Crossed: Chapter 6
Crossed (Never After Series)
M Y MOTHER WASNâT A GOOD PERSON, SO IT makes sense that she wasnât a particularly good Catholic. Not that it ever stopped her from dragging me out of bed every Sunday morning for Mass.
Iâd dress up in the nicest clothes I owned and weâd walk to whatever church was in the area. We moved around a lot, but no matter where we went, religion never seemed to change. Always the same stringent rules and regulations.
Do this. Donât do that. He is forgiving, yet He will smite you down.
It was enough to convince me that we were committing sin just by being there. Visions of a lightning bolt splitting apart the clouds and thundering down the center of the sanctuary filled my head. I was sure that seeking forgiveness for something we werenât truly sorry for was blasphemous enough for hell. And I know my mom wasnât remorseful over her actions because she continued to do them over and over again.
Still, every week, we went, and every week, nothing ever happened.
And nobody in the church ever seemed to catch on that my mother was a hypocrite. A fake. Or maybe they did, and they simply stayed quiet. After all, people often ignore traits in others that exist within themselves.
Perhaps we just didnât stick around in a single place long enough for anyone to really care.
But when we showed up in Festivalé, all that changed.
Because somebody did care. Florence Gammond.
Weâve been in Festivalé for months now, and I think I can count on one hand the number of times my mom has stayed around for an entire day. She chugs coffee, her hair pulled back in a ponytail as she flits around the small kitchen in our apartment, humming to herself while she gets ready to leave.
âWhat time will you be home?â I ask, tapping my nails on the table. Irritation simmers deep in my gut as I watch her.
âHmm?â She spins around, her eyes not even able to meet mine. âOh, late probably. I have some errands to run, and then Parkerâs taking me up into the Green Mountains for a weekend getaway. Isnât that so romantic?â
Her cheeks flush and my stomach drops.
âBut Quin has an appointment today. You promised youâd be here.â
She waves me off. âYou can get him there, yeah?â
I sigh as a heavy weight drops down in the middle of my chest. âYeah, Mom. Iâll take care of him.â
I donât add that Iâm always taking care of him. That Iâm pretty sure heâs supposed to be mimicking by now or smiling and making noise. Bringing up my concerns will just make her angry, and she likes to throw things when she gets mad. Her mood can flip as quick as a switch, and I learned years ago to pick my battles.
Besides, this isnât anything new. Mom disappears most days, leaving me alone to care for Quinten. Ever since she came home from the hospital.
Sheâs never even told me who his father is.
After she leaves, I strap Quinten in a stroller and take to the quaint city streets to pass the time before his checkup. We live on the edge of town, where the French architecture is starting to crumble and the homeless sleep in tents, but itâs only about a twenty-minute walk from the main square, and I like to go there whenever I can to take in the dark brick exteriors and steep roofs. Thereâs something so magical about Festivalé, something that makes me want to immerse myself in its history and soak up the culture.
The square itself is teeming with people, most of them likely tourists, coming to the area to experience âLittle Franceâ without leaving the country. The main attraction is the Notre- Dame Cathedral, which was erected in the late 1800s and has been preserved beautifully ever since. We go there on Sundays for Mass, but otherwise, I stay far away.
Religion creeps me out.
The sun beats down on my head as I push Quintenâs stroller past the Champlain Patisserie and am about to turn around and head to the doctorâs office when a sound rings out from the back alley and draws my attention to the noise.
My jaw drops as I take in the sight of my motherâs boyfriend. Parker has a woman pressed up against the brick wall, her pasty white leg wrapped around his hip and her auburn hair stark against his blond.
I stop in my tracks, jerking the stroller so harshly that Quinten begins to cry.
Both Parker and the mystery womanâs bodies fly apart, and as they do, she comes fully into view.
Florence, the woman whoâs always helping with Communion during Mass and is always glaring at my mother. She smooths down the front of her skirt, her giant diamond wedding ring glinting in the afternoon sun, and Parkerâs eyes narrow when they zone in on me.
I spin around and scurry away before either of them can say a word, my heart pounding as I try to compartmentalize what I just saw and whether I should tell my mother.
If I tell her, Iâm sure sheâll have us packed up and ready to leave before the sun can fully set. And I love it here. I want to stay. No matter what.
Three nights later, long after I put Quinten to bed and lay down to fall asleep, Parker crept into my bedroom.
I remember my blood pumping in my ears and my stomach tightening in fear when the mattress dipped behind me, his large frame cocooning mine as his hand reached around my side and up to cover my mouth.
âDonât make a sound,â he said.
I didnât.
âWhatever you think you saw the other day, your mother doesnât need to know. Nod if you understand.â
Slowly, I nodded. My mouth ran dry, but I bit my tongue to keep quiet.
âI can make your life very difficult, sweet Amaya. Iâd hate for you to find out just how depraved of a man I can be.â
His hand ran down the front of my nightgown and slipped between my legs, and my teeth chomped down on my tongue so hard, the taste of copper started flooding my mouth. Tears pricked behind my eyes, my muscles tense and ready to fight, but his next words stopped me in my tracks.
âSay a word and Iâll kill her in front of you and then take this little pussy for myself while she bleeds out at your side. Is that what you want, sweet girl? You want your motherâs last vision on earth to be the man she loves fucking the younger, tighter version of her?â
Bile surged up my throat, and I shook my head, my lungs burning from the need to let out a sob.
âGood.â
He pressed a kiss to my cheek and then he was gone, just as quickly as he had arrived.
I never did tell my mom.
But she found out about Florence anyway.
And after she made a scene in front of the entire town, she disappeared, the way she always had before. Only this time, she didnât take us with her. And whether she knew it or not, she handed me over to Parker on a silver platter.
But thereâs nothing I can do about it now. Not if I want to keep Quinten safe and a roof over our heads, and Parkerâs weird fixation on me lends itself to a type of protection that I wouldnât get anywhere else. Heâs the mayorâs best friend. Heâs a dangerous and powerful man. And although people still sneer and whisper about the rumors my mother left in her wake, when heâs around, at least they donât say it to my face.
âAmaya,â Parker says as he walks into his office.
The lock clicks as he closes the door, and his voice grates over my skin, leaving it raw.
âParker.â I force a tight grin.
I peer at him closely, trying to figure out whether he recognized me at work. Heâs never been there before, and him popping up out of the blue worries me. The thought of him stripping away the last piece of my freedom makes me sick to my stomach. As it is, he thinks I make my money from doing freelance data entry work from the comfort of my home.
His fingers coast along the back of my neck as he breezes by where Iâm sitting, the touch so light it could be considered an accident. But I know better. Parker doesnât have accidents. Everything he does is methodical.
He moves to sit behind his desk, his gaze undressing me like Iâm a gift sent just for him.
I donât like his staring, and I like staring at him even less.
Itâs not that his face isnât appealing; it is, and most women in this town drool at the sight of him simply because his money makes him the most eligible bachelor in Festivalé. But to me, heâs just another filthy creep. A bad man dressed up in thousand- dollar suits.
He continues to watch me, and my hands grow clammy in the silence. If he doesnât speak soon, I might throw up all over his fancy wood floors.
âYou look nice,â he finally says. âEverything good with Quinten?â
âHeâs fine.â My chest smarts. I donât like him pretending that he cares.
He nods slowly. âSchool treating him well?â
I grit my teeth because no, it isnât, and Iâm pretty confident that Parker knows that. Quinten and public schooling donât mesh. There are too many students and not enough support for someone on the spectrum. He doesnât do well with standing in lines or with having to keep still and quiet at a desk, and no matter how many times I fight for accommodations that allow him to feel safe and comfortable, his teachers shut it down. His iPad is part of his self-regulation, and they donât allow that in class. So he acts out, and then I get a phone call where I end up fighting back tears as I beg for them to reevaluate his IEP: his individualized education program. The school is understaffed and underfunded, and they donât care about why Quinten might be struggling. They only care that he is.
But I canât afford to put him anywhere else.
âItâs the same as always,â I reply carefully.
Parker sighs, standing up and moving until he sinks down into the chair next to me, reaching out to grasp my fingers. âI donât know why you insist on resisting this. I could take care of you.â How many times can we have this same conversation?
âIâm not interested in the ways Iâd have to pay for that.â I pull my hand back.
The muscle in his jaw ticks, and he runs his hand through his slicked- back hair. âWould it really be so bad? To be with me?â
âItâs not that it would be bad,â I say, even though it would be. âIt just wouldnât be real.â
âI can shelter you,â he argues. âTake care of you. Put Quinten in the best private school in the state. Youâll never want for anything again.â
I would be lying if I said I wasnât tempted, but him using what I care about most to try and control me makes hatred burn through my veins. Parker knows me well enough to know I would do absolutely anything for Quinten, and my biggest fear is one day having no choice but to shackle myself to a man who would use stability and the people I love as a bargaining chip.
Heâs already taken so much.
âParker,â I plead, wishing he would stop doing this every single time. âI canât.â
âFine.â His features drop, the softness molding into harsh edges, a coldness entering his gaze. âYou got my money?â
A sharp laugh escapes me before I say, âDonât I always?â
âI donât see whatâs so funny,â he spits.
âYou.â I wave my hand in between us. âThis. You want me to be with you, to marry you, but youâre the reason weâre struggling so much in the first place.â
He scoffs, picking an invisible piece of lint off the arm of his suit jacket. âIâm a businessman, Amaya. Your mother made a deal with me, and she left before fulfilling her end. As her next of kin, it falls to you.â
I lift a brow. âYou pimped her out to your clients. You didnât sign a million-dollar contract. It would hardly stand up in court.â
âSemantics.â He shrugs. âIt holds up where it matters. Should I remind you of that again?â
I swallow around my suddenly dry throat, because no, he doesnât have to remind me. I got the message loud and clear after Mom left and I tried to tell him no.
Huffing, I reach into my worn purse and pull out the wad of bills, almost everything I was able to make this past week, dropping it in the small space between us.
He snatches it up immediately, his thumb flicking through the tops of the rubber- banded bills. âThis feels light.â
My heart stutters. âJust by a hundred bucks, Parker. I needâ¦I need to keep the internet on.â
âThatâs not my problem.â
I swallow.
âYou wonât let it be my problem,â he amends.
âWell, paying you isnât supposed to be my problem either,â I bite back.
Chuckling, he reaches out and cups my cheek. To an outsider, it would look like a tender moment between us, but his grip is tight and his eyes are empty. âAs long as your last name is Paquette, it is.â
He stands up then, clutching the money in his fist and turning his back, effectively dismissing me. I follow suit, my legs tingling from the blood rushing back into them, and I walk to his office door, flicking the lock open.
âSame time next week, Amaya,â I hear from behind me. âAnd donât be short or you wonât like how Iâll make you pay.â