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Chapter no 28

Still Beating

โ€œMiss Lawson?โ€

I straighten out my pencil skirt and turn from the white board, discovering far too many eyes on me. Questioning eyes. Curious eyes. Some worried, some fascinated. I give a tug to my ponytail and force a smile. โ€œYes, Jenna?โ€

Itโ€™s my first day back in the classroom.ย Again. First it was an abduction, then it was a suicide attempt. If my students learn anything from me, I hope itโ€™s some valuable life lessonsโ€”that, and the greatness that is Gatsby.

โ€œYouโ€™re bleeding.โ€

I suck in a breath and glance down at myself. My white button-down blouse is dappled with red droplets. My eyes shift to my wrist, where I

notice blood is dripping out from beneath my bandage. I didnโ€™t even realize I was scratching it. I clear my throat, flustered and embarrassed, as I reach for a tissue on my desk. โ€œGoodness, I didnโ€™t even realize. Thank you,

Jenna.โ€

I excuse myself for a moment to clean up, the whispers and chatter lingering in my ears long after Iโ€™ve walked out of the classroom. I lock myself in a bathroom stall to collect my bearings, pressing my palms against the door and leaning forward, taking in deep, steady breaths. My gaze drifts to the blood stains seeped into the white fabric of my blouse, branding me with a sinister reminder of my pain. It laughs and mocks me, telling me this will never be over.

Deep breath. Deep breath.

Before my tears break through, the bathroom door creaks open and two

fellow teachers march inside, gossiping amongst themselves. I go still when my name escapes their lips.

โ€œโ€ฆfeel sorry for her. Itโ€™s got to be tough getting back to normal after something like that.โ€

โ€œSuicide, though? I mean, really. Way to completely botch up your second chance at life. I canโ€™t imagine surviving something like that and then trying to throw it all away.โ€

I watch through the stall crack, clutching my necklace in a clammy fist as the two women fluff their hair in the mirror and reapply lipstick.

โ€œYouโ€™re being way too harsh. I canโ€™t imagine surviving something like that,ย period. I have no idea how I would cope.โ€

โ€œWith alcohol and ice cream like normal people? Besides, Maryann heard from Kara that it wasnโ€™t even about the kidnapping. She started banging her sisterโ€™s husband, the guy who was trapped with her, and the sister found out. She went psycho and ODโ€™d.โ€

โ€œWhoa. Seriously?โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s what I heard.โ€

โ€œShitโ€ฆ Cora doesnโ€™t seem like the type. Sheโ€™s so sweet.โ€

โ€œWell, you heard about her liaison with Troy Adilman years back. The girl gets around.โ€

The women share a laugh, and I think I might get sick.

โ€œI donโ€™t blame her, really. That guy Dean isย delicious. I totally creeped his Facebook page. Honestly, I wouldnโ€™t say no to being chained up with him for three weeksโ€ฆโ€

The conversation fades out as the teachers retreat from the bathroom, leaving me heaving into the toilet bowl. My necklace remains in my hand,

tears streaking down my cheeks, and I tell myself over and over,ย โ€œIโ€™m okay. Itโ€™s still beating. Iโ€™m okay.โ€

 

 

I didnโ€™t plan this.

Call it insanity, call it some kind of twisted closureโ€”regardless, it wasnโ€™t planned.

I park my car along the side of Hawthorne Lane, an older subdivision with no sidewalks and an abundance of leafless trees. My boots crunch against the thin layer of snow turned icy from the colder temperatures. I wrap my scarf around my neck as I saunter up the walkway, my nerves the only thing warming me up. When I reach the front door, my hand stops

mid-air before my knuckles reach the metal screen. Thereโ€™s still a Christmas wreath mounted, proudly displayed, even though itโ€™s the end of February.

She is still holding onto something cheerful, long after it has passed.

My eyes close tight and I grit my teeth together, my arm falling to my side.

I canโ€™t do this.

But before I can make a quick escape, the door pulls open, revealing a beautiful, young woman with long hair made of obsidian silk. Her skin is as white as the snow beneath my boots, and her chocolate eyes flash with something akin to recognition, despite having never met her before.

And then I see somethingย elseย in those eyesโ€”something I am all too familiar with. Something haunting, raw, and painfulโ€ฆ something that

tethers and binds us like blood.

I know right then that her story is true and guilt eats away at me for even doubting it.

โ€œI had a feeling you would find me. Come in.โ€

My lips part to speak, but only my breath escapes me, hitting the frosty air like a puff of smoke. I nod my head and step through the threshold as she holds open the screen door. โ€œIโ€™m so sorry to drop by unannounced. I wasnโ€™t sure how to contact you. My name isโ€”โ€

โ€œCora Lawson. I know.โ€ Tabitha offers a small smile, closing the door behind us. We share a poignant look, a knowing look, and she guides me to a brown loveseat in the main living area. โ€œSit down. Iโ€™m sure you have

questions.โ€

I pluck my mittens off, one by one, then slide the beanie from my head as my hair spazzes out. I smooth it down and take a seat. โ€œIโ€™m really sorry. This is probably so inappropriate.โ€

โ€œNothing is too out there for me,โ€ she says, her smile still lingering.

Tabitha sits across from me in a rocking chair. โ€œI thought about reaching out to you, but I know your wounds are a lot fresher than mine. I didnโ€™t want to hinder your healing process.โ€

I pucker my lips, feeling like a jerk. I had no problem showing up on her doorstep, barging into her life, hindering away.ย Oof.

Tabitha catches my eyes, her head tilting slightly. โ€œDonโ€™t feel bad, Cora.

Maybe it will be good for us to talk through it. Therapeutic, you know?โ€ She wrings her hands together in her lap, releasing a sigh. โ€œNo one really understands what we went through.โ€

I study her with a nod. Gosh, sheโ€™s prettyโ€”like a porcelain doll or Snow Whiteโ€ฆ if Snow White had eyes like pain.

A thousand questions swim through my brain, but I bite my lip and ask first, โ€œDid you fall in love with Matthew?โ€

Tabithaโ€™s almond eyes widen and gloss over, startled by my initial question. โ€œOh, umโ€ฆโ€ She heaves in a jagged breath and bobs her head,

averting her gaze. โ€œYes. Very much so.โ€

Oh, God.

I want to start crying and Iโ€™m only one question in. โ€œIโ€™m so sorry.โ€ โ€œMe, too,โ€ she whispers softly, her own eyes tearing up. โ€œMatthew was

my rock the whole time. He gave me hope. He made me feel safe. He was truly myโ€ฆโ€

We say the word at the same time: โ€œLifeline.โ€ Our eyes meet, hollow and bereaved.

Tabitha pulls her lips between her teeth, taking a moment to regroup

before she faces me again. โ€œThis is going to sound awful, Cora, so please forgive me, butโ€ฆ when your story broke, I was incredibly jealous of you.โ€

โ€œYou were?โ€

โ€œYes. Youย bothย made it out. Together.โ€ Tabitha pushes her hair behind her ear and glances just over my shoulder. โ€œI saw that picture of you holding hands. It looked like the end of something terrible, but the start of something beautiful.โ€

I donโ€™t even realize tears are sliding down my cheeks as I shake my head back and forth. โ€œHeโ€™s my sisterโ€™s fiancรฉโ€”orย was, at the time. Thereโ€™s nothing beautiful about that.โ€ I inhale a painful breath. โ€œItโ€™s been a

nightmare.โ€

โ€œI would give anything to live in your nightmare. Mine is very lonely.โ€

She dips her chin, her emotions climbing. โ€œI can still hear him whisperingย โ€˜I love youโ€™ย over and over as he bled out on the cement, chained to that pole. I was completely helpless to save him.โ€

No. I rise from the sofa with a strained gasp. โ€œI-I donโ€™t think I can hear this.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m just trying to show you how itย couldย be. Youโ€™re truly blessed, Cora.

You both survived.โ€

I feel queasy and lightheaded, and all I want to do is throw my arms around Dean and hold him tight. I imagineย himย lying on that basement floor, his life slipping away. Itโ€™s too much.

I try to reroute my thoughts and center myself. โ€œDidโ€ฆ did you have feelings for each other prior to the abduction?โ€

Tabitha watches as I sit back down. โ€œNot really. I mean, he was my teacher and he was gorgeous. He wore these black-rimmed glasses during our lessons that made him look like Clark Kent. All the girls swooned over him.โ€ She smiles wistfully, replaying memories in her mind. โ€œWe shared a

few stolen glances here and there. There was a connection. A chemistry, you know? But he was off-limits. He was walking me to my car one night after I stayed late working on an assignment, and thatโ€™s whenโ€ฆโ€

She goes quiet and I close my eyes. โ€œHow did you get out?โ€

Tabitha wraps her arms around herself, hugging tight. โ€œEarl developed feelings for me. He couldnโ€™t kill me.โ€

โ€œGodโ€ฆ I never got that impression from him. He seemed entirely void of feelings.โ€

โ€œI thought so, too, but I worked hard to establish a connection with him. I pretended to enjoy it when he wouldโ€ฆโ€ She clenches her jaw. โ€œWell, you know. I developed a rapport with him. I manipulated his emotionsโ€”what

little he had, anyway. He told me I was his favorite pet.โ€

My stomach twists with nausea. โ€œWhy didnโ€™t you come forward sooner?โ€

She fiddles with the gold fringes on her long-sleeved tunic, a silence settling between us for a few beats. โ€œI did. I tried.โ€

โ€œWhat? They didnโ€™t believe you?โ€

Tabitha leans back in the chair, rocking it with her feet. โ€œEarl never told us his name, so I had nothing to go on. I had no idea where I wasโ€”he

knocked me out and dropped me on the side of the road thirty miles away. I gave my story to detectives and did a composite sketch, but they didnโ€™t have any leads. The only thing I had was that basement.โ€

I lower my head, nodding, feeling awful for branding her a liar and a fraud before I even knew her story. I think back to those two teachers in the bathroom, women Iโ€™d formed a friendship with over the last few years, passing misinformed judgements over me. Belittling my trauma to fit into their petty gossip train. I look up at Tabitha, finding her zoned out as she

stares at her colorful area rug. โ€œYouโ€™re very brave,โ€ I tell her gently, waiting for her eyes to lift to mine. โ€œI couldnโ€™t go through this alone.โ€

Tabitha slips a faint smile, then nods her head over my shoulder to the corner of the room. โ€œIโ€™m not entirely alone.โ€

A frown creases my brow as I turn around, gasping when I spot a baby swing. A tiny infant lies there, perfectly asleep, quiet and still, wrapped snugly in a pink teddy bear blanket. I wipe away tears with my fingertips, my chest aching with a mix of joy and sorrow. “Is she…?”

“Sheโ€™s Matthewโ€™s,” Tabitha confirms. “Matthew promised heโ€™d always be with me, no matter what. He meant it.” Her teary smile widens as she gazes at her daughter. “Her name is Hope.” I crumble.

My face falls into my hands, tears streaming through my fingers. I shake and sob uncontrollably, not even pausing for breath when Tabitha slides beside me on the loveseat and wraps her arms around my shoulders. I cry for this courageous woman, raising her loverโ€™s baby alone. I cry for Matthew, who never got to meet her. I cry for little Hope, born from something so horrific, yet so heartbreakingly beautiful.

And I cry for my own baby who never came to be.

Tabitha fingers my locket as I harness my breaths and wipe my face with the back of my hand. I glance down at her careful touch as she pops open

the heart. โ€œStill beating,โ€ she voices, her tone somewhat whimsical.

I sniffle with a smile. โ€œDean got it for me for Christmas. He would tell me that as long as my heart is still beating, Iโ€™m okay. Itโ€™s a reminder when things get hard.โ€

โ€œWow,โ€ Tabitha beams, grazing her finger over the engraved letters. โ€œWhat an amazing gift.โ€

My sights shift to the little bundle on my left. โ€œWe both have some pretty amazing gifts.โ€

We spend the next hour sharing storiesโ€”some heartbreaking, some sweet. I have made a friend in this young woman, so strong and brave. A vision of healing and perseverance. A kindred soul. We exchange phone

numbers and promise to keep in touch, and itโ€™s a promise I intend to keep.

As she walks me to the door and we say our goodbyes, Tabitha calls after me. โ€œHey, Cora. Can you give Dean a message for me?โ€

I turn to face her on the snowy pathway. โ€œSure. What is it?โ€

โ€œTell him I say thank you for pulverizing that evil son-of-a-bitch.โ€ We lock eyes, and I canโ€™t help but smile.

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