Part 21 (1/2)
She hadn't said a word about it to her son. He didn't need to know. It was his first week of school, and she wanted him to be able to focus on being a freshman. But she needed desperately to talk to someone.
”It's been three days since the text message. Maybe it's all over,” she said to her sister as she visited with her at the Skyway rink on Thursday evening.
”Let's hope so. Did you get a new cell phone like I told you to?”
”What's the point?” she asked as Camille straightened up napkins and straws at the snack counter. ”My number is on the center's website. Anyone can get it.”
Camille gave her a pointed look. ”Maybe it shouldn't be so easy to reach you.”
She drummed her nails against the counter. ”I want the boys to be able to reach me. That's the point of doing what I do. To be accessible. To be a resource for them. I can't shut myself off from the world.”
”Just be careful. Because someone clearly doesn't like your boyfriend if they're sending you messages not to mess around with him.”
Elle sighed heavily and twisted her hair into a makes.h.i.+ft ponytail. ”I know. It just makes no sense.”
”Maybe it's an angry ex of his. Someone who's p.i.s.sed you have your claws in him?” Camille suggested, reminding Elle about Colin's ex who lashed out when he broke up with her.
”I don't think so. Why would she sign it WJ?”
Camille shrugged. ”Who knows? Maybe WJ stands for Whack Job.”
Elle cracked up, the first good laugh she'd had in days.
Twenty minutes later, she picked up Alex from Janine's house. He'd been working on a history project with Janine's son. In the past she'd have let Alex take public transportation home, but there was no way she was letting him on the city bus with WJ hanging over her. No way, no how, not going to happen.
She chatted briefly with Janine on the porch then headed to the car, waving good-bye. ”Good luck this weekend. I'll be there cheering you on, though it'll pain me not to skate,” Elle said.
”It'll pain me more not to have my favorite blocker,” Janine said with a pout.
”Are you going to come with me to the final match this weekend?” Elle asked Alex once they were inside the car.
”Can I stay home and hang out by myself?”
She flinched at the idea, gripping the steering wheel. ”No. I want you to come with me.”
”But why? You're not even skating. I just want to hang at home. Play Xbox and stuff.”
”We'll have fun. We'll get pizza at the rink,” she said through pursed lips. She didn't tell him the truth-that she could barely stomach letting him out of her sight.
He kicked his foot against the floor of the pa.s.senger seat.
”Alex, don't do that,” she said, as she changed lanes.
”I just don't feel like going. First you won't let me take the bus, and you always let me take it last year. You're treating me like a baby. Now I have to go to a game you're not even skating in. Can't I just chill? What if Rex and Tyler come over?”
But before she could say no one more time, her phone buzzed in the console.
”Want me to see if that's Colin?” Alex asked, grabbing the phone.
”I'll look at it later,” she said hastily, as the truck in front of her slowed. She didn't want Alex seeing any messages from Colin, though they hadn't exchanged many dirty ones lately. Still, her phone was private. It was hers.
”Mom.”
She hadn't heard that tone in years.
His voice was laced with fear.
She snapped her gaze to him, and her son was staring at the screen, jaw agape.
Pure, primal terror burst through her, like a dam breaking. ”What is it?”
But she knew.
It could only be one thing.
”Who sent you this?” he asked, his voice thin as a thread, cold as winter.
She yanked the wheel right and pulled into the lot at a Burger King. Slamming the car into park, she grabbed the phone from him.
The hairs on her neck rose.
Pretty ladies should be smarter about who they get INVOLVED with.
The phone slid from her hand, clattering to the console.
”What is this?” Alex asked again.
She inhaled deeply then did her best to channel a calmness she didn't even come close to feeling. ”I've been getting some strange messages.”
He shook his head adamantly then stabbed his finger against the screen. ”This isn't strange, Mom. It's f.u.c.king creepy. It's stalkerish. Who is sending you these?”
”I don't know,” she said, her hold on a cool, collected tone faltering.
”Someone who doesn't want you to be with Colin.” His voice rose with every word.
She bit her lip and managed a small nod. ”It seems that way.”
His eyes widened as big as the moon. ”Mom! I like Colin. He's a cool guy. But seriously, this is freaking me out.”
It was freaking her out, too. More than she could ever have imagined. But she couldn't let on. She had to stay strong for Alex. She had to be t.i.tanium.
”Colin is working on it,” she said, taking her time with each word. ”He's working on figuring it out, and we'll make it stop.”
”'We'?” he asked, arching an angry eyebrow. ”Who's 'we'? You and Colin? Or you and me? Or you and-”