Finding Purgatory (2 page)

Read Finding Purgatory Online

Authors: Kristina M. Sanchez

BOOK: Finding Purgatory
8.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The young woman dropped her gaze. “Oh, gosh. There’s just . . . there’s no easy way to say this. Um. I . . . my name is Tara Bryant. Steven Leung was my fiancé.”

The last two sentences were spoken in such a rush, it took Ani a handful of moments to separate each noise into individual words. When she realized what the young woman had said, the blood drained from her face. “Oh.”

“I’m sorry. It’s . . . maybe it’s awful for me to bother you. I just . . . I had to try. I . . . I know what you must think about Steven. I can’t even imagine. But I wanted you to know that . . . it wasn’t him. I’m not saying he didn’t do it. Obviously, he did it, but that’s not the kind of person he was. Normally, I mean.”

Ani stared at the girl, at a loss for what to think or say.

Steven Leung had broken into her home and invaded a place that should have been private and safe. Steven Leung had shot at a man holding a baby. When Ani ran to the top of the stairs, Steven Leung had rushed at her. Her feet tried to go two directions at once, away from Steven Leung and toward her fallen family, and she’d tumbled down the steps. Steven Leung had looked down at the dead man and baby and injured woman at the bottom of the stairs and shot himself in the head, taking with him any chance Ani had to see justice served.

Ani had no interest in knowing what Tara had to say about what kind of man Steven Leung had been—she knew enough. Her hand braced on the door, ready to slam it shut before she lashed out at this ridiculous girl.

But then again, even if Ani didn’t want to know what kind of a man Steven Leung had been when he wasn’t murdering innocent people, she did have one question no one had been able to answer.

Why?

Swallowing around the lump in her throat, Ani eased her grip on the door and took a step back. “Come in.”

 

Chapter 2: Tori

 

“T
his is bullshit.”
Tori pushed back from the kitchen table, but Shane wrapped his hand around her wrist before she could get far. His hold was loose, but she stopped anyway, glaring daggers at the walls rather than look at him.

“Sit down.” As always, his tone was quiet and unassuming. If it had been her foster parents, the Everetts, the order would’ve been laid out as if by a drill sergeant.
With Shane, it was more like a suggestion.

Tori crossed her arms and sat down. She still refused to look at him. “Do I have a choice here? Do I have to see her?”

“No. But—”

“Then tell her to fuck off.”

“I think you should consider it.”

“Okay. Let me think about it. Hmm. My sister hasn’t seen me in, what, fifteen years? What does she want? Is she dying and she needs one of my kidneys?”

The corner of Shane’s mouth twitched. “She said she just wants to get to know you.”

“Oh, that’s cool, then. We could have a sleepover. Maybe talk about boys. Or maybe she could explain why I suddenly exist to her after all this time. That will give us something to chat about while we trade nail polish. Ooooh. Maybe she can teach me how to braid my hair.” Tori ran her hand through her hair, still not used to how short it was after she’d shorn most of it off the week before.

“Hilarious, Tori.” Shane shifted to lean forward with his hands folded on the table. “You’re in control here. I don’t blame you for not wanting to see her.”

“But . . .”

“But what could it hurt to at least hear what she has to say? I know you’ve had questions about your parents. At least you’d get answers.”

“What does it matter? My parents are dead.”

“Don’t say no right away. Think about it. Family isn’t necessarily the worst thing to have.”

Tori scoffed. “What are you trying to sell? Family is why everyone else is in here.” Of the five foster children in the house, she was the only one who was in the system because she was an orphan.

Shane held his hands up in a placating gesture. “Think it through. You don’t want to look back and wonder what might have happened. You don’t want to have regrets.”

Tori had to laugh. “Oh yeah. That sounds like my life. No regrets here.” She turned away, but his words had triggered a handful of precious memories. She’d been three when her parents died. Her memories of them were reduced to a few blurry images. Her mother was a melodic voice humming her to sleep. Her father was the strong arms that lifted her high into the air so she felt weightless and giddy. Her sister . . .

Almost fifteen years ago, Ani, then nineteen, had kissed her cheeks, cuddled her close, and promised she would be back soon.

“You know what?” Tori turned back to her social worker. “Fine. She wants to see me again, let her come. You’re right. I have a few things to say.”

 

 

“Oh my God, must you always be in my way?” Ariel hip-checked Tori away from the closet they shared and sent her tumbling to the floor.

Rage painted Tori’s vision. Destructive though it could be, fury was always on her side, and it whispered to Tori now, urging her to spring at the spoiled girl. She climbed to her feet, intent on doing just that, when a smaller voice stopped her.

“V, I can’t find my flash drive with my homework.
I can’t find it, and Mr. Ontiveros is gonna flip if I don’t have it!

Tori took a breath and turned away from her wicked foster sister and put on a calming smile for the youngest member of the household. “Chillax, B.”

Brooklyn was only thirteen but had the stress level of a forty-year-old single mother of six. Tori could’ve told her they had all night to find the damn thing, but she knew better. When she was younger, Brooklyn had been beaten by her biological mother when even the smallest thing was out of place, and a missing flash drive was a bigger deal than a misplaced TV remote. The poor girl wouldn’t be able to calm down until she knew where it was

With one last glare at Ariel’s head, Tori went to help Brooklyn find her missing flash drive. As she searched, she tried not to think about Ariel and how much it sucked that the hateful girl was her roommate. Being the Everett’s only biological offspring, it was only natural she was the favorite of all the children in the house, but why that meant she had to strut around like Queen Shit of Turd Island, Tori didn’t know.

By the time she and Brooklyn found the flash drive, Shane was pulling up to the house. Tori rushed back to her room only to find the door locked. She pounded on it.

“Busy,” Ariel yelled.

Tori pounded again. “I need my jeans.” The music coming from behind the door got louder. Tori jiggled the door knob. “Ariel. Open the door.” Pissed as hell, she started to kick and hit at the door at random, screaming as she did. The music blared.

“What the heck is going on up here?”

Tori turned slightly to find her foster mother at the top of the steps, scowling as usual. She strode to Tori and grabbed her hand mid pound. “Haven’t you caused enough headaches today, Vicky? Cut it out.”

“Don’t call me that.” Tori yanked her arm out of Stacey’s grasp and went back to pounding on the door. “I need my jeans.”

“You won’t die without your jeans. Your social worker is here now.” She pressed her palm to Tori’s back, trying to push her in the direction of the stairs. “For once in your life can you not be a pain in the ass?”

Tori pressed her tongue to the roof of her mouth and pushed past Stacey. She didn’t want to go to this meeting in her school slacks, but her need to get away from her foster mother outweighed her need for comfortable pants. She stomped down the stairs and out the door.

“Are you ready for this?” Shane asked as they pulled away.

“Whatever.”

Shane kept up a constant monologue as they drove, but that was his way. The park they were headed to wasn’t far, so Tori didn’t tell him to shut up like she wanted to. She balled her hands in fists, irritated with herself. Her throat was dry and her hands trembled. When they got closer to the park, her heart started to pound.

“She’s already here,” Shane said as he stopped the car. Tori swallowed hard and raised her head.

In her vague memories, Ani was an imposing figure. She was tall and beautiful—glamorous. When she was a very little girl who still played pretend, Tori had dreamed of the day she would be a big girl like Ani.

The woman at the picnic table didn’t look glamorous. She wasn’t as tall as Tori remembered. She was small and short. Her hair, the same shade brown as Tori’s, didn’t flow loose and pretty around her, but was up in a simple ponytail. Tori remembered an Ani whose smile was patient, her lips shiny with lip gloss, with a cute button nose. This woman wore no makeup at all, and she looked tired. Her hands were folded on the table in front of her. Her head was tilted down.

“Are you okay?” Shane asked.

“Why wouldn’t I be?” Tori got out of the car.

The sound of the car door shutting brought Ani’s head up. Tori froze. A weird sensation curled around her stomach. She didn’t care about her stranger-sister at all, was only going to this meeting to get Shane off her back, but when she saw Ani, her heart twisted with a hurt she didn’t realize was a bone-deep part of her.

Ani pushed herself to her feet, her face blank. Gritting her teeth, Tori shook whatever she was feeling away. She didn’t want it, and this chick didn’t deserve it. She was nothing to Tori—a stranger.

Tori strode forward and plopped down on the bench across from Ani, flashing a grin that was all teeth. “Hey, sis.”

If she was shocked, Ani didn’t show it. She cocked her head, looking Tori over. Her smile was small and fake. “Hi, Victoria. I’m glad to see you.”

“Well, I guess that makes one of us.”

Ani’s brow furrowed, but Shane stepped up to them then. “Shane McCarty. We spoke on the phone.” The shook hands. “I brought some soda for us. You like Pepsi?” He took the chance to give Tori a glance that reinforced what he’d been saying in the car. He was there for her.

Tori rolled her eyes, but she took a Pepsi. A few gulps and her throat didn’t resemble the Sahara.

“I’ll take one. Thank you,” Ani said. “And thank you for bringing my sister.”

Shane nodded. “I’ll let you talk.” He only moved as far as the opposite end of the picnic table and took out his phone.

Ani turned to Tori and opened her mouth, then closed it again. Tori raised an eyebrow, not about to help her. Her sister reached into her pocket and took out what looked like a credit card. She held it up. “It’s a prepaid card. It’s almost Christmas. I wanted to bring something, but I figured I didn’t have a clue what you might like. I—”

“Keep it. I don’t want anything from you.”

Ani’s eyebrows furrowed. “I’d like you to have it. It wasn’t any trouble—”

“I don’t really give a crap how much trouble it was or wasn’t. I don’t want it. In case you missed it the first time, I don’t really want to see you.”

Tori expected Ani to look hurt, but she didn’t. She seemed more confused than anything. “If you didn’t want to see me, why did you agree to this?”

Her tone was steady. If she wanted to play it cool, Tori could play that game. She crossed her arms and brought her feet up on the bench. “Tell me a bedtime story, sissy. I figure you wander back after all this time, the reason must be good. I’m not up to donating any bone marrow or organs if that’s what you want.”

“I don’t . . . I don’t need anything from you. That’s not what this is about.”

“So what is it about?”

Something dark flitted across her sister’s features before the smooth mask was back. “I met a woman about a month ago whose fiancé had just died. She told me about him. How he’d spent the first five years of his life in a car with his mother before ending up in the foster care system. He had problems in school. She told me his first foster family gave him up because they didn’t have time to help him. His second family thought he was being stubborn and punished him by not letting him play with the other kids. He was with three other families, and none of them helped him.”

“So some asshole you met couldn’t get through school. What does that have to with me? You want to help me with my homework?”

Ani didn’t rise to her bait. “It was a domino effect. He ended up in a bad place, and he . . . he did something he couldn’t come back from. I don’t know.” She glanced at Shane and back at Tori. “I had this idea in my head that when children go into the system, they’re taken care of. You hear that people, kids, slip through the cracks, but I didn’t want to believe it was true. I started to wonder if you were as okay as I thought you were.”

“Oh, I’m fucking fine and dandy.”

Ani looked up. “I didn’t know. I really didn’t know about the adoption not going through. If I’d have known—”

“You know what, no. Shut up. I’m not an idiot. Mom and Dad died, and you didn’t want to get stuck with a needy three-year-old. Whatever. But don’t sit there and act like you regret it. You didn’t have to walk away, and you did.”

“Victoria—”

“Hey, newsflash, sister dear. I survived. You can go back to whatever you were doing before you remembered me.”

“That’s not what I want.”

“So you do want something. Color me surprised.”

“Take it down a notch,” Shane said.

Tori threw her arms wide as she looked back to Ani. “Sorry. Go ahead. Tell me what you want. I am all ears.” She crossed her arms and stared, vindicated when Ani shifted under her gaze.

Ani breathed in through her nose and out again. “I suppose I can’t tell you what I would have done if I’d known your adoption didn’t go through. It was a long time ago. I was nineteen when Mom and Dad died. Things that made sense to me then wouldn’t make sense to me now. That’s not an excuse, but there it is.”

“Well, I feel better. Do you? Can you fuck off now?”

“I . . .” It was gratifying to Tori to see Ani’s cool demeanor thrown off, to see her sputter. Ani huffed and looked down at her lap before she tried again. “I want you to know I’m here now. If you need something, anything, I can help.”

“I don’t need anything from you.”

“You’re going to be eighteen in a few more months. Do you need help with college or some place to live or—”

“You want to give me something? How about you get out of my face, because I don’t want to see you. Ever. That’s what I need. Can you give me that?”

Other books

Nine Coaches Waiting by Mary Stewart
Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor by Gabriel García Márquez
A Saint on Death Row by Thomas Cahill
A New Life by Stephanie Kepke
Changing Hearts by Marilu Mann
Spy Games by Gina Robinson