Page 89 of Chasing the Tide


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Of course I did.

What I had done to Flynn wasn’t something you could just get over because he had chosen to forgive me.

Forgiving myself was proving to be the greatest challenge I had ever faced.

Our history was horrible and beautiful and complicated. It was brutal and life changing.

We shared a love that had blossomed under the most impossible of circumstances. It was rough. It was imperfect.

It was ours.

How could I question my salvation? How could I deny what held me together?

Goddamn Leonard for making me wonder. To question whether the absence of guilt would mean the destruction ofus.

I got up out of my seat and left Leonard’s office without a word. The therapist looked up as I made my hasty exit but he didn’t stop me. Neither did Flynn, who watched me with a blank expression.

I pulled on my coat and left the building, the cold air cutting my skin with icy fingers.

I stood there, on the sidewalk choking on twisted thoughts.

I found myself thinking about our time at the beach, all those years ago. On our broken journey to each other, it had been one of the few moments of total connectedness. Absolute simplicity.

I remembered sitting close to the ocean, watching the machines out in the water hauling up sand and dumping it on the shore. Flynn and I had wondered about their purpose, only to realize they were reclaiming the beach. Putting it back the way it was before time and erosion had obliterated it.

Back then, I had been that beach. I was lost.

And Flynn had scooped up the tiny, damaged pieces of myself and gave them back to me.

Here I was, years later, still not whole. I was healing. I could feel it but I couldn’t help but wonder whether I would have to live the rest of my life with parts of me missing.

I felt as though Flynn and I were forever chasing the tide. Hoping that just this once, we’d finally be able to catch it. That we could hold it in our hands and breathe a sigh of relief because all the battles, all the wars, were over.

That we could finally be content inthis…our happily ever after.

Because if we couldn’t catch it, what would that mean? For Flynn? For me? For the life we were trying to build?

What would I be left with?

Giant holes and forgotten pieces where a girl used to be.

“Why did you leave?” Flynn asked suddenly, interrupting my thoughts.

I shrugged. “I needed some fresh air,” I dismissed, not wanting to admit out loud the horrible insecurities that wouldn’t go away.

You don’t deserve him.My inner voice said nastily. And maybe that voice was right. Because who would purposefully sabotage what this amazing man was trying so hard to give me?

Ellie McCallum would.

Because she had never learned to do anything different.

Flynn pulled out his keys and we started walking towards his car.

“We can do this,” he said and I looked over at him questioningly.

“We can do what?”

“Go to New York. Be together. Get married and have kids. We can have everything.”