Pulling away from the water, I find a spot back by the sea oats that’s already set up for a fire. I pull the jeep up the beach and park.
“You wanna grab the blankets?” I ask as we get out of the car.
I open the back hatch and pull out the firewood to start a fire while Candace bundles up. Once I have the fire going, I sit next to her, wrapping the blankets around the both of us as she cuddles into me.
“I had fun at Tori’s this morning,” she says as she clutches the blanket to her. “She’s really nice.”
“Yeah, she is.”
“So her mom is Donna’s sister?”
“Uh huh.”
She laughs quietly, saying, “It’s hard to keep it straight.”
“It’s my mom and her two sisters. And then all my cousins are girls as well,” I explain. “Tori and I always linked up because of our age, and she’s really into surfing too, so we get together a lot to hit the beach.”
When the wind kicks up, she turns her head and rests it on my chest. “I was wondering something.”
“What’s that?”
“If that’s the house you grew up in, why does your mom still live there?”
“I don’t know. I asked her that not too long ago,” I tell her. “She told me that she loves the house and that she chooses to remember all the good memories we had there.”
“What about you?” she asks as she looks up at me.
Adjusting to pull her between my legs, I lean back against the log lying behind me before answering her. “It’s hard for me to remember anything good. Being in that house is sometimes hard on me. I’ll see things that remind me of a particular beating and stuff like that, and it dredges up a lot of shit for me.”
She lets go of the blanket and wraps her arms around me, asking, “Why did she stay?”
“Honestly . . . I never asked her. Now that I’m older, I would just assume that she was scared. Worried about how she would support the two of us if she did leave.”
She doesn’t say anything, just leans into me as we hold on to each other. I stare into the fire when I continue to talk and explain, “My dad was a frightening man. I was terrified of him. Scared he was going to kill my mom one day. He would drink heavily and lose control. You never knew how far he would go. I used to sit and watch him beat her, scared if I left that he might go too far and I wouldn’t be able to help her.”
“So you watched?” she asks, horrified.
“I couldn’t say anything because every time I would scream for him to stop, he would just go harder on her, making it worse.”
“I can’t even imagine. But what about you?”
“He hated me, Candace. At least with my mom, he had once loved her. But never me. He didn’t give a shit what he did to me. I was always walking around in pain. Broken ribs, concussions. That’s mostly why I started using X. It just felt good.”
She looks at me, and I watch her eyes puddle with tears that don’t fall.
“And nobody ever knew? Nobody helped you?” she questions.
“The only other person who knows, beside me and my mom, is you.”
“No one in your family?”
“Only you,” I tell her.
“Does Donna know that I know?”
“No.”
She shifts to her knees and faces me. I know she doesn’t know how to respond to everything I just laid on her, so I take away the pressure when I hold her face and kiss her. She grips my wrists with her hands, and I keep my eyes open as I watch her tears finally fall.
I pull back and wipe her cheeks before I lie us down on the pile of blankets in the sand, the only heat from her and the fire. I’ve never unloaded this weight that I’ve been carrying for years the way she allows me to.
“You’re the strongest person I know,” she whispers against my neck.
“I’m not.”
“You are.”
“Before I met you, I hid everything. I was selfish and used people. I was weak.”
“But you’re not now. I don’t see any of that in you,” she says, and I know the only reason for that is her.
Chapter Thirty-six
After a few more days, it’s time to head back to Seattle. I’m finishing packing our bags while Candace gets ready in the bathroom. Having this week away has been good for us. And having her here with my mom makes this connection that we have so much stronger.
Needing to grab a few things out of the bathroom, I don’t knock when I see she has left the door cracked. When I open it, she startles as she pulls down on her sweatshirt.
“What are you doing?”
“Nothing,” she says as she still has her top clutched in her hands.
I walk over to her and take her hand, lifting it up along with the shirt, and when I do, she says, “I don’t like it,” referring to her tattoo that is peeking over her pants that she has tugged down.
I lower her shirt and ask, “Why?”
“Because it’s not me,” she admits. “I was trying to be someone different, and it only led to bad things.”
“What do you mean?”
“I got it in a moment of rebellion, I guess. It was stupid, really. I got it and started acting foolishly, which led to . . . umm . . .” her words stammer off as she drops her head away from me. I know what she’s trying to say, and it’s insane to think getting a tattoo would result in her getting raped.