Too Strong: Chapter 29
Too Strong: Hayes Brothers Book 4
DAD AND BECCA stay out of my way since I came home. A blessing, considering Iâm not ready to talk. Iâm still processing the news, trying to understand what I learned.
Whenever I think Iâve figured out what happened, new questions pop up, screwing with the timeline of events Iâve assembled. My mindâs reeling. The constant galloping thoughts sap my energy, but I canât sleep no matter how tired I am.
Things took such a quick, sharp turn that I begged my doctor for an emergency appointment.
He prescribed me new meds again.
Well, not exactly new. I took Adderall a few years ago, but now I take a long-term release every morning and a short-term release in the afternoon to boost the morning dose as it wears off.
Itâs only been a day. The adjustment period usually lasts about a week, so Iâm in for a few more days of blindly navigating the emotional labyrinth.
Thatâs if the dosage is correct and wonât need adjustingâ¦
In the midst of all the chaos, or maybe despite the chaos, thereâs not a minute I donât think about Conor.
I shouldnât. I know I shouldnât. Itâs wrong to remember every time he kissed me. Even worse to recall every time he touched me. How he looked when his big, toned body hovered over me in bed. How he sounded when he said he loves me.
Wrong. All of it.
While my mind knows it, my heart disagrees because my relationship with Conor doesnât taboo. Kissing him, holding his hand, or coming undone beneath him never felt wrong. Not once.
I keep thinking about the scene in when Lorraine kisses Marty and immediately knows something is off. Iâve never had that with Conor. The opposite, actually. It felt so fucking to kiss him.
Itâs not, but I canât seem to let the thought sink.
Rose tried talking to me a few times. At first, she was sympathetic. She held my hand or climbed to my bunk and spent a monotonous hour brushing my hair. When playing nice didnât work, she changed her tactic to plain rude, saying I should call Conor and tell him what Dad told me. That maybe heâd help me piece together what happened twenty-one years ago.
But whatâs the point?
Telling him weâre related wonât change anything. We canât make it work, no matter what. I could risk blowing his family wide open if thereâs a chance his parents donât know I exist, like if Robert Hayes was my father and my mother never told him, but thatâs not the case.
They know I exist.
They chose to give me up, which means Iâm not welcome.
Unleashing that news will devastate Conorâs life⦠itâs not worth it. I love him too much to hurt him when thereâs no chance of a good outcome.
Gripping my phone, I lay in bed late in the evening. Rose is here, watching a movie on her phone, earbuds in.
I scroll through the pictures of Conor and me, then read every single text he ever sent. Iâve been doing that for the past five long days. I should delete every single one, convince myself we never happened. That we were never happy.
It would be safer for my heart, but whenever my finger hovers over delete, I canât bring myself to click.
Those photos are all I have left of him. Iâm not throwing them away.
Another thing Iâve been doing a lot is googling Monica Hayes to find myriad pictures of her at the many galas and balls she organizes.
We look similar. Not identical, but similar enough that our relationship makes sense. Itâs not our features that match. I inherited my face shape from Dad, but Monica has my eyes. Or rather, I have hers. When she was younger, her hair was the exact same shade as mine.
I find a picture of Monica in her thirties and climb down the ladder to fetch an old shoebox from my closet. Thereâs not much here, just a few Polaroids of the woman my father claimed was my mother.
I look like her too. Silver eyes, caramel hair, freckles.
I guess if you look closely, youâll discover similarities in everyone, but the sense of familiarity I get from the woman in the picture isnât there when I look at Monica Hayes.
I grab the box, joining my dad in the living room. I canât piece together a convincing story, and heâs the one who blew up my entire world, so heâll have to help me out.
He sits in his armchair, eyes glued to the TV. Beccaâs not here, working the night shift at the Motel by Costa Mesa.
Thatâs good.
I donât need her listening to our conversation.
I donât mind Becca per se. Iâve never particularly liked her because sheâs so strict toward Rose and because she doesnât try harder than she has to. She could work overtime to pay at least half Roseâs college tuition, but she relies on my dad and me to do the heavy lifting around here.
Dad looks up, eyes dull as he looks me over from head to toe. Heâs worried. Iâve not left my room much this week. I skipped work and hardly spoke a full sentence the past five days, but itâs time to get some answers.
âWho is she?â I ask, throwing a picture at him, carefully watching his expression. âWhoâs the woman in those pictures?â I fan more out on the table, but he remains silent, his face stoic. âSheâs obviously not my mother. My motherâs Monica Hayes, so is this woman?â
A long, tense moment passes before he looks up at me, eyes full of pain and remorse. âYou really love him, donât you?â
I clamp my teeth, squeezing my eyes shut tight to not let another tear fall. Iâve cried every day, and Iâm exhausted. So fucking weak. Tired of the pain ripping me wide open. Tired of the sinking, sick feeling wrenching my stomach whenever I force myself to eat, and tired of missing Conor.
âIt doesnât matter,â I whisper, eyes still closed.
I hear him get up, and his arms circle my back as he cradles my head, holding me flush against him. âIt does, Angel. It matters a great deal.â He kisses my head, pushing me back a little. âIs he everything you ever hoped for?â
I want him to stop, drop the subject and stop reminding me how much I love Conor, but something in his eyes has me bobbing my head, barely holding off tears.
âMore than I hoped for. I miss him so much.â
A heavy sigh deflates him. âI know. Youâre so consumed by the pain you didnât even stop to think.â
âIâve not stopped thinking,â I spit out, pulling away. âThatâs all Iâve done for days! I wonder why you never told me. Why Monica gave me away, whyââ
âPromise me one thing, okay?â he cuts in like he hasnât heard a word I said. âThings are about to take a turn, and weâll need to be here for each other. Promise me youâll be here.â
I move away to look at him, his words making less sense by the second. âWhat do you mean? Dad, please, Iâm tired. I just want the whole story. I want to forget. Tell me who the woman in the pictures is.â
âSheâs your mother,â he coos, moving to sit in the armchair. âIâm sorry, Angel. Everything happened so fast, and Beccaâ¦â He shakes his head, clamping his jaw, holding back words he might regret. âYouâre young⦠I didnât think your feelings were valid, that they were enough to risk our family, to trade one daughter for the other, but Iâve watched you all week, and little by little, itâs killed me to see you hurting like that. You reminded me of myself when I lost your mother. It was the darkest time of my life, Vivienne. I donât wish it on anyone, so I want to make this right.â He grabs a picture, pinching the corner between his fingers. âLook at the very beginning. Whenâs your birthday?â
My eyebrows bunch together, anger skyrocketing. âYou donât know when my birthday is?â
âOctober twelfth,â he replies with a sigh. âAnd whenâs Conorâs birthday?â
It strikes me like a lightning bolt.
How have I realized this sooner? Monica canât be my mother. She had the triplets two months before I was born. Itâs physically impossible. I look to Dad, but instead of hope filling me up, my heart threatens to burst.
âSoâ¦â I whisper, eyes brimming with tears. âYouâre not my real dad?â
âIâm very much your dad. Always have been, and always will be.â The softest smile brightens his face before he starts talking again, flipping my world on its axis for the second time this week.
***
âNo, no, noâ¦â I chant, patting the steering wheel. â
, not now. Just a little longer. Weâre halfway there. Keep going.â
It doesnât. The engine sputters, growls, jerks a few times, and stops. The sudden silence is almost deafening, punctuated only by my shallow breaths.
âNot now!â I snap, my mind still in overdrive, racing as Dadâs words linger, replaying like a broken record. âFine,â I huff, reaching for my jacket, aware how ridiculous my words are, how stupid Iâd look to a passive observer, scolding my car. âI donât need you. Iâll call a taxi.â
A quick pat-down proves me wrong. I donât have my phone, so a taxi is out of the question. âWell, I have legs. Iâll run.â
Iâm not surprised the streetâs deserted. Itâs Sunday. Almost eleven oâclock at night. No traffic around at this time in Newport Beach on the eve of New Yearâs Eve. Streetlights cast eerie shadows on the sidewalks, illuminating the shopfronts.
âI wish I scrapped you a long time ago,â I snap, beating the steering wheel with my fist, my heart racing, adrenaline pumping through my veins at the sharp burst of pain. âOuch!â
Yanking the door open, I leave the keys in the ignition. âI hope someone steals you and saves me the trouble of taking you to the scrap yard.â And . The door snaps shut, but the window stays intact despite my unvoiced pleas that it shatters.
The cold, dark night envelops me like a cloak. It canât be more than forty degrees. The coldest day of the year, Iâm sure. Undeterred, with Dadâs words spurring me on, I take a deep breath, steeling myself for the ride, and take off at a sprint.
The wind whips my hair, the chill of the night air stinging my cheeks as I dodge parked cars and leap over the cracks in the sidewalk. Everything blurs together, a sea of dark buildings. My breathing ticks like a metronome, my footsteps echoing over the silent streets, counting time.
I donât get far before my muscles burn with the effort. Instead of taking a short break to smooth my breath, I push myself harder, ignoring the ache in my legs and lungs.
Just then, as if this couldnât get any worse, the first raindrops strike my head. I make myself stop, my brain hitting the brakes so fast my legs barely have time to react.
âPlease donât let it be thunder,â I whisper, peering at the dark, starless sky.
Swallowing big gulps of air, my ears perk, listening for any sounds thatâd strip my courage in a flash. My heart painfully screams against my ribs.
Rain. Itâs just rain. Not even heavy. No gusting winds or roaring strikes of lightning. Just a typical California shower.
With a sigh of relief, I recognize the neighborhood. Itâs not been here long, a few years at most. The houses still look brand new, with lush lawns and gray cladding.
Reassured, I cross the street, settling into a walking pace until my pulse slows. Iâm still subconsciously waiting for lightning to burn the sky wide open with a bright flash, but after five minutes of gentle rain, I calm down enough to sprint again.
Iâd consider myself physically fit, but no more than three streets over my body tells a different story, every muscle rebelling against my brain urging me forward.
âNot far now. Just five more minutes.â And after those five minutes⦠âAlmost there, just five more minutes.â
The poor attempts to trick my brain work to some extent whenâpanting and heavingâI stop at the bottom of Nicoâs driveway twenty minutes later.
The rainâs still just a soft, misty drizzle, but itâs soaked through my clothes, leaving me chilled to the bone.
Two Mustangs sit to the left of the garage, the house dark save for the soft glow of LED lights embedded in the concrete steps.
On my last legs, I rest my forehead on the door and rap my fist against it, perfectly aware Iâll wake more people than Iâd like. I donât even know what time it is. It canât be past midnight, so maybe theyâre not asleep, watching TV in the living room thatâs not overlooking the driveway.
Point invalidated when my hand starts turning numb from repeated banging. If someone was downstairs, theyâd open the door by now.
I keep at it, ignoring the pain increasing with each blow. Conorâs bedroom is right above, the balcony shielding me from the rain. Just when I think Iâll have to climb up there to wake him, the upstairs light suddenly floods the driveway. Within seconds, the hallway light blinks, and I hear the characteristic sound of the lock being turned.
A touch too late⦠Iâm still slathered to the door and fall forward as soon as it opens, but two strong hands grip my shoulders, steadying me before I face-plant the floor.
âVivienne, shit, youâre all wet,â Cody clips, pulling me inside, eyes roving my frame. âDid you run here?â
âSorry,â I mumble, dark spots coruscating in my eyes as I find my feet. âSorry I woke you, Iââ I press my hand to my wet forehead, feeling like I weigh a ton. âI need to talk to Conor.â
âWhoa, easy there.â He grips my shoulders again. âYouâre swaying, Vee. Are you feeling okay? Câmon, you need to sit down. Iâll go get Conor in a minute.â
âWhatâs going on?â Coltâs voice sounds on my left when Cody helps me to a breakfast stool in the kitchen. âIs she alright?â he asks his brother, pulling a tee over his head as he approaches. âWhat the hell happened?â
âI think she ran here. Go get Conor.â
Colt turns on his heel, his bare feet slapping against the marble floor.
An unpleasant thought materializes out of the blue.
What if Conor doesnât want me back? What if, during the last week, he took a step back, considered everything I told him at Abbyâs, and decided it was true?
My mindâs screeching so loud I canât understand what Codyâs saying as he sets a glass of water in front of me. His lips move, but the words hit an invisible wall between us, dispersing before they reach my ringing ears.