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“Excuse me for not clarifying. What I meant was that having sex and having a relationship are one and the same when it comes to you, Josie. You.”

“Says the guy with his bag packed and tugging on his boots like he can’t get out of here fast enough.”

I pulled on the other boot before grabbing my shirt. I’d been clouded by Josie’s words and her body, but I’d remembered what I needed to do and why I needed to do it. I couldn’t get away from there quickly enough. I couldn’t linger with her for long enough either. One. Giant. Mind. Fuck. “I need to leave. You know it, and I know it. It’s going to happen one day, and a day sooner is better for both of us than a day later.”

“I know that? I know that?” she huffed again, then tossed a pillow at me. “Stop telling me what I know and don’t know and give me a straight answer. Why are you leaving, Black?”

Minutes ago, she’d been kissing me and making me feel things I didn’t know could be felt. Then we were throwing pillows and words and breaking each other’s hearts. I hated myself, somehow, even more than I ever had. “There are a million reasons I’m leaving. All of them a reason for why we can’t or shouldn’t be together and why it never could or would work out if we tried.”

She swung her legs over the side of the bed and was either issuing the glare to end all glares or was trying her damnedest to keep from crying. “You know what you need to do? Stop focusing on all of the reasons we shouldn’t be together and start accepting the reasons we should be.” Josie slid her hands through her hair, shaking her head. “You could take the most perfect couple God ever had the audacity of creating, and if they only focused on the small handful of reasons they shouldn’t be together, I guarantee you they wouldn’t make it. And we’re a long, long shot away from being a perfect couple, so why don’t you cut the glass-half-empty routine and give us a fucking chance. Give us the chance we’ve both been waiting for.”

A chance. That was all I could ask for with Josie. But to give someone a chance, there had to be a probability—small as it might have been—of things turning out okay. We didn’t have even a minuscule probability of turning out all right if we gave us a try. I couldn’t give her a chance because I didn’t have one to give. “It’s too late.”

“You’re a fucking liar.” Another pillow flew at me. “You’re taking the coward’s way out, and if you do this, if you walk away because you’re afraid of hurting me, or messing things up, or whatever it is you’re so terrified of, I’ll never forgive you. You leave me again, and I’ll hate you for the rest of my life.”

I grimaced as pain flooded me. I wanted nothing more than to gather her up in my arms and fall asleep together like we had the past few weeks together. That was all I wanted. “That’s okay, Joze. I understand. Hate’s a good thing. It will help you heal quicker. It’ll keep the wound from going too deep and the scar from being too obvious. If hating me’ll make this easier for you, you’ve got my permission to hate me for all of eternity.” Damn, I needed some whiskey. Bottle after bottle after bottle until I’d had enough I forgot her name, and the red cowgirl boots she’d been wearing the first day I met her, and the way hair lightened every summer, and every one of the billion fucking memories I had of Josie Gibson. She wanted to hate me, but I wanted to forget her. Forgetting her was the only way I could survive without her. It wouldn’t be much of a life, nothing more than survival, but I wouldn’t even be able to manage that if I couldn’t find some way to erase her from my mind.

“I’m not asking for your permission,” she snapped. A moment later, her face fell as she slid off the edge of the bed. Josie looked as broken as I felt, and the worst part was not being able to comfort her. “I don’t want to hate you. But there’s no other place to put this love I have for you. It doesn’t just go away, you know? I can’t just flick a switch, and Poof! it’s gone. I can’t just build it one day and dump it the next. It’s always going to be a part of me. If I can’t love you, those intense feelings will morph into something just as intense, but the total opposite. My love for you will have nowhere to go but hate. I’m going to hate you . . . and that breaks my heart.” She started crying, and if I wasn’t so resolved, that would have been my tipping point.

I took one last look at her—curled into herself and crying on the floor. That would be my last memory of my Josie. The girl I’d made a silent vow to always protect, always take care of . . . and she was destroyed thanks to me. The ball in my throat was close to suffocating me. I grabbed my bag and opened that door realizing one thing—Josie would move on to live a happy and full life. Maybe not tomorrow, and maybe not next month, but eventually. She’d find love and protection and consistency in the arms of another man.

“But at least you’ve still got a heart left to break, Joze,” I whispered before leaving the room, the house, and the girl all behind.

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DAYS TURNED INTO weeks, and weeks turned into months. I could finally look in a mirror without wanting to slam my fist through it. That first month after leaving Josie, I couldn’t count how many shattered mirrors I left in my wake. Looking in a mirror and hating the person staring back at me wasn’t new, but what had changed was that the eyes staring back were the same ones Josie had looked into as she admitted her love for me. She’d looked into those eyes and said it again and again and again before they had turned away and betrayed her.

I’d hated myself for so long it didn’t feel like hate anymore, but that . . . ? I didn’t have a word extreme or intense enough for how I felt about myself. Utter self-loathing was the closest I could get, but that seemed way too cute for how I really felt.

After leaving the Gibsons’ that night, I’d headed east. I didn’t have any plans. I just went until my gas tank was empty and I felt as physically exhausted as my mind did. I was in Billings. Even though it was my first time there and I didn’t know a thing about it, I moved into a motel room I could rent by the month or the hour and made it home. I didn’t know a single person in or around Billings. It was perfect. I didn’t want to know anybody, and I didn’t want anybody to know me. I found work at an old man’s ranch just outside of town, a place to practice bull riding, and tried to purge my mind of all things Josie. I watched the sunrise that morning after I left her, knowing she would wake up hating me. She was right—that kind of love didn’t just shrivel up and die. It ran too deep and had weaved too far inside of us to just fade away. It was imprinted on our very cores. That kind of love couldn’t be weeded out, so it changed and darkened and morphed into what Josie said—hate. I felt it, too. In my case, it was extreme hate for myself, not for her. So the good thing we had—the best thing I’d ever experienced—I’d managed to twist and break and transform until it turned into thick and heavy hate. I really was a virus.

A month had passed when I recognized one of Willow Springs’s seasonal ranch hands walking into the feed store in downtown Billings. I headed straight back to the motel, packed my duffle, got in my truck, and didn’t stop driving until it was empty again. I wound up in Baker, about as far east as a person could go and still be in Montana. I wasn’t sure I even wanted to stay in the same state I’d grown up in. The same one my mom had fled from, my dad’s charred ashes were blowing through, and where the girl I’d loved and destroyed was. Nothing was behind me but a mountain of bad memories, so if I hadn’t been about empty on gas and money, I would have kept going until I’d crossed into North Dakota.