Chapter 65
Ex-Husband's Regret
65 Heart to heart âAva can we please talk?â mother pleads when I move to leave.
1 stare at her, not sure what she wanted. What was there to talk about? Hasnât everything already been said and done?
âThere isnât anything for us to talk about, Motherâ I insist.
Looking back, I see now how I made a distinction when it came to her and father. While Emma and Travis referred to them as mom and dad, to me they were Father and Mother. Clean, cut and completely impersonal.
I never truly acknowledged them as my parents, because deep down I just knew. Parents donât hate their children. Parents donât neglect their child and treat them like shit. I made what I called them impersonal because on a spiritual level, I didnât consider them my parents.
âPlease, I beg youâ she pleads with tears in her eyes.
It was so strange looking at her with tears in her eyes. Her face flushed and soft. This is a look Iâve never seen her direct at me. Her face was always in a frown. She always looked at me with a certain cold indifference that was specifically targeted at me.
âHow about you show me to our table as they talk?â Martha, Rowanâs mom asks Corrine while cutting off what I was about to say.
Corrine looks skeptical. Like she didnât want to leave me. After all, it was known that the Sharp family werenât my biggest fan even though I was apparently their daughter.
Martha doesnât give Corrine a chance. Instead she links their hands and pulls her away in the opposite direction.
I sigh and take my seat. âLetâs just get this over with, looks like you wonât leave me alone until youâve said your piece, so do it now before I change my mindâ I tell her coldly.
I used to adore this woman back in my younger days. When I was around five or six. That quickly changed when I realized that she didnât feel the same way. It changed when I realized she treated me as if I was more of a burden, than a daughter.
She hesitantly takes her seat before taking my hands in hers. I pull them away. Not wanting her to touch me. I didnât want her near me. The part of me that had longed for such moments was long Tm sorry, Ava More than youâll ever knowâ she whispers, folding into herself.
Instead of saying anything. I keep quiet. I always imagined this moment. Always day dreamed of her apologizing to me, then pulling me into her arms. I used to crave it. Pray for it. Hope for the day to come. Now that itâs here, the joy I thought I would feel is nonexistent. I feel absolutely nothing as I stare at her.
The way I treated you was wrong. You were just a child and instead of embracing you, I pushed you away. You loved me, loved us, but we gave you nothing but scorn. I wish more than anything that I could go back in time and change things. Go back and be the mother you deservedâ she said before continuing.
âI never saw your value. Never acknowledged that youâre the best daughter anyone can have. It took almost losing you to realize how much you mean to meâ
She was full on crying. If I was my old self, then her tears would have moved me. I wasnât though, and her tears meant absolutely nothing to me.
Years of pain. More than twenty five years of hurting. It canât be erased by a few drops of tears. It just doesnât work like that. It would heavenâs intervention inorder for that to happen.
âLook, letâs cut to the crap okay? If this is about the threat my mother made on your company, we can discuss it as adults. There is no need for you to try and sweeten me up, that shit wonât work. Instead of all the drama, why donât you tell me the real reason you wanted us to talkâ I tell her emotionlessly.
I see hurt flash in her eyes, but I donât care. Sheâs been hurting me for years. This was nothing compared to what I had to endure at her hands and that of her family.
Besides, I wasnât sure why she looked hurt. I was sure that the only reason she was here was to try and save their family company.
âIt hurts that you would think that of me. That you would think that the only reason I was apologizing was so I could save the company. Then again I have no one to blame but myself. Itâs because of my own actions that you find me so untrustworthyâ
Looking at her now, you couldnât tell she was the same woman who used to yell at me for the slightest mistake. Who used to treat me like I didnt matter. It was so weird. Weâve never had a heart to heart, so sitting here as she pours out her heart is a bit unsettling.
âI truly want your forgiveness. I want to be your mother in every way. I want to build what I shattered I want to win back the love I so carelessly threw awayâ
I sigh. âI donât want to come off as mean, but first of all youâre not my mother. The DNA test report I have back at home can prove that. Second, that ship sailed a long time ago. You and me? Being close? That will never happen. Lastly, I donât want you in my life. In fact, I would prefer if you and your children continued ignoring me like I didnât exist. You did it for close to three decades, it shouldnât be a hardship for you to continue doing itâ
Some would say I was being ungrateful and maybe I was. The only thing they gave me was materialistic in nature. For me, the emotional aspect may be more important than material things.
Knowing now what I know, I would have preferred if they had dumped me in an orphanage instead âPlease donât say that. Donât say itâs too lateâ her soft pleading voice pulls me to the present.
âBut itâs the truth. Youâre more than twenty five years too lateâ
She wipes her tears. Determination etched on her face. âI wonât give up on you, Ava. Youâre still my daughter and Iâll do anything to get your love backâ
I breathe out and rub my temples. I could already feel a migraine coming on.
I donât say anything as she stands up. Nor do I look up. She can continue being delusional for all I care, but nothing was going to make me change my mind. I feel nothing when it comes to her. She managed to kill the love I had for her and I donât see that changing anytime soon.
âBefore I go, I wanted to give you this. Your father told me to give it to you before he died. I just never got a chance toâ
I donât acknowledge her. Instead I continue ignoring her. When she sees this, she lets out a sigh and places something on the table.
Itâs after she walks away that I look at what she left. Iâm shocked to find a piece of paper that had bloody finger prints.
Only after looking at it for over five minutes that it hits me. This piece of paper is the same one that I saw father handing over to her before he went to surgery.