Crossed: Chapter 51
Crossed (Never After Series)
IâM SITTING ACROSS FROM THIS ABSOLUTE stranger.
She has my motherâs face, but she isnât the woman I know.
This isnât Chantelle Paquette.
This is Sister Genevieve. A woman of faith. Of renewed hope.
One whoâs been granted forgiveness, though not from me.
The truth in that statement lights my insides on fire until thereâs nothing but rage left in its place. That same ball of tension from earlier in the church percolates in the center of my gut, coiling tighter and tighter until it pinches my chest and makes my lungs fill with smoke.
Sheâs a fake. A phony. A narcissist wearing a habit and preaching words sheâs never lived.
âDo you have anyâ â My voice catches on the knot in my throat, and I try again. âAny idea what youâve done? The mess you left behind?â
She shakes her head, taking a sip of her tea. âI wonât talk about this with you. Iâve paid my penance. Iâve lived through my guilt.â
âSame old Mom, brand-new packaging, huh?â I eye her outfit with disgust. âOh my God, do you know Cade?â
Her mouth drops open, something sinister entering her gaze. âOf course. Weâreâ¦close.â
âReally?â I say dryly, although her words make jealousy spear through my middle and wrap around my throat.
âThatâs right,â she continues, a haughty gaze slipping into her eyes. âHe trusts me. More than anyone else, Iâd imagine.â
My blood heats with a possessive rage and I lean forward, something dark and wicked spinning through my mind like a spiderweb. âYouâre not special, Mother. Not like me.â Her face drops.
I smirk because I know how to press her buttons so easily. I spent nineteen years of my life at her mercy. Listening to her tell me I wasnât good enough. That my breasts were too big, my hips were too wide, and I was a distraction to all the men in her life.
And I know envy runs deep. Deep enough to leave your responsibilities at the door. Deep enough to forget about the people youâre supposed to love.
I shrug. âTruth hurts, doesnât it, Mom?â
She places her mug down on the table and leans back in her chair. Itâs a comfortable move, one that shows just how settled she is here. Here, less than an hour away from where she abandoned Quinten and me, leaving us to clean up her mess.
That knot in my gut cinches tighter. âIf I asked him to kill you, he would without blinking.â
She scoffs. âHeâs a priest, child. Please.â
âNo.â I shake my head. âHeâs mine.â
âStill the same delusional little Amaya. With bigger dreams than you have tits.â
I laugh. âThere she is, good olâ Chantelle Paquette. A decent fake but a terrible mother.â
âPeople can change, Amaya.â
âBullshit,â I hiss through clenched teeth, smacking my hand on the table. âYou fucked up, over and over and over, and then you left, painting me as some witch and leaving me to pick up the pieces. I donât give a fuck if youâve changed. I do not forgive you.â
âWell,â she sniffs. âGod forgives, and Heâs all that matters.â A little bit tighter now.
I huff out a breath, sadness filling up my chest, that lost young girl who still aches for a mother rearing her pathetic little head. Maybe sheâs here because she wanted to be close. Just in case. âDid you ever miss me at all?â
âOh, Amaya.â Her voice is soft, and my naive heart pounds in my chest. âNo.â
The last tiny strands of hope from that kid inside me break away, leaving behind a lightness that Iâve been searching for since the day she disappeared. âHowâs Quiâ â Boom.
I surge up from the table and am across it before she can blink, wrapping my hands around her throat and squeezing as we both topple to the floor.
She yelps, and Iâm fairly certain my rib is cracked from the way we fell, but the fury pounding in my blood silences everything else. I climb on top of her, straddling her lap until sheâs pinned to the ground, and then the rage pumps into my arm and I swing before I can think, backhanding her across the face, droplets of blood spraying from her mouth.
âDonât you dare say his name!â I yell, my hands going back
to her throat. She fights, and she fights well, nails gouging into the skin of my arm and ripping out chunks of my hair, but I donât care.
She canât hurt me more than she already has.
I tighten my grip, and eventually her flailing turns to jerks and then stops altogether, quiet taking over the room.
My breathing is heavy and uneven, and a clock ticks on the wall. I glance up at it, a delicious buzz racing through my system.
And I feel free.
The door bangs open from down the hall, and I scramble to my feet, spinning around and racing out of the kitchen toward the front.
Cade stands there like a dark angel, tall and imposing with snowflakes dusting his black hair and Quintenâs hand in his.
I let out a sob, rushing to Quinten and grabbing him in my arms, hugging him so tightly he squirms. âAll done! All done!â he squeals.
Releasing him, I sit back on my heels, the knot in my chest untangling as I catalog his every feature. Tears flood my eyes again, and I would give anything to stop crying. Iâve done enough of it in the past few days to fill up a fucking river.
âEverything all right?â I ask, my eyes flicking up to Cadeâs.
He smiles down at me, but I can sense the worry in his gaze. âEverything is taken care of, mon trésor.â
Quinten starts to move past me, looking around this new place heâs never been to, and I suddenly remember our motherâs dead body in the kitchen.
Panic must show itself on my face because Cade stiffens, his eyes glancing around the room before coming back to me.
âQuin,â I call out, my muscles stiff and sore. Now that the adrenaline is wearing off, it hurts to breathe. âStay close by, dude.â I spin around, watching as he moves into the small sanctuary to the left instead of closer to the kitchen.
Definitely cracked a rib.
Cade moves in front of me, his gloves icy from the winter air as he cups my face, his eyes searching my face. âAre you all right?â
My eyes flutter closed as I sink into his hold. âI did something bad. And Iâll need your help to clean it up.â
Thirty minutes later and Iâve finagled Quinten into a bedroom upstairs while Cade is in the kitchen, seeing the damage Iâve created. I havenât told him who Sister Genevieve really is yet, but I know that to him, it wonât matter. I lie down next to Quinten in the small bed, listening to his breathing even out and thanking Godâ if He existsâ for keeping him safe, and eventually I stand up, tiptoeing out of the room and making my way downstairs.
Cadeâs there waiting with a fresh cup of tea, my motherâs body gone and the broken chair cleaned up like it was never there to begin with.
He sets down the mug, stepping into me and pulling me flush against him, one hand cupping the side of my head and his other gripping my jaw.
âIâm sorry if she was your friend. I justâ â
âShh,â he soothes, stroking my hair. âI donât care.â
And now the emotions that were missing well up in the center of my chest, leaving me tired and ragged and worn. I rest my head against his chest and listen to his steady heartbeat, letting it calm me the way it always does. âShe was my mother.â His body tenses.âShe came up here to, I donât know, stay close but far away? I donât really care why. I justâ¦I didnât mean to kill her.â
He leans back, tipping my chin up with his fingers and pressing a soft kiss to my lips. âIf she hurt you, she deserved to die.â
I sigh, nodding at his words. âIs there something wrong with me?â
Cade smiles, bringing me back into his chest and wrapping his arms around me, cradling me like Iâm his to hold. Like Iâm the only thing that matters.
It makes my body warm and my fractured heart swell.
âThereâs darkness in us all, petite pécheresse. We just have to learn to control it.â He presses a kiss to the top of my head. âI can help you with that.â
THE NEXT MORNING, I wake up feeling tired and sore but ready to face the day. Cade fucked me deep into the night last night, kissing away my tears and breathing life back into my bones. He was gentle, and it still hurt, but it was also cathartic. I needed him to wash away the memory of Parker and replace it with himself. Because I choose him.
Heâs sitting on the edge of the bed when I get out of the shower, staring at his hands, that muscle ticking away in his jaw.
My stomach dips. âWhatâs wrong?â
He blows out a breath, running a hand through his hair as he turns to look at me, smiling and reaching out his hand.
I take it, letting him drag me into his body until Iâm standing between his legs. My hand squeezes the towel around my body tight, dread over what I can just feel is bad news creeping up along my spine.
âI have to tell you something, and itâsâ¦Iâm not sure how to make it okay.â
I back away from him, but he reaches out, gripping my hips and holding me steady. âWhatâs going on?â
He licks his lips and stares up at the ceiling before meeting my gaze. âDalia, sheâParker got to her and took Quinten before I couldâ¦â
My heart drops into my stomach, vomit rising in my throat, and I push away from him, running to the trash can, dropping to my knees, the towel unraveling around my hips as I throw up into the bin, the taste of bile and grief burning the back of my tongue. Cade moves behind me and holds back my hair as I dry heave.
I look up at him, shaking my head, my vision blurring. âSheâs dead?â
He nods, empathy swimming in his gaze. âIâm so sorry, mon trésor.â
My nostrils flare as I nod, sitting upright, my stomach tossing and turning like a ship in a storm. My heart aches, and thereâs this pit in my solar plexus, gaping wide and feeling like it might swallow up everything I am.
Sadness grips me by the throat, and I close my eyes, tears squeezing from beneath my lashes and dripping off my chin.
Another notch in my already scarred heart. So many more now than there were a few short months ago. Only now, Iâm stronger. Iâve been through more, and I have someone by my side and in my corner.
I look up at him, my teeth clenching so hard it makes my jaw ache. âDid you make it hurt?â
His hand runs down the length of my hair, something dark flashing through his gaze. âYes.â
Closing my eyes again, I try to control my breathing, the heaviness of this new reality pressing down on the center of my chest.
âGood.â