wall and plunged into me. I wrapped my legs around his waist and urged him deeper, and he responded by thrusting harder, faster. I could feel him building up, his breathing becoming more labored against my ear, but I couldnât focus, couldnât wrap my mind around our angry sex. A voice in my head whispered that we shouldnât be doing this, yet here we were, panting into each other like dogs in heat.
So I tried to clear my mind and focus on the here and now, but I couldnât stop the image of Henry punching Dave from playing on a loop in my mind. The complete lack of control and regard on Henryâs face as he hit one of his closest friends clutched at my heart and refused to let go.
Henry pushed into me one last time as he came, not making a sound, only breathing hard against my neck.
After some time, he loosened his hold and let me down gently. âIâm sorry,â he said, doing up his jeans and refusing to meet my eyes. Whatever it was that he was apologizing for, I was never able to find out because he said nothing else and just walked out the front door.
5
PEACE TALKS
Henry was not in my bed when I awoke the next morning. I threw an arm over my eyes, hoping to shield myself from the sunshine peering through the wood blinds but there was no going back to sleep for me. Not with everything that happened last night fresh on my brain.
I crawled out of bed and dug around in my desk drawer until I found his letter. I sat on the computer chair and read it over for the hundredth time, clinging to the idea that I could somehow find a way to break down the wall of rage heâd built and find the old Henry on the other side. I had no clue how to even begin but I was ready to try anything.
Henry came home around noon with an apology sandwich from Subway and my favorite: oatmeal-raisin guilt cookies. Henry and I ate on the floor against the couch in silence, just watching the news. Even after weâd finished our meals we continued sitting there, both unwilling to walk away without discussing last nightâs events.
âDid you run this morning?â I asked, picking at the carpet between my legs.
âNo. I went to see Dave.â
I looked up at him in surprise. âAnd?â
âWe talked it over. He told me what happened.â
I waited but didnât really expect the apology. Still, it would have been nice if it had come.
âThen I went to see the commander.â
âOn a Saturday?â
âYeah, he was at his sonâs soccer game.â He took a big gulp from a water bottle. âI told him about the altercation. He asked me if I needed to see a counselor for PTSD.â
I wanted to yell âI told you so!â but didnât think it would help the situation, so I left the words unsaid to float around with the dust motes in the sunshine. âSo what now?â
Henry picked at the seam of his jeans. âItâs tricky. If I go see a military therapist, itâll go on my record that I have PTSD and my top-secret clearance will get taken away.â
âCan you get it back?â
âEventually. It will take a while, though. So in that time, I wonât be able to do my job.â He sighed. âAnd when I donât do my job, my OPRâthe officer performance reportâwill look like shit. And then Iâll get passed over during the next promotion board.â
âOh. What are you going to do?â
He looked at me then, his eyes conveying a million emotions. âWhat do
you
think I should do?â
âWhy are you asking me?â
âI canât think of anyone else that this affects more,â he said, grasping my hand. âSo?â
The naïve girl in me hoped that my love alone was enough to fix whatever was wrong with Henry, but the pragmatic girl knew that sometimes love just wasnât enough. âI want you to let go of that anger thatâs built up inside, and if it means you have to talk to a
Megan Abbott
Sheri Anderson
Hafsah Laziaf
César Aira
William Goldman
Selena Kitt
Shannon McKenna
Diane Duane
V. K. Powell
Kit Tunstall