Page 228 of Nico


Font Size:

I don’t want to go upstairs.

It feels wrong to be farther away from him, even for a few hours.

So I decide, right then, that I’m sleeping on the couch.

It isn’t comfortable.

I don’t care.

I grab the blanket off the back of the sofa and fold it over my arm, then pause.

I still need to get ready for bed. Brush my teeth. Wash my face. Change.

I stare at Dad again, reluctant to leave him.

“Okay,” I whisper. “I’ll be right back. I’m not going far.”

I head upstairs quickly.

The bathroom light is harsh after the dim living room. I move through the motions on autopilot—brush, rinse, wash my face.

I change into what I sleep in without thinking about it. Habit. Muscle memory. Tank top. Shorts. Bare feet on a cold floor.

My eyes catch my reflection in the mirror, and I don’t look too long.

I don’t want to see the version of myself that’s one bad moment away from breaking again.

I turn the light off and move back down the hall, then down the stairs.

When I step back into the living room, my eyes go straight to the bed.

Dad is still there.

But something is different.

It takes my brain a second to register it, like my mind is trying to protect me by delaying the truth.

His shoulders shift under the blanket. A small tremor.

He’s shivering. But his forehead shines faintly in the low light, damp. Sweat.

My heart drops so hard it feels like it hits the floor.

“Dad?” I whisper, already moving.

His breathing is short.

Not steady and slow like it was five minutes ago.

Short. Shallow. Like each breath is work.

“No,” I say, and the word comes out sharp, panicked.

I’m at the bedside in two steps, hand hovering over him because I don’t know what to do first—check the tubing, check his skin, check his temperature, check his eyes.

His face looks flushed. His mouth opens on a breath that sounds wrong.

I jerk back like I’ve been burned, because fear makes me stupid. Kendra’s words slam into my head.