I can only apologise for how long it's taken to get this out. So much for a month!
There are a few reasons why I wasn't able to post sooner, even though the vast majority of this was written on time. My last remaining grandparent had her first brush with death last summer; we're still living with the aftermath. I lost my job, burned through my savings and had to move back in with my aging folks. And I found myself caught up in a torrid love affair of my own that burned so very bright before it spectacularly crashed to the ground.
Life has a habit of sending you curveballs that force you to live the life you want your characters to aspire to, being present every step of the way. I'd like to think I did my best.
For those who have missed it, this is the second and final part to Jei and Sam's love story. Thank you for helping me get this far. I really hope you enjoy :)
- - - -
"I'm going away," he said. "And I want you to know I'm coming back. I love you because..."
"Don't say anything," Fatima interrupted. "One is loved because one is loved. No reason is needed for loving."
But the boy continued. "I had a dream, and I met with a king. I sold crystal and crossed the desert. And because the tribes declared war, I went to the well, seeking the alchemist.
So, I love you because the entire universe conspired to help me find you."
- Paulo Coelho
--
I don't remember the specifics of the day Tal called. I remember we were incredibly busy - not least because Sam was at the peak of some kind of mood swing and snapping like a hyena at anyone who dared call him out, so I was once again in the thick of damage control. You could hear warehouse screaming through the windows, and my extension had been ringing off the fucking hook.
"Tal?" I couldn't keep the confusion out of my voice. I'd been expecting yet another representative from the accounts company that kept screwing up our invoicing.
"Yeah, it's me." His gravelly voice was tighter than usual, prickling with irritation. "Where's Samir?"
I looked into the office across from mine. The blinds were partially drawn, but I could still sort of make out Sam's silhouette slouched over the expanse of his desk. "Hold on, I'll put you through."
"Don't bother. The fucker won't answer."
I hesitated as he broke into a tired sigh. Tal had always made me uncomfortable - he and Sam may have been brothers as well as business partners, but their brands of quiet and dangerous were worlds apart. Sam stalked you lazily through the winding grass. Tal liked to hover like a circling bird of prey.
"Is he in today? That's all I need to know."
"He's in," I said quietly.
"Fuck's sake." Tal's growl was rabid. I immediately drew away from the receiver. "Right. He needs to grow up. Tell that fuckwit brother of mine I'm picking him up at four - rearrange his meetings or whatever it is you do. If I have to drag him to the hospital kicking and screaming, fine, but after this I'm done."
"Hospital?" The word sat cold and heavy on my tongue. "Tal, what happened?"
Loud breaths echoed down the line. My wall clock counted the seconds as they passed.
"Mum's in a coma," he said eventually. Gruff and apathetic. He wrapped his words in an impatient sigh. "They said no visitors after six. Pick him up a bunch of flowers or something too, would you?"
I was still staring off into dead space when he deigned to cut the call.
--
The room was done quite nicely. Considering the stench of decaying hospital that still lingered in the hallways, you could almost forget it was the ICU.
I seated myself on a worn fabric chair, taking in the faded blue of the walls and the machines that surrounded her frail form. The blinds by her bed were slatted and thin strips of August sunlight illuminated her withered arms and bedsheets.
I ignored the bruises of endless needles between her delicate bones, hesitated - then held her palm between my hands.
I had no idea whether or not Sam had come to see her, and I decided I didn't really care. I'd excused myself early to avoid that particular family reunion. But the entire drive home I'd battled with a sizeable knot in the pit of my stomach, and it had only grown heavier over the course of the week.
It was during back-to-back Bruce Willis movies on the sofa with my dad as he beamed at his phone, chuckling at the photos my sister was sending of her and the kids on holiday, that I realised this wasn't going to go away.
I swallowed past the lump in my throat. "Hi, Aunty," I whispered.
She said nothing back; merely communicated the threads of her consciousness through obnoxious monitor beeps and the whirring of mechanical noise. My hands shook and I forced myself to get it together.
"I - uh - I don't know if you remember me." I bit my bottom lip, hard, and ignored all the instincts encouraging me to flee. "Sam introduced us a long time ago. I helped you when he was out of the country, that one time. We went shopping and you haggled a very pretty dress for me at the bazaar." I laughed. "For two gals who don't speak the same language, we cut up quite a good time."
I went quiet, stroking her pallid skin for a moment, and almost jumped when I heard some nurses bustling outside the door. Apologising quickly, I continued. "Anyways, I just... I had to come see how you were. My... my own mum isn't here anymore, and... well. I guess I just have a thing about people being forgotten."
She lay back against her blankets, unfazed and unbothered. In a way, it really did look like she'd gone to sleep. Memories of my mum lying in the funeral parlour came back to me in a rush that I pushed down my gullet like bile.
"I know he cares about you. Of course he does. He's the one who drove you to A&E, after all." I shook my head wildly and tried my best to wrangle my thoughts. "But I don't get how men do it. You know? Shove all those thoughts and feelings into boxes like there could ever be a right time to air them out."
Gingerly, I placed her hand back on the bed. Then I twisted the string on the blinds to shift the garish light away from her face, and began rearranging her flowers.
--