Page 31 of Resist


Font Size:  

“Garrett, we will talk. I love you.”

I hung up and trudged into the building. The women in here counted on me to help them and right now I didn’t know how to help my own brother.

Chapter Eight

I didn’t have the energy to make dinner or even order pizza. Greer texted that she had another late night at the Capitol and was going to spend what was left of it with Preston.

I couldn’t blame her. If I’d had someone, I’d do the same thing.

I made it to the top floor, kicked off my shoes, and flopped onto the couch. I extended my legs to the end of the cushions, massaging the underside of my calf.

Garrett ignored my calls and my texts all days. I tried twice before I left the office, but his voicemail was full.

I closed my eyes for a second and remembered the brother he used to be. He was three minutes younger. Three full minutes that I used to hold over his head. It was hard to think about him that way anymore. All I could see was the illness. And I hated myself for it. There was more to him than that, but he couldn’t get out of his own way. He wouldn’t accept help. He wouldn’t accept his diagnosis. That’s what it always came back to. He rejected that he was bi-polar and manic. Until he was willing to stick with treatment the vicious cycle would never end.

For tonight he was safe. He was on one of his peaks. He had something he looked forward to. He had an outlet for his art. He had friends. It was what was coming next that worried me.

I peeled myself off the couch to pour a glass of wine.

The bottle glugged as the crimson liquid filled the oversized glasses Greer had bought. I wandered to the deck and stooped to turn on the lights.

The first sob came from my shoulders, but the next one from my stomach.

I tried to simultaneously drink the wine while I cried. It was a pathetic attempt. I just needed something.

I’d never experienced loneliness like I had here. The isolation was unbearable tonight. I dabbed at my tears and tried to take a steady breath. I wanted more wine and walked back to the kitchen.

Garrett made me feel helpless. Part of me resented that about him. He made me unable to act. Kept me from being able to help. Prevented me from doing what he needed. It was twisted and unbearable.

He wasn’t thinking about how he affected Mom or me. We were an afterthought. That part always hurt. He wasn’t my afterthought. But maybe this was the consequence for moving so far away. This was his way of shoving my choices in my face. I couldn’t drive to him. I couldn’t stop him. And we both knew it.

I jumped when I heard my phone ring. I rushed to answer, praying Garrett had finally changed his mind, or at least was ready to talk about his new life plans. I only needed to catch him in a moment of clarity in order to reach him. He would listen to me if only I could tap into the sliver of reason I knew he carried with him. It was still there. He was still there.

“Garrett?”

I jerked the phone to my ear without bothering to check the number. I felt frantic.

“No, it’s Vaughn.”

My chest tightened. “Vaughn? Oh.”

Disappointment crested into confusion. I didn’t know what to say. It had been a week since I had made my one attempt to call him. His call was out of place.

“I guess you were expecting someone else.” His voice had a different weight to it, but I had been crying and nothing sounded the same.

“M-my brother, actually.”

“Everything all right?” he asked.

Nothing was all right. It hadn’t been for a long time. I didn’t think I could hold it together any longer. I was too upset about Garrett to sort through why Vaughn had called at this particular time.

“N-no,” I whispered. “Maybe we could talk another time.”

Whatever the instant connection I had felt to him was, it had unraveled over a week of silence. It couldn’t have meant the same to him as it did to me or I would have heard from him. I knew that much about men.

“Are you home?” he asked.

“Yes.”

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like