I'm a quick study and a firm believer that the best defense is a good offense, so at six o'clock, I shut off the lights, lock the door and step out to the street in front of my shop. If I still smoked, I'd have gone through a pack but since I don't have anything to occupy my hands, I just stretch my fingers, not letting them ball into fists the way they want to.
At six ten, I lean against the wall and wait. Any second now. Any second and the prick can say whatever the fuck he has to say without a glass barrier between us.
At six twenty, I realize they aren't coming. They've probably taken a different route just to avoid the crazy waffle maker.
At six thirty, I slip on my helmet and ride to my empty house. The silence is deafening as I lock the front door behind me. It's more depressing than it seemed the day before. Thinking back on the last time I laughed in that place, I realize it was four months ago when Zach and Ryan were here. The night I almost destroyed their relationship.
It's Friday night and I'm opening up early the next morning so I don't bother turning on the TV or attempting to get off. I just lay in bed and stare at the same ceiling my parents both stared at when they took their dying breaths.
My mom died of cancer when I was twelve. I hated watching her go but Dad insisted we be the ones to take care of her. My dad had a stroke a few years ago and spent his final month lying in that room with the son he never liked and a hospice nurse to help the time pass.
Is that what I'm doing? Just passing time until my body or my mind finally gives up.
~**~
I hit the snooze button for the first time since high school. Always an early riser, I never sleep past six so when I crack an eyelid and see it's seven fifteen, I groan. After a quick shower to wake up, I step into a pair of old jeans and grab the first t-shirt my fingers touch then run down the steps. The bike needs gas so I get in my truck instead and drive the six miles to work.
Having become more of a slave to technology than I'd like to admit, I'm walking and texting Allen when I hear a tiny voice.
"Hi."
Startled, I look up and see my little duck huddled in the shadows behind my cart. He's curled in a tiny ball against the generator and looks like hell.
"Hey, kid." I kneel down in front of him. "What are you doing here?"
Tears flood his eyes as he looks away. "I didn't know where else to go."
In the dim light, I couldn't see his battered face but when I brush his hair aside and see a line of caked blood that crosses from the middle of his scalp to his cheek bone, I want to kill someone. "Did that prick do this to you?"
He won't look at me. By the way he flinches, I know he's scared. I take a deep breath and lean back on my haunches. "We should go to the police. I'll take you."
"No." He jumps up and backs away, ready to bolt. "I'm sorry I came here. I'm fine."
The way he's limping pisses me off even more but I force a steady voice. "Okay, okay. No cops." I slowly reach forward and hold my hand out to him, praying he'll take it.
With a tentative step, he walks to me and lets me guide him into the trailer that serves as my shop.
After a few awkward minutes of us just watching each other, I can't stay silent.
"He own you?" I ask, not liking the implications but knowing I'm on shaky ground if I try to save this kid from a Dom that isn't ready to give him up.
YOU ARE READING
Choosing Happy
RomanceSteve is living in Portland with many regrets. He has alienated the people he cares most about by making bad choices that continue to haunt him. When he meets a kid that's in a bad relationship and needs some help, Steve reluctantly offers it, knowi...