War Girls (The Juniper Wars Book 5) Aaron Ritchey (the alpha prince and his bride full story free TXT) đ
- Author: Aaron Ritchey
Book online «War Girls (The Juniper Wars Book 5) Aaron Ritchey (the alpha prince and his bride full story free TXT) đ». Author Aaron Ritchey
She looked at me for a long time.
âCry with me,â Sharlotte said. âYou wept when you saw Mama, and Wren and I held you. I wished I couldâve cried with you, but my heart felt too wounded. Can you cry with me now?â
Iâd never seen Sharlotte so raw, beseeching me with bewildered eyes.
I couldnât take those pleading eyes, and I drew her in to hug her. As for tears, where Iâd kept them was an empty pocket, my heart a dried sponge, wrung out too many times and left too long in the sunshine. Nothing was there. Only a weary determination to get to the Yellowstone caldera and find the ARKâs secret research facility. To finish the quest Micaiah warned me I should never start.
Wasnât sure what we were going to do about the Wind River people. Theyâd helped us before, but odds were, they wouldnât help us again.
While I thought and planned and strategized, Sharlotte sobbed on my shoulder until it seemed sheâd falter and tumble down. But no, Iâd be there to help her, as would Wren.
My big Gamma sister stomped out of the Heartbreaker, in a new tarpaulin poncho sheâd sewn including a hood, which kept most of her body swathed in canvas and her face hidden. Sheâd left her cleaver and her slaughter machine inside.
And wasnât that just like my sister... if she couldnât blast her enemies with shrapnel, sheâd chop them in half with a machete as big as I was.
Wren held us, head down, until she started to hum a song; she hummed it âcause she couldnât form the words. I knew the words, the song Mama always sang, some old R&B tune that never hit the radio. It was what the old-timers called a B-side.
How much do I love you,
oh, where do I start?
Through the valleys of my soul,
âcross the mountains of my heart.
I sang the chorus in a low voice until Sharlotte stopped sobbing. She stepped back, embarrassed, and I knew why. Sharlotteâs job in our family was to be the strong one, the leaderânever show emotions and never show cracks.
She held my face in her hands, and I felt her thumbs brush under my eyes, touching the dry skin where my tears shouldâve been.
âIâm sorry,â Sharlotte said, âfor all those years when I made fun of you for crying. Iâm sorry you canât cry now.â
I closed my eyes, ashamed. And isnât that just life? Iâd spent years not wanting to cry and being ashamed. And now I couldnât cry, and more shame was piled on.
Standing there with my sisters, my heart was heavy with sorrow, but I wasnât dead inside. No, I realized. I wasnât a negative number, and I wasnât zero, not anymore. Iâd made it to a plus one. And that made me smile a sad smile.
Wren took the pick and whirled it around, her poncho moving with her shoulders, until she sank it into the ground. She dragged out a clot of frozen clay as big as my head.
I couldnât cry, but I could help dig.
I fetched a shovel and started shoveling out the little bits of mud and clay Wren couldnât get. We worked, Sharlotte watching us, letting us do the job, and not coaching, not getting involved, and not insisting we do it her way.
She let us dig the grave for her wife. She accepted the gift.
Itâs a cruel thing to cage our family members in their roles. And then when they want to change, we hit them with teasing or cruelty to keep them playing their part, however insane, ineffectual, or ancient. Iâd done it to both Sharlotte and Wren, but no more.
We were going to let each other change, and thatâs how family should be. With so much history, you can forge memories into chains and roles into jail cells. Jacker all that.
Pilate wandered out and saw us. He didnât ask questions. And for once, he didnât light up a cigar. He stood next to Sharlotte. When I looked back, I saw them holding hands, and I knew Sharlotte appreciated his comfort and his silence.
Quietly, working doggedly, we created a grave, three meters long, two meters wide, a meter deep. We squared it up, Wren and I, and then stepped back to appreciate our work.
By that time, Baptista joined us along with a still shaky President Jack, pale and withdrawn, wearing a soldierâs coat too big for him. Then Sketchy, Tech, and Peeperz, and the last dozen or so of June Maiâs army. Out of the thousand troops, only a dozen made it out alive.
We stood there, the survivors, solemn, mourning, staring into the empty grave that would hold no body. Then I noticed the bits of asphalt, an overpass in the distance, and I knew we were on I-25, maybe near Firestone, and I swore, if we made it out alive, Iâd work to build a monument here. Iâd make June Mai a gravestone that would rival the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Washington D.C.
We stood around the grave, Wren at the south end, standing on the pile of dirt. Sharlotte glanced at Pilate. It was time for a eulogy.
Pilate opened his mouth, went to say a word, and couldnât.
A tear slid down his cheek.
He dropped his head, shook his head, and he wasnât going to be able to say anything.
Sharlotte looked at me, and she didnât need to say another word.
She needed me to talk. I was a positive integer again, so I somehow found the words.
âGod bless June Mai Angel,â I said. âGod bless, Alice.â
My voice broke. That had been a hard death to carry. Sheâd found freedom though, from her troubled mind. When I said her name, I didnât remember her lying in the alley, blood dripping off her hair. In my mind, I saw her smiling, loving me, loving my sisters, and saving the day.
I continued because Alice wasnât the
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