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Calamity Rayne II: Back Again by Lydia Michaels (2)


Chapter Two

Floating Through Time

 

For the first time in my life, I was in love. Not crushing on a boy, but grown-up, sexy-time love with an actual man. An incredible man. It didn’t seem fair that at that same moment my heart was breaking.

“You should eat, Rayne.”

My gaze lifted from the hospital bed I’d been staring at for the last several hours and shifted to Tyler. “I have no appetite.”

“Have you eaten anything since you left Florida?” Sliding his bulky body into the corner chair, his assessing stare burned through me.

His concern was a whole other presence in the room. He didn’t seem capable of looking at Elle, which was understandable, but I wished he’d stop looking at me.

My withered appearance wore the stench of communal travel. Wrinkled clothes and greasy hair exploited every missed hour of sleep. The skin beneath my eyes literally burned from dashing away tears, but the last thing I cared about was vanity—I simply never had, and there was no point in starting now.

My heart cracked when Remington Davenport, my eccentric, billionaire boss told me the news about Elle. Another chunk chipped away when Hale, my boyfriend and boss’s son, hugged me goodbye like he might never touch me again. It was a combination of those moments and actually seeing Elle in this condition that shattered my heart so severely I had a hard time recalling the girl I was twenty-four hours ago.

So, yeah, food wasn’t really on my priority list at the moment. “I’m not hungry.”

Tyler sighed and shut his eyes, pressing the back of his head into the recliner seat until the stiff leather creaked. He stuck to the corner like a shadow, his words intruding as a gentle reminder of his presence every so often.

“Is this going to affect your job, being here?”

My job? I had a love/hate thing going on with my job. I loved it because it brought me to Hale, but he wasn’t all I loved. I loved my boss, too, the grumpy, old bastard. However, loving a man like Remington Davenport meant hating him fifty percent of the time, too. He was an enormous, wealthy pain in my poor ass.

I didn’t know how this time away would affect my job, but I knew I wasn’t finished with the Davenports. Not by a long shot. I was pretty certain my job was secure, at least that’s what they all said when I left.

“It shouldn’t.”

“You don’t sound too sure.” Tyler’s realist personality didn’t always inspire confidence. Elle usually acted as the balance between us, me the pessimist, her the optimist, Tyler the realist.

Tyler liked to shoot out random doubt bullets, little ballistic, heat-seeking reality checks that knocked me on my ass from time to time. I hated when I started questioning things. I was not what one would call a heavy thinker. But when I hit thirty I went on a soul-searching adventure to shake up my life. Lots of heavy conundrums since then.

Working for Remington Davenport was my version of Jack Kerou-acing across the country on someone else’s dollar. Okay, maybe Jack Kerou-acing wasn’t the right term. The Davenport lifestyle was galaxies away from roughing it in the woods. But there had been some soul-searching and it turned out, I’m actually pretty complicated.

Not that I’d invested my time in anything as extreme as ending world hunger or solving global warming. We’re talking strictly about girl problems. I’ve been inflicted by all of them—the butterflies, the strange twitterpated sensations one gets when near a certain someone, the gawky misfortunes that happen regardless of how hard I tried to imitate class and grace. Simply put, I was a fucking disaster, a steaming, hot mess. A calamity—thus the nickname. It’d been a rough haul…

I typically got a kick out of four-letter words, but love was a new one in my vocabulary. Sometimes kids said shit, fuck, dick, twat, or piss without knowing what the words actually meant. Grown-ups had a habit of tossing out the word love without ever really knowing the actual definition first hand.

Me, I was one of those grown-ups—until recently.

Hale loved me. All of me. And I loved him. We were L-O-V-E sitting in a tree and I wanted the world to know that I’d finally found someone. Aside from Elle, there weren’t many who could tolerate my weird quirks. Hale, Elle, Tyler, and my mom did not scare easily. They were my people for that very reason.

Remington should probably be lumped into that tolerant clump. I mean, there had to be some reason he hired me. I was easily the worst personal assistant on the planet, no business acumen, zero typing skills, the attention span of a gnat, and the grace of a goat… But those Davenports loved me. And I loved them.

My hand closed around Elle’s, drawing comfort from the warmth of her fingertips. I wanted to shake her, demand she wake up and look at me. I wanted someone to tell me this would all be okay, but those guarantees weren’t coming and I was stuck in this silent room trying my best not to break.

It had never been so hard to put on a brave face, but I forced the words out, needing to hear some sort of reassurance. “It’ll be fine.”

“Did you get to talk to the doctor?” Tyler asked.

“Yeah.” Anxiety made my chest tight so I breathed through my mouth. “He came in around seven this morning. The nurse said until Elle shows signs of waking, he’ll be checking in every few hours.”

“The nurses seem nice. They let you sleep here?”

I nodded. “If anyone asks, I’m her sister.”

“Are you okay?”

Drawing in a deep breath, I gave Tyler a wan smile. “Yeah. Just thinking.”

“About work?”

He seemed to be fishing for a distraction. “Sort of.”

“I haven’t talked to you since you started. How’s it going?”

I left Oregon only a month ago, but so much had changed “I love it. It’s exciting and fast-paced. I meet a lot of interesting people and live in an incredible mansion in Key West.” The first half of the month had been spent on The Lady Parr, Remington’s yacht—one of them.

“What’s your boss like?”

My smile turned genuine. “We’re polar opposites. He’s a conservative egomaniac with the virility of a Fidel Castro.” Little known fact, Castro slept with thirty-five thousand women, one during every lunch and dinner of his reign. My boss was sort of like that, but not with me.

He managed to sleep with many young, pretty things, despite his four marriages. Yeah, Remington didn’t really respect the word fidelity unless it was in reference to a bank. I wasn’t praising these attributes. I personally disdained them. But the facts were the facts. Remington was a pig.

Tyler scowled at me. “Do you have a thing going with him?”

“Ew! Gross! No.” I tried not to gag. “He’s a total chauvinist. And he’s old.

“Good. I don’t think I could handle the image of that.”

I scrunched my nose. “Why would you imagine it in the first place?”

“If you said you were having an affair with him my mind would’ve gone there.”

“Well, stop it.”

I sheltered my boobs with my arms. Staring at Tyler, I concentrated on the crotch of his jeans until his hand dropped protectively over his lap. “What are you doing?”

“Picturing your penis.”

“Why?”

I shrugged. “Fair is fair.”

He sighed and rolled his eyes—so very Ty. At least we distracted ourselves for a few minutes.

Not that I’d tell Tyler that I recently discovered how much I liked having sex, but it was definitely notable news I wished I could share with someone. Not only did I like it, I looked hot having it—at least with Hale. He had this mirror at his house in Georgia and one time we…

Stop.

My brain—and my body—couldn’t handle sex recollections at the moment. I’d gone almost a complete lifetime without a carnal appetite, but Hale opened my eyes to a literal smorgasbord.

Figured, now that I started enjoying sex, I’d have to go without. Maybe I should think of it as fasting rather than some sort of starvation.

“Will you go back to waitressing?”

“I like my job with the Davenports.” My words tumbled out on a wave of panic. Going back to serving fries and beer filled me with a terrible sense of meaninglessness. Nothing against waitresses. I was one for the majority of my life. But now I wanted something more … impactful.

“I was just saying, you have options if you want to stay around for Elle.”

Waitressing might actually be my only option. I needed to be here until Elle recovered and there was no telling how long from now that would be. My gaze lifted to her battered face.

“Her hair will grow back.” Tyler’s words whispered through the silence. The least of my fears, but one of the few guarantees we had to offer each other.

I nodded, appreciating his attempt to console me.

God, it was suffocating in this room, stuffy, yet there was a steady chill to the air. I shut my eyes and tried to picture Hale sitting beside me. A tower of unshakable strength and calm control. Devastatingly handsome, tall, broad shoulders, athletic build, dirty blond hair, and those signature gray, Davenport eyes.

He could be intense and tender, balancing the two with utter perfection. We were so different, yet so perfectly suited for each other. Hale smelled like authority. I smelled like catastrophe. He showed me that sex could be phenomenal and I, well… I let him.

 He was selfless and noble and so much a man to admire if you could actually see beneath the stuffy, reserved façade he wore for the rest of the world. Hale had deep feelings and honorable secrets. For instance, he adopted a little girl who needed a dad. That was the clincher that tied my heart to his.

Even now the truth made me sigh. He was the best man I’d ever met, and through some freak turn of events, we found each other.

A nightshift nurse entered the room. “Pardon me, hon. I just want to check her IV.”

I watched as she inspected the many tubes connected to my best friend. My stomach hurt as I wondered if Elle felt any pain. A shiver climbed my spine as my vision blurred, her shimmering image appearing far too delicate for such a strong woman.

When the nurse left, I looked at Tyler. “Has anyone called Chris?” Elle’s brother wasn’t my favorite person, but someone should have notified him by now.

“I left him a message. Don’t know if he’ll get it.”

Chris had once been a fun, normal guy until he got involved with drugs. When Elle stopped supporting him he robbed her blind. Not only did he steal her debit card and clean out her accounts, he stole her oven. Who steals an oven? He took other things too, her jewelry, some furniture, and her laptop. But the oven really got to me.

“I hope he doesn’t come here,” I muttered, knowing his presence never brought anything but stress to Elle’s life.

“I was sort of hoping the same, but I had to call him. He’s her brother.”

I stayed at the hospital until seven that evening, knowing I needed to get home, find a phone charger, and sleep in a real bed. I ate some sort of pastry from a vending machine on my way out of the hospital but was pretty sure it expired in the nineties.

I took a cab because my car had been in my mom’s garage since I started working for the Davenports. When I climbed out of the taxi and stared at my childhood home, a crushing ache formed in the pit of my stomach. Back again.

Everything inside of me demanded I shouldn’t be there. I was supposed to be taking care of Remington, in Florida, with Hale. Moving forward. This felt like a humongous step backward. Reminding myself of the circumstances that brought me back to this place only intensified that ache, heaping a good amount of guilt into the stew. I was here for my friend and, as much as I’d expected to be somewhere else, I accepted that this was where I wanted to be—with Elle. I was just tired, and juggling so many conflicting emotions wasn’t helping matters.

I lugged my suitcase to the porch and the door opened before I even slid my key into the lock.

“Hi, honey,” my mom greeted softly, eyes heavy with worry.

I’d been so good about keeping my tears locked inside after the first shock of seeing my friend, but my mom’s concern and Elle’s continuous stillness, on top of my lack of sleep and abundant hunger, was a weight I could no longer bear.

My face pinched, as a high-pitched wheeze scraped past the lump in my throat and my shoulders drooped forward on a sob. My mom pulled me into her arms, hugging me tightly.

“I know, sweetie. She’ll get through this. Elle’s strong, honey.”

I wept inconsolably, as my mother ushered me into our little kitchen and sat me at the table. She continued to offer words of hope, but nothing would erase the memory of Elle’s battered face from my mind.

“They had to shave part of her head,” I cried.

“Hair grows back, Rayne.”

But Elle was a hairdresser and her hair was lovely, nothing like my plain, brown, poker straight mop. It was her source of pride and they’d cut it away. Her face had been so battered, it hurt to see her wounds.

A plate of cookies slid in front of me as my mother patiently waited for me to sniffle through the last of my tears. “Thank you.”

“You need to eat. I figured cookies would do the trick.”

I peeled back the plastic wrap and broke off a crumble, but even homemade cookies tasted like sawdust on my tongue. I’d never been too sad to eat.

Sliding the plate aside, I stole a napkin from the basket on the table and blotted my eyes. “Do you have a charger?” Hale was probably going nuts trying to reach me.

“It’s in my bedroom.”

Too tired to talk, I lurched to her room. The familiar, dated décor welcomed me and distressed me at the same time, every glimpse of my surroundings a strange reminder that I was far away from my other home.

Sliding the plug into my phone, I sat on the edge of my mother’s bed and waited for any signs of life—a reoccurring theme for the day. When the screen lit, several messages and texts appeared, but I ignored them and dialed Hale.

“Rayne?” he answered midway through the first ring.

I curled onto my side and held the phone to my ear, shutting my eyes so my tears wouldn’t make the screen slick. “Hi.”

“Oh, babe.” Two words, but I knew he understood. Never in my life had I wanted to touch a person as much as I did in that moment.

“I’m sorry I didn’t call sooner. My phone died and I left my charger at your place.”

“Have you been at the hospital all this time?”

“Yes. She’s…” My voice seized. “I’m so scared, Hale.”

“Shh… We don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to. Just shut your eyes and pretend I’m there with you, holding you tight.”

My arms closed over my hollow belly as my eyes squeezed tighter. I could almost feel his strength banding around me.

“Everything will be okay, Rayne. I’m here.”

For the first time since returning to Oregon, I felt an acute sense of balance return. “I love you.”

I knew he wasn’t there. I knew they were my arms hugging me. But if I could just believe for a minute that they were his, maybe the pain and fear would stay at bay.

“I love you, Rayne. Don’t worry. I’m not letting go.”

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