Page 1 of In the Gray


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PROLOGUE

I pull onto the highway and roll all the windows down, turning the radio up as my foot presses heavier on the gas pedal. Bush’s “Glycerine” begins to take over my jumbled thoughts, and I stick my arm out the driver’s side window. My fingers spread, allowing the wind to flow through them, my hand weightless as it soars through the air. Spring is taking its time stepping aside for summer, and there’s a chill in the night air, but I welcome its bite on my skin.

This has been my therapy since I started driving. Or maybe it began long before that, when I was a little girl riding in the back of my daddy’s Camaro with the T-top down. Those are some of my best childhood memories—traveling down those country backroads, a slight drop in my stomach as he sped over the tiny hills. In those moments, I was truly happy.

Even now, there’s something so freeing about a long drive with the windows down and music up. It makes me feel like I can go anywhere, be anyone.

If only that were true. It’s not that easy to escape our lives. Your troubles will always find you, no matter where you go. A person can’t change who they are any more than a zebra can change its stripes. Sure, anyone can better themselves, even make a whole new life somewhere different. But they’ll still be the same at their core; they’ve merely painted over their markings.

There’s a simple fact of life I’ve come to accept. I’m damaged goods—fundamentally broken in ways that prevent me from living the life I dreamed of as a girl. There’s no point in trying to run from it or pretending to be someone I’m not.

I own my darkness—I’ve shaped it until it fit me like a damn glove.

Still, with the open road in front of me and fresh air blowing around me, I almost feel unburdened. Where I’d been today and the stories I heard almost forgotten. At this point in life, I’ve developed a thick skin. There isn’t much that can penetrate my shell. But talking with Ashland, hearing the details of what that bastard put her through, nearly wrecked me.

As a writer, I always strive to tell the ugly stories—the ones people tend to avoid or ignore. Everyone loves a story with a happy ending, and most writers will twist truths and bend facts until everything is tied into a nice little bow. Not me. My writing always reflects the truth. And the truth is, life isn’t all rainbows and butterflies. There isn’t a clean beginning and ending to every story. Instead of something being black or white, it’s a mixture of both, forming a nice shade of gray.

That’s the way most of us live—in the gray.

When I first heard about Ashland Martin, I knew I wanted to tell her story. If it were left up to the masses, they’d paint her as a villain. After all, she is a murderer. She’d gone into the home of Jim Engels and brutally killed him. Most wouldn’t have even stopped to ask why this young woman would commit such a horrendous act because they don’t care.

I do.

I know what kind of a man he was—the kind of things he was capable of. My sister was one of his victims. She suffered in silence for years because of what he did to her. For that alone, I would’ve killed him myself. Even if I didn’t know the kind of monster he’d been, I would’ve been drawn to Ashland’s story.

After the things I learned though, I’m not sure I can go through with it. There’s only one story I’m too afraid to tell: my own. And Ashland’s words today—the thoughts, feelings, and experiences that led her to that fateful night—hit way too close to home. Her pain mirrored my own as she recounted the level of fear she felt knowing someone she loved and trusted could hurt her in such a way. It felt as if I were interviewing the eighteen-year-old-version of myself as she described her confusion and how she coped by separating the man who hurt her from the man she cared for.

My entire face begins to tingle as tears prick my eyes, my throat swollen and chest tight as they fall. It isn’t often I allow myself to shed tears for the naive and trusting girl I used to be. I don’t dwell on what was or could’ve been. Doing so won’t change anything. It won’t take away the pain he caused or the scars he left behind. Besides, maybe those marks on my soul aren’t such a terrible thing. They’ve certainly made me stronger, wiser. My refusal to let people in would probably be considered more of a weakness than a strength though.

The ringing of my cellphone replaces the calming melody of the music, and I pull my hand back inside the car, swiping it across my cheeks to dry my face. My eyes leave the road briefly to see who’s calling, and I groan when I see Spencer’s name across the screen.

Any normal, sane person would’ve given up on me a long time ago. Spencer is relentless and persistent in his quest to break past my guarded exterior. He’s the person I ended up revealing my darkest secret to, one of my closest friends. The man knows me better than most—he knows more than most, and he still wants to be in my life.

Knowing he’ll only keep calling if I ignore him, I take a deep breath and roll up the windows, hitting answer on the Bluetooth.

“Why are you such a pain in my ass?”

Spencer only laughs in response to my harsh greeting, his deep bellow eliciting goosebumps on my skin as it surrounds me. Guilt claws at my gut. It isn’t right for my body to have this type of physical reaction to my best friend’s boyfriend. But he had almost been mine. If things were different—if I were different—he would be.

“Because you give me no choice.” His voice is intense and scolding, but there’s a playfulness behind it. “You promised you’d call me after you left the institution. I was starting to worry about you.”

“Oh, Jesus.” My words don’t come out nearly as annoyed as I intend, which probably has something to do with my traitorous lips curving into a smile. Though I tell him all the time how much I hate his constant worrying over me, it’s a lie. What upsets me is the way his concern makes me feel so loved and protected. I don’t need or want his protection. I don’t deserve his love. “Calm down, I’m fine. The interview just ran a little longer than expected.”

“Does that mean it went well? Are you still planning to write a piece on her story?”

He isn’t even trying to hide his apprehension. When I told him my plan to pitch the story to my editor at the paper, he made it perfectly clear he didn’t want me to pursue this. More of his unsolicited consideration for my well-being. Which only made me more determined to follow through with it.

Perhaps he’s right to be concerned this time. I’m not even sure I have the balls to finish what I started now that I know it’s going to lead me down a dark path of self-exploration. I set out to write her story, wanting to merely shine a light on the many issues of rape culture in this country—to help women who are suffering in silence. But Ashland’s story goes so much deeper than that. Especially for me.

And that’s why I need to tell it.

I clear my throat and wet my dry lips, griping the steering wheel a bit tighter to steady my shaky hands. “Nope. I’m going to write a whole damn book.”

1

Lori

8 Months Ago

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