When my alarm went off the next day, dread like I hadnโt felt
in years instantly made me want to vomit.
It had been a long,ย longย time since Iโd been so nervous or overwhelmed that I wanted to puke.
But I still dragged myself out of bed. I had to get up. I didnโt want to, but I had to.
I showered even though I had the night before, put on makeup, got dressed, and headed to the kitchen, ignoring the way my knees wanted to shake and my stomach wanted to revolt. I heard pots clanking from the kitchen area. I was usually on my way to work by this time, and my sister Lily was usually in the shower, so it surprised me to hear her banging away.
If the clangs meant anything, it was that she was still mad at me. I hadnโt seen her at all the last two days. Sheโd been in her room by the time I got home and hadnโt bothered coming out to say hi.
Sure enough, the second I entered the kitchen and found her, violently scooping what looked like oatmeal into two bowls on the counter, it confirmed she was in a bad mood. Lily was like me: she was a morning person. Unlike our other two sisters, I had never had to be on her case about waking up on time for school. I was usually in a good mood, but Lily was always in a better mood than me.
Today being the exception from the look and sound of it.
โMorning,โ I told her pretty softly, hating that we were in this position in the first place.
She didnโt look at me, and it gave me the chance to see she hadnโt showered or anything yet. She was still in her pajamas. โMorning,โ she pretty much grunted, almost making me smile.
Eyeing her, I went to the cabinets beside her, watching as she scraped cut-up berries from a small cutting board into the bowls and then shook
some walnuts out too. Filling up my glass with water, I tried my best to ignore how much my stomach ached.ย I didnโt want to go.
โYou have time to eat, donโt you?โ my beloved little sister grumbled, sounding grumpier than I had ever heard her.
โYes,โ I answered before gulping down the entire glass of water just as she slid one of the bowls across the counter.
She grunted before turning back toward the stove and picking up the saucepan sheโd cooked with. โEat it. Who knows when youโll have lunch.โ
I didnโt feel like smiling, I really didnโt, but affection for this not-so- little girl made my chest ache… with love, of course. With so much love it reminded me of why I was going today. So she wouldnโt have to. โThank you, Lily,โ I told her as I opened one of the drawers and pulled a spoon out.
Lily grunted again as she turned on the tap at the sink and waited, then put the pot under the stream of water.
I didnโt say a word as I scooped up one spoonful after the other of steel cut oats as she finished washing everything. I ate so fast that by the time she was done, more than half of it was in my stomach, and I honestly wasnโt sure if I had tasted more than the first bite.
I didnโt want to go.
โWhat time will you be back?โ
I blinked at her back as she stood in front of the sink, hunched over it. โI donโt know for sure. Iโm guessing maybe around three.โ I tapped the tip of the spoon against my nose, seeing her spine curl further into the sink area. โIโm not going to be there longer than I need to, sugar lumps, I promise.โ
The deep breath she took made her shoulders go up a few inches; I could even see her ribcage expand too. But she didnโt make a sound. She didnโt turn around either.
I wanted to go and give her a hug, but my feet wouldnโt move. I wanted to tell her it was going to be fine. That I didnโt want to go in the first place but that I owed Grandma Genie for taking care of her for years.
Butโฆ
I wasnโt sure I could handle it if she pulled away from me or told me not to touch her. It wouldnโt be the first time one of my sisters had done that. So like a coward, I stayed there, fisting my hands at my sides and just watching my little sister struggle with whatever she was thinking.
She was the last person in the world I would want to hurt or have mad at me.
โLily, I love you. I donโt want to go, but one of us has to, and if Dad and your mom are thereโฆ I donโt want them to see you. I donโt want them to see any of you. Nothing good would come of it, and somewhere deep down inside, you know that,โ I told her quietly. โItโll be fine. I promise. Your mom will probably be too high and Dadโฆ. Donโt worry about me, okay? I showed you that picture of Ripley. No oneโs going to want to mess with him, and I can take care of myself.โ
She sniffed.
And still I just stood there, really wanting to go to her but justโฆ not able to. My eyes caught onto the clock on the stove, seeing the 7:25 and sighing. โIโm not going to work afterward. If you donโt have plans, we can go do something.โ
My little sister sighed right back. โOkay.โ โOkay?โ I asked her to be sure.
She nodded. โYeah, okay.โ
Pressing my lips together, I scooped the rest of the oatmeal into my mouth as I grabbed a bottled iced coffee from the fridge. Next, I filled up a water bottle from the filter and had just picked up my purse when Lily muttered, โDo you have your pepper spray?โ
I froze. Then I glanced inside my bag to make sure it was in there. โIโve got it,โ I told her, looking down at the gift she had bought me for my birthday last year.
I turned toward her, holding my things in my hand, and found her still facing the sink. I wanted to give her a hug. I really wanted to give her a hug, or get one in return, but I was going to need all my bravery for later.
โI need to go, but have a good day at school, okay? Thank you for breakfast.โ
โGood luck.โ
I smiled at the back of her head and held my things to my chest, then turned around. I had barely made it down the hall when my little sister called out, โI love you, Luna! Iโm not mad at you! I just want you to be okay!โ
I bit my lip and shook my head, relief flooding through me. โI know. I love you too! Donโt worry about me and have a good day at school!โ I called back, making sure not to let my voice betray me.
I got my keys and headed outside, trying my best to ignore the way my heart beat steadily but a little faster than normal. I had barely locked
the front door and sat on the top step when a familiar yellow pickup pulled up in front of my house. According to my G-Shock, right on time.
I didnโt wonder how Ripley had known my address, but I had figured he would have asked for it if he needed it. A few of my coworkers had visited since Iโd bought my place, and the Coopers of course knew where I lived. At just around fifteen hundred square feetโand with the price tag that had come from it being a foreclosureโit was perfect for meโฆ and the one sibling I still had. It had needed a stupid amount of cosmetic work when I bought it, and even after so long, it still did. What had been worked on, I had done mostly by myself and with a little help from my sisters, friends, and their families. It was getting to where I wanted it.
At the rate I was going, it was more than likely going to be a couple more years before it was the house that Iโd envisioned, and only for a second did I wonder what Ripley thought of the old bungalow.
Then I decided that he probably didnโt care and might have not even really looked at it in the first place, even if it was possible to ignore the dark purple house with medium gray and white accents and trim.
It had taken me months to change the color from the faded white and blue it had originally been, but every time I pulled into my driveway, seeing itโฆ it just made me happy. And if something made you happy, it was worth the cost and effort every single time.
As I walked down the steps of my stoop and then the pathway that my best friendโs grandpa had helped me redo before starting on the painting, I couldnโt help but look over my shoulder at my house.
And I smiled.
I was so lucky.
I was so damn lucky I forgot how lucky I was.
Rip was looking at me through the passenger window as I walked up to his truck door and opened it.
โMorning,โ I greeted him as I got inside and shut it behind me.
He was still watching me as I pulled the seat belt across my body and clipped it in, noticing the black jacket on the seat between us. Only then did he say, โMorning.โ
Setting my purse and drinks on the floor, I slid my hands down my thighs to smooth my black skirt down and then shot him a smile. I had to play it easy and cool and not at all like Iโd woken up that morning on the verge of praying for a natural disaster that wouldnโt let us make it to San Antonio. โWant me to navigate us or do you know how to get there?โ I asked as I finally got a chance to look my boss over.
And look him over I did.
The first thing I noticed was the thin black and white scarf he had on. In June.
Then the second thing I noticed was the freaking rest of him.
I had warned him we were going to a funeral, but I hadnโt been ready forโฆ this. Ripley dressed up like I had never, ever seen him before. In a charcoal gray button-up shirt beneath the scarf wrapped around his neck, his eyes seemed even brighter than usual. I glanced at his shiny black dress shoesโshoes that looked brand new. Black dress pants that looked brand new. I looked down at the black jacket between us and thought it looked like it had never been worn either.
Forcing my gaze back to his face, I took in his close shave, and the way his short hair was styled gave me the idea that heโd slicked something through it that made it look more controlled than normal.
Lucas Ripley had dressed up.
And if they were there, I was taking him to see the most awful people I had ever met in my life.
Probably.
More than likely.
Who was I kidding. This was me. It would be my luck ten times over that all of them would be there. Even my older brother. Why not.
I didnโt have the same hair color or length anymore, but they would know who I was.
I could do this. I would do it. It was only a couple of hours.
I needed to get it together before he figured out just how much I didnโt want this to happen. So I said the first words that came to mind as I sat there. โYou look dapper.โ Which was an understatement, but I didnโt need to cake it on.
How did he respond? By reaching up to pull at the collar of his shirt, digging beneath the scarf he had on, tugging at it and muttering, โI feel like a dumbass.โ
I surprised myself when I laughed. โYou donโt look like one.โ My smile wasnโt forced or fake either. โYou look great,โ I told him.
What did he do? He rolled his eyes, but I didnโt miss the way his cheeks seemed to get a little pink. I didnโt know somebody was bashful.
โSo, GQ? Need me to navigate us or do you know how to get into the city?โ
He rolled his eyes again as he put the truck into drive. โI know how to get there.โ And if I thought he muttered, โUnfortunately,โ then I would have been right.
Neither one of us talked much over the next three hours.
Rip had put the radio on the oldies station, which had made me smile while I looked out the window because that was the last thing I would have figured heโd listen to. Iโd caught him humming along to a few songs, and that had made me smile even more. He wasnโt exactly trying to hide it. I played solitaire on my phone until I got nauseous, then played it again once the worst of it had passed.
But as the minutes went by, and then an hour, then another hour and another hourโฆ
My nausea got worse for reasons that had nothing to do with looking at a tiny screen in a moving car; all the breathing exercises in the world didnโt do anything. Neither did closing my eyes and telling myself that I needed to buck up and that I could handle whatever happened. All the optimism Iโd felt that morning had slowly melted away as the reality of where I was going became more and more present.
The truck wasnโt going to break down and end up making me miss the funeral.
I was going and it was happening.
But I was going to survive it, and that was the most important part.
We drove further along into the city and slowly I took in a lot of things that were familiar from when I had lived in San Antonio. The city had changed a lot over the last almost ten years but not enough to be completely different from where I had grown up.
I hadnโt planned on ever coming back.
I turned on the navigation app on my phone and put in the address that the lawyer had sent me. The app said we had twelve minutes left to travel. The service was supposed to start in twenty, so the arrival couldnโt have been any better.
I laced my fingers together and stuck them in between my thighs. I kind of wished I had paid more attention to Mr. Cooper when he recited an Our Father when he was riled up and needed to calm down.
โYou gonna be all right?โ Rip finally spoke up after hours of near silence.
I glanced at his profile for what might have been the twentieth time
โmaybe the fiftieth timeโsince weโd gotten into the car. The tightness at his jaw had only gotten more pronounced mile after mile. The lines at his eyes had deepened. His coloring was different. More flushed.
I wasnโt imagining the fact that he honestly looked like he was dreading this as much as I was.
But was it because he was with me and he didnโt want to be?
โYeah, sure,โ I told him honestly but watched him even closer. โAre you?โ
His fingers flexed on the steering wheel and his voice was rough when he answered simply, โYeah.โ
He was full of it. He really was dreading this.
Just like that, guilt made my stomach feel off all over again, for a reason that had nothing to do with me and what I wanted.
Maybe he didnโt handle funerals well. Maybe they made him feel terrible. How was I supposed to know? Iโd worked surrounded by men for almost the last decade, and over that time, Iโd learned that even if they didnโt want to do somethingโand I mean theyย reallyย didnโt want to do somethingโthey would if it involved or compromised their pride.
I wouldnโt force someone to do something they didnโt want to for my sake.
โYou can just drop me off and go back. I can get myself back to Houston,โ I offered, watching the lines along his mouth tell me just how uncomfortable he was.
Because I had put him into this situation.
The man beside me slid me a look so slow that a sloth would have managed to catch it. His eyebrows went up at about the same pace, and he locked those blazing blue-green eyes on my face and said in that hoarse voice of his, โNot doing that.โ
Pride was a bitch.
โIโm being serious, Rip.โ I gave him a smile that was tight and probably totally fake. โI can go by myself. It isnโt a big deal. Youโve done enough.โ
Iโd swear he rolled his eyes. โShut it, Luna.โ
He was such a liar. โYou look like youโve got the flu, boss.โ โIโm all right,โ he tried to insist.
I pressed my lips together and looked at the coloring on his face. โIs that why youโve been squeezing the steering wheel so hard your knuckles have been turning white for the last hour?โ I asked him, pressing my lips together again immediately afterward becauseโฆ well, it was the truth.
That hard jaw jerked from side to side, and he even shook his head a little. โLuna, Iโm good,โ he tried to tell me.
โI donโt want you to do something you donโt want to do.โ
He didnโt say a word for a moment, but I watched as his shoulders lost some of their tension and lowered unexpectedly. His voice was calm as he said, โI got no problem going to the funeral or the service. You can drop it.โ
I bit my lip and watched him, trying to decide whether I needed to keep arguing with him. It was obvious he didnโt want to be here. I wasnโt that blind or dumb. I also believed him when he said it wasnโt the funeral he had an issue with.
But then what else could bother Ripโฆ that wasnโt Mr. Cooper or Lydia? Or screwups at work?
Just as I opened my mouth to tell him to wait in the car, his fingers flexed on the steering wheel again, and he told me, โIโm doing this with you. I owe you. Itโs fine.โ
He owed me.
That was the only reason he was here. It wasnโt like I didnโt know that, and it wasnโt like that should hurt my feelings. Because it didnโt. What it did was make my heart clench up a little at the reminder that it was only a favorโฆ a favor I had earned through a lieโฆ for why he was with me right then, sitting not even two feet away in a dress shirt, pants, and a scarf with a coat between us. Looking more handsome than I ever could have imagined, if I did that kind of thing.
I kept my mouth shut and nodded, even if chances were he didnโt see me do it.
The navigation gave an instruction for an upcoming turn a quarter of a mile away, and he got into the lane a second before asking, โWhoโs funeral are we going to?โ
I squeezed my fingers together tighter. I owed him that much information, didnโt I? โMy grandmother.โ
His โOhโ was just about what I was expecting. What I didnโt expect was the way his question came out. Maybe it was the fact that he even asked the question in the first place. The last time Iโd been sick, he hadnโt asked if I was feeling better, heโd askedย you contagious still?ย So the โYou good?โ right then, caught me totally off guard, especially when it came out soft.
But I still lied. โIโm good.โ
I didnโt miss the way his eyes slid in my direction, his expression mirroring the tone of his voiceโthoughtful, different. โYou donโt look good.โ
He didnโt need to know that I didnโt feel good about this whole thing. So, I made a face. Then I shrugged the shoulder closest to him. โIโm
justโฆโ
Should I tell him?
Nah. I was greedy and enough of a liar to keep the bad to myself since we were so close already. Plus, he was being a liar about being fine coming with me, when it was clear he wasnโt.
โI havenโt been homeโฆ to San Antonio,โ I corrected myself, hating that I called this city home, โin a long time.โ
His hands flexed on the steering wheel once more, and I wasnโt sure I imagined that his voice seemed to get deeper, losing that almost sweet edge to it. โYou used to live here?โ
โYeah,โ I told him vaguely. โI grew up here.โ
Those teal-colored eyes came my way again, and a muscle in his cheek tensed. โWhenโd you move away?โ he grumbled the question. These were more personal questions than heโd asked me in the three years we had known each other.
I squeezed my fingers together. โA few months before my eighteenth birthday. So thatโs nine years.โ
He made another thoughtful face that had his eyebrows knitting together and that little dash between his eyebrows indenting, probably wondering why I would have moved away at that age. So when he asked, โYou got family here?โ I figured he was trying to figure out just that.
While I might have told him everything a week agoโฆ I didnโt want to do it then.
I looked forward and stopped myself from frowning. โMy grandmotherโs the only person I would still call family here, and I havenโt seen her in years. I just found out about the funeral on Monday right before I asked you to come with me.โ
His eyebrows did that thoughtful thing again, and some more guilt filled my stomach.
Should I tell him? At least warn him? If I was in his positionโฆ.
I should tell him. I had never been good at playing games. I had never liked other people playing games with me either. It was the right thing to do.
โRip?โ
โHmm?โ
I could do it.
โLook, I want you to know that I have people Iโm related to that might be at the funeral andโฆ things are complicated with themโฆ and I asked you to come with me because youโre the biggest person I know, and I donโt think anybody would willingly mess with you, and I donโt
think youโd let anyone mess with me too much if you were around, even ifโฆ you knowโฆ you didnโt think you owed me oneโฆ,โ I rambled, trying to think of my words and not sure what the hell else to say that wouldnโt be me admitting just how much my family sucked.
I squeezed my fingers again. โMy plan is to mind my own business, go to the funeral, and head back home. I just want you to know why weโre sitting by ourselves. I donโt want to talk to any of them if they are there,โ I told him, leaving out the part that warned him that half the people in the room might end up looking at us like they wanted to kill me.
There. He couldnโt say I hadnโt warned him. Thatโs what I was going to tell myself at least.
The last thing I expected was the smirk-like quirking way the corner of his mouth went to the side.
Then I waited until he let out a sigh that wasnโt unhappy exactly becauseโฆ because he was still doing that smirk thing.
โWhat?โ I asked him slowly.
He was still making that facial expression when he said, โI didnโt think you invited me to go somewhere because you didnโt want to go alone.โ
I pressed my lips together before grumbling in an almost-whisper, โBut you thought I wanted you to pretend to be my boyfriend.โ
That had that smirk of his going away real quick, and I definitely didnโt imagine the harshness in his voice when he replied, โNo, I didnโt.โ
I burst out freaking laughing, remembering,ย rememberingย him asking if we were going to pretend we were getting married.
Married. Me and Rip. Pssh.
Rip, on the other hand, decided to ignore me there in the seat beside him cracking up as he went back to the original topic. But nothing could hide the color on his cheeks or the way his spine went straighter after Iโd started laughing. โI figured there was something else you wanted, all right? If it was something important, I figured you wouldโve said something.โ
Andย thatย had me shutting my mouth. Then it had me biting my cheek.
The sigh out of his mouth went straight to my heart. โI didnโt, and I donโt give a fuck what you want, Luna. If I could do it, I would.โ
Because of the favor.
โIโm sorryโโ I started, feeling guilty all over again, because no matter how much he might deny it, I could still sense he was put off
about something with this entire situation. He was here because of his pride and that white elephant wasnโt going to let him admit anything.
โDonโt,โ he cut me off. โItโs not a big fucking deal. It ainโt even a little fucking deal.โ
Somehow I managed to hold back a sigh. I hoped he still thought that when we were heading back to Houston. I hoped he thought that when we were sitting in the funeral home to begin with.
โOkay.โ I still felt bad regardless of what he said.
Maybe to him, this wasnโt a big deal, but to me, it was, and regardless of why he was here, I really was grateful this was the case.
In no time at all, Rip was pulling his truck into a funeral home that looked faintly familiar. From what I could remember, my grandmother hadnโt lived too far from this side of town. Twice, I had ridden my bike
โsomething I had bought by slowly stealing small bills from my dadโs wallet over the course of six months when heโd pass out around the houseโto her house when I couldnโt stay at my house a minute longer. While she hadnโt lived on a nice side of town, it had still been way better than where we had lived.
Then again, at a lot of moments, Hell would have been a better place than where I had lived.
I swallowed down that memory and did the sign of the cross inside of myself. The lot was only about halfway filled, mostly with late-model cars. I didnโt see the beat-up Voyager my nightmares had memorized, but then again, I wasnโt expecting to.
Rip pulled the truck into a spot and parked it, his body shifting toward mine, all broad shoulders and huge chest contained within that beautiful dress shirt, before he asked the same question as before. โYou good?โ
No. โYeah,โ I lied, hearing it sound weak and full of shit even to me, but you had to fake it till you made it, or something like that.
He blinked, and at that point, he definitely knew I was full of it. But he watched me with those eyes for a moment longer before he turned off the ignition. โReady then?โ he asked, calling my bluff.
Now or never, Luna.
โReady,โ I agreed, giving him a cheerful smile that inside felt way more like a grimace.
I opened the door a second before he opened his and we both slammed them shut at about the same time.
I was fine. I was loved. I had everything and more than I had ever wanted. I was choosing to be happy for the rest of my life.
None of this was going home with me. I wouldnโt let it.
I swallowed as I made my feet take me one step closer and then another step closer toward the brick building.
My heart pounded in my chest, and honestly, part of me felt like if I would have really wanted to, I could have passed out. Passing out would have been a perfectly acceptable excuse for not going into the building.
But that wasnโt going to happen.
When Ripโs tall, beefy body caught up to walk beside me, closer and closer to the building, I forced myself to let out a deep breath I hadnโt realized Iโd been holding.
I could do this. There was nothing to be scared of. I had survived living in a house with these people for seventeen years.
Nothing was going to happen.
I didnโt have a single word to share with Rip as we approached the doors. He opened one and motioned me forward, his face grave but focused on mine when we made eye contact. I managed to give him a tight smile as I stepped inside.
The foyer was cool and open, and immediately I found a huge photo of my grandmother in a gaudy gold frame with her name on a plaque along with the years she had lived on it. I had seen the blown-up picture before. Sheโd gone to one of those Glamour Shots what had to have been twenty years ago at least, I guessedโฆ She looked the way I remembered her the best: with her blonde-brown hair that I shared with her styled into short waves, her face full and highlighted by the brightest pink lipstick Iโd ever seen. I had gotten my love of lipstick from her. She had never been afraid of some crazy fun color, and she never left home without it.
The thing that struck me the most though was that she wasnโt smiling. She had never been one to smile, but her lips were pressed together into something resembling one. She looked proud and even a little snobby. It was weird to think that this successful hair salon owner, a single mom who had raised two children on her own, would also be related to two sons who would grow up to be mean, violent men. I had overheard her once say she was ashamed of them. I had been too.
How could I have gone the last six years without seeing her?
She had been the only one to show me kindness, even if it hadnโt been warmth and comforting love, but it had been something.
If it hadnโt been for her offering to take them when Iโd finally gotten so desperate to leave, I might have ended up staying for longer in a place that was pretty close to Hell. And who knows what would have happened to my sisters if they had been stuck in that house for longer.
My grandmother had put the seed to leave in my head one day when we had gone over to her house to shower because our water had gotten turned off and told meย Go, Luna. Iโll take care of the kids. But you need to go.
I had gone when I couldnโt stay longerโฆ after doing the one and only thing that would ensure Lily and Thea and Kyra wouldnโt be stuck in that house any longer.
I wasnโt sure what would have happened if she wouldnโt have called me when she found out my dad was getting out of jail so that I would go get my sisters.
I had sent her a birthday and Christmas card every year since, but she had never sent me anything back or called when I had left her my phone number in one of the cards. It didnโt change anything though.
Grandma Gen, Iโm sorry. I did love you, and Iโm always going to be grateful for you helping me get out of here and taking care of the girls as long as you could.
Rip brushed against my arm as he stopped beside me. He was looking around the building, and if I wasnโt imagining it, he was back to being tense again. I could see him lingering on the portrait of my grandmother.
EUGENIA MILLER 1945 โ 2018
Seeing her last name wasโฆ weird. It hit me stronger than when I saw it on the end of my siblingsโ names. I hadnโt seen it on my own since I had decided I didnโt want a reminder of it.
A few people seemed to be hanging around a doorway to the left of the portrait, and I watched them. They didnโt look familiar though.
Now or never, right?
I could do this. I was going to. Then when this was done, I was going back toย myย house to see my sister, and then Iโd have a job to go to the following day.
Breathing in through my nose, I told Rip, โWe can go sit.โ
He glanced down at me, at six four compared to my five seven, and nodded. We walked forward, him beside me the entire time, as we headed toward the opened doorway. The man and the woman standing there both gave us a serious nod as we went by them. The room was filled with row after row of pews with a raised dais-like area at the front, where a casket lay. Opened. Like I had expected from the parking lot,
only the first three rows of pews were filled, and I couldnโt help but glance from the back of one head to another.
I stopped. With the back of my hand, I touched Ripleyโs loosely hanging fingers and whispered, โI want to go say bye. If you just want to wait back here, I wonโt be long.โ
His whispered response wasnโt hesitant at all. โIโll go.โ
I raised my hand and rubbed at my brow bone with it, not because he wanted to go with meโthat wasnโt it at allโbut just becauseโฆ that casket and the backs of those heads made me feel hesitant and bad at the same time.
I still nodded at Rip, not able to even muster up any kind of facial expression that told him I was okay. Because I wasnโt really feeling that okay. I wasnโt bad, but I wasnโt okay.
Ripley tipped his chin down at me, and it was that, that made me keep moving. We headed down the center aisle, where Rip walked to the side as I took a step up onto the raised area.
It was surreal, looking inside it, and it was more surrealโand honestly sadโto take it all in.
Thankfully, it was easy enough to ignore the gazes on the back of my head. Maybe I was imagining it, but I doubted it, and even then, I just couldnโt find it in me to care as I looked at a face that looked familiar but didnโt at the same time. It had been a long time.
A dozen thoughts went through my head, and I told my grandmother a few different things.
Thank you.
I hope you were okay. Things worked out for me. The girls are all doing great.
Lily is graduating at the top of her class. Theyโre all going to be in college.
Leaving was the best thing I could have done. Iโm sorry I didnโt reach out to you more.
It was only the sound of the doors being closed behind me that made me realize how long I had stood there gazing down at the woman with her eyes closed. The familiar but not familiar face. The first person who had taught me that doing the right thing wasnโt easy and would more than likely never be.
It was only then that I took a step back and gave my grandmotherโs face a bittersweet smile before I eventually turned around and
immediately spotted Ripley maybe four feet away, standing with his back to the wallโฆ
With his gaze on the pews.
I knew what I was doing as I glanced in the direction of what he was focused on. Some part of me knew that chances were I might not like what I saw. But I did it anyway.
It was my luck that the first face I landed on was the last face I would have ever wanted to see sitting there. Staring straight ahead. Face blank. Pretending like I wasnโt even there.
My dad looked twenty years older than he had the last time I had seen him. Like my grandmother, he looked familiar but didnโt. He looked like hell.
A lot could happen in a decade, I guessed.
The main one being that I didnโt feel any kind of terror going through me as I took in his face. My knees didnโt shake. Bile didnโt rise up in my throat.
If anything, this coolness flooded over my skin and through my veins as I took him in.
When my eyes flicked to the woman sitting beside him, I wasnโt sure what to think when I barely recognized her too. Her face was blank and dotted with sores. She was thinner than she had been before. A lot thinner. But if he looked twenty years older, she looked thirty years older. The years hadnโt been kind to her. Not that they ever had.
On the other side of her was a man I had grown up with but barely knew.
My cousin.
Of course they were here. All of themโminus my older brother and my uncle, who was still in jailโbut that wasnโt shocking at all. These were the people who were at the top of my list for those human beings I didnโt want to have anything to do with.
I didnโt let myself think as I pivoted where I was standing and went to Rip just as a man in a suit walked down the center aisle. I was looking at Rip as his attention went from the people in the pews that I didnโt want to look at for another second to me, then back to them. They finally went back to me just as I stopped a foot away, his jaw doing that tensing thing again.
Okay.
I nodded, and he blinked slowly enough to agree with me. We moved together down the aisle along the wall. My heart beat, beat, beat just faster than normal as we passed one aisle after another until I stopped at
one only a couple of rows before the exit. Sliding all the way in, I took a seat as the man in the suit stopped behind a pulpit set up just to the right of my grandmotherโs casket. Ripley took a seat directly beside me, the material of the jacket heโd put on as we walked toward the building brushing against my bare elbow. I had rolled up the sleeves of the black button-down shirt I had tucked into my skirt.
The body contact did nothing for me.
I could see the backs of their heads in the second row, but I made myself focus on the man who started talking about my grandmother in vague, vague words that I wouldnโt remember and that I had a feeling he had to have used generically for others all the time. My face went warm and stayed warm as I sat there, listening but only barely. This hum started buzzing around in my ears, but I did my best to ignore it and the way my heart seemed like it wanted to beat its way out of my chest.
Ripโs arm moved, brushing against my elbow even more. But I kept my gaze straight forward.
In less time than I ever would have expected, the man stopped talking and explained the instructions for the motorcade that would head to the cemetery where Grandmother Genie would be buried.
And still, my ears buzzed.
I didnโt mean to get up so fast, but I did, and luckily so did Rip. We were the first people out and the first ones walking toward the lot. The tension in Ripโs body was something I could have easily tasted. I felt it everywhere, even if I didnโt understand it and wasnโt in the mindset to as we walked out.
I knew something was wrong the second we got into his truck and he slammed the door shut, my name slithering out of his mouth, ending on a hard vowel. โLuna?โ
I was looking out the window at the side mirror. My cousin was out of the door, his head swinging around the parking lot. Probably looking for me. โYes?โ
His breathing had gotten loud, but it was steady; I had no problem hearing it. โIs your last name really Allen?โ
Shit.
This throbbing sensation instantly pierced right through my right eye socket and had me rubbing my lips together. My fingertips even went numb before I wincedโon the inside and the outside.
That was just about the last thing I would have ever,ย ever, expected him to ask.
Somehow,ย somehow, I managed to get the truth out, because there was no way I could lie. This wasnโt the kind of thing I could try and hide when there were a handful of people who knew the truth. โLegally, yes.โ The pain from my head got stronger before I admitted slowly, โBut it hasnโt always been.โ
Had he recognized my grandmotherโs last name? The one Iโd had for the first eighteen years of my life?
This was exactly why I had changed it. This was what Iโd been trying to avoid. Only a handful of peopleโincluding Mr. Cooperโknew that I hadnโt always been an Allen. No one else at the shop, not even the other guys who had worked there nearly as long as I had, knew about it. They had no reason to know that my siblings had a different one. I was the only one so far who hated it enough to not want to keep it. Lily had mentioned before that she wanted to change it too, but she was still too young.
Rip had closed his eyes at some point. His forehead became lined as he frowned. I could see that great, big chest inhale and exhale, and his voice was incredibly calm as he breathed out. โOkay.โ
Okay?
Did heโฆ know?
Had he read the paper and recognized the name and seen what my family looked like and pieced it all together?
It hadnโt been a huge bust. Dad had only gone to jail for three years. His brother was a different story. But while Iโd been growing up, everyone knew the Miller last name hadnโt been the greatest. Maybe they hadnโt known specifically about the meth, but they had known there was something, and no one ever did anything.
Until I did.
I couldnโt even find it in me to be ashamed if Rip knew that part of the truth I had tried so hard to get away from.
โIt used to be Miller.โ I tried to keep from making it seem like it was something I had tried to hide. Even though I had. โAccording to my birth certificate, my momโs last name had been Ramirez, but when I changed my name, I didnโt want to choose anything that any of them might think of. You know Mr. Cooperโs first name is Allen, and I thought Luna Allen sounded like a nice name.โ
The lines at his forehead and along his mouth got even deeper, and I couldnโt miss the way he shook his head slowly, thinking who knows what. The skin at his cheeks changed color and gotโฆ pink? Why?
โI changed it eight years ago,โ I explained to him, glancing out the window to look through the side mirror again. More people exited the building, but none of them looked familiar.
I wondered if my dad had already gotten to whatever car he was now rolling around in, without me noticing.
โMr. Cooper and Lydia drove me to the courthouse two days after my eighteenth birthday so I could start the process. They paid for the filing fees. The judge eventually granted my petition, andโฆ I changed it,โ I explained, still looking through the side mirror, the pain behind my eyeball still sharp. โNo one but my sisters, the Coopers, and now you, know I changed it.โ
The breath Rip let out was low and long, and the leather creaked as he shifted around.
I was a coward and didnโt want to look at him. โDid you see it on the news?โ
He didnโt respond. The leather just creaked more, and the next sigh he let out was even louder than the last one. The deepest one I had probably ever heard from him.
Out of the side mirror, I watched a hearse pull around to the front of the building and a police officer appearing out of nowhere on a motorcycle.
It was time to go.
To go and see my dad, whose smallest offense had been selling drugs. The man who I would have forgiven for doing that, if heโd just been a decent person. If heโd just beenโฆ different.
โIf you donโt want to go to the burial, I understand,โ I found myself telling Rip as I fought the urge to scrub my face with the palm of my hand.
There was another sighโnot as deep but still offโand then he said, โWe can go.โ The words had barely come out of his mouth when he started the truck and then put it into drive.
I could feel the wheels in his head turning. Could sense his tension. I didnโt like it.
Did he thinkโฆ
โIโm notโฆ like them,โ I told him, just in case he was thinking that I was. I was reliable. I had never actually liedย toย him before. I hadnโt stolen a single thing in years, and even then the stealing I had done was subjective. At least I thought so. โIโve never done a single drug in my life. I rarely drink. I would never do anything to hurt anyone at the shop or anywhere else, even if they deserved it.โ
His scoff almost made me jump. His fingers flexed on the steering wheel for what might have been the hundredth time since heโd picked me up. โThatโs not what Iโm thinking.โ
I held my breath and kept on looking at him and his facial features, but they didnโt give a single thing away. โItโs not?โ
Rip scoffed again, shaking his head while his attention was on the other side of the windshield. โYouโre a good girl. Everybody knows that.โ He paused and a muscle in his cheek twitched.
โNobodyโs fucking perfect, Luna, but I know a good girlโa good personโwhen I see one.โ His breath was more of a sigh. โAnd you are. Iโm not about to start a fucking tally with you about the shit weโve done in the past. I know youโre not likeโฆ them in there.โ
My nose tingled, and I didnโtโฆ I didnโt want to talk about those things Iโd done. โI havenโt seen them since I left when I was seventeen,โ I rushed out. โI told you, Iโm notโฆ itโs complicated. We donโtโฆ like each other.โ
A line had somehow formed while weโd been talking, following the hearse that had just driven off. Rip squeezed the truck in between a Chevy Impala and a small Toyota pickup. I looked behind me to make sure that it wasnโt anyone I knew in the truck.
I wouldnโt put it past the cowards I called my family members to do something stupid like accidentally run a light or look down.ย Thatโsย who and what I was related to.
Crap.ย What the hell had I been thinking? I had no business being here.
Yes, you do, Luna. You have every right. You think they were close to Grandma Genie? You think theyโd be here if there wasnโt some other motive? They never do anything unless they can get something out of it.
People donโt change.ย Well. Most donโt.
โIโm sorry I didnโt tell you,โ I told him. โI guess Iโd hoped that they wouldnโt come.โ
He didnโt say anything. He just drove, and as the silence stretched, all I could do was stay where I was and, after a moment, look out the window. The ache behind my eyeball got worse as we drove on.
We pulled into the cemetery and parked after a moment. I held my breath as we got out of the truck and walked in the direction of where two heart-shaped sprays of flowers were located. Rip walked beside me the whole time, the tension still just pouring directly off him. It said something about how much I distrusted the people I was related to that I
kept glancing over my shoulder to make sure none of them were following us.
I was pretty sure if I looked up the Miller family history, the word โbackstabbingโ had to have been stemmed from an ancestor somewhere down the line.
Luckily, I didnโt see any of them, at least not directly behind us. As we stopped at the gravesite, a hole that seemed too small for a casket, I kept my head aimed down, but I didnโt close my eyes.
Ripโs arm brushed my elbow as he settled in so close beside me I could feel the heat of his body. It wasnโt unwelcome. The size of him, the knowledge that he more than likely wouldnโt let anyone physically hurt me, even if he was unhappy about all of thisโincluding finding out I was related to a felonโmade me feel better. It was too warm for my long-sleeved shirt, and I could only imagine how hot he had to be in his jacket and dress shirt, but he didnโt complain or act in any way like it bothered him.
I had a feeling it was him there that kept me from walking off as I watched the three people I hadnโt seen in years approach slowly.
My sistersโ mom didnโt look at me.
But my cousin was staring. Beside him, the man who was half responsible for my existence acted like I was invisible.
I stood there and watched them both.
I wished that later on I could have looked back on that moment and been the bigger person. That I could and would have looked away from them while the chaplain or whatever he was said some more generic words about a woman he had more than likely never met. I wished I could have let myself focus on Grandma Genie and the few memories I had of her.
But I didnโt do anything like that.
As the man went on, I stood there and took turns staring at my cousin and the man that my birth certificate said was my father.
My cousin basically snarled.
My dad looked right through me with those green eyes I saw every time I looked in the mirror.
Ripโs arm brushed mine a few times, but I was too caught up in my own moment to worry about how bored he must be. Or how disappointed he might be in me for being related to these people. There were a million other things that he might have been thinking, and none of them were good.
It was only when the chaplain stopped speaking and the thirty other people around us approached the casket with mementos that I snapped out of it and took a step forward to drop the small picture of my sisters and me that Iโd put in my purse the day before in the hole.
I was ready to leave, and it had nothing to do with the people on the other side of the casket.
I just wanted to go back home to the place that made me feel safe, to the people who made me feel loved, to the life that made me happyโthat I swore from now on would only make me happier.
Turning to face Rip, who it seemed had his entire attention focused on me, I met his eyes and nodded.
He nodded back, his gaze flicking behind me for a beat, and we headed back toward his truck, avoiding old headstones and flowers.
Fortunately, I hadnโt been able to relax or let my guard down, because I heard the hurried steps coming and was partially expecting the hand that wrapped around my wrist, the holdย tight and hurtful and mean, a second before it yanked at me.
Or tried to.
Because I didnโt let that happen. Iโd spent years with Lenny at the gym so Iโd know how to defend myself. That was how weโd met. She had taught a self-defense course Iโd taken. Then kept on teaching me things after it ended. So I didnโt hold back when I threw my elbow as hard as I could backward, and in a move that would have made her proud, I kicked my right leg out, feeling it connect with a left leg. The second the person behind me stumbled forward, I grabbed their right arm and extended it across my body into a straight armbar positionโa submission move that hyperextended their elbowโhis elbow, if you wanted to be specific, because I knew who it was.
It was the same move that Lenny and I had worked on time and time and time again, so many times, I had gotten sick and tired of doing it. She had done it to meย lightlyย before and it had hurt for days. It had been totally worth it, I guessed, because instinct had justโฆ kicked in, like she had said it would.
โWhat the fuck!โ the voice I didnโt recognize anymore hissed.
โDonโt touch me,โ I snapped at my cousin as I took in his face, tightening my grip even harder, knowing I was hurting him and not giving a single crap.
I had seen Rip out of my peripheral vision jerk to a stop and turn around, but I had this.
I had always had this. Even when I was younger. Because maybe I was an Allen now, but I had been a Miller, and being a girl, being younger, didnโt mean anything. I had gotten into fights with every single Miller kid around my age growing up, even some that werenโt my age. They were all bullies and jerks. Every single one of them.
This one specifically had been the first one who had knocked me around. I still had a tiny scar on my forehead from one of those times. As I looked at his own cheek, I could see the one I had given him when Iโd been fourteen and had punched him right in the cheekbone as hard as I possibly could.
โPut your hands on me again, and I will break your hand,โ I told him, dead serious.
His face, thin and oval, was pinched and in pain as he tried jerking his arm away, but there was no way he could. โLet me go, you fucking bitch.โ
I wasnโt him, I reminded myself as I did finally let go, shoving him away at the same time so that the man who was only a few inches taller than me, stumbled back.
He looked terrible too. I could see the staining at his teeth, the gauntness at his cheeks, and the discoloration in his eyes.
This was what Iโd avoided. This was what my sisters had missed. Thank God.ย Thank God.
I took a step back and stopped only when I bumped into the hard mass of a body that belonged to Ripley. His hands didnโt touch me. He didnโt do anything but stand there.
Hopefully he was at least shooting my cousin that face that I knew damn well made the guys at the shop turn around and walk away.
โI only came here for Grandma Genie,โ I told my cousin as calmly as I could, even though I didnโt feel all that calm. โJust leave me alone.โ
โLeave you alone?โ my cousin snarled as he clutched his arm. โYou came here. You knew what the fuck you were doing. We told you not to come back.โ
He was right.
It had been a mutual decision in a way.
But it didnโt change the fact that he could have let me walk away.
โI came for the funeral. I donโt want any trouble,โ I tried to tell him, but he was already shaking his head before Iโd even finished the first sentence. โIโm never going to come back after this.โ I almost added โbelieve meโ to the end, but I knew it would be pointless.
Honestly, I had an idea what he was going to say before he said it, and my cousin had never been the brightest or most creative crayon in the box. โYou fucking bitchโโ
My hand formed into a fist, ready.
But I felt it then. The hands on my shoulders.
I heard it then. The deep grumble from the man behind me.
Then I caught onto everything that came out of Ripโs mouth, the rumbling rattle of each word etching themselves into me for the rest of my life.
โYou can shut your fucking mouth.โ
Then I held my breath again as I took in the calm within Ripleyโs voice.
What I witnessed though was the way my cousin opened his mouth to say something, then he closed it. He made a face that said he didnโt want to do that, but he had, and he took a step back. And another step back, the snarl on his face growing as he backed further and further away.
Keeping his mouth shut the whole time.
It wasnโt until he was at least twenty feet away that the hands on my shoulders fell off them.
Only then did Rip take a step back.
By the time I turned around to look at the bodyguard Iโd had to use my one and only favor on, his hands were at the scarf around his neck.
He was tightening it for some reason.
His cheeks were more flushed than any other time I had seen, and the tendons in his hands popped with restraint.
And his gazeโฆ it had been on the ground, his lips thin.
I had made it. I was fine. I was loved. I had a home. I had everything I wanted and needed and more.
Yet knowing all that didnโt stop my body from breaking into a shiver.
Maybe the adrenaline had disappeared and left me feeling shocked at the sight of what had happened to the people who I shared genes with me. Maybe it was at the reminder of what I had left. Of how desperate they had made me feel that Iโd left their house at seventeen years old, not knowing what I was going to do, not knowing where I would live. Of how scared I had beenย after. Of how mad.
But mostly, maybe I just felt overwhelmed at how empty I had felt for so long. Of how much I had wanted things to be different. Of how much I had suffered from yearning for things that I had never been given.
It could have been any of those things and all of those things.
Iโd felt lonely on and off for so long, the reminder that my little sister was finally leaving me soon hit me like a wrecking ball straight in the chest.
I wanted love, and even after all these years, I had found it, but I hadnโt.
I was almost twenty-seven years old and I was still looking. I hadnโt stopped wanting it after all this time. Here I was, not able to hug my sister because I was worried I wouldnโt recover if she didnโt let me. Because I had two other sisters who had pushed me away out of anger years ago, and I had never been able to get over it. This was who Iโd become because of them.
I hated them.
I stood there, and all I could do was suck in a breath that sounded almost like a gasp.
I had never in my life done anything malicious just for the sake of being an asshole. I had sacrificed for my sisters. I had busted my ass for us, day after day. I had tried to be a good, decent person because that was who I wanted to be.
And here were these people who had treated me like total shit my entire childhood, trying to do the same thing after so long.
I hated them. I hated them so much I couldnโt catch my damn breath.
I couldnโt catch my own freaking breath because of them.
If that wasnโt bad enough, I hated myself too for letting my stupid cousin get to me now.
I didnโt see Ripโs eyes as they sliced over me, and I didnโt watch as that hardened, rough expression turned into one that was still hard but surprised. I would never see the way his head reared back, his chin tipped down, and his nostrils flared.
โLunaโฆโ
I grit my teeth as tears bubbled up into my eyes all of a sudden, but I made myself look up at him. I wasnโt ashamed. I wasnโt ashamed about any of this. All it did was piss me off.
I was choosing to be happy. I was choosing to be happy every day for the rest of my life, and nothing and nobody was going to take that away from me. No freaking way.
But why couldnโt things have been different?
โYou all right?โ he asked, still taking his time with his words, his expression seeming like this mix of horrified and shocked as he watched me.
โYes.โ I bit my cheek and then shook my head immediately afterward. โNo.โ
Those eyes sliced to somewhere behind me for a split second before returning to my face. That foreign expression disappearing into that mean-mugginโ Rip face that was my favorite. His chest expanded with a big breath, and he was totally serious as he asked, โWant me to go whoop his ass?โ
โYeah.โ
One of his big feet moved.
โBut donโt.โ I reached up to wipe at my eyes with the back of my hand, thankful Iโd worn waterproof mascara and put a setting spray on my face that morning just in case. I knew better than to let this get to me.ย I knew better.ย I was better.
โLunaโฆ.โ
I wiped under my eyes with my index finger and felt a shudder go right through me, violent and uncomfortable, starting at my shoulders and making its way down, and justโฆ sucking. Just sucking, sucking,ย sucking. Had it really been that much to ask for, for things to be just a little bit different? To just come to a funeral and get through it without a reminder of what I had grown up around and tried my best to move on from?
I knew I had lost my damn mind when I asked him in a voice that wasnโt totally steady, โGive me a minute would you?โ
He didnโt even think about it. โSure.โ I licked my lips.
When I had been a teenager, I had wondered what things would have been like if my mom hadnโt died giving birth to me. If she would have been a better mother than the only one I had grown up knowing. I wondered if maybe our dad would have been different.
But as I got older, I realized that things might have been worse.
I had to accept I would never know how differently things might have been.
All I could do was stand there and slow my breathing, inhale and exhale.
โJust thirty more seconds,โ I told him, quietly, trying to ignore the ache in my chest.
But he didnโt listen. He moved, and before I knew it, something warm and heavy fell over my shoulders and arms.
What had to be his hands draped themselves on my shoulders, over what had to be his jacket, and slid down over my arms, his hands
molding themselves loosely over my muscles and bones. The skin on his palms and fingers eventually landed on my wrists. He was warm. Those palms kept moving downward until they were cupping my hands. His fingers lingered there. Holding them there.
Then they dropped away.
I always knew he was really a decent man.
That was when I forced myself to take a step back. To breathe. There at the cemetery, with Ripleyโs jacket on my shoulders, I sniffled and wiped under my eyes with my finger one more time, looking at everything and nothing at the same time.
It wasnโt so hard to glance up at Rip as I wiped at my eyes again. His face was back to that cool, detached expression. Not mean. Not surprised. Justโฆ cool.
โThank you,โ I told him in a voice I was honestly proud of. โCan we go now?โ
It was only his nostrils flaring that said something was going through that brain of his because his features didnโt tell any other story.
The only words we shared over the next three hours were when he pulled up to a gas station and asked if I wanted to get something quick from the fast food inside, but that was it.
When he pulled up to my house after all thatโmy phone telling me I had an hour until Lily got homeโI reached over and put my hand over his where it sat on the steering wheel. We hadnโt done more than accidentally brush fingers in years, and here, twice in a day, we had done more than that. Weird how things like that worked.
โThank you, Rip.โ I met those blue-green eyes and told him, โMy sister is graduating on Saturday. If youโd like to come over after six, youโre more than welcome to. Weโll have food and drinks and stuff.โ
I gave it a squeeze, just one, and then pulled away.
I opened the door and slid out. Then I closed the door, took a step onto the curb and lifted my hand.
He didnโt wave back.
But he waited until Iโd opened my front door before he drove off.
I went to my room, changed out of my clothes andย then, then, I cried. For Grandma Genie.
For my sisters.
For the mom I had never met.
For the past, the present, and the future. But mostly for myself.