Here Without You

Read Online Here Without You by Tammara Webber - Free Book Online Page A

Book: Here Without You by Tammara Webber Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tammara Webber
Ads: Link
those people when he was suffering?
    And where was I? Partying, or shooting another insipid
Life’s a Beach
episode? A second wave of sobs washes over me, but I steel myself against it, like a sharp high face of rock against the tide.
    What’s best for my son is me
.
    As if I’d said these words aloud, Kathryn says, ‘Even if what’s best for him might not be coming home with you right now? Even if what’s best for him isn’t you?’ Kathryn’s words light the landscape of my memory. Graham. The loss of his friendship and that sharp, buried pain in the centre of my chest. I thought I was what was best for him, but really, I hadn’t cared what was best for him.
    I’d wanted Graham because Graham would have been best for
me
. I still believe that, though I see now – more clearly than ever – that I was not best for him. I wasn’t what he wanted.
    I want to be what’s best for River. But what if I’m not?
    I pull myself together. Breathe. Sit up straight. Press the tissue tight under each eye. Clear my throat.
    ‘Yes.’
REID
     
    No paparazzi shots emerge, but one shadowy fan-submitted cell-phone image pops up on one of my fan sites, and within the hour, it’s on all of them, as is speculation about Dori. John texts me the link.
     
John: Word is out on your soooper-secret GF.
    Me: Is it ok to murder some of these people? What makes them think their stupid opinions about who I date matter to me?
    John: Come on dude. You’ve seen this a million times before. Literally.
    Me: I know. I just feel more protective of her.
    John: AWARE.
    Me: Yeah yeah. I’d say I’m sorry, but I’m not.
    John: Are you getting her a bodyguard?
    Me: I hadn’t thought of that. God, she would freak. Can I do that without her knowing?
    John: Probably. But then she can’t tell him who’s safe. He might beat up some poor fucker who’s just talking to her.
    Me: And that would be bad … right?
    John: Sounds like a question for Lawyer Dad.
     
    When I show up for our second public date, I’m greeted by the sight of the media camped out along Dori’s street. Not many – but enough to rattle Dori and her parents. A rental van sits in the driveway, backed up to the garage andprobably already loaded. Her parents are driving her upstate to Berkeley tomorrow, and I’m not invited.
    ‘They’ve always assumed they’d take me to college, move me into my dorm, meet my roommate, suffer through the tearful goodbyes – all that stuff – just the three of us,’ she told me.
    I don’t expect to be part of every segment of her life, but I feel like I’m in a tug-of-war with them. Consenting to assume second place is not in my nature, and chucking her parents’ wishes out the window isn’t in Dori’s. The current stalemate is a fucked-up sort of compromise, but at this point – whatever works, works.
    ‘How much do you trust me?’ I ask just before we head out of her front door.
    She looks up at me – a little less made up than she was last time we went out. Her friends aren’t here tonight. Her outfit – pale pink button-down shirt, grey cords and generic loafers in a nondescript colour – is less hip, a more girl-next-door than her previous (no doubt borrowed) ensemble. As happened with her collection of extra-large, philanthropically mindful T-shirts, though, it turns me on knowing that I’m the guy who knows what’s underneath her plain veneer.
    ‘Do you need to ask?’ she says.
    ‘I’m still getting used to it.’
    ‘I trust you, Reid.’
    Subduing a brief surge of guilt over the rather significant thing I’m still withholding, I tell her, ‘I’m going to hold your hand on the way to the car, which will be interpreted – correctly – as deliberate confirmation of our relationship.Try to erase that apprehensive little frown. Have you ever been on stage? School play, class skit, anything?’
    She nods, the crease between her brows more pronounced and her lower lip drawn fully into her mouth – firm evidence of

Similar Books

One Amazing Thing

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

Lucky Break

J. Minter

Heaven's Promise

Paolo Hewitt

The World Series

Stephanie Peters

The Franchiser

Stanley Elkin

Threading the Needle

Marie Bostwick

Elephants Can Remember

Agatha Christie