Nanny for the Neighbors: Chapter 63
Nanny for the Neighbors: A Surprise Baby Reverse Harem Romance
I donât know how long passes. I really, honestly donât know. The days are blurring together. The nights feel too long. I spend all my time lying in bed and crying.
Iâm sad. Iâm so sad, it feels like thereâs an anvil sitting on my chest. I wake up every day, and for a few tiny seconds, I feel okayâuntil I remember the doctorâs visit. I remember meeting my mother. I remember that Iâm never, ever going to have the family I wanted. And then I get sad again. So sad, I canât even bring myself to move.
Iâve felt like this before, but not for a long time. Not since I was a kid. I felt it every time a foster family Iâd fallen in love with sent me back to the care home. I donât know if depression is the right word for it, exactly. I think maybe grief would be more accurate. Itâs like Iâm in mourning.
Which would make sense, right? I feel like Iâve lost a lot in one day.
Then again, Iâm apparently fucking menopausal, so maybe itâs just my out-of-whack hormones. Or the pills my doctor prescribed me. At the end of the day, it doesnât really matter whatâs wrong with me, does it? Nothing matters. Nothing at all.
I try calling the boys a few more times, but none of them respond. After the first day, I give up. They obviously donât want to speak to me. I put my phone down somewhere, and then lose it immediately in all of my crap. My flat is a mess. I canât eat or sleep. I just lay in bed all day, watching my crappy little TV set and drinking cheap wine.
That is, until the landlord comes and thumps on my door.
âBethany!â He shouts through the wood. âOpen up. Itâs Bill.â
Panic floods me. I jump out of bed, looking down at myself. Iâm wearing a stained t-shirt that hasnât properly fit me since I was fifteen, and a pair of pink knickers with holes worn in the crotch. I havenât showered in days, and my apartment looks like a tip. I wouldnât be surprised if the dirty plates in my sink are growing mould.
Heâs going to kill me.
âShit,â I mutter, yanking open my wardrobe. It takes me a few minutes to scrounge up clean clothes, and by the time Iâm changed, his knocks have become a steady, full-on pounding. I can hear him swearing under his breath behind the door.
âComing!â I call, stumbling across my flat. I trip over some shoes strewn on the floor and collapse against the front door. âSorry, Iâm coming.â My fingers fumble on the latch. Theyâre shaky and weak. I donât remember the last time I ate. I should probably do that.
I eventually get the door unlocked and yank it open. My landlord glares at me. He somehow looks imposing, even though heâs five-two and has a fluffy white Santa Claus beard.
âRent,â he grunts. âYouâre late.â
Fuck. âShit. Oh, God, Iâm so sorry. It completely slipped my mind.â
Itâs weird; Iâve been late with the rent before, and Billâs never come to ask me for it in person. Then again, Iâve been pretty off-the-grid. For all I know, my email is filled with angry messages from him.
He studies me closely, taking in my unkempt appearance. I shift in the doorway, trying to block his view of the messy flat. âYou donât have the money?â He asks shortly.
âNo, I do, I do. Iâll transfer it right away. Iâm so sorry I forgot.â I pat down my pants, then remember my phone is AWOL. âUm, can you take a cheque?â
âYes.â
I run to my little desk and yank open the top drawer, unearthing my cheque book. I have written exactly one cheque in my life, but luckily I still keep the thing lying around. âHow much is it again?â I ask, grabbing a pen.
âTwo thousand seven hundred for the quarter.â
Shit, thatâs a lot of money. Thanks to the guys, I have enough, but Iâll be pretty much wiped out until they come back. If they still want me.
The thought slams into me like a truck. Thereâs no guarantee that Sebastian will still want to hire me when he gets home from the US. Heâs certainly not in a hurry to fly back. Or call me.
I remember his words in the bedroom.
I donât need her.
Youâre overreacting, a voice says in the back of my mind. Theyâre busy. Thatâs why theyâve not been calling you. Theyâre not abandoning you.
The thing is, it wouldnât even be abandoning me, would it? Iâm not their girlfriend, Iâm their employee. They can fire me whenever they want.
Youâre just fragile and overemotional, the tiny voice insists. Youâre not thinking straight.
Even so. If thereâs one thing Iâve learned in my life, itâs to never depend fully on someone else. Especially someone that hasnât bothered to contact you for a full week. Always have a back-up plan.
âUm.â I rub my eyes. âCan I pay just one month, instead of the full quarter?â
Billâs eyebrows fly up. âYou donât like it here?â
âNo, I justâ¦â I remember Maisie. âI got offered a job up in Bristol. Probably wonât take it. But Iâd like to keep my options open, just in case.â
âIs there something wrong with my building?â He asks, his voice rising.
âNo, Bill.â
âThen why is everyone leaving? How am I supposed to find new tenants at this time of year?! The men upstairs rang and told me the exact same thing.â
My stomach goes cold. âWhat men upstairs?â
âYour friends. The tech guys.â
I stare at him. âThey got a job in Bristol?â
âTheyâre planning on moving out, and want to pay rent monthly.â
I feel the blood rush out of my face. âOh. Well. This is London. Iâm sure youâll find new tenants soon. Students, or something.â
His scowl deepens. âDo I look like a bloody university hall? Iâm not taking in students! I swear to God, if I find out some other landlord is trying to poach my businessââ
I cut him off. âThatâs nine hundred for a month, right?â
He nods. I write out the cheque, and he snatches it out of my hand, muttering to himself as he stamps back down the corridor. I stand still for a moment, staring after him. My mind is racing, but I feel too tired to move.
Theyâre leaving. Without even telling me. They want to move away. Slowly, I close my door and lean against the wall, running a hand through my hair. My skin is boiling hot under my clothes.
I feel so fucking stupid.
Why am I like this? Why am I so desperate? Itâs like I never grew up at all. I might be a grown woman now, but on the inside, Iâm still the same terrified, hungry girl I was as a child. So desperate to be loved and cared-for that she clings to everyone who shows her a crumb of affection. Who falls head-over-heels for a guy in a matter of weeks.
And then another guy.
And another.
This is why Iâve been so careful not to date. Because Iâm absolutely pathetic. When am I going to stop being such a fucking leech, and just stand on my own two feet? I obviously need to; clearly, I was never meant to have a family. I was meant to be alone. The universe has practically told me as much. No parents. No kids.
I need to get over this idea that I can ever have anybody.
Iâm so fucking sad I just donât know what to do anymore. I want to crumble into atoms and disappear.