“Yeah. I get it.” There’s not much I wouldn’t do for Beth. She’s the closest thing I have to a sister. “We’ll get Beth to move out with us. The more distance she puts between her and her mom, the better.”
“Thanks, man. So why are you calling?”
My gaze roams back to the path. “I fucked up with Echo.”
“When don’t you fuck up with Echo?”
My best friend’s a comedian. “A guy called her a freak, and I threw him against a wall.”
“Good for you.”
“She’s pissed. Won’t even look at me.”
“Why?”
Exactly. “I love her, but I never said I understood her.”
“Have you said you’re sorry?”
“No, and I’m not sorry.” Not in the least.
“Try it. Who knows, it could help.”
“It could.”
“And people say you’re smart.”
“Fuck you.” I let sincerity into my voice.
“Right back at you. When are you coming home?”
I study the mountains looming on the horizon. “I don’t know. I thought we’d be heading back later this week, but some shit’s come up.”
“Shit?”
“Shit.”
“Got it.” That’s Isaiah. He doesn’t need to know details to sympathize.
“Did you put the money down on the apartment?” I made a promise to Isaiah that I wouldn’t leave him behind in foster care. Even though the state would pay for me to live in the dorms, there’s no way I can leave my non-blood brother behind, so we decided to move out together, even though he’ll only be a senior in high school this fall.
“We move in September first.”
I exhale. One less situation to worry about.
“I got a favor to ask,” says Isaiah.
“Shoot.”
“If you’re going to be gone for another few weeks...” Isaiah’s not a guy who hesitates, nor is he the kind that asks for favors. He’d rather break off his arm and
sell it than ask for help. “I’d like to bring Beth out. A guy owes me, and I can get one-way bus tickets cheap. Watching Beth with her mom is like watching a ticking time bomb without a pair of pliers to clip the wires.”
“Is Beth going to be on board with this?” Beth doesn’t like being away from her mom.
“She owes me, and she knows it, but it doesn’t mean she won’t bitch.” A long pause. “The shit Beth’s mom’s into...I need to get Beth out of town for a few days. Change her perspective. Then maybe she’ll stop going over to her mom’s so much.”
That would take a damn miracle. Regardless of that I say, “Come on out.”