Read Love Inspired August 2014 – Bundle 1 of 2 Online

Authors: Allie Pleiter and Jessica Keller Ruth Logan Herne

Love Inspired August 2014 – Bundle 1 of 2 (24 page)

“Where do you get off making assumptions like that?”

Max threw his hands in the air. “Hey, don’t get all up about it. Do you know how many
physical therapists I’ve had since my accident? How many counselors and docs? Pretty
soon it gets easy to recognize the type, that’s all.”

“Oh, yes, JJ told me you used to tear through a therapist a week back at the beginning.
A paragon of empathy.” That wasn’t particularly fair to throw back at him, but for
Heather, his attitude struck an old nerve. “Look—” she forced herself to soften her
voice when Max’s eyes grew hard and dark “—I want you to help Simon, and I think you
might actually be able to. But not if you dump him into some labeled box based on
your own experience. Simon’s had his disability his entire life—he’s never known anything
different. You need to respect who he is, not who you want him to be, or this will
never work.”

Max didn’t reply at first. He looked down, fiddling with a joint on his chair. “Okay,
I get it.” When he raised his eyes again, the edge in his features was replaced by
something else. Determination? She couldn’t quite tell. “What do you want to happen
from all this?”

“What do you mean?”

“I don’t know if you want Simon to be happy, to be less of a target or to be able
to punch Kikowitz out. What’s the end goal here?”

She thought carefully before she answered. “I want Simon not to be afraid of who he
is or what Kikowitz might do to him. He’s brilliant, you know. Simon’s one of the
smartest kids at our school. I want him to enjoy coming here, not dread it.”

Max didn’t appear to have an immediate answer to that. After what she hoped was a
thoughtful pause, he said, “You want him to be able to take risks?”

“He needs a few outlets, I’ll admit that.”

Max pivoted to face her. “Then we go sailing. You, me and Simon on Saturday afternoon.
That way we both can convince the geek there’s more to life than Math Club.”

“Don’t call him a geek. And how did you know Simon was in Math Club?”


Puh-lease.
I saw two calculators in his backpack. The dock behind Jones River Sports, two o’clock.
You’re in charge of permission slips and snacks.”

Heather tucked her hands into her pockets. “Who said you could take over here?”

“Eleven therapists,” he called as he started down the ramp, clicking the remote starter
on his car to send it roaring to life as he descended. “Actually twelve, if you count
the one who lasted ten minutes. And four nurses. And there was an intern at Adventure
Access who—”

“Okay!” Heather shouted as Max somehow made the engine rev before he even got into
the car. “I get the picture.”

Chapter Three

M
ax checked his watch again Saturday afternoon. Since when did he get nervous about
stuff like this? Chronically late, he didn’t have a leg to stand on—if he could stand—about
anyone’s punctuality. Still, Simon’s dad seemed like the guy to show up ten minutes
early, not twenty minutes late. And where was Heather? He wheeled the length of the
dock again, needlessly checking the ropes that tied the
Sea Legs
to the dock, frustrated with how much he’d managed to invest in one kid’s sailing
lesson.

It was the look in Simon’s eyes that did him in. That heartbreaking eagerness at the
mention of going sailing nearly instantly squashed by a dad’s harping voice. Parents
were hard enough to take at that age as it was. To have all that other stuff loaded
on top, then compounded by kids like Kikowitz?

Kids like he’d been?

The faces of all the kids he’d ever bullied had haunted him last night. He saw Simon’s
face every time he shut his eyes, and it was making him crazy. Sleepless, fidgety
and just plain nuts.

The sound of tires on gravel hit his ears, and he looked up, expecting the Williamses’
big red van. Instead, a small tan sedan pulled into the parking area and Heather climbed
out of the nondescript little car. Shoulders slumped, head slightly down, Heather’s
body broadcast what he’d begun to suspect: Simon wasn’t showing.

His understanding—and annoyance—must have been clear on his face, for all Heather
said when she walked onto to the dock was “I’m sorry.”

Max grunted. It was a better choice than the nasty language currently running in his
head.

“I’ve been on the phone with Brian Williams, trying to convince him Simon would be
safe, but—”

“But hooligans like Max Jones can’t be trusted with his precious son—oh, I can just
hear the speech.”

She set down the loudly patterned tote bag she was carrying and eased onto the dock’s
little bench. “It’s not about you.”

“Oh, not all about me, but I can just imagine what Simon’s dad thinks of someone like
me.” He flipped open the equipment locker’s lid and tossed the third life jacket back
inside.

He was picking up the second one when she put out a hand to stop him. “So I guess
we’re not going, huh?” Disappointment tinged her words.

Max looked up, life jacket still in his hand, surprised. “No, we can still go.” He’d
just assumed she’d ditch the day with Simon not coming. Sail alone, just with her?
He’d have to go so
slow
and be so
nice.

“I sort of want to know how this whole rigging works.” She gestured toward the specially
modified sailboat, covering her tracks with a “professional curiosity” that didn’t
quite pass muster. She frowned and crossed her arms when she reached the back of the
boat. “
Sea Legs?
Really?”

“I thought that was particularly clever, actually. Much better than my first choice.”

Her brows knotted together. “I’m almost afraid to ask.”

“The
Crip Ship.
JJ thought that a bit confrontational.”

Heather laughed. “Max Jones? Confrontational? Imagine my surprise.”

Max spread his arms. “Got me where I am today.” He tossed her the life jacket. “Hop
in. I’ll hand over your bag and cast us off.” Wheeling over to the bag, he picked
it up. It weighed a ton. “There had better be decent snacks in here.”

“Homemade brownies, watermelon and some of the firehouse root beer.”

Max handed over the bag as he rolled on board after her. “Someone ought to call Simon
and tell him what he’s missing.” He pulled the ramp up and stowed it in its special
spot alongside the keel.

“I think he knows.” Heather’s voice sounded like he felt. Disappointed and not a little
miffed. “This would have been so good for him.”

Max liked the way that sounded. Ever since he’d wheeled into Heather’s office, he’d
gotten the vibe from her that he was a poor substitute for whatever mentor she’d had
in mind. It bugged him that Heather hadn’t judged him capable of helping someone.
Then again, no one was more surprised than him that he’d even cared to take the whole
thing on.

He pointed to the bowline. “Undo that knot and pull the line aboard, will you?”

While she climbed up to the front of the boat, Max transferred himself from his chair
and into the swiveling seat on rails that allowed him to move freely about the boat.
It wasn’t a particularly graceful maneuver, and he preferred having her attention
diverted elsewhere. Once settled, he collapsed his wheelchair and stowed it in a compartment.
Pulling the jib tight, Max felt the singular, blissful sensation of the boat under
way. Even before his injury, nothing felt like pulling out onto the river. Now that
gravity was often his enemy, the river gave him even more freedom to unwind his nerves.
Sea Legs
may be a mildly tacky joke to some, but it was actually close to how he saw the boat.
Anything that gave Max speed and movement gave him life. They counterbalanced all
the parts of his life that had become slow and cumbersome since falling from that
cliff a little over a year ago.

In a matter of minutes,
Sea Legs
was under way, slicing her way through the Gordon River and catching the perfect
breeze that blew through the warm September afternoon. Heading upriver and upwind,
he angled the boat toward the opposite shore, ready to “tack” back and forth as the
craft moved against the current and into the wind. He watched Heather settle into
one of the seats closer to the bow, the breeze tumbling through her hair.

“You’re different here than at school,” he offered, liking how she angled her face
up toward the sunshine. “Not so serious.”

She shot him a look. “I take my job seriously. Don’t you?”

Max shrugged and tightened up a line. “I don’t have a serious job. I’m...enthusiastic
about it, but Adventure Access is about making fun, so it’s not the kind of job you
ought to take seriously.”

Heather brought her knees up and hugged them. He found himself staring at her bright
pink toenails peeking out of the blue thong sandals she wore. Funny the details that
don’t come out at the office. Max spent a lot of time noticing feet—now that his weren’t
much use—and she had ridiculously cute toes that wiggled when she realized he was
staring at them.

“Are you serious about anything?” she asked, shifting to tuck her legs underneath
her and blushing. Some part of Max was highly entertained that he’d made her blush.
What kind of woman wore sensible clear polish on her nails but bright pink on her
hidden toes?

“I’ve been seriously injured. Been listed in ‘serious condition’ at Lincoln General.”
He tied off the line. “And I’ve been in serious trouble lots of times.”

She looked more disappointed than annoyed. “What does it take to get a straight answer
out of you?”

That was a loaded question. His boss and now brother-in-law, Alex Cushman, had asked
pretty much the same thing before bringing him on board at Adventure Access. Nobody
seemed willing to take a smart aleck at his word these days—they all wanted to see
some deep and serious version of him, as if what he’d been through didn’t supply enough
credentials. “It takes a straight question. Duck, by the way—we’re coming about and
the boom is going to come across the boat.”

“Okay,” she said as she ducked. “Straight question. What did it feel like?”

It was obvious what she meant by “it.” “When you cut to the chase, you really cut
to the chase, huh?” He had a couple of stock answers to insensitive questions like
that—mostly asked by curious kids who didn’t know better or adults who only wanted
gory, tragic details—but opted against using them. He’d asked her for a straight question,
after all. He just hadn’t counted on “straight” going to “serious.”

“You don’t have to tell me. It’s none of my business.”

“No.” Max was surprised to find he didn’t feel any of the irritation that kind of
question generally raised. He actually wanted to tell her. It must be some kind of
empathetic-counselor trick. “It’s okay. But it’s not especially pretty.”

She didn’t reply, just leaned one elbow on the bow behind her and looked ready to
listen. So he told her.

“I wanted to die.”

* * *

Heather swallowed hard. Max said it so matter-of-factly. As if
I wanted to die
was like
my left shoulder hurt.
All her counselor training left her no response to his casual attitude.

He actually laughed—a dark half laugh, but still, it sounded wildly inappropriate
to her—and she cringed at the sound. “That’s horrible,” she said, not exactly sure
if she meant his feelings that night or his disturbing attitude now.

“Horrible, tragic, devastating—pick your sad word. I’ve heard them all. Everybody
was being so kind and vague and optimistic, but it didn’t fool me. People get that
look in their eyes, you know? The one they cover up in a second but you still catch
it?”

She did know, but she didn’t say anything.

“I think I knew right when I fell that something really serious had happened, but
I don’t remember hardly anything from that night. I don’t remember the helicopter
ride—which is rotten, by the way, because I think that would have been cool—or the
hospital or surgery or really anything until about a day later. And even my memories
from those first days are sort of blurry.” Max pivoted the seat and shifted a bit
down the rails, adjusting his position as the boat picked up a bit of speed. Heather
felt the wind lift her hair and the sun warm her shoulders. It was easy to see why
Max craved time on this boat.

“The first thing I clearly remember,” he went on, his voice still remarkably conversational,
“is waking up in the middle of the night and trying to get up out of bed—I think I
wanted to go find JJ or something. That was the moment when I really, truly figured
out that I couldn’t feel my legs. Like the world just stopped at my hips.” He pretended
to busy himself with some adjustment to the rigging, but even without a counseling
degree, Heather could’ve seen he couldn’t look her in the eye while talking about
the trauma. His eyes darted everywhere around the boat but at her, and she could see
how hard his hands gripped the tiller. Why even pretend this was an easy memory? What
had made her think it would be a good idea to ask?

Max cleared his throat and shifted. “I remember pinching my thigh, hard, and feeling
nothing. Zip. Nada. Then all the tubes and nurses and Mom showing up clicked in my
head, and I knew. Alone, in the dark, I just
knew.
And I decided it would be better if I stopped breathing, right there and then. It
was like I didn’t even have enough life left in me to get mad. I was hollow, empty...just
gone, like my legs.”

He ventured a glance up at her, and she felt the severity in his eyes as fiercely
as if he’d grabbed her hand. “So that’s what it was like.
Lousy
’s not really a strong enough word, if you get what I mean.”

She had a way-more-than-lousy memory like that. The scars running down her left hip
and thigh shouted memories that made her feel hollow and “just gone.” Only she couldn’t
brandish them like Max did. There had been another man in her life, years back, who
pushed his pain out onto the world like that. Mike had forced his illness on people,
daring them to cope with the nasty details, almost looking down on her when she couldn’t
do it that way. Heather could count the number of people who had seen her scarred
leg on the fingers of one hand. “I’m sorry,” she whispered, not knowing how else to
respond.

Max shook his head, his sardonic smile mocking her compassion. “You know, everybody
says that. I’ve got enough I’m-sorrys to fill this river twice over. That always struck
me as funny, ’cause it never accomplishes anything.”

“Oh, yes, you make it clear no one’s allowed to feel sorry for you.” That came out
a bit sharper than she’d planned, but some part of her was having trouble swallowing
Max’s nonstop bravado. Sure, he laughed off his huge trauma—and looked down on anyone
else who couldn’t do the same—but he wasn’t fooling anyone. He thought all that casual
charm hid his dark edge, but it didn’t. Not to her.

“I don’t think Simon wants people feeling sorry for him, either. I think half his
problem comes from how much people coddle him.” Max waved his hand around the boat.
“See anything life threatening here? Any deep, dark dangers?”

“Only one, and he’s just as dangerous on land.”

Max jutted a finger at her. “See? That’s
exactly
what I’m talking about. Would you make a crack like that at Simon? Would you give
him the respect of thinking him strong enough to take it?”

“Simon is a fifteen-year-old boy who’s sick.”

“No,” Max nearly shouted, jerking a line in tighter so the boat picked up speed. “He’s
not
sick. That’s just it, Heather—he’s not sick any more than I am. Okay, his legs don’t
work right. My legs don’t work at all, but I can do almost anything I want, while
he...” Max growled and slid the seat so fast down the rails that Heather felt the
whole boat shake when the chair locked into a new position. “Simon and I have been
texting each other since the basketball game. His mom cuts up his meat, for crying
out loud. The only thing limiting him is his parents. If he’s having social problems,
it’s their fault.”

“That’s not fair! My mom had to help me like that after I got hurt, and—” Heather
snapped her mouth shut, beyond angry with herself for letting that slip. She angled
away from Max, pretending—uselessly—to look out over the water while he took the boat
into another turn. She couldn’t go anywhere; she was trapped on this boat with Max
Jones and an admission she’d give anything to take back right now. The silence on
board was so thick she felt paralyzed herself.

He stayed quiet the whole way across the river, which surprised her. She’d expected
Max to pry the rest of the story out of her, but he didn’t. She felt him looking at
her, sensed his gaze even though she kept her eyes on the river.

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