Hello all,
This is my first story on Literotica. The short, staccato writing style is inspired by "Riptides" written by NoraFares. Hope you enjoy.
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The sticky air clung to my skin, washing a fresh sheen of sweat across my face as I laid there in the burning car. I was looking up at the sky in a car that had been clipped in the back, tipped over and rammed into by an eighteen-wheeler. What remained of my body was a broken, bloody mess. The flames spread from the hood to the dash. I could feel the heat, could feel the way the flames licked desperately at the air, hungrily reaching for me.
I was dying.
"Help is coming," said a voice somewhere from my left. I couldn't turn my neck. I think it was broken.
"Okay," I croaked. God, I sounded like shit. I wasn't going to make it.
There was a dull constant roar in my ears and I could still hear the crackling of the flame and the groaning of the metal. An acrid stench filled my nose and I began to panic thinking it was my burning skin. The flames danced closer to my face. I was trying not to scream. I was burning from the heat. Blood trickled down from my mouth and nose. I couldn't do anything but let myself die.
I didn't see my life flash before my eyes. I didn't see anything but the darkness.
β
My name is a palindrome, which just means that it spells the same backwards and forwards. The name was for a sweet girl, maybe a church-goer who sings in a choir, but instead you've got me, Hannah, the girl who grew up to become a drilling engineer who works on offshore oil rigs. That was where I belonged, out far away from people, working on drilling operations. I hated being on land, and now you can see why.
"Hannah? Can you hear me, Hannah?"
My head was throbbing.
"Open your eyes, Hannah."
I didn't want to. I knew it'd hurt, that it was bright.
"Hannah, this is Dr. Monroe," the voice persisted. "I need you to open your eyes."
Doctors meant that I was in a hospital, that I'd survived. I didn't know how I felt about that yet. I'd given in to the darkness, had accepted that death had come for me, but what now? How could I move on with my life if the second I opened my eyes, I'd see my broken body? I was an active person, someone who liked using my hands, and now I wondered if I could even move my fingers. I was too afraid to try.
"Your father is here with us."
My eyes shot open.
β
I almost married a geologist.
Love was for fairytales, was written up by advertising guys to sell engagement rings and flowers and cards, but somehow, slowly, it crept up inside of me, setting fire to my heart.
His name was Benjamin Mathers. Ben.
With a smile that lit up even the darkest nights on the rig, and a laugh that rang inside my ears long after he'd left, I could almost let myself believe that even girls like me were allowed to fall in love. It took me months, almost a year, to finally admit that I had feelings for the guy.
"You're quiet tonight," he'd said. I'd been working up the nerve to tell him all day.
"I, uh, have to tell you something."
His eyes, warm and hazel, had glanced at me, his expression softening when he saw how nervous I was. His brown hair, which had been neatly brushed in the morning, was now in disarray from being out in the wind. I wanted to walk over, take his face in my hands, and kiss him.
"Okay," he said, leaning back against the wall. There wasn't much room in the bunks, but he always managed to find a spot for himself, as if he could belong anywhere so long as he tried. He'd done that with my heart. He'd moved in where there hadn't been any room.
"I like you," I blurted out.
Ben smiled. "I like you, too, Hannah."
"You don't understand. I
like
you."
"I think you're the one who doesn't understand," he said, kicking himself off the wall. He walked over, standing directly in front of me. I was tall for a woman, and so we weren't too off in height. He was maybe an inch or two taller.
"I like
you
a lot more than you like me," he said.
And then he kissed me.
β
"Hannah."
Standing at the end of my bed was the one man I'd never expected to see: my father. I couldn't speak, but if I'd been able, I probably would have screamed. I found out later it was because my throat and lungs had been seared by the heat of the flames.
"I flew down as soon as I heard," he explained. "Hannah, baby, I thought we'd lost you."
Who was
we
, exactly? There was no one else. Just me and him. There wasn't any other family. They'd all died.
"Maybe we should give her some time to rest," the doctor said. "I don't think she's ready to interact yet."
I didn't think I'd ever be ready to interact with my father, but I didn't say anything. I couldn't.
β
Ben and I had been dating for three months when he'd whispered the words during sex.
"I love you."
I stiffened, surprise taking me by storm. I loved him, too. I'd loved him for a long time. Now was the time to say it back.
But I couldn't.
"You don't have to say anything," he said, his breathing heavy. I writhed beneath him, wrapped my arms around his neck, and pulled him in for a kiss.
"Hush," I whispered.
β
It took me almost a week to gather the strength, mental and physical, to say anything. If the doctor worried, his face didn't show it. He reviewed my vitals twice during the day, said some encouraging words and went off to his next patient. He didn't seem to think the world was ending, not the way I did.
"You're breathing on your own," Dr. Monroe said. "Talk when you're ready."
"I'm ready," I'd said, the sounds foreign. Had my voice always been this husky?
"I've got some questions for you," he said. We went over my medical history, my allergies, how I was feeling, what my pain level was, and then he left me in peace.
Now that my eyes were open, I could see that I was more bandages and plaster than anything else. I couldn't see skin anywhere. My hands didn't look so great. They were burned badly. By now, I had found out that I'd lost all feeling in my fingertips.
Still, I kept those eyes open. I observed the room I was in. Stared out the window to my right. Looked the nurses in the eye.
The only time I closed my eyes was when my father walked into the room.
β
Ben and I worked together, and so it was no secret that we were dating. We held hands in the break room, ate our lunches together, and shared what moments we could spare.
"This isn't going to get in the way of your work," the site manager said. It was a statement, not a question.
"No, sir," Ben said.
"Of course not," I replied.
Our jobs were too important. If we did them wrong, lives could be lost.
But still, we made time for each other.
"I was thinking, maybe we'll go to the mainland together," Ben said when my days off were nearing.
"We could do that," I said. Usually, I went and grabbed a hotel for a few weeks or months, living out of a suitcase until my next assignment. I loved being on the rig. I hated being on land.