He read the letter one more time, grunting his thanks when Chloe put a second coffee down in front of him. Deciding it would have to do, he picked up his phone and dialed.
The voice that answered was somehow bouncy. “Hello?”
“Hi, is that Bia?”
“It is.” The voice turned suspicious. “Who is this?”
“Max Carter. Look, I know this is—”
“Max? As in Josie’s Max?” Josie’s Max. Not right, and wouldn’t ever be true.
“Yes,” he said, knowing what she meant. “Look—”
“How did you get this number?”
He huffed out an impatient breath, glanced up to where Chloe was watching him, eyebrows raised. “From John, who got it off Laura. Now will you just let me finish? I have a favor to ask you.”
“Well, I won’t be doing you any favors,” she said primly.
Sometimes, blunt was best. “Bia,” he said flatly, “I’m dying.” He couldn’t, or wouldn’t, look at Chloe when he said it.
There was a pause at the other end of the phone. Then, “What? What do you mean?”
“I mean what I said,” Max said evenly. He was more used to saying it now—what did it mean, when you came to accept those two words, I’m dying, as just a natural part of conversation?
“No,” she said. “I mean, God. I’m sorry. What…For how long…Does Josie know?”
“No, and that’s where I need the help,” Max said. “I need to get a letter to her.”
“A letter? You want to tell her that you’re dying in a letter? You can’t do that, it’ll kill her.” Jesus.
“There’s nothing else I can do now,” he said quietly, noting the slight pleading edge that had come into his voice. “I know I shouldn’t have got into it with her.”
There was the sound of chattering in the background at Bia’s end of the phone, followed by Bia swearing. “No,” she said. “You shouldn’t have.” She sighed. “No, look, I’m sorry, OK? It’s just…” And then Bia told him, about Josie’s grandmother, about the fact that she was there alone. Two minutes later, he’d convinced Bia to give him the address, along with Josie’s aunt Helen’s number—he didn’t want to risk getting there only to not get past that barrier. As soon as they hung up, he grabbed the letter from the windowsill and strode to the spare room where he’d been staying for the last few months. Chloe stumbled after him.
“What are you doing?” she demanded.
He didn’t even glance back at her. “I have to go, Chlo. I have to see her again.” He shook his head at himself. “I have to at least try to explain it—I owe her that, I owe her more than a letter.”
He shoved a few things in a bag, then turned to see her standing in the doorway, hugging her arms around her and looking impossibly young in that moment. Her lips were trembling. He crossed the room, put his arms around her and felt his own throat tighten. “I’ll be back,” he whispered into her hair, even knowing that there was only so long he could keep telling her that. “But I have to see her before I…”
Chloe pulled back, dashed a tear away under her eye. She nodded. “Go.” She took a shaky breath. “Tell her—if she doesn’t kick you out before you explain, that is—that if she ever wants to look me up, now or in the future, then she’s welcome to.” She tilted her head and a small smile played around her lips. “I’d like to get to know that girl of yours.”
He walked to the front door of the flat, Chloe following him. Girl of yours. And she was, Max knew, even if she had no idea just how much she’d captured his heart. Captured it when it was already too late, when he had no right to take her heart the way she’d taken his. He’d tried to stop it, but it was too late now, too late to stop the fall, so all that was left was to make the best possible decision in this moment, and not be a coward about it.
He turned back to Chloe. “Fill Mum and Dad in, will you?” They’d only worry and try to stop him going if he told them himself. Chloe nodded. He brought her in for one last hug and felt her chest sob against him. He kissed the top of her head. “I love you, you know.”
“I know that,” she whispered. “I always will.” She pulled back, blinked up at him. “Now go get the girl before it’s too late.”
Josie stared at her name on the envelope. Her heart was thumping a steady rhythm of not real, not real, not real. Helen was still on the other side of the room, getting her water. Around her, there was the humming of various noises, all blended in together—the whirring of a machine, the sound of footsteps, the murmur of conversation.