“Uh huh. Okay you better turn around and fix this right now or I’m leaving,” she whispered fiercely.

I bent forward and kissed her mouth and then grabbed her hand as I turned around. My parents stood just inside the doorway, Dad in a plaid shirt and khaki shorts, Mom in a red sundress. My dad had a grin on his face and I could tell by the quick perusal of my girl, that he liked what he saw.

My mom looked a little uncomfortable, probably because Georgia was right.

It did smell like sex in here. What the hell. I decided to put it all out there. I just hoped Georgia was down with taking the next step in our relationship or I was going to look like a clueless asshole if she called me on it.

“Benjamin?” Mom said slowly.

Here went nothing.

“Mom, Dad, I’d like you to meet my girlfriend, Georgia.”

Chapter Twenty-Two

Georgia

I watched Ben grilling steaks with his father, outside on the deck. I watched the easy camaraderie they had—the way his dad, Jason, couldn’t keep that goofy, proud, smile off of his face whenever he looked at his son. Or the way Ben ate it up. The way they touched each other and joked around.

His mother, Eve, was in there too and it was obvious she was happy to have both of her guys in her circle. If she didn’t have her hand on Ben, she was hugging her husband. Resting her chin on his shoulder, or stroking his back.

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She loved her boys and they loved her back. They were a complete unit. Their own little triangle of love.

So what was I? The bad corner of a square?

I leaned back in my chair swallowing the lump that stuck to the back of my throat like glue, and shifted in my chair so that I gazed out at the fresh gardens around the pool instead of Ben and his parents.

They were sweet—especially his dad. His mom was friendly, but not overly friendly. I knew she was checking me out. Evaluating. Contemplating. Wondering.

She’d pretended not to notice the stash of condoms left on table beside the pool, even though my face had turned so red I was sure I looked like a damn tomato. But so far she’d been pleasant enough.

Girlfriend.

God, I hadn’t seen that one coming.

And though it made me happy to know he thought of me that way—that he introduced me to his parents as something more than just a girl he’d hooked up with—I should have been happier.

I should have been over the moon or at the very least, I should have been scared out of my tree.

For the last two weeks I’d been telling Ben that we needed to slow down. After I shared Seamus with him and he’d been so incredible, I kind of froze up. I was so scared that when he found out why I saw Seamus he would bolt. Who the hell wanted a girlfriend that was crazy?

And even if he did—if he was willing to overlook that fact—was it fair to him?

I didn’t know where this was leading. Us. Us and my illness. And for the moment I was content to just be with him and not think about the rest.

And yet here I was. Not scared. Or happy.

I was pissy.

And not because I felt left out of their little club—I knew I didn’t belong in it. It was because I was jealous of what Ben had with his parents. Of their love and their need to be together. Of knowing that neither one of them would ever hurt each other.

What did it feel like to have such complete trust in your parents? To know that their love was strong and true? To know that when your mother slid into bed and stroked your hair, singing an odd lullaby, she wasn’t hiding a steak knife behind her back?

What did it feel like not to have to watch your father finally give in and fall through the bottom of every vodka bottle that crossed his path?

For a moment I drifted off and disappeared inside my head. Inside the memories from a past littered with ghosts and bottles of vodka and hidden steak knives.

“Georgia, I don’t want to get up. Leave me the fuck alone.”

I looked at her small body beneath the mess of covers and the even larger mess of clothes on her bed. Her hair was ratty and greasy and her eyes scared the crap out of me. They looked dead. I was shaking but I didn’t want her to see because it would make her sadder than she already was.

“No, wait,” she said. “Don’t go.”

Where was Matt? Where was Daddy?




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