Authors: Andrea Randall
Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Romance, #Contemporary
I could have lied, I suppose, but I didn’t. “You just said Lucas’s name a few times . . .well, Luke . . .”
“How’s your hand?” He still wasn’t looking at me, and his tone was dead.
“It’s fine, Ry.”
“I gotta go,” he said, standing abruptly.
I stood and followed behind him. “It’s like five thirty in the morning, why don’t you stay and get some sleep.”
“I can’t. I just . . . I’ll call you later.” He gave me a tight kiss and left me standing in the middle of my room, confused and scared, as he left without another word.
Finally, I cried. The night before had been scary as hell with him in that guy’s face at the party, and then the nightmare. This was turning into a living nightmare, and I knew deep down this was just the beginning. I felt weak again. This was going to be a long road with Ryker, and I was falling apart a few days in.
I walked into the bathroom with intentions that pervaded me since the night after Lucas’s funeral, and began cutting. I suppose, looking back, my face had the same trance-look on it as Ryker’s did when he woke up from his nightmare, only I was intentionally walking into mine. I stared at my arm as I casually pressed the broken blade down and dragged it slowly from my wrist to my elbow. Blinking was my only response as blood spilled from my skin immediately. Usually it took at least a second pass for me to draw blood.
Not this time. It didn’t even hurt anymore. I guess it only had to hurt once for me to know how good it felt after—when it was all over.
When I was done, disinfected, and bandaged up, I called Ryker’s cell. He’d had it reactivated when he got home, but didn’t answer. Confident that I was ready to face whatever was plaguing him head-on, I didn’t bother calling his dad’s house before getting in my car and driving there. After pulling on an unseasonable long-sleeved t-shirt, of course.
Bill’s car wasn’t in the driveway, making me only slightly nervous. I thought with his dad around, I at least had a safety net. Instead, it would just be Ryker and me. I knocked on the door a few times, but no one answered. And it was locked. I chewed on my lip for a minute, weighing my options, when sitting on the steps and waiting became the only one. I sat down, rested my head on the railing, and promptly dozed off due to the lack of sleep the night before.
Who knows how long later, Bill gently shook my shoulder. I had to shield my eyes from the glaring sun.
“Natalie,” he whispered in laughter, “you know where the key is. What are you doing out here?”
I rubbed my eyes as he helped me to my feet. “Sorry, Ryker left in an awful hurry this morning . . .” I stopped myself when I realized I was speaking out loud. “Where is he?”
Bill shrugged, “Must be out for a run, I guess. His sneakers are gone and I had the car. Come in.” He held the door and we walked into the kitchen. I sat, awkwardly, on the stool in the kitchen, checking over my shoulder to the front door, waiting for Ryker—feeling like maybe I shouldn’t be in his house without him knowing.
“I’m surprised he’s out running,” I started, nervously, “He didn’t sleep last night really . . . nightmares . . .” I didn’t know if I should be mentioning this to Bill, but I had no one else to tell. Ryker didn’t even want to talk about it.
Bill slid me a cup of coffee I hadn’t asked for, but was grateful to accept. “I imagine he did.” He shrugged and poured himself a cup.
“He didn’t want to talk about it. He woke up from it, asked if I was okay, and left.” My tired eyes filled with tears.
Bill planted his elbows on the counter across from me, and his eyes—an identical blue to Ryker’s—met me dead on. “
Are
you okay?”
“I am. I was shaken up a little because he jumped out of bed, like,
while
he was still asleep. He was holding onto my hand so he yanked me up a little, but I’m physically okay. I guess by the look on his face, he was more scared than I was . . .” I closed my eyes briefly and wondered how Bill knew I drank my coffee black.
He nodded and took a long sip before sighing. That was his only response. I don’t know if he didn’t know what to say, or if he knew I wouldn’t like what he was going to say, but we sat in caffeinated silence for a while. Several minutes later, Bill’s eyes shot to the front door as it opened, producing a shirtless and sweaty Ryker, home from his run. I felt queasy as he headed toward me, wondering if I should have come at all.
“Hey.” Ryker was still breathing heavy as he leaned in and gave me a sweaty kiss before getting a glass of water.
“Hey.” I grinned behind my coffee mug. Bill caught me, and smiled back. My smile faded, though, when Ryker turned around; that dead look was still in his eyes.
He walked right past me. Stopping abruptly when he got to the entryway, he turned on his heels to face me. “I’ll be down in a few, gotta shower.”
I nodded and smiled as he ran up the stairs. Turning my attention back to my coffee, I traced my thumb along the rim of the mug.
Bill walked around the bar and rubbed my back. “Hang in there, Kid. Stick with him.”
“I will.”
* * *
“Okay, Mrs. . . .” The teacher scans her eyes between my boys’ last names and mine.
“Collins,” I save her. “Their father and I are married and cohabitating, I just kept my maiden name.” I don’t know what’s more shocking to her; that I kept my last name, or that we’re actually two married people raising children. “But,” I continue, “Natalie’s fine.”
She smiles the perfect circle-time smile. “The boys did great, they’re right where we like kids to start for the beginning of the year. Max even seems a little ahead in letter and word recognition.”
“And Oliver?” I smile at my boys’ natural intellect.
Something Eric and I got right
.
“Oliver did well, also. I’m curious, though, has he ever had his hearing tested?”
Dizziness flashes through me for a second, the way it does before you know something inevitably negative will come next. “No, why?” I clear my throat.
“Well, when the room was quiet, there were times he had a delayed or no response to my voice. When his back was turned, there was one time I had to walk around him and get his attention. It looked like I startled him.”
My eyebrows knit together as I replay the same scenarios I’ve had with Ollie over the last several weeks. “I’ve noticed that too, actually. I honestly thought it was an attention thing . . .”
“It could be, or an auditory processing issue. Sometimes, when there’s lots of background noise, it’s difficult for some children to decipher what they need to be tuned in to. If you take him to an Audiologist, they’ll perform lots of diagnostic tests using different frequencies, volumes . . .” the teacher lists off the possibilities in what I think is a very reassuring tone, but I’m scanning every potential risk factor in their short lives. I carried them to full term, they never had oxygen therapy, and have never had a fever over whatever threshold the AAP says is dangerous, but I swallow hard while studying the look in her eyes.
Something’s wrong with one of my sons. And I’m scared.
Chapter 17
Like any parent of the internet generation, I spend the twins’ nap time Googling causes of hearing loss in pediatrics. The most common—and most rational—explanation is fluid build up in the inner ear. The least likely, of course, is a rare brain tumor. Everything in between sends my head spinning. The teacher did mention auditory processing issues, which does seem to be in line with Oliver’s overall behavior lately. When there’s a lot going on around him, he can’t seem to focus on the voice he should.
I’m so wrapped up in WebMD, that it’s not until Eric’s number pops up on my cell phone that it registers he was a no-show for the screening today.
“Yeah?” I answer in a bored tone.
“How’d the screening go, Babe?” He sounds awfully upbeat for someone who didn’t bother to show up.
“Everything went fine. They suggested we get Oliver’s hearing tested, though.”
“Really, why?”
“Because when his back is turned he’s not as responsive as he should be. Sometimes not responsive at all.
Haven’t you ever noticed that?
”
Eric pauses for a long time. “I guess, but . . . isn’t he just being a kid?”
“I don’t know, Eric.
Jesus,
I’m not the Audiologist. When will you be home?” I’ve grown tired of the conversation.
He hesitates. “Late.”
“Perfect,” I blurt out, “see you then.”
I hang up and immediately call the Audiologist the school recommended to me. Luckily, they can see us in two weeks—a few days before Eric’s graduation. I guess until then, we’re going to sit around and wait, and I’ll try not to stare at Ollie like he’s a bomb ready to go off at any moment.
* * *
“How’s he doing?” Tosha asked, a couple of weeks after I told her about Ryker’s first nightmare. We were walking around Amherst, catching up after she’d gone on vacation to Maine with Liz. They were a serious couple and so happy.
“I think things are leveling out, finally. We still don’t spend the night with each other, but I think that has more to do with him not wanting to have another nightmare when I’m in bed next to him. He hasn’t said that, but . . . what other reason could he have for not wanting to stay over?”
I noticed little things, like him reaching across his shoulder every time we walked down the stairs. At first I thought it was his injury bothering him, but he told me it was habit, not wanting his gun to knock on the wall on the way down even though he wasn’t wearing one. That had started to fade over the last week, but his eyes always darted around no matter where we were.
“How are you doing . . . with everything?” Tosha knew I cut sometimes, but we didn't talk much about it after the time she caught me. She just asked me not to be stupid and told me if it got out of hand she would call my parents.
I’d never tell her this, but her threat made me really good at hiding it.
“Eh, I’m fine.” I shrugged.
“If Ryker finds out, Nat . . .”
She had legitimate concerns about Ryker’s potential reaction to my cutting. He’d been really snappy with me when he thought I was being too quiet, or tiptoeing around him. My fear of his reaction actually prevented me from cutting much, for a little while.
“He won’t, it’s fine. We’re actually going out to dinner tonight. It’s our first real date night since that party at UMass—”
“Where he lost his shit?”
“That’s the one. We’re just going to Judie’s, though. Not a rough crowd like the frat parties.” I giggled. “I’ll call you when I get home.”
Tosha hugged me. “You’re doing awesome. Just really make sure you don’t lose you, okay? He needs you, but you need you, too.”
A few hours later, I parked in Ryker’s driveway and headed up to his room.
“Knock, knock,” I cheered sweetly when I got to Ryker’s door.
“Yeah?”
I smiled as I entered, closing the door behind me. “Just me.”
Ryker was pacing around his room, moving things from his desk to his dresser and seemingly back again. He glanced at me from the corner of his eye. “Oh, you’re still here?”
“No, just got here,” I whispered as a knot formed in my stomach.
I stood in awkward silence as he finished his task, with the towel wrapped around his waist. He rested his hands on his hips for a moment, staring at his desk, before he turned to his dresser to get his clothes, apparently satisfied with whatever the hell it was he had just been doing. Wordlessly he dressed, pulling on khaki shorts and a black t-shirt before lacing up his sneakers.
“Where’s your dad tonight?” My pulse kicked up a notch as I guiltily realized I felt better with Bill around.
“Out, I guess.” He shrugged and the knot in my stomach tightened.
Something was extra “off” and I had a sinking feeling, but when he turned to face me, I met his eyes and saw a flash of the Ryker I knew. Still, I involuntarily leaned away when he came in to kiss me.
Ryker stood up straight. “What the hell, Nat, what’s the matter? You’re being weird. I’m just getting my stuff together before I reenlist.”
My eyes bulged, with my mouth hanging open. I knew I should have kept a straight face, but serious alarms were sounding through my head, and I knew I needed to get out of there. He’d never mentioned reenlisting before, and he certainly wasn’t going anywhere anytime soon. I forced myself to shake my head and shrug nonchalantly, I just wanted to get him, and me, out of the house.
“Nothing, let’s go to dinner.” I smiled and headed for the stairs.
At the top, Ryker grabbed my wrist and spun me around. Any trace of him had vanished from inside his eyes in a split second. “No, what’s going on?” he yelled like he was at boot camp, or something, and it took my breath away.
“Nothing, Ry, what are you—”