my head worse. A doctor had put three stitches in my scalp
ressed to the bandage on my head. As I steppe
ively around Charly Mack. Her face was buried in
"I never should have left. I was just scared. I didn' t
her at parties over the years, laughing and drinking wit
ghter. "It' s okay, Cha
ickered with something-guilt, may
d, his voice strain
said, my own voic
mad. Coleton and I... we have a lot of history." She looked up at him with wide, innocent
years I had given him. He just stood there, silent, his a
a triumphant little smile
ugh. It was a sound that see
directly at Coleton. "You don'
alked away, no
received a job offer months ago, from a prestigious rehabilitation clinic
t was in
t was filled with memories, every corner holding an echo of our time together. The special railings
toiletries. I took down the photos from the corkboard in the kitchen-pict
hair, but I had baked him a cake, and his friends had come over. In the picture, I was leaning down to light the can
nd tore it into tiny pieces. I let the
. I had to
ang. It wa
casual, as if nothing had happened. "I wo
s. "I had some
have a board meeting, and I want you to ch
the past three years. I was his physical
id, my voice b
ern building felt alien to me now. I found him in
as perched on the edge of his desk
Coleton some lunch. It' s his favorite, from that little Italian place we us
et, ensuring he ate healthy, low-inflammation foods to aid his reco
professional instincts taking over. "It' s too
' m fine, Arminda. I' m not an inva
sta, moaning in pleasure. "Go
e clutched his side, his face turning pale and sweaty. The ri
aced a bottle of digestive enzyme
and walked ou
d me, I heard Charly' s
on' t let her boss you around. She should b
choing in my ears. But what hurt more was what I didn' t hear. I d
loved her enough to let her poison him, to let her insult the woman w