I can’t argue with the first thing. But the second one annoys me. “I don’t have sad eyes.”
He takes a beat to consider me before saying, “It’s none of my business, but if you need some help—”
“I don’t need any help,” I interrupt hotly. “I’m fine. There’s nothing wrong with me.”
“Didn’t say there was,” Aidan replies softly.
But his gaze isn’t as tranquil as his voice. His eyes are like his fist pounding on my front door, loudly demanding an answer.
With my heart racing, I say, “You know what? I don’t think this is going to work. I’m sorry to inconvenience you, but I’m going to ask you to leave now.”
Rain thrums against the roof. A gust of wind rattles the windows. Somewhere upstairs, a loose shutter bangs back and forth, rusty hinges groaning.
After a long, tense moment, Aidan says, “Okay.” He turns and walks to the front door.
I’m relieved until he turns back and gazes at me. His eyes are dark and penetrating. It feels as if they can see straight down to the bottom of my soul.
“But if you change your mind, Kayla, you’ve got my number.”
I don’t know if he means changing my mind about needing help with my roof or something else.
He walks out, closing the front door behind him.
As soon as he’s gone, I pull the scarf from around my burning neck and go to the powder room down the hall. I switch on the light, then stand in front of the mirror and look at myself, trying to determine what’s so wrong with my eyes.
I gasp in shock when I see the ugly purple splotches encircling my neck.
The one just beneath my left earlobe looks like it was made by a thumb.
Five days later, the marks on my neck have completely faded. I searched the internet for causes of unexplained bruising and found everything from diabetes to vitamin deficiencies.
Considering my poor diet and the amount of stress I’ve been under lately, I’m betting it has to do with that. I’m probably anemic, which would also explain the fatigue.
The marks could also have been caused by the accident.
But I don’t want to think about that. Because thinking about it would mean remembering it, reliving it, and I’m not prepared for that yet. I doubt I’ll ever be. I’ve put that horrible day into a box and put the box up on a high shelf in the back of my mind for safekeeping.
But knowing as I do that my mental health is fragile, I decide to attend a local grief group.
The meeting is held in a room at the senior’s center. A dozen or so folding metal chairs are arranged in a circle in the middle of an expanse of ugly brown carpeting. Against one wall, a rickety wood table is dressed with a white plastic cloth and set up with coffee and tea service and a tilting stack of Styrofoam cups. Posters of smiling seniors are tacked around with reminders to get your annual flu shots. The lone window looks out over the parking lot and the rainy evening beyond.
A few people are already sitting down when I arrive. I can tell by the way they’re chatting that they all know each other. Feeling anxious, I head over to the table with the coffee and pour myself a cup. As I’m debating whether or not I’ll stay or run out the door and make a quick escape, a woman walks up beside me and reaches for a Styrofoam cup.
“First time?” she asks, pouring herself a coffee.
“Yes. You?”
“Oh no. I’ve been coming to this group for six years now.”
She turns to me, smiling. She’s brunette, fortyish, and chic, wearing heels, an ivory Chanel suit, and a huge diamond ring on her finger. Her skin is flawless. Her haircut costs more than my entire outfit. She’s incredibly pretty.
I feel like a clod of dirt standing next to a unicorn.
She says, “You don’t have to participate if you don’t want to. There’s no pressure to join in, you’re welcome to simply sit and listen. That’s what I do. Sometimes just being around other people who understand what you’re going through is enough. Jan’s the group leader.”
She gestures to a lanky gray-haired woman in a flowing paisley dress who’s walking through the door. Jan greets the group and takes a chair, dropping her bulky purse onto the floor.
“I’m Madison,” the woman beside me adds.
“Hi, Madison. I’m Kayla. Nice to meet you.”
I want to ask why she’s here but don’t. I don’t know the rules yet. And I don’t want to offend someone being so nice who can probably tell I’m panicking.
As if she can read my mind, she says, “My daughter was kidnapped when she was four years old. The police never found her.”