Breaking Hailey: Chapter 28
Breaking Hailey (Shadows of Obsession Book 1)
âMiss Vaughn.â Melindaâs clipped voice calls out as soon as I enter the cafeteria, dressed in jeans and a long cardigan.
She sits by the professorsâ usual table, her features pinched, her boring, brown dress suit impeccable.
âYou have a visitor.â She motions to the man beside her.
Relief and disappointment churns in my stomach, one contradicting the other.
Itâs not my father. I dreaded getting into an argument over why I wasnât in my room this early in the morning, but at the same time I miss him. Maybe we could talk more freely face to face.
I narrow my eyes at the man beside Melinda, his posture rigid, black suit hanging loose over his shoulders like he recently lost thirty pounds and hasnât had time to buy new clothes.
Why is he here? It doesnât make sense. I only met him once and Dad said no one save for him and Dr. Phillips know where Iâm recovering.
âGood morning, Hailey,â Officer Matthews denotes with a kind smile. âYour father sends his regards.â
Coming closer, I take his outstretched hand. âHe didnât mention youâd be visiting. Is everything okay?â
âIt is, Iâll explain in a minute.â He glances out the window before zeroing in on Melinda. âDo you mind if I take Hailey for a walk?â
âOf course not,â she clips, rising from her seat. She couldnât look more disinterested if she tried. âPlease donât wander far. Itâs easy to get lost in the woods.â She looks at me over her glasses. âI trust youâll be okay?â
I donât know.
I nod, remembering what Dad told me about Matthews. Without another word, Melinda turns on her heel, briskly sauntering out of the nearly empty cafeteria.
âShall we?â Matthews gestures toward the double doors, letting me lead. âIâm afraid I donât have much time.â
As soon as weâre outside, I regret choosing a cardigan. Had I known it wasnât Dad, I wouldâve proudly pulled Nashâs hoodie over my head, but I didnât want to face an inquisition.
Now the chilly morning air seeps through, making me shiver. Matthews takes charge of our destination, leading me down a cobblestone pathway toward the forest. Before we get there he stops, and pulls out a folded note from his inside pocket.
He hands it over, urging me to read and I immediately recognize my fatherâs neat writing.
Sunshine,
Iâm sorry I canât make it out there myself. There are many things I canât yet tell you about but know that all precautions Iâm taking have your best interest at heart.
I need to know what youâve remembered so far, but I canât risk a phone conversation, or driving all the way down there in case someone follows me. Itâs not safe for anyone to know youâre healing at Lakeside.
Again, Iâm sorry I canât explain things further, but I promise itâs for your own good.
Please answer all of Jonathanâs questions as best as you can. He will relay everything back to me.
I love you and I hope to have you back home safe soon.
Dad
Questions swirl inside my head, begging for answers. My lips part, but the words dissolve on the tip of my tongue. Jonathanâs expression tells me that, like my father, he wonât explain shit.
Heâs here to get information, not give anything away.
I swallow hard, wondering why Iâm not safe and why no one can know where I am. What the hell happened the night of the accident? What donât I remember?
How does Alex play into this?
All the effort my dadâs put into sending and keeping me here, how adamant heâs been about secrecy, how insistent on communication, how paranoid over anything suspicious⦠it all tumbles down on me, confirming what I knew deep down.
My life is on the line.
Frustrated tears well in my eyes, a new wave of questions infesting my mind⦠None of which will be answered today.
âCan we talk now?â Matthews asks, stepping off the pathway and heading for the trees.
âI donât think I have any choice in the matter,â I bite back, frustration morphing to anger. âWhat do you want to know?â
âNot me. Your father. Iâm merely the messenger, Hailey.â He stares at me for a while, as if waiting for his words to strike a chord. They do. I canât blame him for whatever Dadâs hiding. Heâs doing him a favor. âCharlieâs worried about you.â
He always worries, but this isnât normal parent worrying. This is laced with real threat.
I look into Matthewsâ eyes, getting a hold of my emotions. Regardless of how angry I am about my father sending his colleague instead of driving over himself, while still keeping me in the dark, thereâs something comforting about Jonathan.
The rustling leaves under our feet and the howl of the wind through the trees grow louder the further we walk into the forest. Matthews acts like he knows where heâs heading, though his flickering eyes give him away. Once the asylum buildings are no longer visible between the thick trunks, everything looks the same no matter which way I turn.
Still, we plod on, forward, always forward.
âWe shouldnât wander too far,â I say.
âDonât worry, I spend all my free time hiking. Iâm pretty good at finding my way in the wild.â He smiles, nudging my shoulder. âSo are you.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âCharlie said you two went camping in the woods a lot when you were younger.â
I smile, recalling the times when the two of us trekked through forests, setting camp on high ground so we could watch the stars for hours.
âWe never went in blind. Dad taught me to mark the trees.â
âChalk, right? He said you carried a stick with you wherever you went for years.â
âI donât have any right now.â
âWe donât need it today, Hailey. Weâre not that far away. Someone would hear if you called out.â He slows his steps, glancing around as if checking for eavesdroppers. âHow are you finding it here?â
âListen, I donât mean to be rude, butâ¦â I tap my head, pulling an apologetic face, ââ¦youâre a stranger. I know you and Dad are close but I donât remember a single thing about you, so this feels a little odd.â
âThatâs understandable. Your fatherâs one of the good ones, Hailey. Itâs been years since I worked with someone I trust. Someone whoâd rather risk his life than accept a bribe.â
Iâm taken aback by the raw honesty. Itâs not every day you hear a cop admitting the system is flawed.
âI know you donât remember, but you and I⦠weâre pretty good pals,â he adds with a cheeky smile. âYou kicked my ass at a whole lot of boardgames more times than my pride will let me admit.â
Against myself, I smile too. He does seem easy-going. Someone Iâd get along with.
âOne day, when Iâm back home, maybe you can kick my ass for a change.â
âI truly hope so. It pains me to see Charlie like this. He never stops working and barely sleeps, trying to make sure youâre safe. Heâs been there for me through thick and thin and now Iâm trying to repay him a tiny bit.â He takes a seat on a fallen bough, stretching his long legs. âCharlie wants to know what youâve remembered.â
My mind pictures the diary in my room. The pages are filling faster than I anticipated. Slower lately because I refuse to write about Alexâs sexual abuse. I doubt itâs connected to the accident, or the threat Dadâs hiding me from, anyway.
Iâm too embarrassed to even think about how I let Alex use me, let alone write about it.
âAlex,â I answer simply, taking a seat beside Jonathan at the far end of the makeshift bench. âAnd Mom. Everything so far is about them. I guess Dad wonât be interested in my memories of Momâs death.â
âI suppose not,â Matthews admits. âHe was there.â
âYeah⦠he was.â
âSo? What about Alex do you remember?â
âNot that much. I figured out we were⦠dating, I think.â
âYour father mentioned you said that over the phone. I can tell you thatâs news to him, and me. What else?â
Well thatâs not reassuring. If Dad didnât know, then Alex and I mustâve been sneaking around. But⦠why? Did he not want my dad to know? Did I? Was he afraid Dad would take him off the case if he found out about us?
âHe was working a case,â I say, deftly toying with a button on my cardigan. âI donât know the details, but I know it was dangerous. He was angry all the time andââ
And he made me suck his dick even when I didnât want to.
I canât tell him that.
Aside from Alexâs anger, nothingâs relevant and⦠itâs embarrassing because in my memories I take his shit and ask for more like I deserve it. Like Iâve done something wrong and Iâm accepting the punishment. Itâs odd.
âI keep seeing him leave, to do something that worries me. I donât know what, but I tried stopping him a few times.â I pause, unsure what I should say.
Not knowing whatâs happening, where Alex is, and how my words will affect him makes it so much harder to be honest. If we were sneaking around, then what Alex told me about the other girl, how special she was, isnât meant for Dadâs ears.
âWhat else, Hailey? Anything might be important, the smallest detail,â Matthews says.
He comes across as calm, but itâs artificial. The slight tremble of his hands, the intent of his gaze, the way he leans closer⦠it all betrays that heâs on edge, eager to know everything.
Apparently, something I said hit a nerve.
I wish I knew what so I could gauge how much Alex would be okay with me sharing but⦠why would I cover for him? He was nothing but vile in all my memories of him.
He said he was protecting me, but doesnât every cheating bastard spew that line?
âI think he had someone else,â I say, surprised that the betrayal I canât remember still hurts. âI donât know who, but he was in love with her. He left me for her.â
Matthews nods, shepherding his tells so his expression gives nothing away. If only I could read people better. My fatherâs mastered this skill to perfection: one look, one twitch of the cheek and he extracts heaps of data.
All I see is how closed off Matthews suddenly is. How tightly he guards himself. Whatever case Alex was working, it was important, and his girl⦠sheâs important too.
âThatâs all,â I lie, omitting everything Iâm too ashamed to share with anyone.
âThank you, Hailey. I know it canât be easy for you here, away from everything you know. And it must be even harder because you donât know whatâs happening butâand I hope this goes without sayingâyou canât trust anyone right now. Too much is at stake.â
Once more Nashâs sharp features materialize before my eyes. The possessiveness of his touch, the concern in his eyes even when he doesnât want to show emotion.
He cares.
How much, Iâm not sure. Itâs hard to judge, but he cares enough to want me in his bed again, even though he never struck me as a guy who enters the same river twice. He cares enough to listen when I speak and understand when Iâm silent.
When he held me all night, weaving a metaphorical security blanket around me, I felt almost normal.
âIf I canât trust anyone, why should I trust you?â I ask.
âYou shouldnât.â He playfully nudges my shoulder with his. âThe only person you should trust is your father.â
Dadâs lying. With my safety in mind, so technically he has a good reason. If thereâs one person who would do anything to keep me safe, itâs Dad⦠and since he trusts Matthews, by extension, it means Iâm safe to trust him.
âYou didnât spend the night in your room,â Jonathan states. âItâs not my place, but be careful, Hailey. Your father will want to run checks on whoever you were with.â
âIf I know my father, he already ran a check on everyone here. Iâm here, so he clearly didnât find anything. I think if I keep my mouth shut and donât share my secrets, I can sleep around with whoever I want.â
âI didnât⦠I wasnât implying that youâreââ
âItâs what you thought, isnât it? Donât answer that. You can tell my father Iâm fine. If he doesnât think so, he knows where to find me.â
âOf course. Iâll tell him youâre being⦠sensible. Maybe itâs best if we donât mention your boyfriend. Charlie has a lot on his mind without worrying about your heart, too. Heâs a shadow of the man he used to be and he wouldnât send you here if he was concerned about any student.â
My insides riot, the anger and resentment replaced by a sudden longing. I swat away the tears pricking my eyes and swallow the lump clogging my throat.
âYouâre right, Iâm sorry, itâsâ¦â
âHard,â he finishes for me, scooting close to drape an arm over my shoulders. âIâll tell you what. Give me your phone. Iâll put my number in. If you ever want to talk, Iâll come down.â
I lean into his embrace, the scent of his cologne vaguely familiar though I canât remember where I smelled it before.
Probably during those countless boardgame nights he mentioned. My chest tightens again.
Iâve lost so much⦠things Iâm not even aware of, connections I might never rebuild, relationships, parties, first kisses, all the wild nights and the thrill of sneaking around with Alex.
All Iâm getting back is the bad stuff and itâs not fair.
Itâs not fucking fair.