Corrupted Chaos: Chapter 19
Corrupted Chaos: An Enemies to Lovers Forced Proximity Romance
We were twelve days in with just two days left of glamping, and I was surprised to admit that things were going well. We tested new breaches on JUNIPER daily and brainstormed different scenarios. We worked on our day-to-day tasks and did some zip-lining, campfires, and swimming in between.
Cade was on a first-name basis with everyone, and he and Rodney were practically palsâexcept when Rodney stared too long at me in my bikini and Cade whacked him over the head.
Lucas didnât ask me questions, but I knew they were flying around in his mind. Heâd pried about my gold bracelet that I now twisted more than I should on my wrist all the time. I didnât disclose anything. I couldnât. We were in a safe little bubble for now with Cade staying too close, hovering too much, and staring too long.
I told him so that night, and he laughed, not giving a shit.
âItâs not funny. We have to go back to work after this where youâre the boss.â
âIâm your boss right now,â he murmured, typing away on his computer at our table while I watered the fifth bouquet of roses thatâd been brought in the days since Cade had hacked my phone. Heâd murmured they were sent to match my red spray paint.
And I couldnât stop myself from bringing out a tiny linen-wrapped canvas Iâd packed in my suitcase. While he worked, I set it down on the table, folded up a piece of paper to use for edging, and started to spray paint. It took some time to move the paper and get the angles perfect before I went to grab a brush and my paints. All I needed was black and white, and I shaded it quicker than I normally would because the art flowed freely through me now.
Everything was freer. I didnât hesitate to show what I was feeling as much. I was more comfortable in my own skin. I even embraced the emotions Iâd long since bottled up. My heart and my soul were liberated because they were toppling head over heels in love with Cade.
This rose turned out jagged, but with a bright white background, it appeared as though it was growing in the sun, in the light, and not succumbing to any darkness. Would I grow in our love too? Or would there be darkness?
âYou hone your talents in things outside the digital world, I see,â Cade murmured as he stared at my picture, my hands, and then my face. âYouâre truly a beautiful specimen, Izzy Hardy.â
It would have been a precious moment, one in which we could have talked about what this relationship was starting to look like, had my sister not called.
Lilahâs name popped up on my phone, and when I swiped to pick up the video chat, her frown made me immediately ask, âWhatâs wrong, Lilah?â
âWell, I thought Bug got out, but sheâs fine.â She followed up with that right away, knowing panic raced through me immediately. âBut I was looking for her everywhere . . .â Her face fell and she glanced down.
âOkay, well, what? Whatâs wrong?â
She held up a crinkled note. The writing was almost illegible. But it didnât have to be well-written for me to know every word. Every curve of the wâs, every period and punctuation mark.
âWhat is this, Izzy?â Her question came out scratchy, like sheâd been crying. âThis isnât your handwriting.â
My heart dropped; the blood drained from my body.
âWhose is it?â she whispered.
Everyone had a secret, right? Everyone wants to keep one thing hidden in their life. Maybe more. People thought the skeleton in my closet was that I was an addict. They didnât know the whole truth.
They wouldnât want to. Life was ugly. It was unkind. It was unforgiving at times too. To keep living, though, a person has to take the ugly and find the beautiful, take the wretched and search for the blessed.
Maybe I hadnât done that. Maybe Iâd just buried it all deep down and tried to hide it instead.
Vincent was ugly. He was the ugly sort of love that shaped me, that molded me, that made me the person I was today.
âPlease donât leave me. Please. You canât. You canât die,â I sobbed as I cradled him.
His buddy was already standing over me, tapping his dirty tennis shoe on the ground. âYou gotta go, Izzy.â
âIâm not leaving.â I fisted the paper in my hand. His letter to me. It said goodbye. It said he was leaving, but he couldnât.
âYouâre going to stay? For what?â he asked, his voice cracking with fury. âYouâre sixteen. Heâs twenty-one. Do you know what that looks like? He should have never been with you, and now heâs gone.â
âNo.â I said desperately. He couldnât be.
âYes.â His friend pushed back, trying to grab my elbow to pull me from the floor where weâd slept that night, but I ripped my elbow back. âAnd he didnât leave a letter to his mom or his family. He left it to you.â
Jonny never had approved with us being together. No one had. And his words pelted me like a hailstorm that I couldnât see through.
âWe love each other,â I murmured.
âHe didnât love anybody but the drugs,â he grumbled and swiped the mess off the floor. Needles and powder and . . . God, had we done all that? âHow much of this did he give you?â
I was sobbing, the tears pooling so high before I blinked them away that I could barely see my loverâs blue lips. Could I drown in them? Could I get lost in my own tears so I didnât have to wake up either? Because without him, I didnât want to.
âHow could this happen? I was right here the whole night. I was rightââ
âHe gave you more than you asked for, and you passed out.â He shook his head in disgust. âHeâs known forââ
âDonât you dare talk bad about him right now.â
âHeâs been cheating on you this whole time!â his friend bellowed at me. The words cut through me, trying their best to cause damage.
I shook my head in denial. I would ask him when he got up. âHe needs our help, Jonny. Heâs not fucking breathing, Jonny. Call someone. Call someone, please.â
He pursed his lips, and his chin shook but no tears came. âYou gotta get out of here, or heâs going to be charged with statutory rape and dealing to minors before they pronounce him dead. Youâll cause the family a shit storm. Disappear. Donât come to the funeral, and donât mention his damn name.â
âBut . . .â I glanced down at him, âHeâs not dead, Jonny.â
He grumbled âFuck me,â before he came for me. He didnât hesitate to swoop me up and carry me to his car kicking and screaming.
âHow can you do this? I love him! Donât you love him? He needs help.â
As he threw me in his pickup and slammed the passenger door, I scrambled for my purse to look for my phone. By the time he rounded the hood and got in, he held his up to his ear and said, âYeah, my friend ODâd. Iâm pretty sure heâs gone, but we need an ambulance.â
Whatever he said after that, I didnât hear. I was bawling, begging, pleading with God. I needed my first love back, even if he was a secret. Even if I was his dirty little plaything.
At sixteen, everyone would have said Iâd been groomed, coerced, pushed into loving him.
Theyâd have been right. I learned that much later. Jonny called me to say our drugs had been laced with fentanyl. Iâd been lucky. Vincent hadnât.
Yet, it didnât negate the pain. It didnât make this any less hard. Heâd gave me my first kiss, my first falling in love, my first time letting go of my innocence. Heâd also shared my first high, and now Iâd shared his last. We were connected. Heâd told me I was his forever, that heâd love and take care of me to infinity and beyond.
I crumpled up that paper and stuck it in my pocket. His last communication with the world had been for me. For only me.
That had to mean something, right?
âGet rid of that note, Izzy,â Jonny warned as he dropped me off two blocks from my house. âAnd here, take a few bars. If youâre feeling down, theyâll pick you up.â
I snatched them, my body already scouring for a way to avoid the sadness, the agony, and the trauma I would have to endure on my own. âJonny, I donât think I can do this.â
That first heartbreak, it was like a meteor flew from the sky and landed right on the one thing that pumped love through my veins.
âYou can. Do it for him, Izzy. For us. Weâre your friends. We canât have this on our records. Donât tell anyone. Donât tell anyone, or youâll ruin the memory of him.â
My mother and sister greeted me as I walked in that day. I told them I was sick from my sleepover, that my girlfriend had been the worst kind of friend and I needed space.
They knew something was wrong.
Lilah knocked on my door for much longer than normal. She probably somehow felt my grief. So I covered it up with a pill.
And I did that for days, weeks, months. I did it until juvie, and I read that letter over and over again.
Burying emotions took time, practice, effort, and training.
I buried that emotion so deep I could barely access it.
I hoped I would never have to again.
âIzzy.â She shook the paper in front of the phone again, but this time there were tears in her eyes. âTell me who wrote this to you right now.â
âIt doesnât matter,â I whispered. My therapist told me over and over that I should talk with someone whom I trusted about what Iâd been through. The secret was between my therapist and me alone. I didnât want to get anyone in trouble, even if Vincent was gone, even if I didnât talk to any of those people anymore.
Now, I struggled with the embarrassment that Iâd been taken advantage of, that Iâd fallen for so much when I should have been smarter.
My therapist said I needed to share this with my family. But why? For them to worry even more, to be even more disappointed? My therapist had told me over and over that Iâd been young, drugs were involved, I shouldnât blame myself.
I still did.
âIt does matter!â she screamed, and Cade took that moment to stop staring at his laptop.
When I hustled out of the room and down the hall to our bedroom, the man followed. His stupid sharp eyes behind his stupid hot eyeglasses read my every move as he leaned on the doorframe, watching us both like he was ready for the destruction.
The man loved to see people uncomfortableâI knew that about him now. âGet out.â I motioned for him to leave.
He shook his head no, but the look of concern on his face caught me off guard. He should have been smiling, should have relished my sister unearthing my secret.
âIzzy, Iâll make Dante call Cade and have him send you home right now if you donât tell me. This is . . . this is a suicide note from someone! Izzy, who wrote this?â
âIt doesnât matter,â I whispered, but I remembered the words and, although I hadnât read it in maybe a year, they flashed before me now. The hand that held my phone shook as I thought of her rummaging through my things. âYou shouldnât have been looking through my stuff. Put it back now.â
âI was looking for your damn cat, and I came across the box.â
âYou didnât have to look in it.â I raised my voice and then took a breath before I tried to rush past Cade into the living room.
He stopped me with a hand on my arm and took the phone from me.
Lilah gasped and stuttered, âAre you two working?â
âSomething like that. Put her stuff away, and sheâll call you back.â
âCade, this is serious.â
âDo as youâre told.â He hung up and stared at me.
Curling up and crying in the bathroom was what I wanted to do, but instead I stood there with my chin raised. âYou already know part of the story from the campfire. The rest is I was involved with a guy before juvie. I loved him, and he was too old for me.â
I waited for his recoil, for him to frown upon my actions, but there was none whatsoever from him. He waited, like he wanted the whole story.
I took a deep breath, turning the bracelet that I wondered if he would want me to keep after I admitted this. âIt was wrong and stupid and reckless. But he was my first love. Heâd have been charged with statutory rape had anyone found out about us. I was sixteen and now I know heâd probably preyed upon me, groomed me, and changed me.â I shrugged, trying to shake away the heat of embarrassment I felt rising to my cheeks. âTherapy taught me all that. Yet, even still, a heart can break quickly and soundly. Mine shattered when I realized he chose to leave me, that he didnât love me like I thought I loved him. I was embarrassed and in pain. It broke me, was big enough to destroy me.â
Cade tsked. âYou havenât been destroyed yet, baby doll.â
I let out a small laugh that held no joy. âCade, Iâve hidden this for a long time. Itâs embarrassing and wrong and . . . heartbreak and embarrassment hurt. That pain wrenches at your soul. Shakes you awake with the weight of the reminders and the pain. I couldnât handle it at first and used drugs as a crutch. Itâs how I know that love broke me, that Iâm wrecked for all others.â
âWhy would it wreck you for others?â
âI try to find . . .â I hesitated, looking for the right words. Cade was messy, my boss, and my weakness. Falling for him was like jumping out of a damn airplane, not knowing if the parachute would open. âI try to find love that wonât hurt, thatâs safe and comfortable at best. That way, if I lose someone like I did him, I wonât go back to what I did then.â
He studied me for a moment before asking, âWhat did his letter say?â
Would he look at me differently if I told him?