Emergency Contact Read Online Lauren Layne

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Funny Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 77389 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 387(@200wpm)___ 310(@250wpm)___ 258(@300wpm)
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The conductor’s voice comes on over the intercom. “Next stop, Cleveland.”

The picture of Lolo’s face in my messages looms brightly, like a beacon calling me home.

Sorry, Katherine. I did my best, but this is as far as we go.

With one last backward glance, I board the train. Alone.

TWENTY-TWO

KATHERINE

December 23, 9:48 p.m.

You know in cheesy action movies, where they do something fancy with the sound so all you can hear is the sound of the hero’s heavy breathing during a vital plot moment?

It’s like that.

All I can hear is my panting breath and the pounding of my heart as I hurl myself toward platform eleven as fast as my stilettos will carry me.

Oh yeah, and purse flaps at my side, my phone clasped where it belongs, firmly in my palm. Because apparently, Christmas miracles happen even to the Grinch, and the departing train was held up, and my new friends on the quiet car obligingly dangled my bag out the window for me.

Tom was wrong. I can’t wait to tell him.

Finally, I make it to my destination, and for a second, I think I’m still in the movie sound warp because I hear nothing but my thudding heart.

After a moment, I realize I’m not hearing anything because . . .

There’s nothing to hear.

No people. No trains. The platform is completely deserted.

I suck in gasping breaths, trying to get my breathing under control. When I do, I finally register another sound. A soft, brushing swish. I follow the noise to the other side of a large concrete pillar, where a bored-looking janitor is sweeping up crumbs at the base of a trash can.

“Hello,” I say. “Where’s the train?”

He pauses his sweeping but only stares at me.

“Um . . .” I fish a wrinkled ticket out of my pocket. “Cleveland. Train eighty-one. Did they change the platform?”

The janitor resumes his sweeping. “Left.”

I point to my left. “That way?”

He shakes his head. “The train left.”

“Left? It can’t have left!”

Yeah, yeah. I hear the diva, but after the day I’ve had, I really thought there was a decent chance of the universe throwing me a bone.

He shrugs and goes back to his sweeping.

I have an almost uncontrollable urge to burst into tears, something I didn’t do even as a child.

But then, as a child, I didn’t have to endure a day like this one, where I’ve had my head bashed, my bra cut off, my back stitched up, all of which forced me to reunite with my ex-husband due to faulty paperwork.

Oh yeah, and as a child, I wasn’t kicked off a plane or ditched in a Buffalo train station in the middle of a blizzard.

The real kicker? It’s all my fault. Every last drop of horrible that’s happened today? All on me.

I glance down at the phone in my hand, and for the first time in my life, I really, truly ask myself:

Is it worth it?

This obsessive fixation on making partner . . . where has it gotten me, exactly?

And can I even still claim I’m doing it for Dad? Yes, the goal started as a way of honoring his last wish, but somewhere along the way, I’m afraid I crossed a line into far, far more selfish territory.

“You haven’t by chance seen a man lurking around, have you?” I ask the janitor in last-ditch desperation as I slip my phone into the outer pocket of my purse. “Tall, dark-haired? Good-looking, though not as much as he imagines himself to be? Smells a bit like ego and ham?”

The janitor shakes his head, then walks away, clearly having reached his limit with my nonsense.

Just like Tom, apparently.

I feel . . . I don’t know what I feel.

I can’t blame Tom. I don’t blame him. He told me he would leave without me, and he had every right to. I’ve already made him miss a plane; to think he’d give up his last chance of getting home for me a second time is, well . . . unfathomable.

And unfair that I’d even expect it of him.

But knowing all of this, understanding the situation from the logical, rational place that is usually my sweet spot . . .

It doesn’t stop the pain from rolling over me. Pain that has nothing to do with my concussion or the stitches on my back, which I’m pretty sure I ripped loose in my futile attempt to catch the train to Cleveland.

But my aching head and the searing pain in my back don’t hold a candle to the ache in my chest.

With an agonized sigh, I drop heavily onto a hard bench. My purse slips off my shoulder and drops to the ground, my phone slipping out of the exterior pocket and skidding a good foot across the concrete.

I don’t move a muscle to retrieve it. I’ve just risked everything for that damn thing, and yet somehow, now I can’t seem to muster the motivation to pick it up.


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