More of You (Confessions of the Heart 1)
I tried to give her the only encouragement I could find. “But we can’t regret our lives or our pasts or the decisions we’ve made. We can only learn from them and live in the day. For right now. For forever.”
“Just . . . promise me one thing.”
I took her hand that rested on my chest, brought it to my mouth, and brushed kisses across her knuckles. “What’s that?”
“Don’t walk away from me for me without telling me why you’re doin’ it. Don’t make that wrong decision for me. Not again. Don’t ever hide what’s happening in your life to protect me. You should have let me make that decision.”
“I won’t,” I promised her.
Silence climbed back into the room. Like the questions crawled in from under the crack in the door.
Penetrating and invading.
“I need you to tell me everything you know about Joseph,” she finally said, her plea small and insecure.
If Joseph weren’t already dead, I might jump from that bed, hunt him down, and kill him myself for that sound alone.
For the terror that trembled through her body.
I knew there’d come a time when we had to lay it all out. Mack’s warning from earlier rambled through my mind and clawed at my consciousness.
“You have to tell her everything.”
I knew I did.
But how was I supposed to put her through that?
I wanted to protect her.
Wrap her up and hold her and promise her that everything would be okay.
Reaching out, I yanked her closer. “Come here.”
I rolled onto my back so I could envelop her in my arms.
She rested her cheek on my chest, angled so she could still look up at me.
“It’s going to be okay, Faith. I promise you.”
Mindlessly, she ran her fingertips over my stomach, her thoughts going far. “You know that’s what Joseph told me, too? When I asked him what was happening, that’s what he told me.”
A bolt of agony slanted through my spirit. I shifted so I could look at her better. “Is that all he said?”
Her head began to slowly shake, taken back to that time. I wanted to grab her and pull her out of it, tell her to stay with me, right here, in this moment, but I needed to know.
I kept my mouth shut and let her continue. “One night, he got up from the dinner table with the excuse that he needed to go back into the office. It was the same excuse he’d been making more and more. I’d finally called out after him—to his back as he was walkin’ out the door—and asked him to just tell me. Whatever it was, to just tell me.”
Insecurity bunched up in her shoulders. “I guess I’d figured he was cheatin’ on me. Maybe it makes me pathetic, but I wouldn’t have been surprised in the least since sex between us always seemed kind of . . . unfulfilling. Our relationship was . . . different, Jace. When we first got together . . .”
She trailed off, searching for what to say, her eyes blinking up at me for understanding. “He was there for me when you walked away. You have to know I had no idea where you’d gone or why. Had no idea you’d been sent to prison. I thought you left me. Joseph kept me company, being a friend and telling me one day I wouldn’t miss you so much.”
Sadness blanketed her spirit. “About nine months after you left, he kissed me. Right out by the roses. I started to cry because it felt so wrong. So off. I told him I was always goin’ to love you, that time wasn’t going to change that, and he told me that was okay. That he’d love me enough for the both of us.”
She winced. “In time, I did love him. Different from how I loved you. It was a comfortable kind of love.”
I wanted to claw my eyes out at the vision. Joseph with her. Touching her. I’d bet my ass for Joseph it hadn’t been unfulfilling at all. The fucker had no idea how to treat her right, and she’d taken that inadequacy on herself.
Or maybe . . . maybe she really just hadn’t ever felt a spark.
Regret filled her sweet gaze. Like any of this could ever possibly be her fault. “But things had started to change. He’d been acting different for about six months before he was killed.”
Her eyes narrowed, like she was trying to look into the past and figure out what she’d missed. “He was acting anxious. He had always been a little jittery. Watching over his shoulder. But something had changed. Something that kept him up at night. I tried to ignore it. To chalk it up to the fact that we all have different moods, and that we’re all going to go through different phases in our lives. I’d thought it would pass.”