my loss. I understood the logic and intelligence of Garrett and Dr. Castilloâs words, but they still stung. Maybe Iâd wanted to answer questions, maybe I
could
be helpful. It hurt that only strangers thought this plausible.
Garrett left to show them out, and there was a tacit agreement that Iâd stay with Dr. Castillo until he returned.
This wouldâve been the ideal opportunity to ask about my counts. To question the empty whiteboard ⦠but next to it on the wall was a calendar.
Tomorrow Iâd be brotherless for a whole week. Seven days. And that would grow to a month, multiply to two. I couldnât stop time from pushing me farther and farther from Carter.
It was hard to look from the calendar to the blank space where the ghost of âPL:â could still be read, and to care about the numbers that should be after it.
Hugh, Garrettâs oldest living brother, banged through the exam room door, swearing and demanding, âWhat was the idiot thinking? Bringing cops
in the clinic
? And you agreed with it? Letting her be questioned
here
?â He ended with another snarl of swears aimed at his brother, Nolan, and the world at large.
âExcuse me, Hugh?â I stood up. He was nearly a foot tallerthan I was, but he hadnât had Motherâs lessons on posture and diction. âI must have misheard you. Your brother was brilliant, Dr. Castillo too. I doubt the officers will be bothering us again.â
The doctor chimed in agreement and reassurancesâbut Hugh shrugged us off. âNone of this would even be happening if Garrett had done his job and stayed with Carter. Itâs his fault your brotherâs dead.â
âGet. Out.â I wasnât sure if the words were Garrettâs or mine. I tasted them on my gritted teeth, but he was standing in the door to the exam room, glaring flames and hands balled in fists.
âOh, did I hurt little Garrettâs feelings? Is that what they teach you at your fancy schools? How to be all sensitive and in touch with your inner girl?â
âExcuse me?â I said. âInner
girl
?â
âI apologize for my brother,â growled Garrett. âHeâs probably too ignorant to understand why thatâs offensive.â
âWhatever,â snorted Hugh. He did a mock bow in my direction on his way out the door. âI donât have time to play babysitter anyway. Some of us have real responsibilities.â
âA few words to my father and that can be remedied.â I enjoyed the heartbeatâs worth of panic my threat brought to Hughâs face before he covered it with a scoff and disappeared down the hall.
Garrett had always been different from his brothers. He was smarter, betterâheâd been set apart to rise above the role of enforcer, to be my brotherâs second-in-command. It neveroccurred to me that they might resent himâblame him for Carterâs death.
My own deliberate distance, avoidance of eye contact and conversation werenât any kinder. In fact, they might have been crueler. My throat tightened with guilt.
âWhat do you want to do now? More TV or go sit in the solarium?â he asked.
âWhat do you want to do?â
âWhat I
want
is for you to find something to keep yourself busy so I can call your father and update him on what just happened.â The frustration in his words wasnât directed at me, so I shrugged it off. Dr. Castillo was less understanding, clearing his throat and raising his eyebrows. Garrettâs cheeks flushed. âPlease.â
I wondered if he ever hated me for seeming helpless, hated Carter for dying, hated my father for estranging him from his family, hated his brothers for resenting that, hated the Family for dictating all our life choices.
âWhat are my counts?â
Dr. Castillo hadnât expected me to pivot toward him, hadnât expected that question. He kept his poker face in place but
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