: Chapter 26
Monster Among the Roses
Shock and confusion mixed with anger. But seriously, what the fuck? Iâd just survived a week from hell, almost lost my mother, and still might lose her if she didnât recover. Why would he do this to me?
Offering no explanation, he held out his hand. âThe keys to the truck, if you please.â
I blinked, not quite able to process what he was saying. After a second of making no sense of his words at all, I shook my head, even as I dug the keys from my pocket. As I dropped them into his waiting palm, I said, âI donât understand. What happened? Is this because I missed four days?â
âOf course not.â Henry stepped closer, his eyes narrowed. âI thought I made it explicitly clear to you not to hurt her.â
I squinted, even more confused. âYou mean Isobel?â
He drew in a sharp, livid breath as if offended I would dare to say her name.
âI didnât hurt her,â was all I could think to say. âI would never.â
âOh really?â he challenged, lifting his eyebrows. âThen explain her rose garden to me.â
With no idea what he meant by that, I blew past him, marching into the house and toward her garden.
âHey,â he boomed, hurrying to catch up. I began to walk faster. He latched a hand around my upper arm just as I shoved open the French doors leading into the conservatory. But I didnât need to take another step. All the heads of her roses had been chopped off and lay scattered on the ground like dead soldiers whoâd lost a war.
I stood there, frozen, gawking. Air rushed from my lungs. âWhoâ¦â I gasped for breath and whirled toward Henry. âWho did this?â
I would kill the bastard. Iâd grab himâor herâby the neck and smash his head into a wall for touching Isobelâs precious roses. How could anyone be so cruel?
âWho do you think?â Henry said quietly. âIsobel did it herself.â
I blinked, not understanding. But the look in his eyes narrowed until I knew it had to be true. His expression was too bleak, too defeated.
Shaking my head, I turned my attention back to the roses. âNo. No way. She wouldnât.â
âI caught her in the act, scissors in hand.â
âButâ¦â My head wouldnât stop moving back and forth, denying it. âWhy?â I croaked. âWhy would she do this?â
âYou tell me.â His voice was low and full of venom.
I glared at him. âIf you think I caused this, that I did something to make her upset enough to do this? Youâre fucking insane. Iâd never cause her this much despair.â
Needing to see Isobel, to learn what was wrong, I started toward the library. But Henry caught my arm, his fingers digging deep into my bicep.
I growled at him. âIâm going to find Isobel.â And then I was going to kill whoever had hurt her.
âNo. Youâre leaving. Right now.â
I barked out a harsh laugh. Yeah right. The woman I loved was suffering. No one was going to keep me from seeing her.
âGet out of my way.â I didnât want to hurt the old man, but he was beginning to piss me off.
âConstance,â Henry called, âcall the police.â
Shocked, I glanced over to find Constance, Lewis, Mrs. Pan and even Kit standing there, gaping at me. Mrs. Pan was crying softly into a tissue, Kit was hiding behind her as if scared of me, and Constance held a phone in one trembling hand. Lewis stepped forward, murmuring my name gently as if to call me off.
I just stared at them, confused. âWhat the fuck is going on?â I demanded, only to turn back to Henry. âDo you really have no idea why sheâs so upset? None at all?â
He finally wavered, looking sad instead of mad. âI wish I did.â
âThen give me ten minutes with her,â I pleaded, âand Iâll find out. I swear. This isnât about me. It canât be.â
But he stubbornly shook his head no. âShe doesnât want to see you.â
Shards of my breaking heart stabbed into me from the inside. âShe said that?â
âNot in so many words,â Henry allowed as if not certain himself, but then he straightened and said, âBut the meaning was clear. So you are no longer welcome at Porter Hall.â
I ground my teeth. âYou realize how messed up this is, right? You think I did something wrong, but you donât know what. You think I hurt Isobel, but you donât know how. So youâre justâ¦youâre sending me away forever? Just like that? Without any proof or explanation?â
âI made myself very clear the first day you came here, Hollander.â
âAnd Iâm making myself very clear right now!â I shouted right back, spreading my arms wide. âI didnât hurt her. When could I have? Iâve been stuck at the hospital with my dying mother. For Godâs sake, donâtâ¦â My chest heaved as I tried to steady my breathing. The only thing that had been keeping me together these past few days was the thought of seeing Isobel again, of her being there for me. And nowâ¦now they were telling me that wasnât going to happen?
âDonât do this to me,â I begged. âJust let me see her. I can fix everything. I know I can.â
When he shook his head, Lewis hurried over to help him contain me in case I resisted. I stared at both men, then I glanced at the women, and I wanted to howl at the injustice of it. Why were they keeping me from her?
Shaking my head, I turned away and left the house. I started toward the truck before I remembered it was no longer mine to drive.
Stewing, I walked back to the hospital. None of this made sense, and it was even more maddening that no one felt inclined to seek answers. I alternated between anger and heartbreak.
I could only guess what had happened to Isobel, but none of the reasons I came up with added up to why sheâd never want to see me again.
Determined to find out, I snuck back onto the grounds of Porter Hall at 5 a.m. on Saturday morning to catch her on the lake before she began her run. I wasnât sure if sheâd run at five or seven. Sheâd only adjusted the time to seven after Iâd started running with her, so I had a feeling sheâd move it back to her normal pre-Shaw time now that I was supposedly gone from her life. But she didnât show up at either five or seven, and I hated being away from Mom for any longer than that. So I returned to the hospital.
My mother didnât improve, and yet it was impossible for me to focus all my concern on her. I wanted to hate Isobel for taking that away from me, except I was too worried about her to feel such a nasty emotion.
The next day, I was back at five. It was a Sunday. I didnât know if she ran on Sunday mornings, but I went anyway.
She never showed up.
Alice grew pissed at me. Iâd taken off two days in a row and disappeared from 3:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. But I couldnât help it. I left again on Monday, needing to see Isobel.
Something in my life needed to go right. Sooner or later, I was going to get my answer as to why Henry had fired me.
My heart leapt at seven on Monday when I finally saw Isobel walking up the path toward the lake, wearing her jogging gear. Seven. Sheâd kept our running time. For some reason, that gave me hope. I stepped from the shadow of a tree Iâd been waiting under and murmured her name.
She slowed to a stop, her stance turning weary. âWhatâre you doing here?â
It broke me to see her on guard. It confused me, and then it pissed me off. I hadnât done anything wrong enough to deserve this.
âI need to talk to you.â
She turned right back around and started back down the trail toward the house. âWell, I donât want to talk to you.â
âWhy?â I started after her. âIâm so confused, Isobel. I have no idea what happened. Are you okay? Why did your dad kick me off the property and tell me never to come back? Why did you vandalize all your roses? Please, just tell me whatâs going on here.â
âDonât,â she warned. âStop pretending to care. Your act wonât work on me any longer. It was a good performance; you were very convincing. But itâs over now.â
âPerformance? What the hell are you talking about? I donât understand any of this.â
She spun around to march up to me and glare into my eyes. âIf you donât already know, then you donât deserve to understand. Now get off my fatherâs property. No one wants you here.â
I only shook my head. âYou donât mean that,â I said, desperate for it to be true. âYou canât mean that. We love each other. Weââ
She slapped me. Hard. Right across the face. Then her finger shook as she pointed at my nose. âDonât you ever say that to me again.â
Spinning away, she marched off.
I pressed my hand to my stinging face and gaped after her, shocked and growing more upset by the second.
âBut why?â I yelled. âYou canât do this to me. You canât make yourself become my everything and then turn around and shove me out the door. Godâ¦dammit, Isobel.â
I charged after her, grabbing her arm, and forced her around to face me.
She immediately began to struggle. âGet your hands off me.â
âTell me why,â I growled. âWas it because of what those two girls at the restaurant said? Youâre worried it was true, that Iâm only with you because of your money? Was it because I didnât talk to you directly over the phone when my mom got hurt? Why? Just fucking tell me.â
âLet me go.â She started to struggle more; her eyes became frantic. I didnât think she was scared, though. How the hell could she be scared when it was just me holding her? Iâd never hurt her. I loved her.
But her struggling became intense; I feared sheâd hurt herself if I didnât release her.
âI said let me go,â she screamed at the top of her lungs.
I didnât want to. I needed answers. But I let her go, because shit, she looked scared of me.
It made no sense. I was so confused.
What the hell was happening?
âWhy?â I whispered, defeated. Tears clogged my lashes. She was wrecking me. And I didnât even know why. That was the worst part. The not-knowing.
She looked into my eyes, and I swear she felt the same pain I did. But all she did was whirl around and run inside her house.
I stayed outside, just standing there. It was the perfect opportunity for the clouds to open, for rain to pour down on me and drench my soul. I wouldâve remained there, soaked and miserable, waiting for her to return, to tell me this was all just a cruel, nasty joke, or at least explain what was going on. But the morning remained uncommonly bright and cheerful. And Isobel didnât return.
I remained, though, the pieces of my ruined heart scattered around my feet.
Eventually, a police car arrived. Thatâs when Henry stepped outside. I watched him talk to the officer before pointing my way, but I didnât move, just stared at them, bleak and broken.
The officer approached me, pulling his handcuffs from his duty belt. I didnât fight, or argue, or protest as he hooked me up. I just looked to Henry and asked, âWhy?â
He actually appeared sad, as if he might feel bad for me. Then he slowly shook his head. âI donât know.â
The police officer began to lead me to his patrol car. I glanced at Henry over my shoulder. âWould you, though?â I called. âIf you ever found out, would you tell me?â
I think he gave a barely discernible nod. That was all the reassurance I needed. I was sure I could still get her back. I just had to find out what Iâd done wrong. It couldnât be that bad. I loved her, worshiped the ground she walked on. How could I have done anything so wrong that it couldnât be fixed?
I didnât think about my mother until they began to book me in. She was still in the hospital. Alice couldnât sit with her forever. Who would stay with her if I ended up not being able to get out of here?
Iâd trespassed on private ground. Nothing else. What was the maximum penalty for such a petty crime?
I never found out because they released me while I was being booked in. I never actually saw the inside of a cell. One correctional worker called out to the other who was taking my fingerprints, asking, âIs that Hollander?â
âYeah,â came the reply as the guy kept most of his attention on rolling my pinky across an ink pad.
âWell, stop booking him in. His charges have already been dropped. Heâs free to go.â
I didnât know if it was Henry or maybe even Isobel whoâd had me released, but I guessed it didnât matter. Theyâd both made it explicitly clear I wasnât welcome back.
Soâ¦Iâd write a letter. That was what Iâd do. Iâd mail it to her, pour my heart into every word, and beg her to tell me what was going on.
I was already composing it in my head as I returned to the hospital to check on Mom.
When I returned to her room, though, she wasnât there. Her bed was empty, and only Alice sat in the chair beside it, crying into her hands.
My heart stopped. âWhaâ¦?â
Alice looked up. âShaw.â She jumped to her feet. âWhere the hell have you been?â But before she waited for an answer, she charged toward me and pulled me into a desperate hug.
I hugged her back, even though I couldnât take my gaze away from the empty hospital bed.
âWhereâs Mom? What happened?â I hadnât been gone that long. Half a day. Sheâd been fine last night when Iâd sat with her. Weâd watched Wheel of Fortune together and laughed over some of the words weâd come up with to try to solve the puzzles. Sheâd been smiling, and her face had some color back in it.
Sheâd been fine.
âThey found a blood clot.â Alice hiccupped and pushed some tears off her cheek. âA bad one. It was getting too close to her heart, so she went back into surgery.â
âSurgery,â I repeated, my skin prickling and then chilling with the strangest sensation. Relief and yet fear flooded me. âSo sheâs still alive?â
âHollander?â a man in blue scrubs asked, glancing hesitantly into the room.
âHere.â Alice and I pulled apart to face him. âIs our mom okay?â
He blinked once, then said, âIâm sorry. No. She didnât make it.â He went on to explain more. But I didnât hear a thing after she didnât make it.
It didnât seem real.
My mother was dead.