Keep Happy
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Description
Epigraph
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Acknowledgements
Playlist
What’s coming…
Other Books
Sneak Peek of Keeping 6 by Freya Barker
Rights:
This book is a work of fiction. Names and characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © A.C. Bextor 2018
Title: Keep Happy
All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher or author constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from this book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at acbextor@gmail.com.
Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.
FBI Anti-Piracy Warning:
The unauthorized or reproduction or distribution of a copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement including infringement without monetary gain is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to five years in prison and a fine of $250,000.
For Margreet
Never forget how strong and beautiful you are.
Carrie
Those who think they know me would tell you I’m a caring mother, a loyal friend, and a dutiful wife. They’d say the golden path which led me here is the road every little girl dreams of taking.
However, the guise of my happy existence has come to be just that—an illusion. A mask of contentment intended for the world to believe.
Not many years into my marriage, I became an abandoned housewife to an adulterous husband. A proud, but sad, mother of two beautiful daughters.
My days were spent somewhere lost between empty and alone.
Then he came back. Mason Cole offered a second chance to share the life we were supposed to have together. He gave me a glimpse of myself. The woman I’d forgotten long ago.
My road to hell was paved with good intentions. But sometimes good intentions get lost amidst a heart’s desire.
At least mine did.
Now I’ll tell you why.
The minute I heard my first love story, I started looking for you, not knowing how blind that was. Lovers don’t finally meet somewhere. They’re in each other all along.
—Rumi
RUMI WAS ONCE QUOTED SAYING, “Grief can be the garden of compassion. If you keep your heart open through everything, your pain can become your greatest ally in your life’s search for love and wisdom.”
At the time I read this, I wasn’t sure I believed him. That was, until I realized how lost in my own life’s grief I had always been.
When I was young, I thought my life was going to go precisely as I’d planned.
I was going to finish college, earning my master’s degree in accounting, and follow in my father’s footsteps as I’d always imagined I would.
I was going to fall in love, marrying only the man of my dreams. Of course, I had no idea what he looked like, but I knew in order to love me how I wanted, he had to be strong, kind, and fill my soul with passion while enriching my life with excitement and understanding. I wouldn’t settle for less.
And I was going to be the best parent to however many children God saw fit to bless me with.
I never knew my mother. She and my father parted ways shortly after I was born. This left me to be raised as an only child to a single dad and regretful ex-husband.
Growing up, I didn’t always have a lot of friends. Yet those I came to truly trust have been with me for as long as I can remember.
Now, after so much of my life has passed: all the triumphs, tears, happiness, and heartbreak, I’m married to the love of my life. The one man I was always supposed to find. Finally, I have my life the way I always dreamed it would be.
I’m a mother to beautiful children.
My home is everything I’d always envisioned.
Those who’ve come into my life are where they’re supposed to be. Some are faded memories of my past. And those I cherish still remain.
So looking back, I concur that Rumi was right.
The lessons I’ve learned were tough in coming.
The grief I’ve harbored has finally been set free.
The tumultuous path I fought so hard along the way was worth all its torment and pain.
The garden of my life is rich, centered, and destined for even greater things.
My heart has finally found its peace.
Past…
“JESUS FUCK. WHAT DID I just say?” the large framed, dark-haired man standing near the cashier shouts to the smaller blond man, who hasn’t left my side since I walked in. “I told you to let the girl be.”
Tears of fear and humiliation are ready to cascade down my reddened cheeks.
The blond man has yanked my ponytail three times, in attempt to coax a reaction. He hasn’t gotten one as so far, I’ve been able to hold myself together.
My dad would come unglued if he knew where I was. Not to mention that I made my way here by myself. Let alone how pissed he’d really be if I ended up hurt and he had no way to find me.
I’ve been in this corner store lots of times, but never by myself.
Our house sits on the outskirts of Silvervale, making this the closest place to find anything on quick notice. The trek here took nearly an hour and it’s early September.
I’m tired. I’m sweaty. And now I’m starting to panic.
When I walked through the front door, I sensed right away something was wrong. The air was stifling, tainted, putting me on edge.
Once I entered, the dark-haired man turned his head in my direction. He smiled and looked over my shoulder to find I was alone. Then he moved his aim back to the cashier, who I know by name as Gabe. A garbled sound came from Gabe and a bite of laughter from the blond.
After I stepped away, I heard semi-muted, harsh, hushed voices. I couldn’t understand what they were saying, but honestly, I made every effort to block them out. With liar’s courage, I headed straight for the aisle to pick out what I came here for.
No twelve-year-old girl should ever have to buy their own period pads because they’re too embarrassed to call their ignorant fath
er at work and inform him that Mother Nature has come to curse his only daughter. This teenage dilemma left me no choice but to walk the mile and a half it took to get here.
I’m now regretting every step.
“Calm the fuck down, Cole,” the blond man warns. Using his filthy hand to rub my back, he continues with, “This is a big deal. I’ve met my new girl. Get your ass over here and meet Buttercup.”
When he wraps his arm tightly around my shoulders, a sliver of fear begs me to escape. To run. To get as far away from him as I can.
But I don’t. The man standing stoically near the counter holds my attention captive.
I know him.
Last summer, my dad hired Mason Cole and a small group of builders to construct a large deck and in-ground pool in our backyard. For eight weeks, Connie, Grace, and I were entertained by a variety of men of all ages. Obviously, they had all known each other for a while if the exchange of personal jokes and sarcastic jabs told their history.
I spent my days delivering tall, cold glasses of ice water and freshly made sandwiches my friends and I took all morning to prepare.
Most of the men were appreciative. Some patted our heads, eating what we made, even when they had brought their own lunches. Some dealt out high fives. A few would empty their pockets of change, offering a monetary thank you. Most of them were older, guessing close to my dad’s age.
Except for him.
Even at our young ages, my friends and I became enthralled by all that was Mason Cole.
Our summer wasn’t spent sleeping in and relaxing each morning before heading outside to find something to do. Our time off from school was spent waking up early each morning in anticipation of who was on his way.
We could hear his huge truck coming from down the street. It was shiny, black, and lifted high off the ground. It had those oversized, big lights on the top, too. And steps on each side at the door. Every day he parked in the same spot at the curb outside my house.
We’d watch Mason from my bedroom window as he’d climb in and out of his truck, dressed for work in clothes that were aged with wear, even torn in various places. I was fascinated at how his large body could adjust so swiftly, his muscles moving in sync with each pull of the handle or hefty jump to get inside.
Since he worked at our house, I’ve seen Mason around town a couple of times.
My face flushes, recollecting how many different women I’ve seen him with. He kisses them in public. He touches them in places I’m embarrassed to recall. And they always return his affection. They don’t care who witnesses their exchange either.
Yuck.
“Hands off the girl, Caleb,” Mason warns, this time his tone formidable.
The blond man, now known as Caleb, sneers in protest at the same time he removes his arm from my shoulders, pushing into my stomach to clear me from his path.
In irritation, he voices, “Fuck, but you’re an asshole after your dad takes his fists to you.”
The punishing shove causes my back to smash into the row of cereal boxes, forcing the entire stand to shake. Several boxes on the top shelf sway, tilt, then fall. More than a few hit the floor, echoing loudly with each drop.
As Caleb makes his way down the narrow aisle, Mason offers a small, but reassuring smile. Then he winks.
Both embarrassed and afraid, my hands shake as I bend to pick up the mess.
I confirm Mason’s gotten closer when a pair of dusty black boots come into view. The bottom of his jeans are tattered and frayed, resting against the top of his dirty, black boot laces.
He smells of cigarettes and beer. And something else. Unexplainable, but something definitely him.
“Caleb’s an asshole, but he’s harmless,” Mason gruffly explains, bending to help me gather some of the mess. “Ignore him, like I do, and he’ll go away.”
When he shoves a single box toward me to accept, I look up. My reflection is caught inside the bluest eyes I’ve ever seen. Each framed with thick, dark lashes. I expected him to be angry at my interruption of his afternoon bullying. Instead, his eyes are quiet—tame. The wrinkles at their corners are fascinating to study.
He’s just as I remembered.
In addition to his eyes, I also notice his teeth are straight and white. His full lips are red. The bottom one is swollen, cut angrily near the corner of his mouth. The bruise around the dried blood has only started to form.
Someone hit him.
Unlike his friend, Mason’s hair is clean. The strands in front are slightly disheveled. He wears it longer in back. The ends nearly touch the collar of his old, worn down, faded Black Sabbath tee shirt, which I’m guessing was once black. He has only one dimple on his left cheek. I’d guess him to be maybe in his late teens or early twenties.
“You good?” he probes, his tone casual and surprisingly sincere.
“Yes. I’m fine.”
“Do you need anything?”
“No,” I reply, shaking my head and continuing with clean up. “But thank you.”
What does a girl my age say to a man as large in frame and as powerful in presence as Mason Cole?
He’s overwhelming to look at, but with a voice as smooth and even as his, I can hardly keep my thoughts together. I’ve been in the same room with him for all of five minutes, and in that time, he’s gone from bully, to bossy, and now almost sweet.
No wonder girls my age are confused. We’re left to decipher a man’s next mood before we’ve finished guessing the first.
Pulling me from thought, Mason tests, “Do you remember who I am?”
“Yes,” I immediately reply. “You worked at my house last summer.”
“I did,” he confirms with a nod. “How’s your dad?”
“He’s good.”
“He’s a good dad,” Mason oddly compliments. “A good guy.”
My dad liked Mason. I know this because I heard him recommending the crew Mason works for to our next-door neighbor, Mr. Albertson. Though, from where I stood, which was usually hidden away from sight, Mason and my dad’s bond was more of a son and father, rather than friend to friend.
Dad and Mason would catch each other at the end of the day and talk mostly about baseball: what games were on, where the game was being played, who their favorite players were. But they’d talk about other things too.
Per their conversations, I learned Mason liked to fish from a dock, never a boat. I also found out he liked to go to the beach to hang out with friends. And other than sports, he never watched television.
“Yeah, he’s a good dad,” I agree.
Mason surveys my response, his eyes scanning my face. His body relaxes and his lips tilt at their corners when he notes, “You’re quieter than I remember.”
Fascinated with his eyes shining in play, I prompt, “I’m quieter?”
“I remember you always having something to say before.”
“I did?”
“Yep,” he reassures. “Figured you’d have some teenage bullshit to spout about what just happened.”
“What just happened?” I parrot again, not to clarify but to stall.
I know what happened, and I have about ten thousand things I’d love to ‘spout.’ I’m just not willing to voice them to the guy I crushed on for an entire summer. I’ll wait until I get home and call Connie and Grace. We’ll raise hell just the three of us. Who knows, Grace is crazy. Maybe we’ll head out into the streets and look for his idiot friend.
I smile to myself, picturing the three of us slicing open our palms, holding them together, and swearing our vengeance in blood against a creepy guy named Caleb.
That’s what best friends do.
Picking up another box, Mason lifts his chin in the direction of the door. “I’m talking about Caleb.”
“So your friend has a name,” I comment with a sneer. “I was leaning toward ‘idiot’ or ‘dirt bag.’”
“The idiot does have a name,” Mason confirms, clearly amused.
He stands with an armful of cereal box
es, putting them back on the shelf in a ridiculous, nonsensical manner. Some are upside down, some backward, and a few are facing as they should.
With nothing else to say, he turns to face me directly. Giving him my attention, I watch the thick veins of his arm and hand as he pulls out a black, leather wallet from his pocket. It’s hooked to a belt loop, attached by a silver chain. After rifling through the money inside, he hands over two five dollar bills.
“Go on and get what you came to get. I’ll get Caleb out of here.”
“Um—”
What did I come here to get?
“That work for you?” he presses.
Trying not to blush, I take the money from his grasp and offer a quiet, “Sure.”
Mason studies my puzzled expression, then he smiles and says, “My name is Cole.”
“Mason Cole,” I fix. “I remember.”
“No,” he sternly corrects. “Not Mason Cole. Just Cole.”
There’s not one thing I’ve let myself forget about him. I’ve written his name in the pages of my journal countless times. And I specifically remember his name being Mason Cole.
“Whatever you say, Mason,” I dig again.
“You don’t listen very well, do you?” he smarts, his grin turning into a fully-fledged smile.
Countering for good measure, I advise, “I listen when someone has something to say.”
Laughing off my ridiculous reply, he states, “That’s fair,” then questions, “How old are you?”
“I’m twelve.”
His eyebrows furrow, and his mood swings as his lips form a frown. “Why the fuck are you out walkin’ around town alone at twelve?”
“I said I’m twelve. I didn’t say I was stupid.”
“If you say—” he starts.
“I say,” I return. “And if you would’ve kept your pet leashed, I would’ve already been on my way. Now, it’s getting dark so I have to hurry.”
Now there are only nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine things I have left to say.
Crap.
I need to learn when to keep my mouth shut. Dad says I have a way of speaking my mind the way a woman of value never should. He says to always speak your piece but do so carefully, never with the intention to insult.