"Bean," Rochelle rubbed over Sabrina's back while she wept in her palms. Rochelle was holding her 'I told you so' in the back of her throat. She'd known that Sabrina going to see Keegan would be too much and had warned her before she left. But that was something Sabrina just had to see on her own.
The dental office had been closed for nearly 25 minutes and Sabrina knew she'd never make it home feeling so horribly. As soon as she'd come back from seeing Keegan, a cloud had loomed over her head for the rest of the day.
"Am I an unlovable person?" Rochelle almost hadn't heard her behind the walls of her hands. "Is no one capable of genuinely caring for me?" Sabrina asked in hysterics.
Everything fell on her full force. Quincy, her father, Keegan, her mother and sister. No one had the decency in their heart to love her the way she felt she deserved. One after another, they continued to fail and abandon her. Keegan was the tipping point of a mountain tall pile of hurt.
"Do not say that. You are an amazing woman and you are completely lovable." Rochelle hated seeing her best friend this way. She was typically an upbeat, fun and joyous person. She didn't think she'd ever seen Sabrina shed more than one tear at a time. "I love you." She laughed meekly between her friend's sobs. Sabrina chuckled a little. Rochelle sighed.
"You know you still love him, right?" Rochelle said. Sabrina knew. She'd known the day she saw him in the bar with another woman on his arm. That was the most factual thing she knew. But it didn't matter anymore. He had ruined what they had and it had to end there. She kept telling herself there was no way she could go back to him after that. "If you want to keep fighting that feeling, I'll stick with you until the day it goes away. But I'd be just as supportive of you learning to be happy with him again." Rochelle whispered.
"It isn't fair that I let everyone fuck me over and get a second chance." She sniffled roughly. "I shouldn't have to be that forgiving. Especially of people who claim they love me."
"I know, honey. But we aren't talking about your family or Quincy. We're talking about the man you fell in love with. The man who still has your heart."
Should Keegan be held to different standards—standards lower than everyone else? Or were his halfway decent intentions enough to warrant forgiveness?
*
Keegan was lying in bed when he heard a knock on his cracked door. He didn't bother to look.
"Can I talk to you for a second?" Bethany ventured inside the pitched black bedroom and Keegan swallowed his annoyance. She sat on the edge of his bed and Keegan eventually slid up his headboard. It was still early in the evening so the open blinds allowed some light to shine through. She twisted her thumb in her hands.
She took an audible gulp.
"I want to apologize to you." Keegan's eyebrows pressed together in a tight line. He hadn't been expecting that. "I also want to thank you." She chuckled to herself. Bethany reached to tuck a lock behind her ear. "I got a teaching job at the elementary school around the corner." Keegan's eyes grew wide.
Bethany had worked hard for her teaching degree and certification back in Florida. When Keegan left, she had been just about ready to start teaching and quit her waitressing job. But his departure had shattered her life and she didn't have the nerve to start anymore. She hadn't had the strength to do anything knowing that he had chose to leave her behind.
"W—wow, I'm really happy for you." That was genuine. He was happy to see her doing better. Happy to see she had something in her life that gave her new purpose.
"Thanks," She looked up at him with a smile. "I know you lost something when you chose to help me." She said it sternly. Keegan looked at the wall beside them. He hadn't told Bethany much about Sabrina or his relationship with her. But she was a smart woman; he wasn't surprised she had pieced enough together by now.
"I'm thankful you sacrificed her for me; I don't—" She stopped to reflect. "I don't think I would've made it if you hadn't been willing to help." Keegan exhaled roughly. Some kind of weight had been lifted off his shoulders and he didn't know what it was or where it came from. Did that make losing Sabrina an easier pill to swallow? In some ways, it did. Knowing he had helped keep Bethany living long enough to find her passion again had made losing the love of his life just a little easier to bare.
"I'm sorry you had to but I'm thankful you did." She wiped her tear away quick enough for Keegan to second guess its existence at all. "I hope you can get her back."
"Don't thank me. I've always cared about you." Keegan stated.
And it was true. He and Bethany had a history that couldn't be forgotten. She had been there when no one else was. When his father was his enemy, she had been the one to make his heart a little lighter. He was forever thankful for his life with her back in Florida. However, he was glad she finally recognized that life had come to an end.
*
"Are you sure about this?" His publisher had asked him with a smile. Walker was of course anticipating the release of Keegan's novel but he had wanted to ask again just to make sure. "You know if—" His tone of caution had been heard too many times for Keegan's taste.
"I already know." Keegan said harshly. "I'm more than certain." His palms were slick and juxtaposed every ounce of confidence in his tone. A lot of people were counting on this book. He'd built up local expectations and he had to exceed them. He was certain his book could do it.
For the first time, his heart was in the paper. He had written from a place that had been locked and sealed away all his life. But he'd had experience to guide him. Having to scrap an entire novel more than 3/4th complete was tough. His publisher gave him hell and he spent many nights back in Florida cranking out something to soothe his worries. That book had been his escape from the world of dealing with Bethany and coping with his loss of Sabrina.
His publisher was beyond impressed and Keegan had been too. He was proud of himself and what he had managed to create.
He had someone special to thank for that.
*
Sabrina opened the dental office door. She was in a great mood; traffic was manageable, she went to be early the night before and she had a new episode of Scandal to look forward to after work. She glanced behind her to say good morning to everyone but was met with multiple pairs of wide eyes. They were all standing around the TV in the waiting room. She looked inquisitively between the staff and patients.