When Love Turns to Ash Novel – Chapter 4
Jax showed up at the hospital the next day.
I was propped up in bed, my leg in a heavy cast, a throbbing ache radiating from my collarbone.
“Hey,” he said, lingering awkwardly by the door.
He looked tired, a little guilty maybe.
I kept my face neutral. “What do you want, Jax?”
“Ben told me what happened. That you were hurt. Chloe felt terrible.”
Chloe. Of course.
“I’m fine,” I said, my voice flat. I didn’t want his pity, or Chloe’s.
I tried to shift, to hide the Florence travel brochures I’d been looking at on my bedside table.
He noticed the movement. His eyes narrowed.
“What are you hiding?” he asked, a hint of suspicion in his tone. “More fan art?”
He thought I was still that obsessed kid. Maybe he always would.
“It’s nothing,” I said.
“Chloe asked me to check on you,” he said, as if that explained his presence. “She’s worried about, you know, lawsuits. The loft owner is a friend of her dad’s.”
So this wasn’t about me. It was damage control.
My heart, already bruised, felt another dull throb.
“Tell Chloe not to worry. I’m not suing anyone.”
I kept my voice cold, distant. I wanted him gone.
He shifted uncomfortably. “Look, Savvy, about the party—”
“It’s forgotten,” I cut him off.
He seemed surprised by my coldness.
Then, a flicker of something else. “You need anything? Water? Help with the… pillows?”
It was a reluctant offer, almost forced.
“I’m fine,” I repeated.
But the movement sent a fresh wave of pain through my leg. I winced.
He stepped forward. “Here, let me.”
“I don’t need your help, Jax.”
He ignored me, reaching for the pillows behind my head. His fingers brushed my hair.
For a second, it was like old times, a phantom echo of the boy who’d given me a guitar pick.
Then Chloe walked in.
“Jax, darling? Oh, Savvy, you’re awake.”
She glided to his side, possessively tucking her arm through his.
Jax immediately straightened up, moving away from me as if I were contagious.
“Chloe was just worried,” he said, his voice instantly warmer, softer, for her.
The sudden shift in his attention, his complete abandonment of me mid-gesture, made me lose my balance as I tried to readjust myself.
My injured leg twisted.
A sharp cry escaped my lips. Pain, white-hot, shot up my thigh.
Chloe tutted. “Oh, dear. Clumsy. Jax, maybe you should help her properly.”
Her concern was paper-thin.
Jax looked torn for a split second, his eyes darting between me and Chloe.
Then he shook his head.
“Nah, I can’t. We’re, you know, engaged. Wouldn’t look right, me fussing over another girl. Especially with the wedding so soon.”
He actually said that. Publicly.
My jaw tightened. The humiliation was a fresh wave.
Chloe smiled sweetly at me. “He’s just being proper, sweetie. Old-fashioned. He wouldn’t want to give anyone the wrong idea, especially after your… well, your little crush.”
Her eyes gleamed with a triumph that made me sick.
I looked straight at her, then at Jax.
“Don’t worry about wrong ideas, Chloe. I’m perfectly aware of your… relationship. And frankly, I don’t care anymore.”
Chloe’s smile faltered. She opened her mouth, maybe to deliver another patronizing line, maybe even to let slip more of their “plan.”
She took a step back, gesturing animatedly, and her heel caught on the uneven edge of a floor tile near a large potted plant that was leaking water.
She yelped, arms flailing, and then she was falling.
Right into the decorative fountain in the hospital lobby, which we’d just passed as they wheeled me to a small sunroom for a change of scenery.
Splash.
Jax whirled around. “Chloe!”
He hauled her out, dripping and sputtering.