Gorgeous Misery (Creeping Beautiful) - Page 42

Three hours. He practically moved next door. And yeah, I get it. His daughter lives there too. So I’m sure he does want to be close to Lauren. And Lauren lives with Sasha, but that’s another thing. I practically raised Lauren until she was six. And fine, I was only nine when she was born, but by the time he shipped her off to Sasha, I was fifteen. She was like my baby sister one day, then the next—gone.

Living with Sasha. In Fort Collins. New life, new name. She even got a pony.

You know what I got? A front-row seat to a shadow government global war, that’s what I got.

“Yeah,” I mutter, taking a turn too fast so the tires of my truck skid sideways across the loose gravel. “I’ve got issues.” I straighten out the wheel, barely avoiding a slip into the ditch, and then press my foot down on the accelerator. I’m not really sure where I’m at and the cell signal out here is spotty. So I sit up in my seat and peek around, trying to find a landmark.

Nick’s house is between two fields. If this were winter the fields would not matter. They’d be empty and brown like all the others. But it’s summer and that means the two fields on either side of Nick’s shitty house are filled with sunflowers.

I scan the horizon for any sign of yellow, but there’s mostly corn out here now and it’s that super-tall genetically engineered kind, so I have to travel past two more fields before I find what passes for a hill in Nebraska. I stop at the top, which is like twelve feet above sea level, get out of the truck, climb into the bed, then onto the roof, and scan in every direction.

My lips creep up in a small smile when I spot it. A blanket of yellow off in the west.

But I don’t get down right away. I stay there on top of the truck. Not a sign of life—other than grasshoppers and birds—for ten miles, at least. I guess it’s nice out here. I can see the attraction of emptiness. It’s a lot easier to live in your own skin when no one’s looking at you all the time. And isn’t that why Chek and I called Kentucky home? It’s a different kind of emptiness, but it’s all the same in the end.

Nick makes them plant the sunflowers for me. He told me that three years ago. That’s the last time I was here. And every year, on my birthday he sends me a picture of them. And if he knows where I am, he sends a bouquet.

Nick Tate has been giving me sunflowers on my birthday since I was six years old. He graduated up to bouquets when I turned ten. I guess I was worth more than a single flower that year because Nick, Lauren, and I had been travelling the southeast coast of the USA like we were permanent tourists for almost eight months before that day.

Then Chek came and got me. I balked a little in the beginning, but once I was back I was back, ya know? I missed training and jobs. But I had already fallen in love with Nick Tate by that time. No, not that kind of love. I don’t know if Nick and I will ever have that kind of love. Our love is something else. Something huge, and real, and even though we’re almost never together, we’re getting better at it.

We’re tied together now, at least. And he’s been helping me look for the cure.

You gotta love a man who helps you look for your cure. That’s real love in my book.

I jump down into the bed, then hop out, land on the dirt road, get in my truck, and head towards the sunflowers. Twenty minutes later I stop at the end of his driveway, suddenly hesitant.

Nick and I are people who don’t like to be found sometimes. And I’ve only been trying to get a hold of him for a couple days, so he’s not exactly missing.

But something is going on and I can’t put my finger on it.

So I’m here.

I look around, wondering if anyone is watching. This is just habit. But out here there is nowhere to hide. Unlike Kentucky with its thick woods and deep gullies, the Nebraska plains are… well, plain. I buzz my window down to listen. Birds, insects, somewhere off in the distance a tractor or some similar piece of machinery. This is the only house for miles and miles. All of this land—even the sections not owned by Nick’s shell company—are just fields. They surround his house, and the sunflowers are tall, but I scan them for a good two minutes looking for any sort of movement and see nothing. The other two fields nearby are sugar beets, and that’s not a tall plant. So I’m reasonably sure there’s no one watching.

Tags: J.A. Huss Thriller
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