didnât believe me. He may have retired from the police force, but he still had his instincts. He usually knew when I was lying. It used to be always, but as I got older, I was better at it. It wasnât something that made me particularly proud.
He cleared his throat. âArenât you supposed to play with Lola at the Outdoor Palace today?â he asked. He was right, but if I didnât leave in the next few minutes, Iâd miss the practice. What I wanted and what Kya needed tore at me.
I paused, avoiding Kyaâs gaze. âItâs okay, Dad. Theyâve got enough players for two teams. And itâs a practice, not a game.â
He was silent for a moment and his self-restraint drifted under the door. âYouâre not messing things up for them?â he finally asked.
âNo, Lolaâs running drills today. She can play if she has to,â I called.
âSheâll be pissed off,â he muttered.
Kya and I stared at each other until his footsteps walked away from my door.
âShoot,â I said. âShe is going to be pissed.â
Kyaâs eyes filled with tears. âIâm sorry, Iâll go.â
âNo, no, itâs okay.â I said, reaching to hug her. Kya needed me more.
She wiped under her eyes. âMy mouth tastes like Iâve been licking clay, and my head pounds worse than Indie on his old drum set.â Fortunately for all of us, Indieâs rock-and-roll wannabe stage had ended a few years ago.
âMore reasons not to drink.â
The remorse in her eyes made me feel like I was flaunting my moral standards at her, which would be okay except she was in kind of a vulnerable state. In my heart, Iâd already forgiven her for messing up, but I sighed. Iâd definitely be missing Lolaâs practice today.
I went to grab my purse from the wicker chair in the corner and pulled out my phone. âIâm going to text Lola and let her know weâre not going to make it.â
She blinked and concentrated on nail chomping. âYou sure? You could go. Your dadâs right. Lola will be pissed. I donât care, but I know you do.â
âItâs okay.â I turned the phone on, staring at the screen saver, a picture of Kya, James, and me, our heads mushed together, goofy wide grins on our faces, our arms wrapped around each other.
I hesitated. Lola would be pissed at me for jamming last minute. Sheâd wanted to coach me on my snake-side crawls today. She had plans to round me out so I could play the whole paintball field. At one time, Lola had focused more on Kya, but sheâd switched more to me.
I was an honest player, like Lola. We wouldnât slide or dive to wipe off a paintball hit if we could get away with it. Kya would, given the opportunity. Lola and I both played to win, and we played tough, but we played clean.
âI can tell by your face you want to go. Itâs okay. Iâm fine,â Kya stood up but her voice was low, her eyes on the floor.
âSit down. Youâre not fine.â I punched out a quick text to Lola and then put my phone away. I walked over and sat on the bed beside Kya.
âWhat happened?â I asked softly.
She didnât say anything for a minute.
âItâs okay,â I whispered. âItâs me.â
âHe did it again.â Her voice was robotic.
âWhat do you mean?â I asked slowly.
She sniffled. âAnother girl. Someone else. A girl called my house,â she said in an exaggerated whisper. âHe goes to the same church as her. Mr. Born Again. But he raped her. Her lawyer dug up my name. He wasnât supposed to do that, Gracie. But he did. People do bad shit all the time, but lawyers? The girl tracked down my number.â Her voice was slow.
âOh, sweetie,â I said. âIâm sorry.â
Sorry that the girl called. Sorry he did it again. Sorry he existed.
I remembered his face clearly. The way his
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