Josh doesnât trust me, but Iâll wear him down. Iâm willing to bet he doesnât trust anyone, so Iâm not taking it personally. If his childhood is anything like mine was, Iâm sure heâs been toughened at the age of twelve in a way that no kid should be familiar with.
As much as he glares at me with distrustful eyes, I can also sense that heâs curious about me. He doesnât ask many questions, but he watches me in a way that makes it obvious he has a million questions on the tip of his tongue. For whatever reason, he keeps swallowing them down. Heâs probably wondering why I went so easy on him last night after finding out heâs the one who damaged my restaurants. Heâs also probably wondering why I didnât know about him, and how I turned out so vastly different from my mother and Tim.
Whatever heâs wondering, heâs attempting to keep a tight lid on his expressions. I donât want to make him feel uncomfortable, so Iâve been doing most of the talking while he eats breakfast. Itâs not that hard; I have just as many questions for him as he does for me. Itâs one of the reasons I couldnât sleep last night when we finally made it to my house. I kept listening for the sound of him trying to sneak out of the house. I was honestly shocked he was still here this morning.
As much as my questions are probably annoying him, I can remember what it was like to be twelve. All I wanted was for someone to be interested in who I was, even if they were faking interest. If his life is anything like mine was, heâs gone twelve years being ignored, and I refuse to allow him to feel that way under my roof. But Iâve only been asking him safe questions. Iâll ease into the more difficult stuff.
Josh eats one thing at a time. A biscuit first, then bacon. Heâs cutting into the pancakes for the first time when I say, âWhat are you interested in? Any hobbies?â
He takes a bite, and one of his eyebrows raises a bit, but I donât know if itâs because of the food or my question. âWhy?â
âWhy am I asking you what youâre interested in?â
His neck is stiff when he nods.
âIâve missed twelve years of your life. I want to know who you are.â
Josh breaks eye contact and forks more pancakes into his mouth. âManga,â he mutters.
That surprises me. But thanks to Theo, I actually know what manga is. âWhatâs your favorite series?â
âOne Piece.â He shakes his head, erasing that answer. âNo, Chainsaw Man is probably my favorite.â
Thatâs about as far into that conversation as I can go without sounding ignorant. âWe can go to a bookstore later today if you want.â
He nods. âThese are good pancakes.â
âThanks.â
I watch him take a drink of his juice, and when he sets the glass down, he says, âWhat are you interested in?â He nods toward the plate. âOther than cooking.â
I donât know how to answer that. Most of my time is given to my restaurants. Whatever time I have left over is spent on house repairs, laundry, sleep. âI like the Cooking Channel.â
Josh chuckles. âThatâs sad.â
âWhy?â
âI said besides cooking.â
Itâs a harder question than I thought, now that itâs being thrown back at me. âI like museums,â I say. âAnd going to the movies. And traveling. I just donât do any of those things.â
âBecause youâre always working?â
âYeah.â
âLike I said. Sad.â He leans over his plate to catch another bite of pancake.
The get-to-know-you questions are backfiring, so I cut right to the chase. âWhat was your fight about?â
He shrugs. âHalf the time I donât even know what the hell I do wrong. She just gets mad for no reason.â
I can relate to that. I let him eat for a while before I pose another question. âWhere have you been staying?â
Josh doesnât look at me. He scoots food around on his plate for a moment, and then says, âYour restaurant.â His eyes slowly journey back over to mine. âYou have a really comfortable couch in your office.â
âYouâve been sleeping inside the restaurant? For how long?â
âTwo weeks.â
Iâm in shock. âHow have you been getting in?â
âYou donât have an alarm at that one restaurant, and I finally figured out how to pick the lock after a few tries. Your other restaurant was too hard to get into, though.â
âYou know how to pickâ¦â I canât help but laugh. Brad and Darin are going to love saying I told you so. âWhyâd you go from sleeping there to vandalizing it?â
Josh looks at me reluctantly. âI donât know. I guess I was mad.â He pushes his plate away and leans back in his chair. âWhat now? Do I have to go back to her?â
âWhat do you want to happen?â
âI want to live with my dad.â He scratches at his elbow. âCan you help me find him?â
I want to find Tim about as much as I wanted to find my mother, which is not at all. âDo you know anything about him?â
âI think he lives in Vermont now. I just donât know where.â
âWhenâs the last time you saw him?â
âA few years ago. But he doesnât know where to find me anymore.â
Josh looks every bit his age right now. A fragile kid, abandoned by his father but refusing to lose hope. I donât want to be the one to rip that from him, so I just nod. âYeah, Iâll see what I can do. But for now, I need to let your mother know youâre okay. I have to call her.â
âWhy?â
âIf I donât, this could be considered kidnapping.â
âNot if Iâm here willingly,â he says.
âEven if youâre here willingly. You arenât old enough to decide where you want to live, and right now, your mother has legal custody of you.â
He grows visibly irritated. He stabs at his breakfast with a scowl, but doesnât take another bite.
I step away to call Sutton. I unblocked her number after she left my restaurant last night in case she needed to get in touch with me. I dial her number and put the phone to my ear. After a few rings, she finally answers with a very groggy hello.
âHey. I found him.â
âWho is this?â
I briefly close my eyes while I wait for her to wake up and remember her son is missing. After a few quiet seconds, she goes, âAtlas?â
âYeah. I found Josh.â
I can hear rustling from her end like sheâs hopping out of bed. âWhere has he been?â
I really donât want to answer that. I know sheâs his mother, but I feel like itâs none of her business where heâs been, which is an unusual opinion to have. âIâm not sure where heâs been, but heâs with me now. Listen⦠I was wondering if he could stay here for a while? Maybe give you a break?â
âYou want him to stay there with you?â The way she puts the emphasis on that last word makes me wince. This is going to be harder than I thought. Sheâs the type of person who fights for the sake of fighting, no matter what outcome she really wants.
I could enroll him in school and make sure he attends,â I offer up. âTake the truancy heat off you.â Itâs quiet on her end, like maybe sheâs contemplating that.
âSuch a martyr,â she mutters. âBring him back. Now.â She ends the call.
I attempt to call her back three times, but she sends the calls to voice mail.
âThat didnât sound promising,â Josh says. Heâs standing in the doorway of the kitchen. Iâm not sure how much he heard on my end, but at least he couldnât hear her end.
I slide my phone in my pocket. âShe wants you back today. But Iâll call a lawyer tomorrow. Hell, Iâll call Child Protective Services if you want me to. Thereâs just not much I can do on a Sunday.â
Joshâs shoulders drop when I say that. âWill you at least give me your phone number?â He asks that like heâs scared Iâm going to say no.
âOf course. Iâm not going to abandon you now that I know you exist.â
He picks at a hole in his sleeve, avoiding eye contact with me when he says, âI wouldnât blame you for being mad at me. I cost you a lot of money.â
âYou did do that,â I say. âThose croutons were expensive.â
Josh laughs for the first time this morning. âDude, those croutons were fucking delicious.â
I groan. âDonât use that word.â
The Risemore Inn is clear on the other side of Boston. It takes us forty-five minutes with traffic to get there, and itâs not even a weekday. When we pull into the parking lot, Josh doesnât immediately get out of the car. He just sits quietly in the passenger seat, staring at the building like itâs the last place he wants to be.
I wish I didnât have to return him to his mother, but I put in another call to my lawyer friend this morning after talking with Sutton. He said if I want to go about this the right way without her having ammunition against me, the only thing I can do is return him. And then, if I want to take her to court, he said I need to get a lawyer and go through the process.
Anything done outside the process could be a mark against me.
Apparently, you canât just kidnap your sibling, even if you know theyâre in danger.
I wanted to explain all of this to Josh in more detailâto let him know Iâm not just abandoning him with herâbut heâs so hell-bent that heâs going to live with his dad, Iâm not sure he even wants to live with me. And Iâm not sure Iâm prepared to raise a little brother, but as long as Iâm alive, thereâs no way I can willingly leave him in this womanâs permanent custody without at least trying.
Until I can figure out what to do next, I donât want him to find himself in a situation where he has no food to eat, or no money to extend their hotel stay. I pull out my wallet and hand him a credit card.
âCan I trust you with this?â
Josh looks at the credit card in my hand, and his eyes grow a little wide. âI donât know why you would. Iâve spent the last two weeks trying to destroy your businesses.â
I push the credit card toward him. âUse it for basic necessities. Food, minutes for your phone.â We stopped on the way here and got him a prepaid phone so he could stay in touch with me. âMaybe some new clothes that fit.â
Josh reluctantly takes the credit card out of my hand. âI donât even know how to use one of these.â
âYou just swipe it. But donât tell Sutton you have it.â I point at his phone. âHide it between your case and your phone.â
He pops the case off his phone and puts the credit card inside of it. Then he says, âThank you.â He puts his hand on the car door. âAre you coming to talk to her?â
I shake my head. âItâs probably best if I donât. Itâll probably just make her angrier.â
Josh sighs, and then gets out of the car. We stare at each other for a few seconds before he finally closes the car door.
I feel like such a dick bringing him back here. But I have to do this the right way. If I donât return him, she could file charges on me. And knowing her, she probably would. Itâs best if I just leave him for today and then as soon as the week begins tomorrow, I can make phone calls and figure out what I can do to move him in with me.
I know if he stays here with her, he isnât going to have a chance in hell. I lucked out finding Lily. She saved my life. But Iâm not sure thereâs enough luck in the world for both of us to be saved by a random stranger.
Iâm all he has.
I remain in my car as Josh makes his way across the parking lot. He walks up the stairs and knocks on the second door from the end. He looks over his shoulder at me, so I wave right as the door swings open.
I can see the rage in Suttonâs eyes all the way from my position in the parking lot. She immediately begins yelling at him. And then she slaps him.
My hand is on the door handle before Josh even has a chance to react to the slap. Suttonâs hand is now gripping Joshâs arm as she yanks him into the hotel room. Iâm several feet away from my car when I see him trip over the threshold and disappear into the room.
Iâm taking the stairs two at a time, my heart racing. I reach the door before she even closes it. Josh is still trying to scramble to his feet, but sheâs hovering over him, scolding him.
âI could have gone to jail, you little shit!â
She has no idea Iâm behind her. I wrap my arm around her waist and pull her away from Josh by picking her up and dropping her onto the mattress behind me. It happens so fast, sheâs too shocked to react.
I help Josh to his feet. His phone is a few feet away on the floor, so I grab it and hand it to him, then urge him toward the door.
Sutton realizes whatâs happening, and she jumps off the bed. Sheâs following us out the door. âBring him back!â I feel her hands on me now. Sheâs yanking at my shirt, trying to get me to stop or move aside so she can get to Josh.
I urge him forward. âGo to the car.â He continues toward the stairs, and then I stop walking and spin around to face her. She sucks in a quick gasp after seeing the absolute fury in my eyes. Then she slaps her palms against my chest and shoves me.
âHeâs my son!â she yells. âIâll call the police!â
I release an exasperated laugh. I want to tell her to call the police. I want to scream at her. But most of all, I want to get Josh away from her. Sheâs not going to ruin his life on my watch.
I donât even have the energy to say anything to her at all. This woman isnât worth my words. I just walk away, leaving her screaming at me like old times.
Josh is already sitting in the front seat of my car when I make it back. I slam my door and grip my steering wheel with both hands before starting the car. I need to calm myself down before I get back on the road.
Josh seems unusually calm for what just happened. It makes me wonder if thatâs an average interaction between them because he isnât even breathing heavily. Heâs not crying. Heâs not cussing. Heâs just watching me, and I realize how I react in this moment is quite possibly something heâll absorb for a lifetime.
I slide my hands down the steering wheel and calmly exhale.
Joshâs cheek is red, and thereâs a small gash on his forehead thatâs bleeding. I retrieve a napkin from the glove box and hand it to him, then flip the visor down so he can see where to wipe.
âI saw her slap you, but whereâd the cut come from?â
âI think I hit the TV stand.â
Slow and steady, Atlas. I put my car in reverse and back out of the parking lot. âMaybe we should swing by the emergency room and have them check out your cut. Make sure you donât have a concussion.â
âItâs okay. I can usually tell when itâs a concussion.â
He can usually tell? I clench my jaw as soon as he says that. I realize I have absolutely no idea what kind of hell this kid has already been through, and I was about to send him right back into the fire. âBetter to be safe,â I say, but what I mean is, Better to get this documented in case we need proof of her abuse at a later date.