My attempts to stop the dull ache in my chest have been an utter failure.
I still try to enjoy my visit home in peace, though. Or as much peace as there can be, considering the circumstances.
Mum and I are preparing dinner together, something weâve done since I was a child. Uncle Kirianâmy motherâs younger brotherâwould usually join us, but heâs traveling. Hopefully, Iâll be able to see him before I go back to school.
Iâm sitting at the prep table while Mum is behind me, stirring ingredients on the stove.
âPass me the salt, sweet pea,â she says, distracted.
Her hair is pulled up in a messy chignon with green highlights peeking out from everywhere. For as long as Iâve known her, sheâs always had some green in her hair. Sometimes, itâs fully green. Other times, like now, itâs brown with green streaks.
Sheâs wearing a knee-length floral dress, and, you guessed it, a green apron.
Papa remodeled the kitchen into a chefâs dream when I was a toddler. Itâs full of stainless-steel equipment, a large food-prep area, and itâs green-themed like Mum.
This is where Iâve often dabbled in internet recipes with Mum while Papa joins in just to annoy us, makes a mess out of the kitchen, and then stays to watch with a massive grin on his face.
The only reason heâs not doing that right now is because Mum sent him to get us a few things weâre missing.
I place the salt cellar in her hand, and she starts to put some in, then stops. âCecy, hon, this is pepper.â
âBollocks. Sorry.â I snap out of it and give her the appropriate cellar.
She shakes her head with a smile and adds the salt as I sit down again and get busy chopping the vegetables. Iâm thankful sheâs busy and canât see my expression that Iâm sure would give me away.
Mum always makes sure we do mother-daughter activities together. We cook, do yoga, watch movies, and shop. Though Iâm not a big fan of the latter. She also plays the perfect role of my solicitor whenever Papa kicks up the overprotectiveness a notch and forbids me from doing things because theyâre âdangerousâ for me.
It means a lot to me that weâve always been so close, but not when she can read me. I really hate that part.
âIs everything okay back there?â she asks, glancing at me over her shoulder.
âGrand, yeah.â
âIs there anything you want to tell me, hon?â
âWhat? No, of course not.â I certainly donât want to tell her about a certain guy whoâs flipping my world upside down while Iâm along for the ride.
I last saw Jeremy yesterday after I got embarrassingly drunk, kissed him, and told him Iâd miss him, then crashed in his bed. I snuck out of his room like a thief, then mistakenly walked in on Killian and Glyn making out in the game room and on Nikolai floating in the pool wearing nothing but boxers. I thought he was dead, so I frantically called Ilya, but it turns out, the incident was normal for the guy.
All in all, my sneaking-out session ended up with me seeing almost everyone in the Heathensâ compound before leaving. But hey, at least Jeremy didnât catch me.
Now, Iâm not sure if that was such a great idea. Because what I said is true. I do miss him. And I only got here yesterday.
âCecy!â
âW-what?â I jump up and wince when I realize Iâve cut myself, and blood is dripping on the cutting board and some of the vegetables.
Mum snatches a tissue and presses it on my bleeding finger, her hand shaking. Sheâs always had this overboard reaction whenever Iâm bleeding, even if itâs a minor cut. Papa, too. I think it has to do with the scars on her wrists, which is why Iâve never blamed them for being too overprotective.
âIâm fine, Mum.â I remove the tissue, showing her that the bleeding has stopped. âSee? Itâs nothing.â
She flips my hand back and forth and only releases a breath when she ensures the cut is minor. âYou need to be careful with the knife, hon.â
Sheâd faint if she found out what Jeremy does to me with the knife, and that I actually enjoy it.
Mum gets me a plaster from the cupboard and puts it on my finger. After sheâs done, I throw away the dirtied vegetables and get new ones, then I climb on the chair to start anew. Mum puts the stove on the lowest temperature, gets her own knife, and settles across from me.
âI can do it on my own,â I tell her.
âItâll get done faster if I help. At least Iâm not distracted.â
âWho says I am?â
âYouâve zoned out a few times and you keep checking your phone in an unhealthy way. Are you waiting for a text or a call?â
âNo,â I say with an awkward smile that she must read right through.
âUh-huh.â She fixates me with that âIâm your mother, and I know everything about youâ look. âYour aunt Silver was here the other day and told me something interesting.â
âAnd what is that?â
âAva told her you were seeing some American boy, and she asked Silver to start picking her bridesmaid dress.â
I know Ava is tight with her mum and basically tells her everything, but this is different. She knows I havenât come to terms with this. According to her, Iâm just delaying the inevitable, but semantics.
âIs it true?â Mum stares at me.
I place the knife on the table to avoid accidentally cutting myself again. âItâsâ¦complicated.â
âHow complicated?â Her voice softens. âYou know you can tell me anything, right? Iâm always on your side.â
âEven if heâ¦heâs not the conventional type?â
âYouâre a very responsible girl, Cecy. You always were, even as a child. So much so that I was worried you wanted to get older prematurely without living your life. But thatâs also why I trust you to make the right choice.â
My chest twists, and I stare at the cutting board, at the half-slaughtered vegetables, and everywhere else but at Mumâs face.
âIf you donât want to talk about it, itâs completely fine.â She pats my hand. âJust know Iâm here for you whenever youâre ready.â
She releases me and stands up to check on the food. She often does that whenever she feels like sheâs pushed too much or shoved me out of my comfort zone.
Mum knows when sheâs started to poke my demons and always, without doubt, steps back and gives me time to recuperate.
She hopes Iâll come to her when Iâm ready, but Iâve always used that time to escape from her, to drown further into myself, and try to fix my fuck-ups on my own.
This is the first time Iâve gathered the courage so that I can use the chance sheâs given me.
âI havenât always made the right choice, Mum.â My voice is so low, lower than the water boiling on the stove and the sound of stirring she makes.
She starts to turn around, and I blurt, âPlease donât look at me. I canât say this if youâre looking at me.â
Iâm too ashamed to meet her eyes.
âOkay,â she says in an affectionate tone and remains in place.
âRemember when you told me you had a bad feeling about Jonah? You were right, Mum.â
âIs this about how he recently got arrested for assault and drugs?â
âThat was the end of it. The actual story started a long time ago.â
I donât know how I find the courage to tell her everything that happened. I tell her about that night, the sleep paralysisâwhich is why I locked my room so no one could see me in that stateâthe fear of the opposite sex, relationships, and my lack of trust in everything.
The words flow naturally, without any effort, as if theyâve been waiting all this time for me to tell Mum the truth thatâs been festering inside me for so long.
âIâm sorry I didnât tell you, Mum.â My voice is raw and brittle. âI was just so scared about those pictures becoming public and ruining your reputation. I was also terrified that youâd remind me that youâd never liked him and had encouraged me to leave him. It wouldâve killed me if youâd blamed me for it or said I told you so.â
She starts to whirl around again.
âNo, Mum, please. Donât look at me when Iâm like this.â
Her fingers are unsteady as she turns off the stove and faces me, eyes shining with tears, and her features as pale as I imagine mine are.
Then she comes to my side, slowly, with measured steps, and stops a few breaths away. Her chest rises and falls hard, as hard as mine, as if she can snatch my feelings and mold them into her own.
She wipes the tears sliding down my cheeks. âWhy canât I look at you like this? If the world refuses to see this version of you and the pain you went through, I will. All day. Every day.â
âYou wonât say none of this wouldâve happened if Iâd listened to you?â
âNo, because no one can be sure of what wouldâve happened. He couldâve found other ways.â She strokes my cheek, my tears, and my anguish. âI want you to know and believe it wasnât your fault, honey. None of it was.â
âButââ
âNo buts, Cecily.â Sheâs crying, too, as much as I am, until tears stain her cheeks. âI was a victim, too, once, and the perpetrator was the one person who shouldâve been protecting me.â
âYour mother?â Iâve only met her once, when she showed up at our door when I was seven, and I hated that woman at first sight. Sheâs a world-famous artist and had a haughty expression that rubbed me the wrong way.
She spoke to Mum as if she owned her. Papa and Uncle Kirian were there, and they kicked her out. Mum cried so much that night, and she told me that my estranged grandmother reminded her of her painful past.
Mum nods. âYeah, so I know exactly what it means to be a victim, and if you push that energy inward, itâll only lead to self-destruction, Cecy. Youâre our little miracle, the one Xan and I had after a long journey of healing, and I know we can be very overprotective, but itâs only because we love you so much and donât want you to go through what we did. So please donât blame it on yourself. Take this as if Iâm begging you. Blame it on us being horrible parents who didnât see the signs.â
âNo, Mum.â I jump up from my seat. âI didnât let you see the signs. I dealt with them on my own because I thought the wound would eventually heal, but it only festered. This is not your fault.â
âItâs not yours either, Cecy.â
âI know.â
Hope blossoms between the tears like a newly planted flower. âYou do?â
I nod. âItâs why I can talk about it now, you know. It took me a long time to come to terms with it, but Iâve met someone who convinced me not to deflect the blame inward. Ever since then, my own head doesnât torture me as much and Iâve started to feel safe. I no longer have panic attacks and the instances of sleep paralysis have become few and far between.â
Mumâs hand falls from my cheek to my shoulder, and a warm smile peeks through. âIs that someone the American boy?â
I rub the side of my nose and nod. âHis name is Jeremy.â
âOh, look at you being so embarrassed at the mere mention of him.â
âAm not.â
âYou just stroked your nose, which is an obvious habit you do whenever youâre embarrassed. I wonder what this Jeremy looks like. Is he handsome? Does he treat you well?â
âYes to both.â
âAw, why didnât you bring him home with you?â
âHe wanted to come, but I said no.â
She retrieves a tissue and wipes my tears, then frowns. âWhy?â
âRemember Annika?â
âYour cute new friend?â
âYeah, the one whoâs a mafia princess.â
âOf course I do. She was so well-mannered.â
âJeremy is her older brother.â
I pause, waiting for her to connect the links together.
âAnd what about it? Oh. Is Annika against this?â
âNo. She doesnât know yet. Itâsâ¦their background. Russian mafia. Heâs the heir to his fatherâs empire. The same father who nearly killed Creigh for being with Annika?â
âI see.â
âFinally. But why do you sound so casual about it, Mum?â
âWell, to be honest, I still canât find anything off with that. Your father certainly would, but I want to hug this Jeremy for being there for you during a difficult time and even convincing you not to think like a victim.â
âBut his family is dangerous.â
âThe world is dangerous, hon. But we donât hide from it. We donât bury our heads in the sand and pretend all is well. If you want something, either you fight for it, or you let it go so someone else can.â
âI donât want to let him go.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause I love him.â
Mum smiles and I pause at the words that left my mouth so easily, so naturally, without my even having to think about it.
Itâs true. I Jeremy.
If I wasnât sure before, all the time weâve spent together recently has made me certain.
âThere you have it, your answer.â Mum kisses the top of my head.
âButâ¦but what if he doesnât love me?â
âWho wouldnât love my beautiful baby?â
âThe world isnât you and Papa, Mum.â
âAll your friends, aunts and uncles, and grandfathers love you to death. Youâre a sweetheart.â
âTheyâ¦they donât count either.â
She raises a brow. âIs Jeremy the only one who does?â
âNoâ¦I mean, itâs not like thatâ¦â
Mum smiles and glides her fingers through my hair. âBelieve it or not, a long time ago, I also thought your father didnât love me.â
âNo way.â He basically worships the ground she walks on.
âI . He was a real wanker when we were young, which is why heâs making it up to me for the rest of our lives.â She smiles nostalgically. âThose times feel so distant now. Guess how I knew he loved me.â
âHow?â
âHe fought for me. He slaughtered his demons to be with me, and thatâs when I knew he didnât only love me, but I was also the love of his life.â
My heart squeezes with both awe and admiration.
Iâve always had a huge crush on the way my parents love, appreciate, and respect one other. Iâve felt blessed to be the product of their love, despite their overprotectiveness. Now, Iâm even more certain I have the best parents in the world.
âThanks, Mum.â I hug her, and she wraps her arms around me, letting me bask in her warmth.
âNo, thank for trusting me with what happened, Cecy. Iâm so proud of your strength.â
I could cry right now, but I donât, because sheâd start crying, too, and Papa might start drama if he finds out I made his wife cry.
As if sensing Iâm thinking of him, Papaâs voice comes from the entrance.
âKim, love, whereâs my grandfatherâs hunting shotgun? I found some bastard on our doorstep who claims to be our daughterâs boyfriend⦠Oh, here it is. Be right back. Iâll shoot him and come back in time for dinner.â
Mum and I pull apart to stare at each other.
Please donât tell me Jeremy followed me here.
Most importantly, did Papa say heâs going to shoot him?