tossing the empty stick in the nearby trash and taking out a cigarette. While he lights it he glances at me. “Anyway, smiling is a good thing. You seemed a little rough this morning.”
“Well I had a rough night,” I tell him, suddenly occupied with picking strands of my hair off my black linen dress.
He exhales, the smoke wafting away. Silence strums between us for a beat. “You know, Ada,” he says in a careful voice, “I hope you know that what you’re going through is perfectly normal.”
My eyes snap to his. “What I’m going through?”
He nods, taking a drag, eyes all squinty. “Yeah. Puberty.”
I let out a tired groan.
“Seriously though,” he goes on, giving me a quick smile. “I mean about everything. Your mom. Everything that’s happened since. Everything that happened before. Normal people don’t go through all that.”
“Then how can you say what I’m going through is perfectly normal?” I question.
“I mean in the sense that I’ve gone through it. So has Perry. We’re still going through it. A lot happened.” His eyes grow hard and he blinks, looking away. “We lost people. We lost . . . chances. We gained truths we didn’t want. Fuck. We literally all went to hell and back and that changes a person. It’s changed Perry. It’s changed you. And it sure as hell has changed me.”
I’ve never heard Dex admit anything like this to me before and I have to say I want him to keep talking. I usually want him to shut up.
“Yeah?” I ask quietly.
He nods, flicking his cigarette. “Yeah. If you think you’re the only one who has weird dreams, you’re wrong. I have nightmares all the time.”
“What about?”
“Everything. Everyone. Every place. It doesn’t really end.” He sighs and rubs his hand along his chin, eyes darting over the passersby. “We know monsters are real. They exist in this world. They can be disguised in a crowd. They can be buried in your head. And they are definitely somewhere . . . there.” He waves his hand in a circle, focused somewhere in the distance. “Beyond what we can see. We know they’re there, fighting to come in. It’s been two years and we’ve all recovered, distanced ourselves, and have tried to move on. Yet, deep down, I know we’re not in the clear. This isn’t over, little sister.”
“Gee,” I tell him softly, “you sure know how to wipe a smile from a girl’s face.”
He gives me a half-hearted grin. “One of my many talents. You’re too young to know the rest.” He puffs back on his cigarette, his dark eyes observing me just as Perry’s were earlier. “Sometimes I know what your sister is thinking whether I want to or not. Extremely handy in the bedroom. Not always handy outside of it. She’s worried about you. A lot.”
I swallow uneasily and absently look down at my nails, not wanting to hear this. “I’m fine.”
“You’re not,” he says simply. “And neither are we. And we’ll probably never be fine. It’s okay to admit that. And it’s okay to tell us if something is going on, whether you think it’s a silly dream or stuffed animals trying to kill you.”
“Okay, why do you guys keep mentioning the stuffed animals? Because I swear I’m piling them all in your car and you’re taking them back to Seattle for Fat Rabbit to chew on.”
“Fair enough,” he says with a shrug. “Better them than my boots. My point is . . . you have us. We’re only three hours away. Use us.”
“Did Perry put you up to this?” I say suspiciously.
He shakes his head, looking downright solemn. “She didn’t. Believe it or not, I care about you.”
I can’t help but grimace, completely uncomfortable with any affection coming from this douchecanoe of a brother-in-law. But secretly, deep down, I’m touched.
“Don’t worry,” he says quickly as Perry comes out of the tent, a plastic bag of clothes in her hand. “I’ll go back to annoying the fuck out of you in no time.”
She holds up her bag
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