In the Stillness

Read Online In the Stillness by Andrea Randall - Free Book Online

Book: In the Stillness by Andrea Randall Read Free Book Online
Authors: Andrea Randall
Tags: Fiction, Literary, Romance, Contemporary
Ads: Link
nearly lost her shit when I told her we were getting married. My explaining that I was pregnant, and that our families would appreciate it, were her exact reasons why we shouldn’t.
    We hug goodbye and I head carefully up the stairs, smelling a bit like Tijuana.  
    Despite knowing Eric’s waiting for me, I still open the door like I’m trying to sneak in.
    “Hey,” I try, nonchalantly.  
    “Where were you? Did you tell me you had plans?” He’s wide awake. I was only gone for an hour.
    “I went over to The Monkey Bar. Met Tosh and Liz.” I start for the bedroom but my dizziness sits me on the couch. Next to Eric.
    “Why were they out? It’s a Monday.”
    You really are a pompous ass.
    “It’s exam time. They’re professors. And, I don’t work. So, we were free.”
    It’s been a long time since we’ve been home together, just sitting on the couch. When I close my eyes I don’t see toys, I can’t hear the sleeping boys, and all I can smell is the Abercrombie cologne Eric still insists on wearing. After a few minutes, I feel Eric sweep me into his arms and bring me to our bed. I half-heartedly help get myself out of the dress, crawling into bed wearing only my panties.  
      Eric kisses just behind my ear as he slides into bed next to me. “I love you, Natalie. We’ll figure this out, okay?”
    I nod and drift to sleep, dreaming about the time a girl at some party at UMass challenged me about the yellow ribbon on my jacket. I used the pin from that ribbon to cut for the first time.  

Chapter 9

    While I’m at the park with the twins the next day, Tosha calls.
    “Hello?”
    “And how are you feeling this morning, Lightweight?” she says with a tick too much cheer.
    “Well,” I clear my throat, which is slightly scratchy from my single cigarette last night, “I’m hiding behind huge sunglasses at the playground like a bitch, downing a venti, and praying the boys don’t drag me into one of their superhero games.”
    “You’re disastrous,” she says mid-laugh.
    “Well, I haven’t gone out in months and the first time I do I swallow three margaritas in, what, an hour?”
    Tosha whispers, as if others can hear, “Was he pissed?”
    “I don’t really know. He seemed it at first, then he carried me to bed and told me he loved me.”
    “Is he a fucking saint?” Her annoyance is laughable.
    “Yeah, didn’t you know?” I scoff. “And, coffee was ready for me this morning. I gotta go, the boys are about to jump from the fire pole.”
    “Fine, but call me later.”
    I end the call, gather the boys, and head for a drive before naptime.  
    As we wind down South East St., I find myself looking for a certain house. I drive this street all the time, but it’s only every few times that I look. Ryker’s dad was so nice to me during the time Ryker and I were together, and even when we weren’t. It’s not that he stopped being nice to me; it’s that I stopped letting him. I haven’t spoken to him since I was pregnant with the boys. We ran into each other at the grocery store. He congratulated me, but there was a look in his eyes I’ll never forget. It was bittersweet. I cried for the rest of that day.
    Rounding the corner, I spot Bill mowing his lawn. My pulse races as we drive by, but I don’t slow down. I remember walking nervously up their front walk when Ryker first got home. I wanted to run, but it was all I could do to remain upright.  
      A quick glance in the rearview mirror and I see the boys are passed out. Great. It’s impossible to move them from the car to their bed without them fully waking up, so it looks like I’ll be driving around for a while. I turn right when I get to the end of the street and head for a drive down 116. I like to drive past Mount Holyoke’s stunning campus as often as possible. I call Tosh to see if she has some free time to pop out of her office and say “hi.”  
    “Of course,” she says, “just text me when you’re outside my building.”
    As

Similar Books

Rising Storm

Kathleen Brooks

Sin

Josephine Hart

It's a Wonderful Knife

Christine Wenger

WidowsWickedWish

Lynne Barron

Ahead of All Parting

Rainer Maria Rilke

Conquering Lazar

Alta Hensley