This entry is part 18 of 19 in the Break Me Down
When the sharpest words wanna cut me down
I’m gonna send a flood, gonna drown them out
I am brave, I am bruised
I am who I’m meant to be, this is me
Look out ’cause here I come
And I’m marching on to the beat I drum
I’m not scared to be seen
I make no apologies, this is me
– This is Me, Keala Settle
Tuesday, July 1, 2003
General Hospital: ICU
 Elizabeth fumbled with the bed controls, wincing as she raised herself up until she was sitting at a higher angle. Seated beside her sat Gail Baldwin, one of her grandmotherâs closest friendsâand a woman who had helped her through the most traumatic experience of her life.
The only reason Elizabeth had acquiesced to talking to anyone was that Bobbie promised her that Gail was available. At least with Gail, there wouldnât have to be a lot of painful background, a lot of family explorationâsheâd done so much of that the first time around.
âThanks for coming here,â Elizabeth said. âMonica isnât letting me move around until tomorrow when they move me to my own room.â
âYouâre only a few floors away from my office.â Gail still looked as she had the last time Elizabeth had come for a sessionâher grandmother had encouraged to see Gail a few times after Tom Baker had been caught, but she didnât feel like she still needed regular therapy and hadnât seen her in nearly four years.
Gailâs hair was still worn short with soft curls, though streaks of gray intermingled more freely than they had before. She wore a cream-colored jacket with a matching skirt, gold jewelry at her ears and around her wrist.
âSo where do we start?â Elizabeth asked dully. She met Gailâs eyes. âDo I tell you whatâs been going on?â
âWe can do that,â Gail said. âYou agreed to see me because Bobbie asked you.â
âIt was important to her.â Elizabeth picked at her fingers; the nails had been bitten almost to the quick and were painful as they grew back.
âIf youâre just humoring her, my dearââ
âShe doesnâtâŠsheâs worried about me. I guessâŠâ Elizabeth hesitated. âI guess I get that. I know it seems crazyâumâŠthat I stayed with Ric. That I married him in the first place.â
âOkay.â
âI donât reallyâŠâ Elizabethâs eyes met Gailâs briefly then she looked away. âHe was drugging me. Did Bobbie mention it?â
âIâm aware of it. Valium and birth controlââ
âSince January,â Elizabeth cut in. âI donât know why. I donâtââ She huffed. âI donât even know what Iâm doing. Why thisâwhy this is so hard.â
âOkay.â Gail was quiet for a moment, but Elizabeth could feel her gaze on her. âIf youâre not ready talk about the past, letâs talk about tomorrow.â
âWhat? Oh. Okay. UmâŠwell, tomorrow I get my own room, and Monica says I can be released in five days. A friendâNikolasâis arranging an apartmentâIâm paying for everythingâheâs just getting it ready for when I move in.â
âIs it important for you that I know youâre paying your own way?â Gail said. âDo you think I assumed you werenât?â
âIââ Elizabeth blinked at her. Realized Gail was rightâand that it was the fourth or fifth time sheâd explained it that way. Sheâd told BobbieâŠand MonicaâŠand Jasonâeven Emilyâsheâd immediately reassured all of them that sheâd be using her own funds to pay for the apartment, to furnish itâthat Nikolas was just helping with the details. Heâd always been good at details.
âI guess I did. I donât know why,â she murmured. âI guessâŠI think people see me as weakâor the papersâI saw the gossip columns in the SunâI had one of my doctors get the last few issues for me because no one else wouldââ
âOkay.â Gail waited a moment. âDo you often assume people are thinking the worst of you?â
âIââ Elizabeth licked her lips. âArenât they?â
âI donât know. Do you think anyone would have thought less of you for asking for financial assistance?â Gail asked. âYouâre recovering from a serious illness, going through what I imagine will be a difficult divorce. You left your job when you got married. Do you think anyone who cares about you would have thought you weak for asking for help?â
Elizabeth chewed on her bottom lip, considering that. Nikolas had offered to help her financiallyâand Jason already was, wasnât he? Justus had done so much paperwork on her behalf and sheâd never even thought about paying him. And there was the divorce lawyer that Justus had recommendedâhad she thought about how much someone like Diane Miller cost?
âWhenâŠwhen this startedâŠwhen, I meanâŠCarly was kidnapped, and IâJason, Sonny, Emily, Bobbieâthey all came to the house. And they kept trying to convince me to leave. Because they didnât think I could help. They kept trying to make me leave. Jason wanted to send me away.â
âBecause he thought you were weak,â Gail said.
âIâyes,â but Elizabeth suddenly felt less sure. âI meanâŠmaybe weak isnât the right word. Um.â
âIs it possible, Elizabeth, that they thought you were in danger and any help you could offer might come at the cost of your life?â the older woman asked, her tone soft and gentle.
âIââ Tears burned behind her eyes. âThat was part of it. But it wasnât all of it. Sonny and Jason think Iâm not strong enough. I know that. They think I canât do it. Thatâs whyâŠthatâs why Jason left me.â Her chest felt sore, and Elizabeth rubbed it absently, wincing as the IV in her wrist stretched.
âIs that what he said?â
âNo, but itâsââ Elizabeth hesitated. âI donât know what youâre getting at. Of course they think Iâm weak. Look where I ended up.â She gestured with her free hand at the hospital room. âAlmost dead. They were right.â
Gail hesitated. âDo you often assume people are thinking the worst of you?â she repeated. âWithout asking them?â
âIââ Elizabeth considered the question more than she had the first time. âI guess I kind of do. IsâŠis that bad?â
âNo, itâs human. Weâre storytellers. Itâs how we function,â Gail said with another one of those smiles. âWe tell ourselves stories all day long. And a lot of time, we make ourselves the star of them because itâs just how we are. But sometimesâŠwe also make ourselves the villain. We create stories that make us look bad because it reinforces how we feel about ourselves.â
Elizabeth shook her head. âNo, thatâsâI likeââ but she couldnât finish that sentence. She didnât like herself. She couldnât remember the last time she had. âSo, because I donât like who I amâŠI tell myself other people donât either?â she asked skeptically.
âItâs more thatâŠand this is just a possibility we can explore,â Gail told her. âItâs perhaps that you have conditioned yourself to disappointment, to unhappy endings. So, you create a story in your head that fulfills that. You said Jason left you because you were weak.â
âY-yes,â Elizabeth bit her lip. âUmâŠwhatâs the confidentiality thing again? How does that work?â
âI am only required to report any future crimes,â Gail said with a knowing smile. âEverything in the pastâIâm bound to keep it to myself. This is a safe space, Elizabeth.â
âHe lied to me last fallâwhen Sonny faked his death. He didnât tell me. We were kind of datingâand he let me think for weeks that Sonny was dead. He didnât think I could handle it. I wasnât strong enough,â Elizabeth told her.
âAnd then he left you,â Gail stated, though her eyes were puzzled now. âBecause youâŠcouldnât handle it.â
âIââ And now Elizabeth could see how that didnât quite fit. âI left him,â she murmured. âHe said that to me a few days ago. I left him. Butâbut heâhe lied.â
âAnd you were hurt, so you left. That seems perfectly understandable.â
âItâit does.â She paused. âWhyâŠwhy did I say he left me?â
âI donât know. Does it feel like he did?â Gail asked. âWere you surprised he lied to you about Sonny?â
âYes.â And that Elizabeth felt to the core of her entire being. âYes. Because heâd neverâI never ever thought heâd put me through that. I liked Sonny. I cared about him. We were close once and I was so upset. For Jason and for Carly, because of who they lost, but because I would miss himââ The tears sheâd swallowed earlier slid down her cheeks. âI had to leave him. I couldnât stand it. How could he care about me and do that?â
âDid you ask him?â
âIâI tried. But he just looked at meâand he said it wasnât about me. I didnât get it. I was living with him partly because I had been in danger. I had helped him with Zander, a-and I had been shot and kidnapped because of him. I thought I had earned the right toââ The words spilled from her lips, and she pressed her hands to her mouth.
âDid you tell him that?â
âNo. He said it wasnât about me, and I just shut down. I couldnât breathe, I was so devastated. It wasnât about me. I didnât matter. I canâhe didnât say it, but I could almost hear it in his voice. I didnât matter. Carly turned Sonny into the feds and regularly almost got both of them arrested, but she got to know. I had never ever let Jason down. I had always kept hisââ She turned away. âI couldnât tell him that then. And he came to see me the next day, looking so hurtâlike I had hurt him. He couldnât see it.â
âIt soundsâŠto meâŠthat you had a reasonable reaction to what had happened. You felt you had earned his trust, and he hadnât trusted you.â
Elizabeth closed her eyes. âIt must have been something I didâIâwe werenât together, so I guess it wasnât technically cheating, but I slept with someone else over the summerâand I donât think he ever forgave me.â
âIs last week the first time youâd really had to see him since this happened?â Gail asked.
âYeah. It wasâit was hard because it was like it used to be sometimes. He was justâhe was there. And I called him. Jason made me check in constantlyâhe said it was the only way heâd let me go back. I called him every night before I tried to sleepââ She exhaled slowly. âIt wasâŠit was a lot of emotions running high, adrenaline. He kissed me, but it didnât mean anything. I donâtââ She stopped. Looked at Gail. âBut thatâs me doing it again, isnât it?â
âDoing what?â
âCreating a story that makes me unhappy. That assumes the worst. Maybe Iâm just anticipating whatâs probably going to happen and just trying to get myself ready.â
âWhatâs probably going to happen?â
âThis will allâŠfade,â Elizabeth said after a long moment. âIâll go back to my life, and Jason will go back to his. I know he said he and Courtney argued, but he must love her. He was going to marry herâand he tried so hard with herâand sheâs Sonny sister. So, I canât let myself think last week meant anythingâŠâ she trailed off. âCan I?â
âI think we should leave it here for today,â Gail told her. âI have some homework for you to do before we meet again.â
Elizabeth eyed her. âWeâre meeting again?â
âI think it might be a good idea, but of course, thatâs up to you. Whether you make another appointment or not,â Gail said, âmy homework assignment remains the same.â
âOkay,â Elizabeth said hesitantly.
âI want you to do two things,â Gail said, holding up two fingers. âOne, I want you to create a story about last week that gives you a happy ending. And two, I want you to ask Jason what it meant.â
âIââ Elizabeth shook her head. âNo, IâI can try the first, but I canâtââ
âWhy canât you ask him?â
âWhat if he says it didnât mean anything? What if Iâm right? Because Iâm right,â Elizabeth insisted. âJason and I are doomed. Itâs just a fantasyââ
âIf youâre right, then youâve already written that story. But I think Jason might have earned himself the right to be the one writing the ending for a change.â Gail got to her feet. âYouâve been through so much, Elizabeth. Just in the last six months. I think it would help to talk through it.â
âI donât know. I guess weâll see how I feel after I do my homework,â Elizabeth muttered, closing her eyes, letting her head fall back against the pillows. âI donât want to be unhappy.â
âWeâve set our first goal,â Gail said with a smile as she squeezed Elizabethâs hand. âItâs a bit more abstract than I like, but Iâll settle for it. Turn it around. Make it positive, Elizabeth. You donât want to be unhappy.â
âI feel like Iâm supposed to say I want to be happyâbut I feel like thatâsâŠâ Impossible. âAm I allowed to say I just want to be okay?â
âYouâre allowed to say whatever you want. Call me when to schedule another appointment when youâve moved into your own room.â
Corinthos Penthouse: Living Room
Bobbie smiled at Max as he let her inside the penthouse just after one. Inside, she found Sonny finishing up lunch with Michael. Her grandson lit up when she saw her and flew across the room.
âGrandma!â Michael wrapped his arms around her. âDaddy says Mommy can come home tomorrow!â
âThatâs the word on the street.â Bobbie pressed a kiss to his bright blonde hair and then smiled at Sonny. âItâll be good to have her backâand hopefully sheâll be able to get back into the swing of things.â
âYou were right to encourage us to get Kevin to talk to her so quickly.â Sonny stacked the plates and handed them to his son. âPut these on the counter so Graziella can take care of them while weâre at the hospital, and then go upstairs to get ready to see Mommy.â
âYep!â Michael sang out. He zoomed into the kitchen, and Sonny tried not to wince at the sound of the clatter of the dishes being dumped into the sink. Michael then flew past them up the stairs.
âHeâs bouncing back pretty well,â Bobbie murmured, following him. âHe might be the only one who is.â
âItâll just take some time.â Sonny sighed, rubbed his forehead. âLast night was probably the first full night of sleep Iâd had since this started.â
âSame here. Iâd gone without sleep for so long I couldnât quite let myself sleep much on Sunday night.â Bobbie hesitated. âI know that you and I have not beenâŠcloseâŠbut I like to think weâve got a decent relationship.â
âOf course, Bobbie. We couldnât have gotten through this without you.â He grimaced. âI wasâŠmostly useless. And I know you were there for Michael, for Jasonâfor everyone.â
âI was here whenâŠJason gave you the sedative.â Bobbie folded her arms. âIt led me to believe that itâs not the first time youâve needed one.â
âI, ahâŠâ Sonny looked away. âItâs never been that bad, but noâŠitâs not,â he admitted in a low voice. âYou must be worried about Carly and Michaelââ
âIâm worried about you,â Bobbie said. âIâm worried about all of us. If nothing else, this experience told me that no one in this familyâand Iâm including Jason and Elizabethâdoes well with trauma. None of us know how to ask for help, how to reach out.â
âWe managed to get through it,â Sonny said, and she could see he was ready to dismiss the entire experience to the heap of memory.
âHave you ever talked to anyone?â Bobbie asked. Her son-in-law flashed her a fond, if irritated smile.
âDo you get commissions from the Psych department, Bobbie? Michael, CarlyâI hear you talked Elizabeth into seeing someoneââ
âIâm a nurse, so I see the signs faster. Michael just needed someone to help him processâand we needed to get a handle on what to do for him. Carly is going to be okay because sheâs treating the symptoms quickly. Itâs not going to fester. But yes, I wanted Elizabeth to talk to someone who isnât one of us. Who doesnât have a vested interest in hating Ric or worrying about her. And thatâs why I want you to do talk to someone.â
âItâs not possible.â Sonny turned away from her.
âYou live aâŠdifficult life,â Bobbie said. âAnd, yes, I worry about my daughter and my grandson. Because if you hallucinated Lily once, what could you conjure the next time?â
âBobbieââ
âAnd what if someone who does not like you learns you haveâŠa problem?â she pressed. âAm I wrong to think theyâd exploit it?â
Sonny dipped his head. âIâm not Tony Soprano, Bobbieââ
âIâm justâI donât want it to happen again. And maybe Iâm thinking about Jason who had to shoulder all of the weight last week because you couldnât be relied upon. Itâs not your fault, but it happened. And Elizabeth saw that pressure he was under, and she felt the same pressure to find Carly. You couldnât shoulder your responsibilities.â
His eyes were burning now. âIs this supposed to be concern?â he demanded, stepping towards her. âOrââ
âThis is the Godâs honest truth, Sonny. I worry about you, but Carly, Michael, and the baby come first for me. If youâre fine with the occasional psychotic break, then fine. Itâs your life. But you have no right to put my grandchildren in danger.â
Michael came down the steps then, so excited he was practically vibrating. âAre you coming with us, Grandma?â
âI wish I could, Baby, but I have to get to work. I took a lot of time off last week. Iâll try to stop in on my shift.â She kissed his head again, ruffled his hair, and then left.
PCPD: Squad Room
Taggert frowned down at the stack of police reports and reached for the next one, unsure if there would ever be an end to the administrative crap he had to do now.
Heâd split the work in the unit the way heâd told Mac he wouldâbut neither Vinnie nor Beaudry had been thrilled with the new division. Vinnie had been more than happy to hand over future sex crimes, but balked at giving Taggert his open investigations. Beaudry liked not having any cases of his own but didnât appreciate the fact that Taggert planned to come along on some of the patrols.
Heâd hoped by transferring, by being in a new environment and people around him that he would be happierâthat he would recover the satisfaction heâd once felt in his job.
Maybe that would come in time.
He glanced up when he saw Lucky Spencer come through the door with Dante Falconieri. The latter broke off to head down to the garage where he was supposed to report to Beaudry for patrol and Lucky came over to Taggert.
He saw the younger man glance at the empty desk where Vinnie usually sat before planting himself in front of Taggertâs desk.
He still couldnât believe the little smart-ass punk heâd rousted more than once for trespassing had become a cop, but so far Taggert was pleasantly surprised by how well he seemed to take to the role.
Lucky didnât look that happy right now and Taggert gestured for him to talk. âWhatâs on your mind, Spencer? Take a seat.â
Lucky sat in Taggertâs witness chair but shifted uncomfortably. âI know I havenât been here long, and maybe itâs not right to think I know whatâs bestâŠâ
âSpit it out.â
âLast weekend, I went on a follow up interview with Detective Esposito. A rape and assault case from the end of May.â Lucky hesitated. âHeâŠwas rough with the vic in a wayâŠI didnât think was okay.â
Taggert lifted his brows. âCan you be more specific?â
âHe justâŠhe asked her what she was wearing, and why sheâd been in the park after dark.â Lucky bit his lip. âAnd when she tried to push back on it, heâŠjustâŠhe didnât say it was her fault, Taggert, butââ
âHe was less sensitive than he should have been, you mean,â Taggert interrupted. He sighed, pressing his index fingers against his temples. âOkay. I get it. Iâm sure youâre even right.â
âBut you canât do anything.â
âItâs not against the law to be a dick. I wish it was, but thatâs the world we live in. I think, personally, Vinnie is burnt out on sex crimes. He did Vice for a while in his first go around, and I know he spent a full two years in Sex Crimes in Buffalo. Itâs a tough beat, and itâs easy toââ He shook his head. âI donât have to tell you how hard it can be with rape victims.â
Lucky blinked at him, and then slowly said, âYou mean because of Elizabeth. Because IâI helped her.â
He said it haltingly, which made Taggert frown, but he nodded. âYeah. You gotta be sensitive. But the horrors of the jobâit takes something out of you. If youâre not especially empathetic to begin withââ He stopped. âYou think Iâm making excuses for him.â
âI donât know. I donât know what Iâm supposed to do. Thatâs why Iâm here.â
âHeâs not working any more sexual assault cases going forward,â Taggert told him. âHe has the ones heâs already picked up, but going forward, thatâs my beat. I know youâre frustrated, Spencer. I know Rodriguez and Falconieri are, too. It kills me to think we got a crop of rookies ready to throw in the towel after a weekââ
âItâs not like thatââ
âThatâs not a gripe at you, kid. Thatâs at this place. I know the problems here. I donât know if we can fix them overnight. Iâm asking you guys to give me a chance to see if we can. You already know that I put Rodriguez on the fast-track to promotion. Iâd like all three of you to take the detectiveâs exam within the next two years. I thinkâI hope weâll have some spots opening soon.â
Lucky hesitated, then nodded. âOkay. Thanks for hearing me out.â He got to his feet and left.
Wednesday, July 2, 2003
General Hospital: Elizabethâs Room
One of her other doctors had braced her arms and helped her from the bed to cross the three feet to the small sofa under windows. Elizabeth felt that she had exhausted all the energy sheâd had to offer that day, between her three-foot journey to the sofa and the trip three flights down to a regular hospital room.
She was relieved to be out of the ICU with its clear and open roomsâto be taken off display. She knew from the newspapers sheâd asked the staff for that her face continued to be plastered all over the tabloids, and more than a few patients and visitors had paused just too long by her room for her comfort.
Hereâthere were real walls and a door that would keep people outâJason had offered someone to stand there, but Elizabeth wasnât comfortable with that either. Not yet. Ric was still in jailâhis initial request to be let out on bail had been denied though apparently, heâd appealed it.
Heâd be out soon, but until then, Elizabeth didnât want to feel any more confined.
Once her doctorâthe name on his jacket read Patrick Drakeâhad settled her, he arched a thick dark brow. âYou sure youâre okay if I leave you?â
âYeah, I haveâŠsomeone is coming in a little while. Heâll help me get back into bed.â Jason had promised to stop by once sheâd been moved to her new room, but she knew he was busy getting things sorted out. She imagined in his business it was like transitioning between peacetime and war for a government.
âAll right, wellâŠâ He set the remote next to her. âIâll leave your call button.â He hesitated. âYou know, I just started my fellowship here and you were my first case.â
âI hope it was an interesting learning experience,â she said dryly.
Patrick laughed, a small, almost embarrassed sound. âIt was, actually, but um, IâI had to be the one to tell yourâŠpeople that your chances werenât great. Fifteen percent when you went up to the cath lab.â
She exhaled slowly. âI knowââ
âI just wanted to say Iâm glad weâthat you pulled through. Itâs good to see you on your feet.â He shoved his hands in the pocket of his lab coat. âBut donât go doing too much too soon and ruining all our hard work.â
And now Elizabeth laughed. âDonât worry. Once Iâm out of this hospital, I donât want to be back. Iâll follow the directions Monica gives me to the letter.â
Behind them, the door to the room opened and Jason stepped in, hesitantly. âAm Iâis this a good time?â
âItâs fine. Patrick is one of the doctors on your motherâs team. Or at least he was when I came in.â
âPatrick Drake. Fellowship in neurologyâIâm specializing in blood clots, so Monica called me in when the paramedics called dispatch.â He said this to Jason, who nodded but clearly wasnât interested.
âSo, you donât have to worry about me when I leave the hospital,â Elizabeth told her doctor. âI imagine Jason is going to make sure I follow all the instructions.â
âGreat. Well, I better check on my other patients.â Patrick tipped his head to the both of them and then left. Jason eyed him as he left, then looked at Elizabeth.
âHe was hitting on you,â Jason said, almost amused.
âUntil you showed up and he remembered who I know.â But Elizabeth smiled. âYeah, he was putting on some charm. Mild. Itâs nice because Iâm in sweats and I lookâŠâ She ran her hands through her hair. âDry shampoo isnât really great, but itâs all I can do for now.â
He nodded to the flower arrangement on the table next to her bedâa cream colored vase with an explosion of tulips, daisies, and carnations in various colors. âIâyou got the flowers.â
âI didâŠthank you. I wasnâtâŠâ She bit her lip as he sat down next to her. She winced as she turned towards him, curling her leg under her body. âI wasnât expecting it, but it was nice to see color.â
âEmily suggested it,â he admitted. âShe said your new room was even more depressing than the last one.â He hesitated. âHow…are you feeling?â
That old awkward feeling was starting to creep inâthat sensation of not knowing what to say, not wanting to say too muchâwanting to hide underneath a rockâshe could feel it sitting between them as it had for much of the last three or four months. After the anger had passedâthey didnât know what to say to each otherâand now that the adrenaline of the past week had fadedâ
Elizabeth stared down at her hands for a moment, then took a deep breath. âBobbie convinced me to see Gail Baldwin.â
Jason squinted. âThatâsâŠBaldwinâs mother, right?â
âStepmother, but yeah. Essentially. I, um, saw her for a while when I was raped. And a little bit after the guy was caught, but I didnât go whenâafter the fire. Gram wanted me to, but I wasnâtâŠI donât know. I guess it would have helped, but then I wouldnât have been angry enough that night to go to Jakeâs.â She offered him a half-smile which he returned. âThat would have sucked.â
âYeah, it would have. SoâŠam Iââ Jason hesitated, looking uncertain. âShouldâcan I ask?â
âWell, the reason I brought it up is that Gail always ends our sessions with a homework assignment. Something Iâm supposed to do that uses what we talked about.â Elizabeth pressed her lips together, trying to figure out the best way to do this. âIâher assignments back then were always useful, you know? Sheâd tell me to do small things, but they always helped. The first thing she asked me to do was to look in a mirror and tell myself it wasnât my fault, andââ On a shaky sigh, she continued, âIt was the hardest thing Iâd ever done, and I cried, but then I did it again. And I did it every day until I believed it.â
âIâm glad she could be there for you,â Jason said, his voice was rough, his eyes soft.
âWhat she wanted me to do this time kind of involvesâI mean, it actually is about you, so I justâŠI guess I should explain it. UmâŠwe didnât really get into Ric orâŠwhat happened. I started to, but I guess she could see I wasnât really ready.â Elizabeth traced the seam of her sweat pants. âSo, she asked me what I was going to do when I left, and somehowâsheâs always good at doing thisâwe started talking about what happened last year. When IâI left.â
Jason exhaled slowly. Nodded. âYeahâŠI guess we should talk about that.â
âUm, she kind of got me to see that I tend to, likeâŠmake up stories is the wrong way to say it, butââ Elizabeth stopped. âI donât know how to explain it exceptâŠI guess I expect the worst, you know? IâI assume Iâm going to be disappointed or unhappy, so I justâŠtell myself a story to understand it, andââ She saw his expression, and sighed. âItâs hard to explain.â
âElizabethââ
âWhen I leftâthat nightââ Her chest felt tight, but this time, Elizabeth knew it had nothing to do with her illness. God, she didnât want to do this, but maybe this was the only way. âI told myself that youâyou didnât tell me about Sonny because you didnât trust meâbecause you thought I was too weakââ
And at the alarm in Jasonâs eyes, the violent shake of his head as he opened his mouth, that pressure released. âAnd I can see now thatâs not true.â
âNo,â Jason said, forcefully. âElizabethââ
âThree hours passed between watching it on the news and when I started to pack,â she said softly. âI knewâI knew you couldnât call me right away. But I thoughtâŠthey said youâd been released. And I thought you mightâŠeven a five second call. But you didnât.â And now was not the time to tell him everything about those three hours and the panic attack sheâd experienced waiting for him.
âElizabethââ
âLet me finish. This isnâtâthis isnât about you feeling bad. And I promise I will listen to every word you have to say. Iâm not even saying how I felt was right. But itâs part of the reason, I think, that we ended upâŠwhere we did. Because you didnât call. And I kept waiting. And finally, around midnight, I started to pack. I kept telling myself that it was just that I had broken your trust that summer and you didnât haveâŠyou didnât want to just tell me that. And then I remembered you kept pushing me away, so I thought it was about not thinking I was strong enoughââ
âElizabethâŠâ Jason shook his head. âIâm sorry. Go ahead.â
âAnd when you did come homeââ She stopped, the tears clinging to her lashes. âWhen you did come back,â she corrected softly, âI stillâŠI wanted to be wrong. But youâŠyou told me it wasnât about me, and I guess objectively that was true. But what I heardâŠwhat I feltâŠwas that I didnât matter.â
The anguish she could see nowâ âIâthatâs notâI messed it up.â
âBut thatâs what I do, Jason. I make up stories to explain whatâs going on, and those stories are always the worst versions. Because I donât know how to assume the best. I can only assume the worst.â She sighed.
âI wanted to tell you,â Jason said after a moment. She looked at him. âWhen Sonny and I planned it, we talked about how to minimize the damage. Michael went to the island so that no one could tell him. CarlyâSonny said Carly had to know. And so, I thoughtâI wanted to tell you. But Sonny said no.â
She bit her lip. âOkay.â
âI argued with him, but maybe not as much as I should have,â Jason admitted. âIt wasnât supposed to last so long, and IâSonny and I had been having some issues. When you were kidnapped, he didnât approve of what I had to do to find you.â
âI never did ask how you were ableâŠâ Elizabeth tilted her head. âWhat did you have to do that SonnyâŠâ
âI asked Edward,â Jason said after a moment. âAnd Taggert.â
âTaggert. As inâŠâ She gestured out the window as if the PCPD was across the street. Her eyes were wide. âYou asked Taggert for help.â
âIâm glad I did, because I was able to find you, and Iâd do it again,â Jason told her fervently. âBecause we might not have made it if Iâd handled it Sonnyâs way. But heâŠwas already irritated because of that. And all that stuff with AlcazarâŠI told you he gets into these dark spaces. And it wasâŠI couldnât chance that happening. Not when we had so much at stake.â
âOkayââ
âIt wasnât supposed to take a month,â Jason repeated, leaning in. âIt wasâŠa week, max. But it kept going on. And then there was Brendaâwe didnât figure on her. Every time I saw you, I knew I was lying to you, and I knew youâd be angry. I didnât call you that night. I thought about it, but IâŠdidnât know what to say. And thatâs why I said something so unbelievably stupidââ He broke off. âYou mattered, Elizabeth. Of course you did. And of course what happened with Alcazar concerned you.â
She nodded. âOkay,â Elizabeth murmured. âOkay, I get itââ She cleared her throat. âUm, that actually wasnât the homework thatâŠGail gave me, but I guessâŠI needed to give you an example of a time I told myself a story thatâŠassumed the worst.â
âOkayââ Jason reached for her hand. âSo, what did Gail want you to do?â
âShe wanted me to do two things. About last weekâŠum, I guess we can say thatâŠstuff happened.â Her cheeks flushed, and she dipped her head. âWeâŠâ
âI kissed you. And you kissed me,â Jason said matter of factly.
âRight. UmâŠshe wanted me to tell myself a story that didnât automaticallyâŠhave a bad ending. And then second toâŠactually ask you whatâŠthat was all about.â She looked down at his hand as his thumb moved in slow circles on her palm. âBecause I told her that it was adrenalineâand now that it was over, things would go back to the way theyâd been.â
She looked up, but now she saw he was waiting for her to finish. âSo the story IâŠthe better version of that is thatâŠâ No way to go but forward. âThe better version,â she began again, âis that I love you. When Iâd call you at nightâŠI didnât just do it to check in. I could have sent texts. I needed your voice to be the last one I heard before I went to sleep.â Her heart pounding, she continued, not taking her eyes from his. âThatâs the truth for me. Thatâs how I feel. The part where I tell the better story is what it was for youâŠand the best version of that truth is thatâŠyou felt the same for me.â
He was quiet for a long moment, just looking at her with those eyesâoh, GodâŠshe wasnât crazy.
âI didnât really sleep a lot last week,â he said finally. âI spent the nights watching surveillanceâand every time I saw you on the monitor, I could breathe easier. When you sent texts or called first thing in the morning to let me know you were okayâthatâs how I got through it.â
He paused for a moment. âBecause I love you. I put it away. I had to, and I triedâŠI tried something else. I tried to move on. But walking out of that house that first nightâleaving you behindâevery time I had to let you go back because I knew you were right. I knew that the house was important, and I had to let you stay.â
Jason stopped, as if trying to find the right words. âIt was almost impossible, and there were times I would find myself halfway to the house just to argue with you again. Not because I thought you were too weak to do it, but I knew you would stay until the bitter end if it meant we could have a find a chance to find Carly. Because thatâs how strong you are.â
A single sob burst from her throat. âJasonââ
âI went with you in the ambulance,â he told her. âAnd theyâyou went into cardiac arrest. Your heart stopped for thirty seconds. You were dead. They got you back, but they looked at meâand I knew they were thinking how to tell meâthey wanted me to prepare myself because you might make it to the hospital, but that you probably wouldnât surviveââ He stopped, shook his head and looked away.
âJasonâŠâ She murmured. Elizabeth released his hand and turned his face back towards her, framing it with her hands. His eyes were bright and glittering with unshed tears. âI donât evenâŠI donât know what to say.â
âItâsâŠâ He hesitated. âWhat was the second part of your homework?â
âTo ask you what last week meant to you, but you alreadyââ She slid closer to him, only wincing slightly. âYou already answered that.â She hesitated. âWhatâŠwhat happens nextâno, wait let me rephrase that. What do you want to happen next?â
âWhat do I wantâŠâ Jason drew in a deep breath as if he hadnât considered that. âI just want you.â
âWell, lucky meâŠbecause thatâs what I want, too.â She closed the short distance between them, and kissed him, lingering, savoring every minute. For a moment, it remained light, but she could feel the tension in in his body, the bunching of his muscles, and then his fingers slid up to cradle her face and shift the angle of her head. As if a dam had burst, he deepened the kiss, pulling her more tightly against him.
She broke away, gasping for breath, her chest heaving. He had tugged her forward until she sat partially in his lap.
âAre you okay?â Jason asked, his breath shallow, and she was stunned to see his fingers trembling slightly as he tucked her hair behind her ears. âIâm sorry, I didnât think.â
âI guess Iâm not quite as ready for this part as I thought,â Elizabeth said wryly, then winced and pressed a hand to her chest. âI think Iâm supposed to avoid activities that require breathing hard.â
Jason laughed, the rumble in his chest spreading through her as well. âYeah, I guess that would be a good idea.â
âI also think I just aced my homework.â
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