I woke to the scent of coffee, bacon, and eggs drifting through the bedroom.
I followed the aroma to the kitchen, where Graham stood over the stove, transferring strips of sizzling bacon from the pan onto two plates.
I stood there for a moment watching him. It felt like stepping into a childhood memory. Twelve-year-old Graham in the apartment kitchen, cooking whatever he could manage to scrounge up. Even then, he was always taking care of me.
I blinked and the memory dissolved.
“Morning,” he said from over his shoulder.
“Morning,” I replied.
I took a seat at the table and rubbed my tired eyes.
When I opened them again, a plate sat in front of me, piled high with eggs, bacon, and buttered toast.
I looked toward Graham who was back in the kitchen, pouring coffee into two mugs. He carried them both to the table, then went back to grab his own plate before sitting across from me.
I wrapped both hands around my mug, letting the heat sink into my palms.
Graham lifted his mug to his lips. “Sleep okay?” he asked before taking a sip.
He looked at me over the rim, the early morning sunlight catching in his eyes and making the green stand out even more.
There was something about the way he was looking at me…
Oh god.
Had he heard me standing outside his bedroom door last night or was it my own guilty conscience reading more into his expression than was actually there?
I lifted my own mug and took a sip, hoping he wouldn’t notice the way heat crept into my cheeks.
“Mmhmm,” I said. “You?”
“Fine,” he replied.
Before I could decipher the look in his eyes, a sharp buzz sounded from his back pocket.
He drew out his phone, his jaw tightening as he glanced down at the screen.
“Excuse me,” he said. He stood from the table and walked toward a room I hadn’t noticed before. The door swung closed behind him but didn’t shut completely.
Graham’s voice was low, but I caught a few clipped words.
“Yes. Transfer. I’ll be there.”
When he came back, there was an edge to his features that hadn’t been there before.
“Everything okay?” I asked.
“I have something I need to take care of,” he said, heading for the door. He shrugged on his coat and reached for the doorknob. “I won’t be long.”
The door clicked shut behind him.
I stared at the closed door for far too long, a familiar knot forming in my stomach.
My breakfast sat untouched in front of me, my appetite gone. I tossed the food into the trash and carried our plates to the sink. As I washed the dishes, the knot in my stomach grew tighter, old feelings clawing their way inside.
He said he would be back, I told myself. This wasn’t the same as before. He wasn’t leaving.
I told myself this over and over, but still the tightness persisted. Maybe if I had something else to do, something to distract myself, I might feel better.
I wandered into the living room and carefully added a new log to the low fire the way I had seen Graham do it. Once the log caught, heat spread throughout the room.
I stepped away from the fireplace, and stood in the center of the living room, taking my first real look at it. The furniture was sleek, modern, all in warm brown tones and soft leather. I moved to the shelves on either side of the fireplace, scanning the books and movies that lined them. A thin layer of dust coated the tops as if they were merely there for the look of them.
The cottage should have felt lived in, yet it didn’t. There were no photographs. No personal clutter. Just furniture and books arranged like it was a showroom.
A strange heaviness settled in my chest.
The cottage reminded me of the apartment in a way—lifeless.
Graham had left on his own. Built a life for himself. Yet standing there, surrounded by untouched books and spotless furniture, I couldn’t help but wonder what kind of life he was really living.
I turned to leave but my gaze caught on a partially open door to the right of the living room. I slowly pushed the door open and stepped inside.
It was his office. His scent was stronger here, as if he spent more time here than anywhere else.
The space was small, with minimal furniture, but cozy. A dark wood L-shaped desk sat in the center of the room with a high-back leather chair tucked in behind it.
I walked around the desk and huffed a quiet laugh at the sight.
“Organized chaos,” Graham would call it.
Stacks of folders sat in uneven heaps, their contents spilling from the sides. Loose papers and legal pads were scattered across the desk, and several books had been left open.
I sat down in the high back chair behind his desk and looked it over. My gaze dropped to the drawer, and before I could talk myself out of it, I opened it.
It was filled with dozens of manila folders. Company names were written in the upper right-hand corner of each one, all organized alphabetically.
I shut it and opened the one below. It was filled with more files from companies I didn’t recognize.
I closed it and moved to the other side, opening the first drawer. Unlike the others, this one wasn’t organized at all. There were various pads of yellow sticky notes with rough writing scribbled across them, and a handful of stray paperclips and thumbtacks scattered about.
Just as I went to shut it, I noticed the frayed edge of a faded blue notebook. I carefully pushed the papers and thumbtacks aside and froze.
A familiar tattered notebook stared back at me. My fingers trembled as I pulled it free.
Graham’s name was written across the center in careful block letters. Beneath it, in my own crooked eight-year-old handwriting, were the words: and Hazel.
A small smile tugged at my lips. I hadn’t gone by Hazel in years. Somewhere along the way, Graham had started calling me Bambi, and I’d been Bambi ever since.
I opened to the first page. Math problems lined the page, written in Graham’s handwriting. Taking up nearly all the space in the margins were a chaotic arrangement of tiny flowers, suns, and hearts. I flipped to the next page where Graham’s notes stopped abruptly halfway down. The rest was overtaken by a wild and uneven rainbow. The next few pages were the same. More math problems and notes interrupted by explosions of colorful doodles and drawings.
On the next page, a crude drawing of a family sat askew in the center. The color had dulled and some of the lines were slightly faded, but I recognized the drawing instantly. It was my dad, Caroline, Graham, and me.
I flipped to the next page. Then the next. With each turn of the page, with each new drawing, both Graham’s and my own, my vision blurred more and more.
I pressed my thumbs harder into the paper as if that might steady me.
The floorboards creaked loudly from the kitchen.
“Bambi?” Graham’s voice echoed down the hall, and a second later, he appeared in the doorway.
His eyes flicked to the notebook, then back to me.
I closed the notebook and moved slowly around the desk. I held his gaze and walked towards him, clutching the notebook in my hands.
“You kept it,” I said, my voice shaking.
“Yeah.” His voice came out rougher than before.
I stepped closer until our chests were nearly touching. I tilted my head back, refusing to look away. “Why?”
His jaw worked for moment, before his lips parted slightly.
My heart beat hard, daring to hope that he might finally answer me, but I could see the hesitation in his eyes. It had never been this difficult to get him to talk to me.
I wasn’t sure what to say now and truthfully, I wasn’t sure my words would be enough, so I did the only other thing I could think of.
I lifted my hand slowly and pressed my palm against his chest. His breath caught, and I felt his heart stumble beneath my fingers.
Graham’s hand rose even slower. He brushed a strand of hair behind my ear, his fingers barely grazing my skin. It was as if he was choosing the only place he could touch me without losing himself.
His gaze dipped low, then back to my face, so quickly I almost missed it. Then, just as quickly, his hand dropped away and the wall he’d been so close to letting fall, snapped firmly back in place.
I lowered my hand and took a step back. I knew I wasn’t going to get the answer I was hoping for.
“Everything go okay?” I asked softly.
“I met with a rehab coordinator,” he answered. “Caroline won’t be coming back anytime soon.”
“It won’t last,” I told him, recalling the last two times I’d tried to get her into a program. “It never does.”
“She doesn’t have a choice this time.”
“And what about me?”
“I already told you, Bambi. You’re not going back there.”
He was quiet for a moment, then added. “I’m selling the apartment. There won’t be anything for you to go back to.”
My stomach dropped.
“Why do you get to be the one that decides that? That was my home too, Graham.”
“I’m deciding what I won’t let happen.”
“You didn’t decide that before.”
Graham’s jaw tightened. “No. Someone else decided for me.”
He shoved his hands in his pants pockets and started toward his room. After a few steps, he glanced back at me and nodded at the notebook.
“Keep it. It was always yours anyway.”
Then he disappeared down the hall.
I stood there a moment longer before finally shutting the office door and heading back to my room.
I climbed onto my bed and set the notebook down in my lap.
It should’ve been comforting to know that he’d kept it, but somehow, it only confused me more. I sighed and fell back against the pillows.
He was the one who left. Without warning and without explanation. Yet for four years he’d held onto this notebook.
If he hadn’t cared… why keep it? If he had… why’d he leave?
My gaze drifted back to the notebook in my lap. I ran my fingers over the worn cover before opening it again.
I flipped through the rest of the pages, most of them blank, until dark scribbles made me pause. It was the last drawing in the notebook.
Drawn in dark, rough, almost angry strokes was the figure of a witch. It wasn’t like the witches from a fairytale or cartoon dressed in black with pointy hats. It was darker than that. There was something sinister in her eyes, and her smile, too wide, looked cruel. The witch looked almost happy in her cruelty.
My eyes stayed fixed on the page. The shape of her face, her eyes, the way the edges of her mouth twisted as she smiled, all disturbingly resembled Caroline.
I couldn’t unsee it, now. The similarities between the two.
Was this how Graham had seen her? And if so, maybe there was more to what happened than I realized.
For so long I had told myself that Graham had left without a single care. I’d believed it for years. But what if that wasn’t the truth?
What if I hadn’t been the only one hurting? What if I wasn’t the only one still hurting?
Chapter Five
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