strange figments of my imagination. Explorations into the deep recesses of my psyche. They were real memories. The worst I possessed.

I would’ve given anything to erase the horrid images from my mind, but they were my penance. My cross to bear.

I sat up from my black leather sectional, the focal point of my living room. It’s the one place I normally fell asleep,
if
I fell asleep. Running my hands through my unruly hair, I scanned my apartment. For a guy, I kept it pretty clean. Of course I only cared about my flat screen. Without the white noise it provided, my bare walls closed in on me.

I stood up, working the kinks out of my neck. I should’ve grabbed my bag and headed to the gym, but I walked to the window at the rear of my apartment instead.

Late August in Texas didn’t see many trade winds, so the trees and flowers surrounding the building sat idle in the balmy afternoon air. Luckily, a well-maintained pool flanked the rear of the property. And since most of the residents were elderly and rarely left the building, I was the only one who ever used it.

Walk away,
man.  Walk away.

I should’ve gotten something to eat. Taken a shower. Met up with Remy and the guys. But my damn eyes had a mind of their own. And they sought the sole picnic table. The reason I stood at the window in the first place.

Since moving in three years ago, it had been an ordinary picnic table. But for the last four days, it had become the very bane of my existence. Maybe not the actual piece of lawn furniture, but the unfamiliar girl seated on top of it. The one with her head buried in her knees and the coffee-colored waves of hair spilling over her body, bawling her eyes out.

Four days ago, she rolled into the parking lot in a killer black BMW sports edition. She lugged an oversized brand-name suitcase up the flight of stairs to the second floor, clearly not realizing the building had an elevator.

From my peephole, I watched her pull the suitcase down the carpeted hallway and approach the door diagonal to mine. Katherine, the owner of the building and a total babe for an older chick, greeted her with a sympathetic smile before stepping aside to let her in. Though they didn’t hug, the girl was obviously staying with her, and not renting an apartment.

Sure, I looked like a creepy stalker staring out my second floor window
, but I wasn’t. At least that’s what I kept telling myself. I just couldn’t ignore the fact that the girl hadn’t stopped crying in four days. Nor the fact that I felt like shit for not going down to check on her.

Don’t get me wrong. My apartment was a revolving door of one-night stands, each convinced they’d be the one to change my ways. And never once did I feel bad for tossing them out after I screwed them. They knew exactly what they were getting when they agreed to go home with me.

I didn’t do relationships. Too much trouble. I didn’t care about other people’s problems. Got enough of my own. And I didn’t do kindness to strangers. Strangers didn’t care about me.

Bottom line. I kept people at arm’s length.

A shrink would attribute my aversion to relationships to the trauma I suffered when I was ten. But I’d been left to self-diagnose since I never saw a shrink. Bouncing around foster homes left little time for that. And truthfully, I wanted no part of baring my soul to some stranger. Fuck that.

If I learned one thing from my messed up life, it was that you didn’t let people in, and you didn’t let your emotions out. You couldn’t. I wondered if I even had any. Emotions that is. Because if you asked me, life had hardened me beyond repair.

And just because I felt like a total dick watching the girl on the picnic table bawl her eyes out, it didn’t mean I’d gone soft. Not by a long shot.

Maybe it was her shoulder-shaking sobs that kept my feet firmly planted by the window. Maybe it was the fact that she didn’t seem much younger than me. Nineteen. Maybe twenty. Or perhaps it was the way her body scrunched into a ball that made her appear so small. So fragile. So broken. Like she needed someone to take care of her.

Jesus Christ. Listen to me.

I was one step away from playing sappy love songs and watching fucking chick flicks. I dragged my fingers through my hair and drew a deep breath. I needed to get the hell away from the window.

 

ALEX

I’d been outside all day, hoping the fresh air would give me some relief. Some solace. Some reprieve from my broken world. But it hadn’t. Not even close. The tears slipping from my eyes and sizzling on the wooden picnic table could attest to that.

What had I been thinking wearing a jean skirt? If I didn’t have red welts on my rear end and the back of my thighs when I finally got up, it’d be a miracle.

At least my bowed head shielded my fair skin from the sun. Because I needed more pain in my life like I needed the proverbial hole in the head. Actually, a hole in the head would’ve been nothing compared to the hell I’d been through.

I swiped at my tears.

It didn’t shock me that they hadn’t stopped. I’d more or less been gutted. Stripped of everything in my life. Everything I’d ever known. Everything I’d ever loved. 

My life was a complete mess.
I
was a complete mess.

Footsteps crunched over the dry grass.

My head shot up. My watery eyes, swollen from weeks of sobbing, squinted up at the shadowed figure before me. With the sun blaring directly behind the person, I could only distinguish a large build and towering height.

“You okay?” a deep voice asked.

I hadn’t even spoken to my aunt about what happened in Austin, so I had no intention of sharing my sob story with a stranger I couldn’t even see. “Not really.”  

I assumed he got his answer. Completed his good deed for the day. Paid it forward. Because he stepped away, leaving the sun shining in my eyes. But instead of walking away, the wood creaked under his weight as he sat down beside me.

Alrighty, then.

I rubbed my palms into my eyes, knowing the attempt to clear the tears would be futile. But really? What did I have left to lose?

I chanced a peek. But my blurry eyes, and the way the stranger stared down at the strategically placed rips in the knees of his faded jeans, hindered me from seeing his face. His body was lean, and he loomed over me by almost a head. His messy dark hair resembled that of the guys at my old school. Like he’d rolled out of bed and didn’t care how he looked trudging across campus.

Long moments slipped by. Neither of us spoke.

I watched as he twisted and knotted his hands together like his life depended on it. He sported some serious muscles under the white T-shirt that clung to his impressive arms. He didn’t look much older than me, twenty-one. Maybe twenty-two.

Despite his presence, my tears continued to drop as the silent minutes stretched on. My soft sniffles became lost in both the melody of chirping birds in nearby trees and the stranger’s even breathing. I’d been surrounded by so much heartache over the past month that the in-and-out whoosh of his steady breaths soothed me. Cleared my mind. Gave me something new to focus on.

I wondered what he thought. What ran through his head as he sat beside a strange girl with a constant stream of tears flowing from—

A disbelieving laugh burst from my lips.

He glanced over.
Oh my.
His icy blue eyes, enclosed by gorgeous dark lashes, locked onto mine. Though they were confused and contemplative, they took my breath away. Was that even possible after everything I’d endured?

I flashed a half grin. The best I could manage under the circumstances that brought me to this town. “You must be some kind of miracle worker.”

His eyes narrowed.

I rubbed away the remaining tears from my cheeks as another incredulous laugh slipped out. “I haven’t been able to stop crying for days.”

He nodded. “Four days.” His pretty eyes flashed back to his jeans as if he’d said too much.

I didn’t bother to mention my crying had lasted for almost a month. Instead, I shook off the unsettling thought and drew in a deep cleansing breath, actually feeling my lungs
expand. “But then you sat down, and poof. They all but disappeared.”

He made no attempt to respond. His eyes stayed lowered.

Had I made him uncomfortable? Had my honesty embarrassed him?

I stared down at his twisting fingers, his short clean nails, his knuckles covered with faded bruises and crisscrossed scars. Did he play sports? Work manual labor? Both?

Without even thinking, I placed my hand on his bare forearm.
Good Lord.
It was hard as a rock. “Thank you.”

His arm stiffened.
His eyes shot to my fingers wrapped around it.

I’d crossed some invisible boundary line. But what could I do? To remove my hand at that point would’ve made it even more awkward.

His eyes lifted to mine for a brief moment. And though it was brief, I caught the regret that flashed in them. It wasn’t regret
for
me. More like regret he sat down next to me. Regret he crossed my path.

Without a word, he hopped to his feet.

My hand dropped unceremoniously to my side as I watched him tear off toward the building. When he reached the door, I expected him to turn around. To say something. But he didn’t. He threw open the heavy door and disappeared inside.

 

HAYDEN

I dropped onto the edge of my bed, burying my face in my hands. I
knew
I shouldn’t have gone out there.

Miracle worker?

On what fucking planet? The girl clearly had me confused with someone who cared about other people. If she knew me—knew the truth about me—she’d see I was the complete opposite. 

But man, after sitting beside her in that tight red tank top and ripped jean skirt showing off her incredible legs, I couldn’t ignore the obvious. Very few could pull off the model body with girl-next-door face. She could. And did. Tenfold.

Even with the tears flooding her emerald eyes, a color I’d only ever seen in a tropical fish tank, she had the most flawless pale skin. Tiny freckles, unnoticeable from a distance, speckled her little nose. Pouty lips any guy would die to kiss, or enjoy in other creative ways, sat perfectly perched on her face. And the scent of vanilla rolled off her body like she bathed in it.

Jesus
. Just thinking about her heated me in all the wrong places.

I fell back onto my bed, growling out my frustration. Since when did I start daydreaming about girls? That shit didn’t happen to me. Hot girls surrounded me on a nightly basis. I had my pick. No need to think about them when they weren’t around. I’d just replace them with the next.

Sure, this girl’s looks might’ve caused my boxers to stand at attention, but something else wound me tightly, irritated me, fucked with my head. Something I sensed watching her. Sitting next to her. Having her frail hand on my arm.

Pain.

It
had
to be the pain. Pain so prominent in her eyes it put me on edge. Made me jittery. Made me uneasy. Because I’d been there. I’d felt pain so severe, so intense, so relentless, I thought I’d die from it.

She was obviously dealing with some major shit. Major shit I was
not
equipped to deal with. 

I gripped the sides of my head, digging my fingertips into my scalp just enough to cause a sting. And then, like clockwork, my anger kicked in. It never ventured too far, always lurking right below the surface, ready to erupt. It was the only emotion that came naturally. The only one I could rely on. The only one I could trust.

Who the hell did this girl think she was worming her way into my head? What gave her the right to make me concerned like the pussy I’d been for the past four days?

Maybe I didn’t know her name, but I knew her type. Girls like her only slummed it with guys like me to piss off their daddies. Their twisted way of getting them to fork over cash for jewelry, shopping sprees, and fancy cars. 

I needed to snap the hell out of it. I lived in reality. And my reality didn’t include expensive gifts or happy endings.

 

ALEX

Twelve hours had passed since the stranger left me sitting alone on the picnic table. The same amount of time since I’d shed my last tear.

Footsteps sounded in the hallway causing me to spring from my aunt’s loveseat and hurry to the front door. I lowered my eye to the peephole and instantly my cheeks heated and my heart thundered in my chest. It was refreshing to know it still worked. To know I was capable of feeling more than just anger, sadness, and guilt.

The stranger’s eyes focused on the floor as he passed by with his head tucked down, stopping at the apartment diagonal to my aunt’s. His dark hair flipped at his ears and the back of his neck like he’d worn a ball cap all day and just removed it.

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