Staring at him as his body shakes from grief, I wish on everything to take this away for him, to fix this.
The day we lost Jonny, it was bad…horrendous. Nothing can ever prepare a person for losing someone that you need above all others. Tru is that person for Jake.
Some people have the strength in them to carry on when they lose that one person they love most above all others. I did. I found my way to carry on.
Some don’t. And those are the people who have that despairing, dark look in their eyes that Jake has right now.
I lost someone I loved to that darkness. I won’t lose Jake the same way.
I take a deep breath and say, “Don’t think of the bad, Jake. Think of the good. Think of the moment you get to hold your boy in your arms. Think of the moment you get to put that ring on Tru’s finger when she finally sees stupid and marries your sorry ass. Think of all the amazing fucking things the three of you are gonna do together. And while you’re thinking of all that great stuff, I’ll pray to the big man upstairs. I’ll promise to make some serious lifestyle changes in exchange for you to have all that, to have what you were always meant to have.”
I can’t remember the last time I was in a church, not that the hospital chapel is actually a church-church. I take a seat on the pew up front. The place is empty. Thank fuck. I don’t want an audience while I’m here.
I lean forward, resting my forearms on my thighs, and clasp my hands together.
“Okay,” I start. “I don’t pray, like, ever, which you know. I’m not exactly what you would call religious, another thing you know, but I made a promise, and I have to see that promise through—hence, why I’m here, talking to you.” I take a deep breath. “There’s a girl in this hospital—Tru Bennett. You need to save her. Aside from the fact that she’s amazing, by saving her, you’ll be saving someone else. If Tru dies, Jake won’t survive. I saw it in his eyes earlier…the same look as my…”
Emotions I haven’t felt in years claw to the surface. I scrub my hands over my face.
“Look, I know how this stuff works. I ask for something, and I give in return, right? You might realize what a bastard I am. I’m not great. I’m pretty fucking horrible to be honest. I treat people like shit—mainly women. I use them like inanimate objects made for me to stick my dick in. I haven’t killed anyone…but I wouldn’t put it past me to do that at some point in the future. I have a shit temper. I’m one motherfucking bastard of a man. Case in point, I can’t even manage not to curse while I’m talking to you.
“One less bastard on this planet would work for you, right? Cross one more off your shitlist. So, I’m saying, if you save Tru’s life, I’ll change mine. Completely. I’ll stop the fast living. No more fucking random women in inappropriate places, like when I screwed that nurse in the medical supplies closet after I visited with the sick kids. There’ll be no more married women. No threesomes or foursomes or orgies. I’ll even stop going to strip joints. I won’t look at women in a sexual way. Fuck, I’ll live the life of a goddamn monk if you save Tru. I swear, I will only have sex with a woman if she really means something to me.”
Did I actually just say that—out loud?
Christ.
I break out in a cold sweat at the thought. I wipe my brow and take a deep breath.
“I’m promising all this because I know Jake won’t survive losing Tru. I saw it in his eyes. He looked exactly the same as…well, I’m sure you know who I mean.”
Exhaling, I lean back in the pew.
“Jake loses Tru…we lose him…I can’t lose him. Jake and Den are all I’ve got left in the world. And you’ve got enough good people up there as it is. You’ve taken enough from us. You don’t need her. She’s needed here more…so I’m making this promise. You save Tru’s life, and I’ll completely change the way I live mine.” I lift my eyes to the ceiling. “What do you say?”
Present Day—Studio, TMS Records, LA
“Your vocal is off.”
Um, what?
The voice in my ears halts my singing. I tilt my head to the side, looking around the huge microphone perched in front of my face to see through the glass.
I stare at the face of the voice—Zane Fox, Vice President of TMS Records, the label my band is signed to.
Total hottie, if I were into that kind of thing, which I’m not.
I don’t like men. No, I’m not a lesbian.
I’m asexual. Celibate. Have been for the past ten months.
My history with men isn’t good.
All of the important men in my life, barring a few, have let me down—hugely. When it comes to relationships with men—well, let’s just say I’m a colossal failure.
Boyfriend One cheated on me with the only close female friend I ever had.
Boyfriend Two stole money from me.
Boyfriend Three was an aspiring singer, whom I found out was only dating me because he knew who my father was. I overheard him telling his friends. It was a sucker punch because I hate my father.
Boyfriend Four dumped me when I refused to have a threesome with him and his best friend. I kid you not.
Boyfriend Five “borrowed” my car. I still haven’t seen him—or my car—to this day.
Boyfriend Six—my longest relationship and with a guy I stupidly thought I might love—screwed my brother on the biggest night of my life. After I caught them in the act, I later found out, he’d actually been screwing my brother for the last month of the eight months we were together.
That one was the killer, the final nail in my sex coffin.
After that, I realized that I only ever seem to be attracted to men with issues. I’m sure any good psychologist would say that I’m drawn to this kind of man because of my father and the problems I have with him, being that he’s a completely crap dad.
Basically, he was the sperm donor who helped create me.
So, I stay clear of men. Seriously, the closest I get to a man nowadays is sharing a drink with my best friend, Cale.
In my past, I was always a relationship kind of girl—albeit, an unsuccessful one. Casual sex was something I never could do. I tie too many emotions to sex to be able to sleep with a guy and not see him again.
Taking relationships off the menu for me also removed the dessert menu, meaning no more sex for Lyla.
I’ve been totally okay with it—well, about ninety-five percent of the time.
Okay, if I’m being totally honest, it’s more like seventy-five and climbing with the help of ASBOF.