Total pages in book: 14
Estimated words: 12408 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 62(@200wpm)___ 50(@250wpm)___ 41(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 12408 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 62(@200wpm)___ 50(@250wpm)___ 41(@300wpm)
“Really, it’s not a big deal. I thought—”
“There weren’t any quiet hours on the lease,” Luna snaps. The sun gleams off her hair. “Send me a text of what the hours will be so I have a record.” Then she gives me the finger and stalks away without another word.
But I see her shoulders shake. I watch how she holds herself when she walks. I try to think back to what I said. What the hell did I say?
Fuck me, man.
LUNA
The rest of the day is more subdued. I don’t tell my friends about running into Parker on the beach before they leave. Even though I can’t stop thinking about him standing there. He’s tall, broad shouldered and practically a model with that smile he has. I was shocked when I first saw him. I just didn’t expect a hot guy to be the landlord next door. I really thought we had cute banter too. Well before that … unfortunate breakdown of mine. I’m pretty sure I’m the one to blame and I’m still too upset about it.
I realize I shouldn’t be this upset. I’ve replayed the conversation at least a hundred times, and I don’t think he was pissed when he saw me. Maybe a little annoyed. Maybe a little put out that I kept him up all night with the music and my friends’ voices. They’ve never been the quietest people, although I had no idea he could hear anything. Swear to God. If we’d known we were bothering him, it never would have happened.
I know my heart shouldn’t be pounding when I think of Parker’s eyes as he stood next to his truck, his arms crossed over his chest and this expression on his face, like—
Like he was glad I walked up because he was thinking about me. I guess he was only thinking about how the single party I’ve had in the condo since I moved in got a little out of hand. There might have been some guys over at one point—friends of Hazel’s who she’d met in college. I couldn’t remember their names, but people’s names haven’t seemed important since my mom died. Almost nothing has seemed important since my mom died, honestly, but the way Parker talked to me—
It’s just he didn’t have to wait. He could have said something. Him waiting… something about it. It makes me so unreasonably upset.
And yeah, I know that doesn’t make any sense.
I don’t know if I’m fine. I don’t know how anything could be truly fine when my mom isn’t here anymore. When I can’t call her or text her or leave her a voicemail about my terrible days. When I can’t feel better the second she calls me back.
“We’ll be here whenever you need us,” Hazel says into my ear, her arms tight around me on the steps of the condo. “I can stay a few more days if you want. A week. However long, really. I don’t mind.” I know she can't though. Not unless she wants to lose her job. The sentiment is sweet though.
“I’m good,” I promise her. “I’m…better. But if I start to feel—” I’m already starting to feel crushed by the sadness that might not ever let go of me. “If I need you, I’ll call.”
“Swear.”
“I swear,” I promise her, and hug her a little tighter. “Drive safe.”
“I will.” Hazel kisses my cheek, and then she’s gone. I stay on the steps to wave to her as her car disappears around the corner.
Then I just breathe in the quiet. I can hear the ocean from here, like everybody else. It’s always there, making that sound, day and night, but when you have four friends in your house, it’s hard to hear anything else.
I glance over at Parker’s place and feel…
A little guilty.
Not very guilty, because if he wanted it to be completely quiet all night or on the weekends, he could have said so. That’s a very standard practice for landlords. They’re supposed to put that kind of information in the lease so nobody has to have a confrontation.
But then—
We could have been quieter. I could have just said we didn’t have plans to stay up all night when he talked to me at the beach. I could have explained. I could have not freaked out over basically nothing and been a complete bitch to him.
Letting my head fall back I groan. I don’t know. I could have done everything differently, I guess.
By Monday morning, I’m feeling as down as I did before Hazel’s emergency sleepover happened. I don’t want to go to my therapy appointment at all, which is a good sign that I need to be there. I make up a million excuses not to go, but in the end, I drag myself there anyway.
My therapist, Anne, runs her practice out of a room in the front of her house with a separate entrance. It’s cozy, with an overstuffed chair for clients to sit in and a colorful rug on the floor. A prism by the window reflects rainbows onto the deep green walls. Anne, my therapist, is making tea when I arrive. She hands me a cup with a quiet greeting, and I settle into the chair with it. It doesn’t matter that it’s summer. I still appreciate the heat. I’ve seen her for six sessions now. I’m used to the pattern of how things go. I’m used to the smell of the herbal tea and the faint bell from her cat as he moves somewhere in the house.