Twisted: Chapter 39
Twisted (Never After Series)
I hated leaving Yasmin this morning. She spent the entirety of last night crying, and I spent mine trying to come to terms with the fact that the only man whoâs been any kind of positive influence on my life is gone forever.
Everything I was trying so hard to take from him seems pointless now.
It was legacy.
Iâve just left his lawyerâs office, having had him draft up a prenuptial agreement, one that protects assets, not any of mine. I donât care if she takes me for all Iâm worth. She could burn Sultans to the ground with me inside, and Iâd die happily, knowing she was queen of the ashes.
But I need to show her that for me, this is real. My penance for being so blinded by greed for so long that I couldnât see the forest for the trees.
Sheâs under no illusion of what this started as, but I want to make sure she knows that if she isnât in my world, it isnât worth living.
Sheâs changed me for the better. In all the ways I care to change, that is.
Iâm not sure that sheâll ever realize the impact sheâs had on me. Iâm a powerful man, and Iâve worked incredibly hard to get to where I am in life. To pull myself from rags to riches and make something of myself.
Thereâs a type of confidence that comes along with that, a sense of pride that I feel, one that I donât think anyone can take away from me.
And the only person who can is about to no longer have access to my life.
I thought about driving to my motherâs house and seeing her in person one last time. All night long, as I was holding Yasmin in my arms, comforting her loss of her father, I imagined what it would feel like if the shoe were on the other foot.
If I lost my mother suddenly, would I cry? Would I feel pain? All that came was longing for the freedom it would provide.
She doesnât deserve my time in person. Iâm protecting myself and the little boy whoâs still living and breathing somewhere deep inside my soul from ever dealing with her abuse again.
People only have the power you give them, and Iâm done giving her mine.
She picks up on the second ring.
âDo you remember when I was little?â I ask instead of saying hello. âAnd you had to take me to the hospital because I had a broken femur?â
âAre you not even greeting your mother now?â she complains.
âJust answer the question.â
âI donât know. You were sick a lot back then.â
âNo.â Anger bubbles like a cauldron deep in my chest. âYou donât get to do that. That femur break was from when you stomped on my leg so hard it fractured, remember?â
âI donât want to talk about this,â she interrupts.
âYou were mad because I got straight As on my report card and it was the first time ever that Papà said he was proud.â
She scoffs.
âProud of . Not of you,â I finish, disgust filling me up until it bleeds from my pores. âYou always were a jealous bitch.â
âHow youâ â she starts.
I cut her off. âIâm no longer interested in entertaining this relationship.â
She lets out a laugh. âPlease, Julian. Iâm your mother.
.â
I wonât lie; her words have the intended effect. They sink into me like hooks, trying to reel me back in, but then I remember what real family is. What it feels like when someone chooses you over everyone else.
My family is Yasmin, and thatâs all Iâll ever need.
âFor years, I felt responsible for you,â I say.
âGood,â she replies.
I shake my head, my eyes growing glossy and my stomach burning like acid. âFive years old and I was your protector. But who was there to protect , Ma? Huh?â
âLook, vita mia, Iâve made mistakes just like anyoneâ â
âYou can keep the house, although I doubt youâll be able to afford it. But weâre done. Do you hear me, Ma? Weâre done.â
âYouâd cut your own mother off?â
âYou have idea what Iâm capable of.â My fingers dig into the side of my phone. âContact me again or bother my wife, and Iâll pay you back for every single pound of flesh. Donât push me, Anita.â
I hang up the phone, blowing out a sigh of relief and running a trembling hand over my face. Invisible chains lift from my shoulders, breaking the tether I felt to her for so many years.
Some people say that family is family, blood is blood. But say that toxic is toxic, and no one is more important than my inner peace, even if it means I lose them for good.
Iâve tried not to bother Yasmin too much today, giving her the space she needs to feel whatever it is sheâs feeling and grieve, but the few text messages I sent her have gone unanswered, so thereâs a niggling feeling thatâs curling around my middle, urging me to hurry home and make sure that sheâs okay.
I pull into my garage and walk inside, noticing immediately that the house feels , and that gut feeling that Iâve had all afternoon about Yasmin grows stronger. I walk through the back hallway from the garage and go immediately up the stairs, walking to our bedroom and peeking inside. I donât see Yasmin, so I turn back around and walk into Isabellaâs enclosure, making my way over to where sheâs lazing on one of the tree branches.
She looks fine, and Yasmin isnât here either, so I turn around and walk back out, making my way through each of the rooms, my heart ratcheting higher into my throat with every step.
My hand goes to the pocket of my pants, and I pull out my staff, elongating it as I check the spaces, just in case. I canât imagine anyone would be able to come in without being in, my security system is far too advanced, but I canât shake off this feeling, and Iâm not going to be foolish and walk through without a weapon.
Sheâs not in any of the rooms upstairs, so I make my way down the steps and head to my office, walking through the door and around to my desk, noticing there are papers on top when I didnât leave them there.
My heart drops to the floor, panic suffusing every single pore of my body when I see whatâs laid out.
I swing around and rush out of the room, now worried that she left of her own volition. I havenât had time to explain how things have changed, how when I fell for her, I fell out of love with the idea of power, because she gives me everything Iâve been missing instead. I hit the entrance to the kitchen, my foot crunching on top of a small piece of green glazed clay.
My stomach twists as I look down at the ground and lift the sole of my shoe up, noticing pieces of a vase thatâs usually in the corner of the hallway stuck beneath my foot.
I take a step farther into the room, the panic of thinking Yasmin left being replaced with something far more sinister when I see the vase is smashed into a hundred pieces on the floor. Drops of blood trail over the ground, and my mouth goes dry when I think about Yasmin lying somewhere, broken and bleeding.
Another step forward, and I see a phone, tossed haphazardly as though it flew from someoneâs hand. I bend over and grab it, then twist and head back to my office, pulling up my computer, an unbearable agony mixing with the anger that someone thought they could come into house and hurt .
I bring up the security cameras and watch.
And when I see Ian smash her over the head, dragging her out to his car, bloodied and unconscious, fury races through my veins like an avalanche.