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Laid Over by S.E. Hall (11)

Chapter One

Henley? Henley Calvert, is that you?An unfamiliar voice pierces the air.

I hastily duck my head so that my long brown hair falls around me in a shroud of anonymity and hurry toward the door of Watson Law Offices, ignoring whomever it is calling my name.

Theres one main street in this town, cleverly named Main Street. I shouldve known better than to stand out in the open on its sidewalk if I didnt want to be spotted. Guess I hoped that after eight years, the chances of being recognized would be slim.

But why would I have possibly allowed myself such dimwitted optimism? Small towns like Ashfall? Nobody ever forgets anything, or anyone. Especially when you give them something grossly outside of mundane to talk aboutlike I had.

Once inside the office, I chance a subtle peek back out of the glass door to make sure my beckoner didnt follow me, and sigh in relief to find no sign of anyone. I turn and walk slowly to the receptionist desk, clearing my throat to get the attention of the woman behind it, her back to me as she files papers.

She spins in her chair andof course.

Henley Calvert!she shrills, if thats the right word for actually managing to speak, very high-pitched, through your nose. I cant remember her name, but I do know I went to school with herand she was not a nice girl. One of the Fallouts.Thats what we called them, in honor of Ashfalldefined as a fake, two-faced girl who thought it was a real accomplishment to peak in high school, and a miniscule one at that, by preying on the insecurities and weaknesses of others rather than earning a name on their own merit. Perfectly personifying the worst of teenage girl stereotypes. And their caddy empowerment was only heightened, made too easy really, by living in a small town.  Our own version of Mean Girls.

She flies around the desk to trap me in an unexpected, and very unwelcomed, hug. My whole body stiffens, arms pressed to my sides, and I count backward in my head until she releases me.

I dont like to be touched.

My Lord, you havent changed a bit!she gushes as she pulls back to survey me from head to toe. You look exactly the same as the last time I saw you. Except, less crazy.

Yeah, cause thats nice to say out loud. Hell, at least she said it to my face; thats new for her, if memory serves correctly.

Whats your trick? Get a little work done?she sneers conspiratorially. Dont worry, you can tell me, itll be our little secret. Was it Botox? I so want to try that!

No, I havent had Botox, you twit. Im twenty-five years old. But I have no interest in encouraging this conversation any further, so I simply deadpan, You caught me.

Knew it!She snaps her fingers, then uses one of them to make a cross over her heart. I wont tell a soul.

Translationshell tell everyone she sees, every time she sees them, for the rest of the week. Which works in my favor actually; better they blather about my non-existent cosmetic adventures than the old shit theyd drudge back up to say about me if left to their own habits.

Whats it been now, six, seven years?She frowns, the overdone, I-have-absolutely-no-real-remorse-or-empathy-for-you-and-I-wantyou-to-know-it kind of frown.

Eight,I respond as nicely as my plummeting patience will allow. I have an appointment with Mr. Watson. Is he available for that?

And there it isher over-the-top hospitality, excluding the one underhanded, nasty comment of course, finally vanishes. Im sure it was quite painful for her to maintain the façade as long as she did. Her face returns to its natural state, pinched in evil delight, confirming she really does need to check into that Botox. Guess the old saying about your face sticking like that is truethe deep grooves of a judgmental, superiority complex around her eyes and mouth are practiced, and permanent.

She then proceeds to all but bounce with giddiness as she takes great pleasure in dropping the bomb that I know has been itching her tongue this entire time. Your meeting is with Mr. Watson, Junior.  Her tone erases any possible doubt; she remembers a lot more about me than my name and looks.

I gulp quietly and struggle to keep the panic from showing on my face. I assumed Id be meeting with Watson Senior, but when she snickers, a sound of inherit, unfixable maliciousness, the shiver that chills me to the bone feels far too real for me to kid myself any longer.

This is actually happening.

And at this point, praying that a new family of lawyers, raising baby lawyers, who just happen to also have the last name Watson and moved to town while I was gone, is a stretch...even my rattled mind wont help me continue to idiotically hope on that one.

So I clear my throat and invite in reality. As in—”

Yes, Henley,she snidely cuts me off,as in Merrick. Ill go and let him know youre here.

Why am I even expelling the energy to pretend to be surprised? Of course its Merrick. He probably specifically asked to be assigned to my file, just to jab the knife of bleakness in deeper and give it a good twist. Having to face this, and Merrick to boot, seems perfectly par for my course.

Id honestly have been more stunned if shed have said anything different.

And even if I run out right now, hell still know I was here. And I do have to face the issue at hand sooner or later, so why give him the further enjoyment of knowing I bolted away like a coward?

No way in hell Im serving him up that gift on a platter. So I lift my chin, push my shoulders back and take a seat in the lobby.

As I repeatedly wipe my sweaty palms on my jeans, I try for the umpteenth time to come to something that at least resembles terms with the unavoidable situation Ive returned to handle.

I never thought Id find myself back in Ashfall. In fact, I swore to myself I wouldnt.

But alas, here I am, waiting to once again face my first love in the tiny ranching town where nothing ever happensexcept my worst nightmares.

Well, thats not completely true, more my skewed opinion silently speaking in exaggerations. Theres church, where everyone shows up, dressed in their best attire and polite smiles, but the sermon is never practiced outside the chapel walls. Oh, and lets not forget the coveted weekend rodeos, followed directly by post-event field parties, with all the underage drinking, subsequent fighting and non-promising pregnancies one might expect to find when small-town high school kids have too much time on their hands.

I doubt anythings changed for the current generation of teenagers occupying this little, unknown corner of the Earth.

And if ever you feel like youve missed out on some vital nugget of gossip, fear not, for you can conveniently wander into the one and only diner in town, on any day that ends in yto get caught up. Cause the town elderswill be there, sitting in the same booth every morning, recapping all the latest news in even less enthusiastic voices than they used the day before, over their stained mugs of stale coffee.

I doubt thats changed either.

But this girl got out.

For the most hellish of reasons, my catalyst and destination both far more horrifying than the dismal life I just described, butI got out. And yet, Id give anything, even my own life, to be able to go back and change things so that I didnt ever have to leave.

Just a cinch tighter. One final tug.

And after all these years, one step back into town and the shame and guilt Ive long carried, weighs heavier than ever. Because a deep, dark place within me that contradicts everything I just thoughtis, indeed, still glad I escaped.

I couldnt change things, and I wouldnt have survived here after what happened. Ashfall and all it stood for wouldve suffocated what little fight for survival I had left in me. And a second horrific ending doesnt rewrite the first one. Unfortunately, it just doesnt work that way.

If it did, I would have gladly planted both feet firmly in place and taken any torture necessary to undo my grave mistake.

Its ironic and sickeningthe one thing that saved what little was left of me will always be painfully intertwined with the one thing that killed the part thats not.

I squeeze my eyes shut and start to chant in my head all the self-helpquotes Id been taughtand just as my breathing evens out and Im able to open my eyes again, determined to not hide, but face things head-on like the adult I now am, he appears.

Walking toward me with a cool, easy stride, is Merrick Watson, as gorgeous as the day I left him. Left it all.

He looks great, age doing nothing but putting a distinguished polish on his undeniable good looks. Nearly every fond memory Ive kept locked away comes rushing back over me like a waterfall with one glance at his vibrant, aqua blue eyes. A cascade of all that was my young adult life, innocence, discoveryand sadness, heartbreak and loss; a painful clash of everything that molded me and everything that damn near shattered me beyond repair bombarding my mind and senses more intensely with each step he takes closer. That same hometown princesmile that snared my attention, then whole heart, in the first place very much alive on his handsome face.

Henley Gene Calvert, get over here.He grins, riddled with nostalgia, spoiled by sympathy. He holds his arms open wide as if Ill just waltz right into them for a hug.

Which I dont.

After several, cramped seconds, he realizes Im not gonna budge and drops those arms that were once my solace awkwardly to his sides. So,he clears his throat, its good to see you, even considering,he tugs at the starched collar of his pin-striped dress shirt and shifts his weight in palpable discomfort. Shall we head back to my office and go over a few things?

Thats what Im here for,I answer and stand.

Addison,he turns and almost knocks over his receptionist, whose name I never wouldve rememberedhad I been trying. Shes standing right at his side and interloping on our conversation, which Im almost positive is well beyond the scope of her job description. Hold all my calls.

Yes Sir, Mr. Watson,she purrs her obedient reply and prostitute prances back behind the desk. Welcome home, Henley,she adds for good show in front of her boss.

This isnt my home, not anymore, and we both know it. Just like we both know what she really just meant was Fuck off, Henley. Reconfirming what I already knew and didnt fall fornothing and no one in this town ever changes, and her initial friendliness, if you want to generously call it that, was just a hunting expedition for any gossip she could get out of me.

Glad to see shes grown so much since high school.

Well, her ass has. Thats at least something. Good for her.

Shame on you, Henley. Just because your entire life now lays in unfixable ruins and she called youcrazyright out the gate, doesnt mean you have to stoop to her level.

Not sure why shes so contemptuous of me anyway. I wasnt mean to her in school. And if shes worried Im here to get in between whatever it is she already has, highly likely, or wants, with Merrick, shes as delusional on that as she is in thinking shes getting under my skin.

Right this way.Merrick extends an arm as my guide and I follow, keeping a speakable distance. One that clearly says I need no further guidance, such as his hand on my back, just in case he was thinking thatd in any way fly with me.

He closes the door behind us, and I take in his office; exactly what Id expectclinical, screaming of his prestigious heritage (as prestigious as it gets in a postage-stamp-sized town anyway) in the most sterile, yet pompous, way possible.

For instance, the picture on his desk? Its of him and Krista, her name I remember, and it isnt just a casual shot snapped one day while they were hanging out. Couldnt possibly have that. No, its a photograph of them dressed in tux and ball gown, with a banner boasting the name of the charity event theyre at in the background. A charity Im sure neither of them have ever researched or spent any time volunteering at for even a second. And lets not fail to take a moment to appreciate the sterling silver frame, complete with a pretentious engraving.

Its posed, cliché, and classic Watson Family Values.

Its also painfulguess the rumors about the two of them all those years ago were true.

Have a seat.Merrick indicates for me to sit directly across from his desk, in what has to be the most uncomfortable looking chair Ive ever seen, while he takes his own behind it; also resembling something that could double as a torture device.

Image over comfort, of course.

You know, Henley, we dont have to get into much today. It can wait until after youre settled, and the funeral. Im very sorry for your loss, by the way. Such a tragedy, and youve been through more than enough already.

I immediately shift my eyes left, staring out the window, but the pity in his gaze Im avoiding still manages to burn into my skin.

Quit looking at me like that!I bite out.

Like what?

I snap my glare back to him and narrow it in further warning. Like. That.I point to his face. And dont assume to know everything Ive been through, how it affected me, or what my more than enough is. You missed quite a bit, and have no idea who I am anymore, let alone my thresholds.

And whose fault is that?He leans forward, trying for that intimidating, penetrating stare of his that used to work on me.

In the interest of time, lets stick with whats always been consensus and habit, and say its mine,I smile wickedly and shrug. Just do your job. Tell me what I need to sign.

He sighs, conceding to move on. Several things, but I dont have them all gathered yet. Not until you read this over and tell me how you want to proceed.He slides a manila envelope across the desk to me.

I shift away from it like its poisonous, sure my anxiety is apparent on my face. Whats that? Whats in there?

He lightly grins, only one corner of his mouth participating. Open it and find out.

I was expecting a stack of papers with little colored arrows stuck to the places where I needed to sign: death certificate, releases, whatever. Not mysterious envelopes that contain things on which I must decide how to proceed.

I dont like the sound of that, at all.

Merrick just furthers my puzzlement when he interrupts my thoughts. Henley, I dont understand why you look so confused? The envelope contains your mothers Will. Whatd you think you were coming here for today?

A facetious laugh bails on me before I can catch it. Not a Will that left any decisions up to me, thats for damn sure.

 

 

 

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