Page 125 of Bitter Sweet Heart


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“I’m sorry I wasn’t here. I should have met you here.”

She takes my face in her hands. “It’s okay. I’m okay because of you. It’s a few surface wounds. Nothing a few Band-Aids and a little TLC can’t fix.”

“Let me see.” I kiss her fingertips before I gently turn them over, inspecting her arms. The right sleeve is patchy with seeping blood along her forearm. “Is this the only place you landed in the glass?”

She nods. “I tried to roll the other way, but I couldn’t avoid all of it.”

“Does it hurt?” I rub my thumb over the center of her palm, memories bubbling up of when Lavender used to come to my room and ask me to help with her hands.

“Not much. I think the adrenaline is still at work, though.”

The sound of sirens in the distance brings another barrage of memories, but I shove them down and lock them in the box, needing to stay present with Clover.

“Do you want me to have a look at them? Do you have a first aid kit here?”

She strokes my cheek. “The ambulance will be here soon. We can wait for them.”

Kody appears in my peripheral vision, holding two bottles of water. He sets them on the arm of the chair and holds out a blanket. “I grabbed this. The temperature is dropping, and the shock might be starting to wear off.” He puts his hand on my shoulder. “You should sit.”

I shift out of the crouch and let my knees settle on the deck, still keeping a barrier between Gabriel and Clover. He groans from the other side of the porch, starting to come around. Blood seeps out of his nose and runs down his chin. If Kody and BJ hadn’t been here, I don’t know if I would have stopped.

Emergency services shows up, bringing with them the police, an ambulance, and fire truck. The fire truck doesn’t stay, but the ambulance and police do. Pearl Bay is a tiny community, with only a few police officers assigned to the area, but Pearl Lake is slightly larger, and Lake Geneva has a much more substantial force. Our families are well known around here, and the officer assigned to the call has a son who plays hockey. My dad coaches him. It’s times like this when the blessing of having a famous parent weighs out over the negatives.

Gabriel violated the terms of his order of protection and physically attacked Clover, so he’s taken away in cuffs and will likely spend the night in the local jail after he’s been checked over for injuries. He seems to be struggling to put weight on his left leg. He’s not entirely coherent as they put him in the back of the cruiser, still ranting about how he should have burned the place to the ground months ago.

Clover gives her statement, and I give mine, and then she’s loaded into the back of the ambulance and taken to the Pearl Bay Emergency Clinic so a doctor can look at her injuries. I go along with them, leaving Kody and BJ to give their statements with promises to check in later.

While Clover is getting X-rays on her cheek, I call my dad and fill him in. He tells me he’ll be at the clinic as quickly as he can.

I’m allowed back in the treatment room with Clover after the X-rays. There are no fractures or broken bones. But I hold her hand as they remove several pieces of glass from her forearm and use Steri-Strips on the shallower wounds, stitching up the worst of them. In the end, she has more than twenty stitches in her forearm, but otherwise she’s okay—physically, at least. The doctor gives her a prescription for painkillers, and she has a follow-up appointment in a few days.

My dad is sitting in one of the too-small-for-his-frame chairs when we step out of the exam room. He pushes out of his seat. His hair is a mess, like his hand has been in it a bunch. “Are you two okay?” His gaze shifts from me to Clover and back.

“It’s all surface wounds.” I repeat the words Clover keeps giving me, as if they’re somehow going to dampen the fears that continue to claw their way up from the box of memories I don’t want anymore.

He looks at Clover. “Kody and BJ told me what happened. If it’s all right, it’d make me feel a lot better if the two of you came home with me.”

“That would be great.” She squeezes my hand.

The twenty-five-minute ride from the clinic to my parents’ place in Lake Geneva is quiet. I sit in the back with Clover. The adrenaline has likely long worn off, but I can feel the nervous energy seeping out of her.

I press my lips to her temple. “It’s okay. My dad is on our side, and my mom is in New York with my sister.” I know she’s the one Clover is most worried about, and the last thing she needs is more stress after what happened tonight. My phone is blowing up with messages in my group chat with Kody and BJ. I fire one off to let them know we’re fine and we’re going back to my parents’ place. I wish Kody luck tomorrow and thank them both for having my back.

We pull into the driveway, and I help Clover out of the truck. The stiffness and aches are starting to set in, based on the tentative way she moves. Once we’re inside, I offer to make her a cup of tea.

Clover gives me a tremulous smile. “That would be good, I think.”

“Do you want to sit in the living room while I make it, or do you want to stay in the kitchen with me?”

“I’d like to stay with you, if that’s okay.”

“Yeah. Of course.” I guide her to one of the bar stools at the kitchen island and help her up, then grab a thin blanket from the living room and drape it over her shoulders. Her cardigan went into the trash at the clinic. Most of her right forearm is covered in gauze and bandages.

My dad goes to the cupboard and retrieves two mugs. He squeezes my shoulder. “Sit down, son. I’ve got this.”

I don’t argue. I don’t feel particularly steady on my feet—more like I’m going through the motions, trying to keep my head in the present. I take the seat to the left of Clover and thread my fingers with hers.

Dad sets the kettle to boil and pulls out the box of Bengal Spice tea. It’s become a staple at my parents’ place since I introduced them to it during the holidays. He drops a bag in both cups.

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