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“Erin, this makes the most sense, seeing as he’s in charge of my money,” she points out. “He can get me the best help. Round-the-clock nurses. I just feel like my healing would be better off at his house.”

“You’re making a mistake. I can guarantee when the cops look into this, they will see he’s the one who hit you.” She scoffs.

Payton visibly shakes at the accusation.

Payton’s eyes dart back to me, boring into mine. Unspoken words are said with her gaze. I trust you.

“Erin, it’s final. I’m going to go home with Trent.”

“Fine.” Erin stands and snatches her bag off the seat. “But don’t say I did not warn you about what can happen to you.”

“What does that mean?”

“Nothing.”

With nothing more to say, the room goes quiet, but the threat still lingers.

Chapter

Thirty-Seven

PAYTON

Trent Aldridge has a heart.

It is big and vibrant, and hidden behind ironclad walls he erected himself. I’m not sure how it took me so long to realize it, but now that I have, I can’t unsee it.

Ivy and Trent bicker over the next steps of my recovery near the door to my private hospital room.

I wave a little. “Right here, guys.”

They ignore me.

Meanwhile, Cyrus has his phone out, growling orders into the device in a language I can’t identify, let alone understand. I only know they’re orders because it’s Cyrus. I don’t even have to have known him long to know what that means.

I agreed to continue staying with Trent, what in the hell did I say yes to?

Now that Trent is no longer ignoring his sister (something I gathered over the past few days through contextual clues), she’s all up in his grill. I think he likes it. I also think it’s a recipe for disaster. The kind that tastes like chocolate and gooey marshmallows but is all sorts of messy.

“She needs a wheelchair,” Trent insists, already pulling up his phone, presumably to order one.

“The doctor didn’t mention that at all.” Ivy snatches his phone from his hands. “Actually, he did mention her legs. To say they’ll be fine. They just need to be elevated.”

“If they need to be elevated, she needs a wheelchair.”

“A wheelchair is flat.”

“Hello?” I cut in.

Still nothing.

If I’m being honest, I want the wheelchair. I tried walking with the crutches the hospital offered and failed miserably. But I understand what Ivy’s been trying to do since she showed up—cement into Trent that I am not fragile. I will not break because of one accident.

I have no illusions that it’s a favor to me, and every impression it’s for Trent. Ivy doesn’t want her brother to feel guilty over my condition, even if it means she has to point out how intact I am. And I agree with her. Dealing with Trent’s guilt is uncomfortable. I never know how it’ll manifest.

I end up in a hospital wheelchair, being pushed by a gentle-handed Ivy. We descend a private elevator and are led out by the staff to a small, empty parking garage. Cyrus pulls his car beside Trent’s. Ivy waves goodbye, and then they’re gone, leaving me alone with Trent.

He helps me into the car even though I don’t need it. I think it’s guilt, but he’s going overboard. I don’t want this to be awkward. Especially if I expect to hide out at his place. We need to find some way to let the past stay in the past and move on.

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