Walk of Shame


A Millhaven Cove Story

What you know about love could fit on the back of a damp matchbook left too long inside the pocket of an old denim jacket. Truth is, the faded fire safety warning printed there probably carried more useful information than anything you ever learned from another human being.

Still, you pick up a few things along the way.

Little survival tricks mostly.

The kind of knowledge a man gathers after enough bad nights, burned bridges, cheap whiskey, and mornings he’d rather not remember in full daylight. Knowledge collected the same way old bars collect cigarette smoke in the walls. Slow. Permanent. Hard to wash out once it settles in.

First thing — never believe a damn word somebody says about love.

Most people lie about it long before they realize they’re lying. They talk forever and still don’t know themselves well enough to tell the truth. They say always when they mean until things get difficult. They say forever because it sounds prettier than for now. Human beings are funny like that. We package temporary emotions in permanent language and then act shocked when reality starts repossessing things.

Second — watch people carefully.

Not in some romantic movie kind of way either. Really watch them. Watch the pauses between words. Watch what makes their eyes drift toward the door. Watch how their voice changes when they talk about somebody they used to be.

The important things in this life rarely announce themselves out loud.

But don’t stare too hard.

Sooner or later people notice they’re being seen. That’s when the pretender crawls out from behind their teeth and starts doing all the talking again.

None of this came from some revelation carved into stone somewhere. No old philosopher standing beside the highway handing out wisdom wrapped in cigarette smoke and motel dust. Most philosophers probably couldn’t survive two nights in Millhaven Cove without developing a drinking problem and an unhealthy relationship with diner coffee.

It was survival.

The kind meant to keep a man from crying himself to sleep at two in the morning while an old refrigerator hums in the dark like it remembers every mistake you ever made.

Millhaven Cove had a way of making nights feel longer than they really were. Harbor fog rolled through the streets after midnight and swallowed whole blocks at a time. Streetlights buzzed weakly through the mist while tired men drifted between bars pretending they weren’t lonely enough to notice each other doing the exact same thing.

Town smelled like saltwater, old wood, fryer grease, diesel fuel, wet pavement, and regret that had overstayed its welcome.

Most of what you learn about women comes afterward anyway.

Not during the flirting.
Not during the whiskey.
Not during all the pretty lies people tell because silence makes them nervous.

Afterward.

During the gray hour before morning fully wakes up.

That’s where the truth lives.

The room smelled like stale gin, harbor air drifting through a cracked kitchen window, sweat, cheap detergent, and the ghost of cigarettes smoked by somebody trying very hard to become a better person next Monday. Somewhere outside, down near the marina, gulls screamed like drunks fighting over the last honest thing left in town. Pipes groaned inside the apartment walls. A radiator hissed unevenly in the corner like it was talking to itself.

You woke up beside somebody you barely knew and suddenly the whole room felt like a hostage situation nobody prepared for.

She sat against the headboard with the blanket tucked beneath her shoulders, staring at you with those tired green eyes that looked prettier last night beneath neon beer signs and whiskey blur. Her black nail polish was chipped near the edges. There was a thin scar near her collarbone she kept touching unconsciously whenever silence stretched too long.

You notice things like that after enough lonely years.

Little fractures in people.

The places where life pressed too hard and never fully let go.

Her mascara had smudged sometime during the night. She looked less like a femme fatale now and more like somebody exhausted from carrying herself through too many disappointing Thursdays and too many men who confused attention with affection.

You wondered briefly what she saw when she looked at you.

Probably some half-hungover idiot trying to remember whether emotional damage counted as a personality trait.

She muttered something about needing to quit drinking and slipped off toward the bathroom wearing one of your flannels. The shirt hung loose around her thighs. The bathroom door closed softly. Water started running through old pipes that knocked like restless ghosts trapped inside the walls.

That’s usually the moment a man starts bargaining with whatever gods still take his calls.

So you do the only respectable thing left.

Make coffee.

There’s something humiliating about standing half-dressed in another person’s kitchen trying to remember where they keep the filters while your head pounds like a guilty conscience. The linoleum floor felt cold beneath your feet. Sunlight crept through dirty blinds in thin yellow stripes that exposed every empty bottle and bad decision left scattered around the apartment.

The coffee maker sputtered awake like it resented existence itself.

Honestly, same.

You leaned against the counter while it brewed and stared out the window at Millhaven Cove slowly dragging itself toward morning. Wet streets. Rusted fire escapes. The old cannery stacks standing motionless against the fog like dead monuments nobody bothered tearing down because the town needed something tall enough to blame.

A couple fought quietly beside a pickup across the street.

Somewhere out on the terrace a cat started meowing like it was personally offended by the concept of daylight. A few seconds later children burst into laughter down in the alley, sneakers slapping wet pavement while they ran from a dog with a playful bark sharp enough to cut through the harbor fog.

Old Mrs. Alvarez downstairs was already out watering plants on her balcony in a pink robe and curlers, humming some old Spanish love song like the world hadn’t disappointed her enough yet.

Never understood people like that.

Millhaven could be falling apart one rusted nail at a time and somehow they still found reasons to grow flowers.

Part of you admired it.

The other part figured they were probably just better at lying to themselves than the rest of us.

Then she came back from the bathroom.

And there’s always that little flicker of surprise when somebody realizes you’re still there.

Like decency somehow missed both of you by accident.

You handed her a cup and waited for the signal. The tiny shift in posture that tells you whether to stay another hour or disappear forever.

Steam curled between you both while the apartment settled around the silence.

She took a sip.

Raised an eyebrow.

And suddenly a brand-new fear entered the room.

What if the coffee was better than the sex?

“You always make coffee after?” she asked.

Her voice still rough from sleep and cigarettes.

“Only when I’m trying to leave politely.”

That earned a tired laugh out of her. Small but real.

“That bad, huh?”

“Usually.”

She studied you over the rim of the cup for another second like she was trying to decide whether you were joking or just honest enough to make people uncomfortable.

Could’ve been either.

“You from Millhaven?” she asked.

“Unfortunately.”

Another faint smile.

“Yeah,” she said softly. “Most people here are.”

Then the silence came back.

Not awkward this time.

Just tired.

The kind shared by people who already knew neither one of them was getting rescued anytime soon.

Her expression stayed mostly unreadable, but she hadn’t thrown you out yet.

That felt promising.
Or dangerous.
Hard telling the difference sometimes.

She sipped her coffee slowly, both hands wrapped around the mug for warmth. Every few seconds you caught her glancing over the rim like she was quietly trying to solve something.

People don’t realize how intimate being observed can feel until somebody actually sees them.

That’s usually when panic starts dressing itself up as instinct.

I didn’t like how much I wanted to stay.

She seemed like the kind of woman who could make a man start reconsidering the stories he told himself about his life. The kind that made staying somewhere feel possible for about five dangerous minutes.

And that right there was enough to make you nervous.

So you finished your coffee, pulled on your jacket, and got out of there before your better judgment started sounding lonely again.

Tried to leave smooth.
Tried to leave cool.

Probably failed at both.

Outside, somebody was already blasting old Aerosmith from a rusted Camaro halfway down the block. The bakery on Mercer Street had started pushing warm bread smell into the cold morning air. Two fishermen argued near the marina about bait prices loud enough to wake the dead.

Town kept moving.

Funny how life refuses to pause just because you’re emotionally constipated.

People in Millhaven made promises like that every week.

Not because they believed them.

Just because hope sounded better out loud.

Or maybe because lying sounded less pathetic than admitting you were scared somebody might actually matter to you.

I always figured love made more sense in motion.

Maybe that’s why I trusted vehicles more than people.

People leave in complicated ways. Cars at least have the decency to break down honestly.

Mine was an old Ford pickup named Gypsy. Primer-gray in some places, rust-red in others, loud enough to wake gulls off the pier when she rolled through Harbor Street too early in the morning. Everybody in Millhaven knew that truck. The old mechanics down near the cannery swore she should’ve died fifteen years ago.

Maybe they were right.

The heater only worked when it felt charitable. The bench seat smelled like gasoline, winter air, old coffee, wet denim, and every bad decision I made between eighteen and thirty-five.

We’d been together since high school.

One of those violent little love affairs where half the memories are good and the other half leave scars you still feel when winter settles into your bones.

I loved her when she was running smooth. Windows down. Radio crackling through old Springsteen songs. Some unsuspecting girl sliding close enough across that old bench seat to make me believe I might actually become somebody worth remembering.

And I hated her when she died on frozen backroads at two in the morning while snow came down sideways and somebody’s father or brother adjusted my jawline for getting too ambitious with their daughter.

Could never tell which one it was.

Didn’t matter much either.

Pain introduces itself without needing names.

Gypsy sat through all of it. Engine ticking softly while I held my face together and tasted blood mixing with winter air. Headlights cut weak tunnels through the falling snow while my fingers shook trying to light cigarettes against the wind.

Truth is, that truck probably saved my life more than once.

Not in some heroic movie kind of way.

More in the quiet mathematical sense.

Every breakdown delayed something.
Every missed chance rerouted disaster somewhere else.

Funny how a busted engine can change your whole life.

I used to joke she saved me from three divorces and child support. Truth is, that joke carried more honesty than humor.

Children deserve steadier hands than mine.

At least that’s what I told myself.

Truth is, I don’t know if that was wisdom or cowardice anymore.

That thought sneaks up on you sometimes without warning. Usually late at night when the road goes quiet and there’s nobody left around to perform for.

You start wondering what kind of father you would’ve been.

Then you remember yourself at twenty-three.
Then twenty-eight.
Then thirty-one.

And suddenly the silence feels safer than the answer.

There comes a point when you realize most of the stories you tell about yourself are just patched-up excuses wearing good boots.

You call yourself restless because it sounds better than afraid.

You call yourself independent because unstable carries too much truth in it.

Men are good at renaming damage.

A guy loses enough good women and suddenly he’s “not built for relationships.” Drinks himself numb every weekend and calls it blowing off steam. Sleeps in his truck two counties over because he can’t stand being known too closely anymore and somehow turns that into freedom.

Hell, I did it myself.

Still do sometimes.

I used to tell people I wasn’t the settling-down type. Said it like it was some rugged personal philosophy instead of what it really was — a man getting nervous whenever somebody learned him too well.

That sounds uglier out loud than it did in my head.

Funny how that works.

I was never the kind of man who mistreated women.

At least that’s what I liked telling myself.

Truth is, most of the time it felt more like an arrangement than romance anyway. Two lonely people reaching for each other the same way drunks reach for neon signs in the rain. Temporary shelter. Temporary warmth. Nobody asking too many questions they didn’t really want answered.

Maybe that sounds cold.

Maybe it was.

But loneliness makes negotiators out of people.

You start convincing yourself you’re providing something useful. A little comfort. A little distraction. Somebody to help carry the weight of a Thursday night until morning arrives and reality starts collecting its debts again.

Consenting adults.
Mutual arrangement.
Nobody promising forever.

That’s the story I liked telling myself anyway.

The dangerous part is repeating a lie often enough that it starts sounding reasonable.

As men, I think sometimes we find ourselves standing right at the edge of something dark, staring down into it long enough to see our own reflection staring back.

That’s usually the moment we turn around.

Run.

Drink more.
Drive farther.
Sleep beside strangers.
Tell ourselves another story about why we keep moving.

Anything to avoid wondering whether we’re frauds beneath all the noise and posturing.

But the thing nobody tells you is this:

There’s no real escaping the abyss once it learns your name.

Sooner or later it calls.

Usually in the quiet.

Usually after midnight.

And usually when there’s nobody left around to help you pretend you don’t hear it.

Men like to pretend we know what we’re doing.

Truth is, most of us don’t know much of anything once the noise dies down. We just get better at hiding confusion behind routines, jobs, drinking, movement, and whatever version of toughness we inherited from the men who failed before us.

Nobody really teaches you how to ask for the things you need.

Especially not as a man.

By the time most of us realize we’re lonely, we’ve already spent years training ourselves to survive without tenderness. Years learning how to swallow pain quietly enough that nobody feels obligated to look directly at it.

Funny thing is, I don’t think most men are looking for permission to fall apart.

Not really.

I think what we want is simpler than that.

Just a place where we could if we needed to.

A place where grief doesn’t immediately turn into judgment. Where silence doesn’t feel like weakness. Where nobody laughs if your voice cracks while talking about something you lost.

Most men would rather break quietly than let somebody watch it happen.

You tell enough stories about why you leave before people can leave you and eventually even you start believing them.

That’s the dangerous part.

Not the lying.

The believing.

I used to imagine selling everything that fit in the bed of Gypsy and driving west until the roads forgot my name. Thought maybe somewhere past Millhaven Cove there’d be a version of me that didn’t carry guilt around like loose change rattling in his pocket.

Truth is, I probably would’ve found another bar, another woman, another excuse, and called it a fresh start.

That’s the problem with running.

You drag yourself along for the ride.

There’s something holy about a long drive.

Not church holy.

Nothing clean like that.

I mean the kind of holiness found in empty highways outside Millhaven with a dying sun stretched across the windshield and enough miles ahead of you to believe, even temporarily, that your life might still change shape.

The road cracks your mind open after a while.

Memories stop arriving in order. They come loose like photographs spilled from an old shoebox. A woman laughing barefoot beside the marina. Blood on your knuckles outside Murphy’s Bar. Your father pretending not to cry in the garage after your mother’s funeral. Snow falling through broken headlights somewhere outside Duluth.

The road doesn’t care what comes first.

Neither does grief.

That’s the beauty of driving alone. Nobody interrupts the replay. Nobody asks why certain memories still live inside your chest like unpaid debts.

You just drive.

Hands loose on the wheel.
Engine humming beneath you.
Darkness rolling beside the truck like an old stray dog that decided to follow you home.

And sometimes it all catches up at once.

The regret.
The loneliness.
The faces.
The years.

It sneaks up somewhere between towns where the radio dissolves into static and the only light left comes from dashboard glow and distant truck stops hanging in the dark like artificial heavens.

That’s when you pull over.

Not because you’re tired.

Because carrying yourself becomes too heavy for a minute.

So you sit there on the shoulder while the engine ticks softly beneath the hood and the cold starts creeping through the cab.

At first you just stare through the windshield pretending you’re fine.

Men do that a lot.

Pretend if we sit still long enough the feeling will pass on its own.

Sometimes it does.

Sometimes it sits down beside you.

The tears come eventually, though usually later than they should. Quiet at first. Angry after that. The kind that leave your chest hurting afterward like something inside you finally got tired of being ignored.

And the worst part is, crying never really fixes a damn thing.

It just makes enough room inside you to keep going a little longer.

So eventually you wipe your face before it turns into something uglier. Rub your hands together for warmth. Step back out into the night smelling like gasoline, winter air, and old regret.

Maybe grab a soda.
A honeybun.
A couple gallons of gas.

Maybe stand beneath those harsh fluorescent lights inside some half-dead station while the cashier avoids eye contact because people at that hour are either running from something or heading back toward it.

Maybe they recognize you from Millhaven Cove and are polite enough not to mention it.

Either way, morning keeps coming.

That’s the cruel thing about life.

No matter how lost you get, dawn still shows up demanding participation.

So you climb back into Gypsy.
Turn the key.
Listen to the engine struggle awake.

Just you and the dark sitting there lying to each other, neither one fully convinced.

And then you head toward whatever disappointment, redemption, or lie you need to believe in next.

Millhaven Cove — Chapter 5


Chapter 5

Martha Marks

Martha got in early every day.

Not because anyone asked her to.
Not because it was in her job description.
She just did.

The building felt different before the doors opened. Quieter. Like it hadn’t decided yet what kind of day it was going to be.

She unlocked the front door, flipped the lights on one row at a time, then went straight to the small break area without taking her coat off.

Coffee first.

Always coffee first.

She filled the machine, measured the grounds without looking, and hit the switch. The smell started spreading through the room before the water even finished heating.

Next came the bagels.

Fresh every morning.
Plain, everything, cinnamon raisin, whatever the bakery had left from the first batch.

She set them on a plastic tray on the table near the entrance, lined them up so the labels faced forward, then put the cream cheese tubs in a neat row beside them.

The people in the center complained about that.

Said she never brought anything for them.

Said she was playing favorites.

Martha never answered.

The bagels weren’t for the clients.

They were for the staff.

And even then, mostly for the ones who got there early enough to need something before the day started.

She wiped the table, even though it was already clean, then stepped back and looked at the entrance.

Chairs straight.
Sign-in sheet ready.
Pens in the cup, all facing the same way.

Good.

She turned toward the hallway just as the side door opened.

Gary came in pushing the mop bucket, the wheels squeaking the same way they always did, one higher than the others so it made a soft thump every turn.

“Morning, Gary.”

He stopped, looked up like he hadn’t expected anyone to be there yet, then smiled wide.

“Morning, Martha.”

He parked the bucket against the wall and started mopping the tile near the front desk, slow and careful, the way he always did, like every square mattered.

Gary never missed a spot.

Didn’t matter how long it took.

He worked like the floor was something that needed to be protected, not cleaned.

Most people in town knew what happened to him.

His family’s car went off the bridge when he was a kid.
Winter. Ice on the road.
Straight through the guardrail and into the river.

His parents didn’t make it.

Gary did.

So did his older sister.

Meadow.

Nobody talked about the accident around him, but everyone knew it was why things were the way they were.

Gary had trouble with numbers, with forms, with anything that changed too fast.

But he could clean a building better than anyone Martha had ever seen.

He mopped the same pattern every morning, starting at the front and working toward the back, never skipping, never rushing.

Routine kept him steady.

Martha understood that.

She went behind the desk, unlocked the drawer, and took out the sign-in clipboard.

Her desk was already in order, but she straightened the stack of forms anyway, tapping the edges against the counter until the corners lined up perfectly.

Then she opened the bottom drawer.

The toy was exactly where she left it.

Small. Plastic. Worn smooth around the edges from years of being handled.

She picked it up and turned it over once in her hand before pressing the button.

The speaker crackled.

“I’m the baby, gotta love me.”

She let the sound play all the way through before she set the toy on the desk for a second, just looking at it.

Dale gave it to her when they were kids.

Said it reminded him of her.

She never knew if he meant it as a joke or not.

He used to squeeze it over and over just to get on her nerves, holding it up in her face, making the voice talk back to her like the thing had something important to say.

You’re the baby, he’d say.
Don’t matter how old you get, you’re still the baby.

She pressed the button again, softer this time, and the sound made her smile before she could stop it.

For a second she could hear him laughing in the kitchen, their mother telling him to knock it off before he broke the thing.

She set the toy back in the drawer and closed it carefully.

Gary’s mop bucket rolled past the desk, the wheel thumping once against the tile.

“All good up here?” he asked.

“All good.”

He nodded and kept going.

The front door opened a few minutes later, the bell giving its usual dull buzz.

First client of the day.

Middle-aged man, eyes red, shirt wrinkled like he slept in it, holding the intake form like it was written in another language.

He stood at the counter a second before speaking.

“Where do I put this?”

“Right here,” Martha said, tapping the desk.

He handed it over, fingers shaking just enough to notice.

She looked it over quick, eyes moving down the page.

“You left a couple lines blank.”

He shrugged.

“Didn’t know what to put.”

“You put what’s true.”

He let out a short breath.

“They ask how much you drink,” he said quietly.
“You tell ’em what you drink when things are good, or what you drink when things ain’t?”

Martha held his eyes for a second.

“You tell ’em what you drank last night.”

He stared at the paper again.

“They gonna think I’m lying anyway.”

“They usually do.”

He gave a tired half smile at that, then nodded once and stepped away when the counselor called his name from the hallway.

Martha set the form on the stack and squared the edges with both hands.

Same questions.

Same boxes.

Same answers nobody ever wanted to write down.

She could see Dale at the kitchen table again, pen tapping against the paper, faster and faster until their mother told him to stop before he tore the form in half.

Just answer the question, she’d said.

He laughed, sharp and tired.

You want the number that sounds normal, or the number that’s real?

Their mother didn’t turn around.

You tell them what they ask. Don’t make it harder than it has to be.

Dale pushed the chair back hard.

Ain’t the drinking, he said.
That’s just what I do so my head shuts up.

Martha blinked and the desk was back in front of her.

Coffee hissed in the machine behind her.

Somebody coughed in the waiting room.

The clock ticked louder than it should have.

The last time she saw Dale he was standing on the back steps, talking too fast, saying he just needed a little help this time.

She told herself he always said that.

Two days later the phone rang before sunrise.

They said the building went up fast.
Old wiring at first.
Then later it wasn’t.

Owner set the fire.

Didn’t know anyone was inside.

Dale had been sleeping in one of the back rooms.

Martha stared at the sign-in sheet until the letters stopped looking like words.

She opened the drawer, took the toy out, and pressed the button.

“I’m the baby, gotta love me.”

She turned it over once, then set it back and closed the drawer.

Gary’s mop bucket rolled past again.

Same sound.

Same morning.

Same day.

Lunch came the same time every day.

At eleven-thirty Martha locked the drawer, straightened the forms, and wiped a spot on the counter that didn’t need wiping.

The side door opened and Meadow stepped in carrying a brown paper sack and a plastic grocery bag.

She nodded toward Martha.

“Afternoon.”

“Morning.”

Gary hurried over, eyes already on the bag.

“What’d you bring?”

Meadow started taking things out one at a time.

“Turkey.”
“Apple.”
“Chips.”
“And—”

She held up a plastic container.

Gary leaned closer.

“Cucumber.”

His face lit up.

“Cucumber my favorite!”

He laughed loud, clapping his hands once before sitting down hard in the chair.

Meadow smiled.

“You say that every time.”

“’Cause it’s true every time.”

Martha opened her own bag.

Tuna salad.

Same as yesterday.

Same as most days.

She sat across from them, unfolding the napkin slow, smoothing the creases with her thumb.

Gary crunched the cucumber loud enough for everyone to hear.

Meadow took a bite of her sandwich.

“You eating okay today?” she asked.

Martha nodded.

“Yeah.”

Meadow watched her a second, then let it go.

They ate in silence.

Outside, a car pulled into the lot.

Gary reached for another cucumber slice, smiling to himself.

Meadow wiped her hands on a napkin.

Martha took another bite of the tuna and looked toward the front door.

Someone would be walking in any minute.

They always did.

Millhaven Cove — Chapter 4


Chapter 4

Graham

The buzzing streetlight outside my window had been flickering for weeks. Nobody fixed it. Nobody ever did. The moths kept circling the glass like the light meant something, hitting it over and over until they dropped out of the air.

Down the block a dog barked, then another. Someone shouted for them to shut up, and the sound rolled through the neighborhood before dying off the way it always did. One by one the lights in the houses went dark, people turning in for the night, closing their doors on whatever they didn’t want to deal with until morning.

Maybe somewhere that meant peace.

It never did here.

I pressed my palms against the brick beneath the window and pushed, the chair fighting me the way it always did before finally giving in. Took a second to get my balance right, another to catch my breath. The world looks different when you have to work this hard just to see it.

I locked the brakes and leaned forward.

Only then could I look down.

You notice things at night when you don’t have anywhere else to go. When the only traveling you do is from the bed to the window and back again. After a while it stops feeling like being stuck and starts feeling like routine. Not better. Just familiar.

More goes on in the dark than most people ever see.

A waitress behind the diner, coat thrown over her shoulders, smoking like the cold didn’t bother her. Three pats on the pocket, checking the tips before she went back inside. Light bill due, rent late, same story different night.

Inside, a truck driver sat alone at the counter, staring at a candle stuck in the middle of a blueberry muffin like it was trying to tell him something. Forty-five years gone in a blink. Coffee in one hand, road waiting outside, another shift already breathing down his neck.

In the apartments across the street, people stood in their windows holding drinks they didn’t really want, looking out at a world they didn’t feel part of anymore. Lights on, lights off, shadows moving behind curtains. People doing the math in their heads, trying to figure out when things stopped feeling like a choice.

Somewhere a woman cried where nobody could hear her. Somewhere a man sat in the dark staring at a stack of bills like if he looked long enough the numbers might change.

Lives turn on small things. One bad night. One wrong turn. One decision you swear you won’t make again.

I know that better than most.

I was drunk. High. Angry in that hot, useless way that makes you think moving fast will fix something already broken. I had just walked in on my woman with another man. No hiding it. No shame. Just the truth sitting there under bad light like it belonged.

When I said something, she didn’t apologize. She explained. Told me if I’d been different she wouldn’t have needed anyone else. That was what I hated most about her. Not what she did. The way she never carried any of it herself.

So I carried it.

The family never saw me coming. A mother, a father, a kid in the backseat. I remember the sound more than anything else. Metal folding wrong. Glass breaking like it didn’t want to. After that everything got quiet in the kind of way that doesn’t ever really end.

You don’t get past something like that. You just get used to carrying it.

I leaned forward in the chair, careful not to shift too far, and looked down toward the corner. Took me a long time to learn how to sit still without tipping. From this angle I could see the sidewalk clear enough.

Trixie and Zoe were working their stretch of pavement again.

Trixie caught the movement first. She always did. She gave me that slow wave she’d been giving me for months, all practiced charm and tired grace. We both knew the rules. A smile, a chuckle, nothing more. She liked knowing someone was watching who wasn’t looking to buy.

She hadn’t always been out there. You could tell by the way she held herself, like she still expected better from the world even when the world stopped expecting anything from her. Once she told me she used to hate winter because it meant shoveling the driveway before the kids woke up for school. She laughed when she said it, like she wasn’t sure the memory belonged to her anymore.

Zoe stood a few feet behind her, lighting a cigarette with hands that never stopped moving. The flame pushed back the shadows long enough to show her face, then the dark took it again. Zoe didn’t talk much about where she came from. What little I knew came in pieces. Foster homes. Running away. Owing the wrong people money. The rest you could figure out without asking.

Out here nobody asks too many questions.

Not because they don’t care.

Because they already know enough.

Zoe looked up toward my window, the ember of her cigarette glowing bright for a second. Trixie followed her eyes and grinned when she saw me.

I lifted my hand from the armrest and motioned toward the building.

Nights get long when you’re alone with your own head. Sometimes it’s easier with other people in the room, even if nobody talks about why.

Trixie nudged Zoe and nodded up at the window. Zoe shrugged like she expected it, then both of them started toward the door without hurrying, like this was just another stop along the way.

It usually was.

I backed the chair away from the window and turned toward the table. The pizza box sat where I left it, heat still coming through the cardboard. Smelled better than it tasted. Always did.

I don’t invite them up because I feel sorry for them.

I invite them up because the night feels shorter when somebody else is in it.

The elevator buzzed a minute later, the old motor grinding its way up the shaft like it wasn’t sure it wanted to make the trip. I waited, listening to the building settle around me, the same sounds every night, the same routine, the same quiet.

The gate rattled open down the hall.

Slow footsteps.

Three short knocks.

Same as always.

I rolled forward and opened the door.

Trixie walked in first, dropping her purse on the couch like she owned the place. Zoe came in behind her, already looking around for the ashtray.

Nobody said anything for a minute.

I set the pizza on the table and opened the box. The smell filled the room, mixing with the smoke that never really left no matter how many times I opened the window.

Trixie grabbed a slice, blew on it, and laughed.

“Smells better than it tastes,” she said.

“Yeah,” I told her.

“It always does.”

We ate anyway.

Outside, the streetlight buzzed, the moths kept hitting the glass, and somewhere down the block a dog started barking again like nothing in the world had changed.

Up here, nobody asked about the past.

Down there, nobody asked about mine.

After a while you learn that’s about as close to peace as most people ever get.

For tonight, it was enough.

Millhaven Cove – Chapter 3

Chapter 3

Ava

Pain learned her before she learned it.

It woke with her, already awake, already settled, a low animal coil at the base of her spine. Not sharp anymore. Sharp meant new. This was older than that—dull, insistent, patient. It let her brush her teeth, button her shirt, load the dishwasher. It waited until she bent the wrong way, until she forgot herself for half a second, then reminded her who was in charge.

By afternoon it behaved like a debt. Quiet. Compounding. She could feel it accruing interest while she stood at the sink, while she folded laundry, while she answered emails that asked nothing of her body. The pain never rushed. It knew she would come back to it.

The pills weren’t relief anymore. Relief had been warmth. Relief had been a softening, a loosening. What they gave her now was narrower than that. Function. Maintenance. The ability to move through the day without drawing attention to herself.

The difference mattered. Relief was indulgence. Maintenance was responsibility.

She kept the bottle in the kitchen cabinet, behind the flour and sugar. White on white. Sensible. Somewhere a mother would put it. Somewhere that didn’t announce itself.

Her phone buzzed while she was wiping down the counter.

Refill day.

The notification sat there longer than it should have. She stared at it until the words lost their shape. Then she checked the bottle anyway. Seven pills. Enough if she was careful. Careful had become a skill. Careful meant halves. Careful meant swallowing against the burn in her throat and breathing through the spike until it dulled. Careful meant not flinching when her daughter hugged her too hard.

Careful meant not letting anyone see the arithmetic.

The pharmacy sat between the grocery store and the dry cleaners. She had driven past it a thousand times without thinking. Now her hands tightened on the steering wheel as she pulled in, like the place itself could sense her attention.

She stayed in the car a moment, letting the engine idle, letting the ache settle into something manageable. The building looked the same. Same automatic doors sighing open and closed. Same posters about flu shots and smiling seniors who looked like they’d never been asked to beg for anything.

Inside, the air smelled faintly of disinfectant and plastic. The floors shone too much.

He was behind the counter.

He smiled when he saw her. The same smile he’d used on the sidelines years ago, shouting encouragement to a cluster of muddy girls who believed him when he said they were strong. He still asked about her daughters by name. Still remembered birthdays. Still led prayer once a month at church.

“Hey, Ava,” he said. “How’s the back?”

“Some days,” she said, and meant all of them.

He nodded, already turning to the computer, already frowning at the screen.

“Huh,” he said. “Looks like we’ve got a problem.”

The word landed heavier than it used to. Problem. It had learned to mean delay. Scrutiny. A look that lingered a second too long.

He leaned closer. Lowered his voice.

“I can help,” he said. “But it’s complicated.”

She felt it before she understood it. The way the space around her narrowed. The way the air shifted. The way the conversation stepped sideways into somewhere she hadn’t agreed to go.

She didn’t argue. Didn’t ask questions that would force him to clarify. She didn’t say no, not because she didn’t want to, but because the shape of no had already been eroded. The words slid past each other, meaning less than the understanding underneath them.

Later, she wouldn’t remember the exact phrasing. Only the moment where resistance stopped feeling available. Where the decision arrived already formed, like something she’d simply failed to notice sooner.

When she walked back to her car, the bottle was warm in her hand.

She sat in the parking lot with the engine off, staring at the label. Her name printed cleanly in black ink. Dosage. Instructions. Everything orderly. Official. As if nothing about this had gone wrong.

Disgust rose, sharp and unexpected. Not for him—not yet—but for herself. For how far she’d gone. For how quietly the line had moved. For how she’d confused familiarity with safety.

She tipped a pill into her palm. Bit it in half. The chalky taste bloomed on her tongue. Her hands shook. The other half slipped from her fingers and fell into the cup holder with a soft, final sound.

She stared at it. The smallness of it. The way it looked exactly like what it was: something she’d negotiated herself down to.

Her phone rang.

“Hi, Mom,” her daughter said. “Where are you? Can we order a pizza tonight?”

Ava closed her eyes. Just long enough to feel the weight of the lie forming.

“I’m on my way,” she said. “Of course we can.”

Her voice sounded normal. That frightened her more than anything else.

She swallowed the half pill dry and started the car.

By the time she turned onto her street, the world had softened around the edges. Not relief. Distance. Like watching herself through a pane of glass that someone else was responsible for cleaning. She pulled into the driveway and sat there longer than she meant to, hands resting uselessly in her lap.

The keys slipped from her fingers. Clinked once against the concrete.

She didn’t feel herself fall.

Light came back without asking permission. Flat. White. Too close.

Her mouth was dry. Her body felt heavy, like it had been filled with wet sand. Something warm pressed against her hand.

“Ava?”

She turned her head slowly.

Her daughter sat beside the bed, fingers laced through hers. Awake. Steady. Watching her in a way that said she already knew something was wrong but wasn’t going to name it yet.

“I’m here, Mom.”

Millhaven Cove – Chapter 2


Chapter 2

The Room 

Will already knew what to expect before he reached the door: the faint sting of disinfectant undercut by burnt coffee; fluorescent light glaring off scuffed linoleum; a woman at the front ready to talk about choices, consequences, and tomorrow. He smelled disappointment and something that pretended to be hope.

He lingered in the hallway, boots scraping the edge of a faded carpet runner. The voices inside blended together—low, tired, familiar. He thought of them as bots, people who leaned on slogans because slogans never asked questions.

A sharp laugh cut through the murmur.

“Are you going to stand out there eavesdropping like a kid,” a woman called, tone flat and amused, “or are you coming in?”

Will squared his shoulders, drew a breath that tasted like bleach and regret, and pushed the door open.

The smell hit first—old sweat, anxious adrenaline, the faint copper tang of fear. Folding chairs filled the room, every one occupied by a version of damage he recognized without wanting to: a man with a fading bruise behind his ear, another tapping his foot like he was waiting for bad news, a woman gripping a sweater so hard her knuckles had gone white.

At the front sat Emma St. John. Legs crossed. Pen tapping once against a yellow legal pad. Her eyes didn’t soften when they found him. They weighed him. Measured him. Moved on.

“Well, look at that,” she said. “We got ourselves a statue.”

A few people snorted.

“Everyone,” she added, “let’s welcome the statue.”

“Hey, Statue.”

Will’s jaw tightened. He scanned the room for sympathy and found none. This was supposed to be part of his punishment—tough love, no coddling. He sat, anger curdling in his gut.

“I’m Will,” he said, voice low. “I’m an addict.”

Emma leaned back slightly, pen hovering. “Look at that. The statue talks. Larry, tap him and see if he says something else.”

Larry, broad-shouldered and sweating through his T-shirt, hesitated just long enough to make it real. Then he drove a fist into Will’s ribs.

The air left Will in a sharp, hollow burst. Pain flared hot and immediate. He folded forward, a sound tearing out of him before he could stop it.

“Well,” Emma said, nodding like she was checking a box, “he screams with conviction.”

She tilted her head. “That’s enough.”

The room exhaled.

Will straightened slowly, hand pressed to his side. Something in him had gone still, alert. Larry stepped back, grinning.

“Seems like he’s not a statue after all.”

Will met Emma’s gaze. “Who the hell are you?”

She didn’t blink. “Who are you, and why are you really here?”

“I told you,” he snapped. “I’m an addict.”

Her mouth curved, but there was no warmth in it. “That one sounded like you meant it.”

The group murmured.

Will sat, shoulders tight. This wasn’t landing the way he’d planned.

Emma waited, then said, “Stand up again. Tell us the truth.”

“Straight?” Will asked.

“Hells yes,” she said. “Or get out and stop wasting our time.”

Will stood because sitting felt like hiding.

“I’m hooked on stupid things,” he said. “Online games that don’t matter. Noise. Anything that keeps my head from getting too quiet.”

A few people nodded. Recognition, not sympathy.

“And when that doesn’t work,” he went on, faster now, like momentum might carry him through, “I look for distractions that don’t ask questions. People who don’t care who I am when the lights come on. Transactions. No names. No expectations.”

The room shifted. No laughter this time.

“I drink,” Will said. “Because it’s easier than remembering what I’m avoiding.”

He sat back down hard, chest tight, like he’d admitted to something worse than addiction.

Emma studied him, pen still.

“That’s a lot of effort,” she said, “for a man who claims he just wants to numb out.”

Her voice dropped.

“Nobody works that hard to disappear unless they’re running from something specific.”

Silence pressed in from all sides.

Will stared at his shoes.

“Meeting’s over,” Emma said. “You—statue—grab a coffee with me.”

The diner down the street smelled like scorched bread and old grease. Will slid into a cracked vinyl booth across from Emma, a mug of black coffee steaming between them like a truce he didn’t trust. His hands clenched around the rim until his knuckles went pale.

She waited.

Ally’s name came out first.

Then the rest followed—halting, uneven. The floor screaming under weight. Steel giving way. Sirens. Joseph fighting for breath on the gurney. Surgery. The quiet, cruel fact of Joseph dying anyway.

Will tore napkins from the dispenser, wiped his face, balled them up like they could hold the mess. He pulled out a cigarette pack, crushed it in his fist, smoothed it, crushed it again.

“I should’ve been there,” he said. “He was supposed to come home. Watch them fall in love. Walk his daughter down the aisle. See his boy make it to the pros. We both knew that kid had it.”

Emma said nothing.

“If someone had to die,” Will said, voice breaking despite him, “it should’ve been me.”

She let the silence stretch until it hurt.

Then she said, quietly, “Joseph knew what was at stake. He suited up every day. He died doing what he believed in.” She looked at him. “Why are you trying to take that from him?”

Will stared at the stained tabletop. His shoulders sagged, something finally giving way.

Outside, rain misted the street, turning the light soft and smeared. Will lit a cigarette, the ember flaring between his fingers. Emma reached for it after his first drag, took one herself, and handed it back.

They stood there in the drizzle, jackets darkening, the city breathing around them.

Nothing was fixed.

But nothing was hidden anymore.

Millhaven Cove – Chapter 1


Chapter 1

The Sister

Dawn in Millhaven Cove never comes in fresh. It oozes through the horizon like sour milk spilled on an oil-slicked counter—thin, cold, already unwanted. The sky hangs bruised and jaundiced, more purplish bruise than golden promise. Morning stumbles in with a limp. The air tastes of scorched coffee grounds, stale cigarette ash, and the weary indifference of a town that looks right through you once it’s marked you as invisible.

I spent nights wedged behind a shuttered bakery by the harbor, my back pressed to crumbling brick, concrete scraping my shirt. I slept on yesterday’s newspaper, drinking in the damp sea breeze when I dared. Dawn cut me out of sleep and pushed me toward Maple and Third—the bleakest corner in town—where I’d squat on the curb, shoulders drawn in, while traffic lights blinked urgent and useless, as if blinking hard enough might change something. Politeness was a luxury here. Vulnerability was currency: if you whispered, no one listened; if you trembled, they stared at the pavement.

That’s Millhaven Cove’s quiet contract: the more you need, the more you disappear.

My fall wasn’t dramatic. No sirens. No headline moment. It was a slow rust—one small compromise piling on the next until the floor finally splintered under me. Once, I punched time cards at the pencil factory on East Main—where we turned graphite and paint into elemental optimism for schoolkids. Blue pencils for hope. Yellow for caution. Green for keep going. I believed in the alchemy of small things. I believed that mattered.

I dated a woman who clipped horoscopes from magazines and wrapped my sandwiches with love notes. She said my Taurus stubbornness grounded her. She left when my stubbornness calcified into inertia.

When the factory shuttered—another silent casualty of digital “progress”—rent notices multiplied like mold. Groceries became cheap beer from the corner store; my bed became a park bench. My apartment vanished first thing in fine print, a tidy legal erasure of everything I’d built. I held on to one relic: a stub of an optimism pencil, worn down to the metal ferrule, the eraser chewed into a jagged ulcer of hope. I stuck it in my pocket like proof that I’d once had a reason to believe.

The final push came in my sister’s handwriting. She’s a social worker, so her we love you was perfectly folded—professional compassion. Then, in cramped smaller letters that cut deeper: Don’t come home unless you mean it. No one tells you how it guts you when the last person you could count on decides to stop rescuing you.

I read that line over and over until it carved itself behind my eyes.

Addiction, I learned, isn’t about the drink or the pill—it’s about boundaries bleeding away. You almost forget they were ever there. First it’s never before noon. Then never except on Tuesdays. Then only when it rains. Until one morning you wake on a Thursday with rain soaking your face and realize you’ve broken every last promise you swore would save you. And you’ve become the very person you swore you’d never be. My universe shrank to three stained blocks—the bus station restroom, the liquor store with its plastic mini-bottle display, and the blinking OPEN 24 HRS sign that lied as much as I did. The letters R and S in HOURS had rusted off. I figured they’d given up too.

Salvation didn’t rock up with trumpets. It slapped me in the knee—literally—with a flapping flyer on a February wind: MILLHAVEN COVE RENEWAL CENTER—HOPE STARTS HERE. I laughed. Hope was a billboard lie for people who had backup plans. Still, the ink ran into my thumb and something in my chest stirred. Reflex or longing, I tore off the address tab and tucked it beside the pencil stub.

That night, under a sputtering streetlamp, I counted coins and did the math I’d done a thousand times before: another night numb or a reckless bet on this “renewal.” I split the difference—bought a stale muffin, saved the bus fare, vowed to step inside for just one day.

The center’s lobby was too bright, too clean—like it expected me to behave. A receptionist with kind, tired eyes asked my name and didn’t flinch at Just Jake. She handed me forms and a cup of coffee from a silver carafe so polished I almost didn’t recognize my hollow face in its curve. Then group therapy: folding chairs in a circle, voices trembling over past wreckage—some confessing like defusing landmines, others brandishing their losses as badges. We worshiped at the altar of worst of all. I found myself nodding along to the litany of broken promises.

Detox was brutal. No poetry there—just nights that shook me raw, bones aching as if life itself had been wrung out. Dreams clawed their way back through the surface. I cursed every well-meaning soul who’d ever said, Take it one day at a time. But the mornings came anyway. Hot showers scoured the residue of last night’s shame; accidental laughter cracked through the tension like sunlight.

I relapsed once. Hard. My sister’s voice on my cell phone, begging me not to die, cut straight through the stupor. Guilt came roaring back—who begs a grown man not to kill himself? She talks like my darkness can be fixed by daylight rules. Like I don’t remember her own sleigh rides, the ones she labeled letting off steam. I’ve heard that story before. I’ve told it myself. Just take the edge off. I could throw a rock and hit five people with that same excuse in any direction. She’s sober now, settled into the role, preaching the familiar sermons with the confidence of someone who made it out. I know she’s disappointed in me. But what gutted me more was realizing how deeply disappointed I was in myself. Everything I’d clawed back slipped away in a haze. Still, this time, I limped right back to the same folding chair. Learned—again—that humility isn’t erasure.

Recovery taught me to treasure tiny victories: brushing my teeth, making my bed. No banner-waving moments—just head-down work. I wrote apology letters I wasn’t sure anyone deserved. They felt clichéd, hollow gestures—a whisper of regret in a storm of consequences. But I mailed them anyway. My sister wrote back: I’m proud of you. I read that line until the paper thinned in my hands.

And then—no grand finale, just quiet change. I started volunteering. I found work sweeping floors at the very bakery I’d slept behind. I stopped conflating survival with absolution. I showed up.

They love the I got better ending. But they never ask what recovery cost. Sobriety didn’t hand me clarity so much as it stripped away the fog that used to soften every edge. Now I see the damage—mine and everyone else’s. I see how close the drop-off still is. How easily survival can become a performance.

Sometimes I still roll that chewed-down pencil stub between my fingers, feeling the metal edge where hope’s eraser used to be. It reminds me that hope isn’t a color someone hands you. It’s something you sharpen, again and again, knowing it might splinter at any moment.

Millhaven Cove remains bruised at dawn. The streets still turn their faces from those who need too much. But some mornings, when the light slices through the haze just right, I can stand in it without flinching.

That’s not a miracle.
It’s a chair I keep coming back to—
and a morning that, once in a while, doesn’t limp quite so badly.