penance. a love story (The Böhme Series)

BOOK: penance. a love story (The Böhme Series)
9.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

pen·ance

1 Wynn

2 Hannah

3 Wynn

4 Hannah

5 Wynn

6 Hannah

7 Wynn

8 Hannah

9 Wynn

10 Hannah

11 Wynn

12 Hannah

13 Wynn

14 Hannah

15 Wynn

16 Hannah

17 Wynn

18 Hannah

19 Wynn

20 Hannah

21 Wynn

22 Hannah

23 Wynn

24 Hannah

Epilogue Wynn

From the Author

Acknowledgements

About Sarah
 

 

penance.
a love story

 

Sarah Buhl

 

 

 

 

 

Penance. a love story Copyright © 2014 by Sarah Buhl
All rights reserved.
Cover image by ©2014 Juan Moyano   
http://www.dreamstime.com/
Book design by Sarah Buhl
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author.
Sarah Buhl
Visit my website at www.sarahbuhl.com
Printed in the United States of America
First Printing: May 2014

ISBN-13: 978-1499156324

 

ISBN-10: 1499156324

 

 

 

 

 

 

pen·ance

penəns/
noun
punishment inflicted on oneself for a wrong one may or may not have done

 

 

 

Freedom is found through living.
Joy is found through forgiveness.
Truth is found through love.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For loved ones whose journey has ended
,
I cherish every one of our moments and this book is for you.

 

 

 

 

The morning light soaked through the white curtains casting an ethereal glow through our room. Her hair cascaded around her as each of her breaths pooled around my face. We lay there for several moments, having the same silent conversation we often did.

“Wynn, tell me this will never end,” Hannah said as she tucked her hands under her chin, trying to keep warm under the blankets. She moved closer to me and I wrapped my arm around her in our usual hold. I kissed her temple and tip of her nose before responding. I loved her enough to tell her the truth. “Nothing can last forever, Hannah. But we can truly live through each moment that we are here.”

1
Wynn
 

The surroundings tore oxygen from me one particle at a time. With my eyes closed, I tried to slow my thoughts.
I am in control.

I climbed off my bike and as I removed my helmet vulnerability consumed me. Nothing hid me now. Memories from when I was a boy came to mind. If I had nothing to hide behind I used to imagine I was a ghost and fade into the shadows. I still want to believe it possible.

The drones of people paraded around me as I stood near the sidewalk of the college. Unease filled me with every footstep that passed by me. I closed my eyes behind my dark sunglasses and took three steady breaths. I had to stay calm. The bright sun held possibility, but in my mind it instilled fear. It was a spotlight on me, bringing attention to my faults. I refused to meet the strangers eyes as they walked passed. Eye contact might cause them to start up a conversation, speaking nothing of significance.

I pulled my bag from my shoulder and assessed my belongings. I had to make sure my camera was secure and I do it five times before sanity returns. One, it's still there. Zip the bag, unzip the bag, and check it again. Repeat four more times, and I’m done. I’m not obsessive compulsive
. At least according to Stinson I'm not.
I just need to keep safe what I value and my camera is the most valuable part of me. I
can
become the ghost now. I hide behind the camera. No one pays attention to the person holding the camera.

Stinson, my doctor, told me I needed to spend more time around other people and less time hiding from them. Fuck off was my response as I gave him my annoyed smile. I wasn’t hiding—I just didn’t want to be around people. My eyes turned away from him as I spoke that day not wanting him to see that I questioned my own words. Believing people in general are good is difficult for me. The more people I meet, I realize how much they fucking suck because of their obsession with the self.

When I brought my eyes back to him that day, I showed the surety I tried to tell myself I had. If I could lie to myself, I could lie to him, as well. I spilled my issues out to him every meeting we had, that was enough
sharing
of myself.
Sid and Petra were there to talk to about life. There was everyone at the art gallery to talk to about art. I had my friend Blake, and we spoke of topics involving alcohol or video games. I had compartmentalized relationships for each of my needs.

People in large groups are fucking stupid I told Stinson and I didn’t need to meet more of them to change my mind. I forced him to discuss the topic of herd thinking and conformity. Our mental sparring was always fun and I could catch him on this one topic.

On their own, people can be real with you—sometimes. In groups, people feed from one another as opposed to thinking for themselves. The loudest person in the group declares the course of action and others follow, thinking the decision came from the collective. When in reality, the loudest person manipulated the entire situation.

“I have no doubt that pe
ople are stupid in large groups,” Stinson responded. “Freud’s nephew, Bernays, made bank on that. But you can't hide forever. You deserve more.” He gave me a sincere expression and I thought it true for a moment, but my history flooded my thoughts, reminding me it was a lie. I am exactly where I deserve to be.

But as I stood on the sidewalk of this college, I wondered if he was right. There was a battle raging inside me and as much as I hated large groups and people in general, I hated this fear consuming me. I hated the anxiety that made me feel like less of a person. The tight, drowning pain in my chest was maddening.

I pulled my phone from my front pocket to check the time, needing to do something with my hands to calm myself. I scrolled through the contacts on my phone. There weren’t many on there and the scrolling amounted to small movements across the screen. In my anxiety, my mind started to create scenarios and I wondered if I could really take the final steps toward the building.

I looked up to see a young woman sitting on a bench across the street from me. She sat atop the back with her feet lifted to her toes on the seat. Her crossed forearms rested on her knees as if she were a teenager in a 1950s film trying to project rigidity. I was expecting a cigarette between her fingers, but in its place a lanyard swung. She wore a serious expression that saw right through me. Her cautious, determined stare saw the truth I held inside—I was a boy parading around in his Daddy’s shoes, pretending to be a man and she knew it.

The twirl of the lanyard continued as she studied me and I her. I never gave anyone a second glance, or held eyes longer than a moment. The longer you give them your eyes, the more apt they are to say something to you. It's human nature. The quicker I turn away, the faster I could avoid meaningless conversation. But this girl, with her relaxed abrasion, held my eyes. A strong fragility in her left me wondering if it permeated into every part of her life. I was not the only one putting up walls to the outside world. She had her guards up full force.

Her hair was in a chaotic mess at the base of her neck and she wore an air of serene madness with her dark eye makeup and even darker expression. She drew me in the longer we stared, but she was no match for the years of training I had in pulling away. My walls were firmly in place.

I wanted to take a photo of her, but pointing a large camera at her would freak her out. Better yet, she would storm across the street and punch me. I scrolled to the camera on my phone and as I pretended to text I snapped a photo of her. It wasn’t the best and it was creepy as hell that I took it and I felt like a stalker. But when I saw the photo fade into view on my phone, a grin formed on my face. She was looking right at me and her pissed off expression was priceless.

She held a fire in her that was apparent without even speaking
a word. I was jealous of her freedom from those around her as she was the ruler of her own world and they couldn’t enter it, even if they tried. I could learn something from her walls.

She kept her eyes trained on me and I wondered what her careful observation believed of me. Women have read books or seen movies where guys with tattoos and motorcycles are feral men
waiting to find a woman to ravish. A fantasy exists in their minds of a tattooed beast that enters their lives and alpha male's their ass. They imagine he will throw them over his shoulder bellowing
mine
and ward off other men. Women see it as a declaration of devotion.
Fucking weird
. I didn’t want her to believe that of me.

I am not
that guy
. I have both tattoos and a motorcycle and many eager women assume I am
that guy
. My reality is quite different, though. I ride a bike because I hate the confines of a car and get claustrophobic. My tattoos are a way for me to cope with memories. For a woman to label them as sexual objects makes me ill. I hoped she didn’t believe the lies found in books and movies.

My phone rang and the girl’s photo faded from the screen. Blake’s name formed in its place and I pushed ignore, knowing I didn’t have time to figure out his mood today. If he's in an annoying mood he keeps me on the phone for hours.

I looked up to find bench girl was no longer bench girl. She was walking toward me girl, her eyes set on mine, as she walked past me and continued up the sidewalk to the same building I was to enter.

I ran through my mind of how I could approach her. I wanted to ask her for her number or ask her out, but I couldn’t do that. Blake could do it, but I couldn’t. Fumbled words with sweaty palms haunted me as I thought of speaking to her. I struggle with speaking to others in general—vacant eyes try to locate the words and I look crazed. I need to prepare for a conversation and I can’t do it last minute.

We approached the door at the same time and I reached to open it for her. This I could do. I can open a door for her. She was a few inches shorter than me and when our eyes met, a dorky smile formed across my face and she returned it with a glare. It threw me off that glare. She didn’t hold the same curiosity in her eyes as me and it made me want to talk to her more. Her obvious lack of interest in me triggered an instinct and I surprised myself in that moment—I wanted her attention. I wanted to know the thoughts that plagued her eyes.

Music echoed from the ear buds she wore and I could hear the faint sound of Beth Gibbons singing
Glory Box
. Portishead. I had never met anyone who listened to them. The song bellowed between us as we stood in our ocular showdown. Her eyes rolled and another grin formed on my face.

This girl didn’t want me to open that door for her, but I continued and waved my hand to allow her passage. She stood there and crossed her arms, with a pointed foot to the side. An annoyed look graced her face, but her eyes showed intrigue for a moment, as if a stranger being polite was foreign to her. She started to wa
lk in the door, and stopped mid-step. The song picked up and was reaching its climactic end. She calculated her decision as her eyes danced around my face.

We were stubborn, the two of us. I held her eyes and continued to prop the door open. With a sigh, she turned and opened the other door and entered the building. She walked toward the basement without a word or glance back. A guy passed her, who looked back to check out her ass as she walked away. When he saw that I was watching, he wagged his eyebrows as if he thought we shared a predator bond because we both had dicks.

I gave him a scowl as I stood taller, “Fuck you,” I said with contempt. I didn’t say it because I felt possessive of the girl. She was a human being and she wasn’t an object to claim or use. The guy jerked his head back as if I punched him and wore an expression of total shock as he walked past me.

Other books

Before Tomorrowland by Jeff Jensen
The Bridal Hunt by Lynn, Jeanette
What a Girl Wants by Lindsey Kelk
Breaking the Greek's Rules by Anne McAllister
A Question of Honor by Mary Anne Wilson
The Secret Ingredient by Dianne Blacklock
Assignment Afghan Dragon by Unknown Author
A Fair Maiden by Joyce Carol Oates