Crossed: Chapter 8
Crossed (Never After Series)
âDO YOU EVER MISS IT?â I ASK DALIA, PLOPPING down into the light wood chair of the dining table and wrapping my hands around the mug of hot tea.
Weâre having a drink before she makes dinner for Quinten and I leave to go to work, which is something we try to do every day. Just a chance to check in and have some private girl time.
Unfortunately, the apartment is small, so sitting at the table in the middle of the square kitchen, surrounded by chipping pale green cabinets and mismatched dish towels, is as private as we get.
It doesnât matter. I love these simple moments. I like to think of it as replacing the bitter memories my mom and Parker infused in this apartment with new ones. Better ones.
Dalia blinks at me with her doe- brown eyes from over the rim of her own cup. âMiss what?â
âDancing.â
She shrugs. âNobody can dance forever, you know?â
I know sheâs right, even if I donât like to think about it. âYeah.â
Her answer is the same every time I bring it up, but for some reason, I keep asking, like if I push enough, sheâll change what she says and admit the emptiness that flits through her gaze is from losing a piece of her when she lost the ability to dance.
Dalia and I met through our boss, Phillip. Well, I guess only my boss now. She was the best damn performer there, and when I first came in to be a cocktail waitress, barely knowing how to balance on bare feet let alone platform shoes, Phillip linked us up. We hit it off right away, and sheâs been the only person in my life Iâve truly been able to call a friend. She sparkled in the spotlight, and I admired her, envied her even, because she always seemed to know exactly who she was. Even more than that, she loved who she was. A long lean body, russet-brown skin, and a large chest, she was a favorite at the Chapel. And then, one night, a drunk driver sideswiped her while going eighty in a thirty-five, and they had to use the jaws of life to cut her out of the car. She hasnât been the same since, and neither has her right leg, which was shattered on impact.
With no job and no money, she was shit out of options. So I had her move in with Quinten and me. Free room and board if sheâd watch him while I brought in the cash for us both. Thereâs not much space, barely enough for Quinten and me, with a small living room and one hallway off the kitchen, but there are three bedrooms, and the one that was my motherâs was just sitting unused. I couldnât really force myself to go in there, so having Dalia take it over was cathartic in more ways than one.
Dalia swears up and down that sheâs fine, that sheâs happy. But despite what she says, every time I leave to go dance, I have to swallow down the guilt.
âThatâs why itâs good you work so much now,â she continues.
âSave up everything you can, Amaya. Make that money and then put it away for when you need it.â
Her words drop on my shoulders like slabs of concrete. God, I fucking wish I could put away enough money to have some savings, but thatâs just not my reality. I could have it rain down in the thousands, and Parker would still make sure I donât keep enough to stay afloat.
Not unless I agree to being his.
But I canât tell her that because nobody knows about my shady dealings with Parker. Heâs my dirty little secret, with grit that burrows into my pores and is impossible to wash clean.
Besides, knowing Dalia, she would never let sleeping dogs lie, and I donât need her trying to solve my problems like theyâre her own.
âItâs annoying that you always ask me that, you know? About dancing, I mean,â she snips.
I shake my head, taking a sip of tea. âIâm not trying to be annoying. Iâm justâ¦I love you and I want to make sure youâre happy.â
She scrunches up her face. âPlease. Weâve got the perfect setup. Are you kidding? Quinâs my dude.â
âI know, butâ â
âBut nothing, girl. Things are good. Iâm good, okay?â
âOkay.â I nod but we both know Iâll probably ask again. I canât help it. The last thing Iâd want is for her to realize that what sheâs got going on here isnât enough and pack up to leave us and find a new purpose.
I shake the thought from my head.
âI have to tell you something,â Dalia sighs, her mug clunking on the wood as she chews on her bottom lip. âItâs about Candace.â
âOh god, what is it?â I groan.
Candace is Daliaâs cousin, and even her name irritates the hell out of me. Sheâs been around since the beginning of my and Daliaâs friendship, especially considering she lives here in Festivalé and, until recently, Dalia lived in Coddington Heights. Theyâve never been close, but every once in a while, they chill, and I donât like her around here. Candace is a raging addict, and I donât want to put myself or Quinten in her path any more than necessary. Plus, Candace is a nasty thing, taking every opportunity to dig her words into my sides, making sure they leave a scratch.
I know people arenât themselves while theyâre in the clutches of addiction, and hating her probably makes me a shitty person, but I canât help it.
I take another sip of tea.
âSheâs dead.â
My chest burns, hot liquid spewing from my mouth as I spit my drink across the room. âWhat?â
Daliaâs eyes are solemn, her lips pursing while she nods slowly, clearly trying to keep her emotions at bay, and empathy hits me square in the chest. Sure, I didnât like the woman, but death is soâ¦final.
âJesus, Dal.â
She shrugs, but I see the way her jaw stiffens like the sharp edge of a knife. âWe all knew it was coming eventually. I just always figured it would be the dope that took her, not a person.â
My head tilts. âWhat do you mean, âa personâ?â
Dalia shakes her head, wiping the back of her hand over her mouth. âShe was murdered. Strangled to death. Her slimeball landlord found her when he stopped by to demand her rent for the month.â
My stomach twists. âHoly shit.â
Iâve never been good when people show me emotion, and saying Iâm sorry doesnât feel like it would be enough, but Iâm not sure how to show support when I donât feel sad over the loss. âDo theyâ do you know if there are any leads?â Is that an appropriate thing to ask?
She scoffs. âProbably that old bastard landlord. Or maybe his wife. Everybody knows how Candace was paying rent when she had no money to give.â
âIs there an investigation?â I ask.
âMaybe.â She shrugs again. âEven if there is, how much effort do you think theyâll put into a dead sex worker with a drug problem who was constantly asking the worst of the worst to come into her home? Theyâre probably happy sheâs gone.â
I nod slowly, but my body is coiling tight. Candaceâs apartment is only a few blocks away from ours.
âSo it could have been anyone,â I say, glancing down the hall to where Quintenâs playing in his room.
My eyes meet Daliaâs, my earlier calm ebbing away like the moon when it drags out the tide.
She winces when our gazes clash, her tongue swiping out across her lip. âCandace was into a lot of bad shit with a lot of terrible people, Amaya. I doubt it was random.â
âYouâre probably right,â I reply, standing up and moving across the table to her. I lean down and wrap her into a hug. âIâm really sorry about your cousin, Dal.â
I feel her head move against my shoulder, the sound of her shaky breaths in my ear. âYeahâ¦me too.â
Releasing her, I walk down the hall until Iâm peeking into Quintenâs open door, watching as he kneels at the foot of his bed, inspecting his figurines before placing them in perfect rows. âQuin?â I call out. âIâll be back later, okay? Be good for Dalia.â He doesnât acknowledge me, but I know he heard.
âCan I have a hug?â I try again.
This gets his attention, and he drops the toys heâs lining up and rushes over, leaning his body into me with his hands by his sides. He doesnât lift his arms, and he doesnât wrap them around me, but I donât care. This is more than enough.
I breathe in his scent, my heart feeling heavy. âLove you, kid.â
âLove you back,â he murmurs.
I make it to the front door, twisting the knob and stepping outside with one foot before I hesitate, Candaceâs death fresh on my mind. I twist to look at Dalia, whoâs at the sink rinsing out our cups, her back to me.
âDalia,â I say.
She pauses but doesnât turn around.
âLock up behind me, yeah?â
And then Iâm gone to the Chapel, where I can leave Amayaâs problems at the door.