Simply hearing Celia’s deep rooted insecurities come to the surface and the tears which inevitably spilled over, resulting in saltwater stained porcelain and a painful twist in his gut which felt a hell of a lot like guilt, Quinn couldn’t take it anymore. “Hey, hey.” His palms came up to clasp her jawline, thumbs wiping away at the liquid coating her cheeks. Perhaps she’d push him away again, which she had plenty of reason to do, but he couldn’t bear to witness her agony. “We need to get your hand under cold water,” the timbre of his voice became soft as he gingerly lifted up her scalded hand to view the damage. “And I promise I’ll explain everythin’. Just come with me. Please.”
Intertwining his fingers with her unburnt ones, he led the brunette away from the lingering ears and invasive gazes of their fellow townsfolk. This was his truth and he refused to share it with anyone other than the woman who deserved to hear it most. Once he spotted an outdoor shower meant for people to rinse their feet and hands, Quinn turned on the icy water and brought her palm beneath it for several beats before speaking. “When you left, it felt like… Like you took one of my limbs with you. I didn’t know how to cope, I’d never let anyone in before who just left. You were my first love, the only girl I ever gave a damn about.” He sighed, attempting to piece together the narrative in his mind as best he could. It was a memory he had purposely avoided due to the fact that he loathed the idea of dredging up the weakest period in his life.
“It was like this gapin’ hole in my chest. I couldn’t sleep. Couldn’t eat. Spent most of my time at the garage or starin’ at the ceilin’ just wonderin’ what the hell I did to make you hate me so much. And then my mom, God rest her beautiful soul, suggested that I take a walk to the local diner and get her a cake. When I think back on it, I’m pretty sure she just wanted me to see sunlight for the first time in weeks.” He shut the water off, tearing a paper towel from a nearby stool beside the shower and using it to very gently dry her fingers. “Ashley was workin’ there as a waitress and when I came up to the counter… I dunno, guess everybody heard about you. She apologized and said if I needed someone to talk to, she was willin’ to get off early and listen.”
Now it was his turn to choke back the tightness in his throat and a stinging in his nostrils. “I’m so sorry, Celia. I was lonely and hurtin’, but that’s no excuse because I knew what she’d done. It was immature and stupid; I mean Jesus, I was there when she began the crusade against you. But I just… I wanted to know that I mattered to somebody, that I was capable of being loved still.” Quinn coughed, inhaling deeply to steady his voice. “It was just one time, nothin’ else happened. I hated myself for it once I realized that she was only humorin’ me to make some twisted point to you, even after you were long gone.” He didn’t know what else to say. “I’m sorry. If you hate me, I understand. I never should have crossed that line.”
While she didn’t want an explanation, she still allowed him to steer her out of the crowd and away from curious eyes. Celia didn’t want to hear about it because she was selfish; because she knew that it had everything to do with her. But she owed him everything and this was the least she could do. She deserved to feel his pain. Her face twisted into an unpleasant grimace when the cold water hit her burning hand and she forced herself to listen when he begun to speak. What I did to make you hate me so much. Her lips parted to interrupt him but closed seconds after. There was nothing she could say because even if he was wrong, and she hadn’t ever hated him, it was how he felt and she knew he was entitled to his feelings. She closed her eyes while he dried off her hand that throbbed with pain yet it’d never compare to the heavy, heartbreaking pain in her chest.
Her eyes fell to the ground when he was done and she played with the dirt beneath her shoes for a moment. “I’m sorry about the chili,” she said after a minute of silence, “you know she won’t enter the competition now.” Celia exhaled a shaky breath, studying her red palm to avoid his gaze because she was ashamed. For everything, not just the chili and her selfish feelings that caused the fight, but for leaving him when he was the only thing that had ever made sense. “I was young and naive, I thought I wanted the glitz and the glamour, that I could escape all the painful memories— but I never hated you. I’m not capable of hating you.” It was the only thing she needed him to know; that it had never been his fault that she looked for an escape. Celia had only ever wanted to be strong but didn’t believe it was possible in the place that had relentlessly kicked her to the ground.