herself to a sitting position. She notices me right away and holds my gaze across the room. A small smile dances across her face until she sees me not smiling back.
I nod to her phone, hoping she’ll answer it and give me a minute. Heat floods my chest, and my heart pounds. I need to be able to do this. For her, and for me.
For our future together.
She looks at her phone, swiping her thumb up and down the screen, and then back up at me. “They made it,” she whispers. “They’re in New Zealand.”
She’s talking about Jax and Juliet. I’d driven them to the airport yesterday, and they must’ve been texting to let her know that they arrived safely. I probably had the same text, but my phone was in my duffel bag at my feet.
“Where are you going?” she asks, noticing the bag.
I drop my eyes but look up again, determined not to be a fucking coward. “I’m leaving for a while, Tate.” I try to keep my voice soft.
Her eyes turn worried. “ROTC?” she asks.
“No.” I lean forward, resting my elbows on my knees. “I . . .” I let out a breath, speaking slowly. “Tate, I love you—”
But she throws off her sheets and starts breathing hard, already knowing where this is going. With her long blond hair pulled back into a low ponytail, I can see the realization written all over her face.
“Jax was right,” she rasps.
“Jax is always right,” I admit, wishing I could keep doing what I’d been doing for the past two years. Just take her lips, turn off the lights, and shut out the world.
My brother can voice what everyone else is afraid to face, and he knows me like he knows himself. I’m unhappy, and I can’t use Tate to hold me up anymore.
“Continuing like this . . .” I shake my head. “I’d make you miserable.”
My brother knows that I hate ROTC. He knew without my telling him that I hate my life in Chicago. I hate school. I hate the apartment. I hate feeling like I’m a lost puzzle piece.
Where the hell did I fit?
And since Tate had overheard Jax and me the other day, now she’s on to me, too. It’s time to own up.
Fuck up, own up, and then get up.
Her eyes shoot to mine, and I can see the tears pooling there. “Jared, if you want to quit ROTC, then quit,” she cries. “I don’t care. You can study anything. Or nothing. Just—”
“I don’t know what I want!” I burst out, yelling so I won’t cry. “That’s the problem, Tate. I need to figure things out.”
“Away from me,” she snaps.
I stand up, running a hand through my hair. “You’re not the problem, babe.” I try to soothe her. “You’re the only thing that I’m sure of. But I need to grow up, and it’s not happening here.”
I’m twenty, and all I know about myself is that I love Tatum Brandt.
Two years ago I thought that was enough.
“Here, where?” she prods. “Chicago? Shelburne Falls? Or around me?”
I clench my jaw and stare out her French doors.
I just want to grab her and keep her. I don’t want to leave.
But I can’t do what she wants me to do. I can’t quit school to find myself and be around her at the same time. What do I do? Stay home all day, wander the city, take on odd jobs as I explore my options for who knows how many years while she comes home every day from her classes, which keep her life moving forward?
I hate to put it like this, but the raw truth? My pride can’t take it.
I can’t be the deadbeat boyfriend doing shit with his life as he figures himself out while she’s there to see it.
But I will come back. I’ll always want her.
She sits on the bed where we’ve slept next to each other for nearly ten years. The bed where I’ve made love to her countless times, and I feel like a candy-ass right now. I’m a fucking coward because I need to leave, and a coward because I don’t want to. I feel myself giving in.
But I clear my throat and meet her eyes, pushing forward. “The apartment is paid up for the school year, so you don’t have to