Page 111 of Dirty Ink


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Mason

Then…

It had to be something spectacular. And unique. And sweet. And dazzling. And brilliant and sexy and intriguing. It had to be theatrical and it had to be from the deepest depths of my heart. And funny. And irresistible. And like nothing at all ever before.

It had to be like Rachel.

“Fuck!” I growled, balling up another sheet of paper and hurling it over the edge of the balcony at Rachel’s apartment. “Fuck, fuck, fucker, fuck me, goddamn fuck, fuck.”

The chair I’d been leaning back on crashed to the concrete. I pushed myself up, tossed the notepad on the little glass patio table, and stalked back inside. At the mirror in the living room, I stared at my reflection and tried to speak from the heart.

“Rachel,” I said, an alright start, I supposed, “I know it’s only been…damn, I don’t even know how long it’s been.”

I tugged at my hair and shook my head, muttering, “It doesn’t matter, it doesn’t matter. She’s not going to say ‘yes’ because you got the dates right. Keep going.”

Breathing in deeply, I tried to calm my thrashing heart and tried again.

“Look, I know it’s been short, our time together, but when you know, you know, you know?”

I bellowed at the ceiling like a maniac and stormed toward the kitchen. “When you know, you know, you know?” What kind of bullshite was that, you feckin’ eejit? The refrigerator door clanging noisily against the wall as I pulled it open. I grabbed a beer and popped it roughly on the edge of the marble island. I downed half of it before gasping at the air.

I needed to calm down, I told myself, palms flat on the counter, back heaving as my head dropped. I squeezed my eyes shut. A million different possibilities shifted through my head like sandstorms. Bits and pieces. Flashes that stung my eyes. Do I take her to a nice restaurant? Too typical. Do I stand up on a table in a nice restaurant? Rachel might like that. But it didn’t scream “romance”, screaming my proposal to her as I was dragged away by security. But maybe that was the exact kind of romance that Rachel would love. She’d probably hold an old lady at knifepoint just to get dragged away with me. We’d fuck in the back of the cop car. Red and blue lights whirling. Rocking on the strip. Batons banging against the plastic divider as the Vegas lights bathed her bare tits before my mouth did…

I pressed the ice-cold beer bottle to my forehead. Fuck, I loved that woman. Loved her more than anything. Loved her more than I thought was possible. Like I was mad, feverish, sick. Loved her like she was the impossible made possible, the unreal, real, the dream, a reality. Loved her like she alone was worth loving.

At first I was going to ignore my phone. I heard it ring from the bedroom. Buried somewhere under the sex-stained sheets. I had more important things to do before Rachel got back from her performance later that night. Proposing marriage to the woman you just met took hard work, you know? But I decided in the end to at least check it in case it was Rachel.

Maybe the rest of the show got food poisoning and the show was cancelled.

Maybe there was a pipe burst in the theatre and the show was cancelled.

Maybe the electricity on the Strip had gone out and the show was cancelled.

Maybe a tornado was heading for the city and the show was cancelled.

Maybe Rachel couldn’t stand to be apart from me the way I couldn’t stand to be apart from her and had demanded that the show be cancelled right then and there with a stomp of her little foot and a sexy pout.

I almost tossed the phone back onto the bed when I saw the Dublin area code. But I saw the name as I was extending my hand, fingers ready to unfurl. My palm moved slowly back toward me. I stared down at my phone as it continued to ring. Maybe I already knew then. Maybe I already knew what would have been impossible to already know.

“Hello?” I answered.

“Mr Donovan?”

“Yes.”

I didn’t want to say “yes”. It was the last thing in the world I wanted to say. I wanted to lie. To say no. To hang up the phone and throw it across the room and run to Rachel where everything was alright, where everything would always be alright.

“Mr Donovan,” the woman’s voice came, “I’m calling because we’ve admitted your nan, Nancy. She came complaining of chest pains and…”

The rest of the words blurred and faded. Sentences became indistinguishable from one another. Technical terms were no different in my ears from kind, gentle words of encouragement. The only thing that came clear was at the very end.

“I’m sorry to be the one to tell you, but I think it best if you get here as soon possible.”

I didn’t remember hanging up. I didn’t remember the mad dash around Rachel’s apartment. I didn’t remember stuffing mismatched socks into my backpack. I didn’t remember deciding to leave my suitcase, to leave the jacket in the hallway. I didn’t even remember whether I called Conor or Rian. Or if I’d texted.

I did remember thinking of Rachel. I remember because it was what I regretted the most. I remember that moment, halfway out the door with my passport in hand, where I considered going back to write a note. I remember thinking of her returning from her performance and finding me gone. I remember not wanting her to think the worst.

In the end, I left without a note. Because the worst had happened.

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