The Truth About Letting Go (24 page)

Read The Truth About Letting Go Online

Authors: Leigh Talbert Moore

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance

In minutes, I’m dropping down on the creek bank again next to the tree, and before long, I hear the sound of a familiar engine at the street. I look over my shoulder and Jordan’s walking toward me. He’s still in his suit pants, but his coat and tie are gone. With every step he takes closer, my heart beats painfully harder, wondering what he’ll say. I wonder if this is the part where we say goodbye for good, the natural end with him leaving.

When he reaches me, he stands for a moment looking out at the water, hands in his pockets. “Got your text,” he says. “I thought about texting you yesterday. Letting you know what was going to happen this morning.”

“You’re officially on the record now.”

He sits in front of me on the bank. “Yep. Now everybody knows.”

We’re quiet a moment. I’m not sure how to start. “I guess you know what happened with Patty.”

He nods and then a little smile crosses his lips. “We’re both doing service projects this summer.”

“Only mine’s forced labor.”

“I’m really surprised. I thought for sure they’d let you off. Say you were acting out of grief or something.”

“Well, they were all ready to. Everything I did would’ve been forgiven because of Dad. But I didn’t want that.”

Jordan plucks a blade of grass. “Your dad was a great guy. Maybe we can still do that feature on him before I leave.”

Sadness fills me. Not the tight-chested hyperventilation kind of losing Dad. More the stomach-twisting heartbreak kind of possibly losing Jordan.

“When do you go?” I manage to ask.

“Mid-June.”

I nod and look down. “I… I wish you weren’t leaving. I’ll miss you.”

He reaches across the space and takes my hand. “I’ll miss you. But it’s only six weeks. I’ll be back in time for college.”

I study his hand holding mine, loving in the warmth of this small connection, this simple touch. Never wanting it to end.

“Dad left me a book. A memory book. It had a note inside, and when I read it, it kind of changed me. It kind of showed me what I think I want to do now.”

He smiles, giving my hand a little squeeze. “Tell me.”

“Well, I haven’t made a definite plan or anything, but I’m thinking less about breaking things and more about fixing them.”

“You’ll have your work cut out for you this summer.”

I smile and tighten my grip on his hand. “I just wanted to tell you that. I’m not fighting anymore.”

He pulls my hand, and I slip forward, closer to him. We’re right in front of each other, and all I can think about is kissing him, pressing my lips to his. I sniff as my chest hurts. I don’t know whether it would be a kiss goodbye or a promise of what’s to come.

I lower my chin and look down. “Otherwise, I haven’t changed,” I say. “And when I’m with you, all I can think is still that I want… Well, I suppose that means it’s good you’re leaving.”

He reaches up to touch my cheek. “Maybe. Maybe a few weeks apart will change how we feel. Or maybe it’ll make it stronger.”

“If it gets any stronger, it’ll just ruin everything.”

He smiles, and his hands find my waist, pulling me onto his lap. My chin rests on his shoulder, and my arms circle them. His are wrapped tightly around my waist.

“Or maybe it’ll cause us to take things more seriously,” he says.

I shake my head. “I told you I’m not getting married at eighteen.”

“That’s not what I meant. What if we just take it one day at a time?”

I lean back, and his lips are so close, his breath whispers across my cheek. I can barely think from wanting.

“You’ll take that chance?” I ask.

“I don’t see it as taking a chance.”

“Why?”

“I told you. I might be in love with you.”

My heart squeezes, and I hug his shoulders again. His arms grip tight around me, and I can’t wait anymore. I cover his mouth with mine as his hands travel to my cheeks, holding my face gently. Our mouths open and tongues meet. It’s amazing and happy and impossible and likely to end badly and exactly what I want.

We break apart, and I press my forehead to his. “This is such a terrible idea.”

“Does it mean you’ll mend your ways for me?”

“No.” I look up and our blue eyes meet.

He laughs. “No?”

“I mean… I was planning to do that anyway, but not because of you. I mean, I don’t mean that because I don’t care…”

He reaches up and slides my hair back with his fingers. “What do you mean?”

“I decided I’m not cut out for a life of crime.”

“I agree.”

“It also means if you’re determined to date someone who’s bad for you, it might as well be me.”

He laughs again, and I kiss him again, then once more before I slide down to put my head against his chest. His arms stay around me, and I feel him press his mouth to the top of my head. All at once, I remember. I sit up and fish around in the side pocket of my skirt.

“What’s up?” he asks, watching me.

I twist away and slip on the huge, horn-rimmed glasses before turning back to face him.

“Holy…” he lets out a loud laugh. “Your eyes are huge!”

I snort a giggle and then laugh, too. “Imagine what I thought the first time these dropped down onto your face.”

He slides them off me and puts them on his head. “That’s when I was still trying to decide. I saw glasses like these in a movie about spiritual journeys and trains, and I thought it was cool that movies could be used to communicate messages like that.”

“So it’s like your backup plan?”

He shrugs. “Maybe.”

I reach for him, and we pull together in another kiss. Our bodies are pressed tightly, and I consider it might be a sin how good it feels when he holds me this way.

“Whatever happens,” I say. “I’ll try. As long as I can. Until you let me go.”

“And what if I never let you go?” he whispers before kissing my ear.

“Then I guess you win.”

“I can’t win if we’re on the same team.”

I lean forward to place my chin on his shoulder. “Does this means I’m your prom date?”

“I thought you’d never ask.”

Jordan’s arms stay tight around my waist, and the tightness in my chest is gone. I take a deep, full breath, and in the place of all that sadness, I’ve finally found peace.

He’ll leave for the summer, and I’ll make amends for what I’ve done. And when he comes back, we’ll see what happens next. I haven’t forgotten anything—the pain or the disappointment—but maybe it’s like Jordan says, challenges change us and make us different.

Sometimes they even make us better.

 

 

The End

 

 

 

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Acknowledgments

 

 

If it weren’t for the generous support and love of readers for my debut novel
The Truth About Faking
, this book might still be in the virtual “drawer.” So my first BIG Thank You is to my dear, faithful readers. Thank you so much for supporting me and for liking my books.

Writing and publishing are evolving so fast, but one thing remains the same: Books cannot (or should not) be released without the input and feedback of other readers and writers. I am tremendously blessed and thankful to have superstars Tami Johnson, Carolyn Abiad, Jolene Perry, Susan Quinn, Magan Vernon, Allie Brennan, Jessica Bell, Laura Pauling, Brent Taylor, and my best editor, my husband Richard, on my team. Thanks to you all for your thoughts, your criticisms, your praise, and your ongoing encouragement.

Thanks to Allie Brennan for the gorgeous cover design and to Juanpablo San Martin for giving me permission to use his beautiful photograph on my cover.

Thanks to my lovely book club ladies and best friends Kim Barnes, Jenni Dismukes, and Sharon Hattenstein and my cousin Odessa Toma for reading early drafts and giving me the thumbs up! I’m always anxiously chewing my nails, waiting to hear what y’all think. Love you guys.

Thank you to my friends in the blogging community, who always encourage and help me spread the word. Thanks to the book reviewers, who are always ready to read and tell others. And special Thanks to the behind-the-scenes people—formatters and tour organizers—you guys are invaluable to the process.

Finally, an
enormous
THANKS to my dear family, my mom and dad, my beautiful little girls, and all my sweet friends who put up with my absences, my daydreaming, and my general unavailable-ness when I’m in the middle of these projects. Knowing you’re there cheering me on, understanding, and being excited means the world to me.

And thanks to God for giving me this gift and for allowing me to live in this amazing time.

 

 

About the Author

 

 

Leigh Talbert Moore is a wife and mom by day, a writer by day, a reader by day, a former journalist, a former editor, a chocoholic, a caffeine addict, a lover of any great love story, a beach bum, and occasionally she sleeps.

 

 

Also by Leigh Talbert Moore:

 

The Truth About Faking
(2012)

Rouge
(2012)

 

 

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Copyright

 

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

 

The Truth about Letting Go

Copyright © Leigh Talbert Moore, 2013

www.leightmoore.com

 

Cover design by
Allie Brennan
.

Cover image by
Juanpablo San Martin
.

 

All right reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, photocopying, mechanical, or otherwise—without prior permission of the publisher and author.

Contents

Title page

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

About the Author

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