Page 31 of The Quiet Between

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“Yeah.” He gave me a small, understanding smile. “Want to come by tonight? I can drive you.”

“Okay,” I said, nodding. “I’ll come with you.”

“I’ve got to run,” he said, already turning away—always in a hurry. “I’ll find you here tonight.”

“Yeah, see you then.”

After that, I was swamped with patients again. Later, I had to head down to the administrative office to assist a patient who’d requested a consultation about costs, but none of the staff had arrived yet. They were often overwhelmed and understaffed, so I sometimes had to track them down myself.

I took the stairs down one floor and jogged toward the office, knowing I only had a few minutes to spare. Passing through the lobby, I had to weave between a crowd of patients, their families, doctors, nurses, and hospital staff. I slipped into a small gap in the throng but accidentally bumped into a woman, who shot me a fierce glare. I mumbled an apology and kept moving.

Then the crowd parted.

And what I saw in front of me stopped my heart for a beat.

It was Cameron.

A woman stood close to him, arms linked around his waist as she looked up at him.

I knew without a doubt it was Evie Moore.

Chapter Nine

Cameron

Isat alone in my apartment, slouched on the sofa with a glass of whiskey in one hand and a bottle of peppermint oil in the other. I flipped the bottle between my fingers, watching it spin slowly.

Just a small bottle of oil.

Unremarkable, yet it carried the weight of a thousand memories.

The kind that didn’t shout but lingered quietly.

Desperation.

It took hold of my heart and clouded my judgment.

I made a choice in the grip of it when, one day, out of nowhere, a glimpse of happiness appeared. And so, I reached for it, both hands open, telling myself chances like that didn’t come twice.

But I realized too late that nothing good ever came from a decision made in desperation.

It only bred poison, seeping everywhere and causing pain for everyone involved.

Because my desperation caused me to overlook what truly mattered.

And I forgot.

Somewhere along the line, I stopped seeing it.

Stopped seeing her.

The way she uniquely showed her love.

How she kissed the corner of my eye, my cheek, my jaw, my lips whenever I said I loved her, as if she were whispering her love softly into my skin.

How her fingertips sought mine in silence, needing a touch only I could give to quiet the noise inside her mind.

How she kept a bottle of peppermint oil close at hand, ready for the moments when my headache struck.