Sweet Agony (Sweet Series Book 1) (17 page)

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Authors: Jessie Lane

Tags: #Romance, #Military, #New Adult & College, #Military Romance;

BOOK: Sweet Agony (Sweet Series Book 1)
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With his free hand, he knocked on the glass partition separating us from the driver, and the car moved forward, merging into traffic. He didn’t move his eyes from my own, and although I was scared shitless of him, some part deep inside wondered what he saw as he looked at the daughter he hadn’t seen in sixteen years.

A beloved daughter returned to him? Or a nuisance he wanted to get rid of once and for all?

I was terrified of learning his answer would be the latter. Not just because every woman wanted their father to love them, even if they were a deranged, dangerous man, but because—in my case—my life might be on the line.

Hopefully, my mother was right in her belief that, deep down, she felt my father was still the good man she had fallen in love with. However, as I stared into those seemingly soulless eyes of his, I wondered just how deep down that part of him was buried, if it was there at all.

He finally pulled his gaze from mine to turn his head and look at my mother. Grabbing the hair at the back of her head gently, he then turned her so she was looking back at him. I couldn’t be sure if it was the dim lighting through the tinted windows or just my wild imagination, but I could swear a look of tenderness passed over his face for a split second.

“I almost didn’t recognize you with your hair styled so short, darling.”

If he thought mom’s short hair was drastic, I would hate to see how my father would have reacted to all the different hair colors she had tried over the years.

He ran his fingers through the short strands of mother’s bob in an almost loving inspection. The sight reminded me of a movie I had watched about a man who had obsessively stalked a naive woman he ended up killing.

A shiver went down my spine at the thought. Now was not the time to lose my shit, so I pushed the morbid thoughts away in order to stay in the moment.

“It might be fashionable on other women, but you know I prefer your hair long.”

Well, that comment certainly didn’t help me forget about my creepy, stalker slash killer movie comparison! However, he was my father; thus, I would try to stay positive and hope for the best, despite the fact that I was positively scared shitless. Perhaps the years had changed him and he wasn’t the scary monster I had thought he was when I had been a little girl.

“My beautiful girls are back with me where they belong.”

An unexpected part of me softened at his quietly spoken declaration. Maybe Mom was right; my father was good somewhere deep in his bones.

“Now you’ll tell me everything about where you’ve been all these years, or there will be consequences, and those consequences will be dire, my love. If I have to figure it out on my own, I’ll go and wipe out every person who’s helped you in any way, shape, or form, even if it includes burning the mailman alive in your old driveway.”

Nope. It looked like my father really was a psychopath.

Chapter

13

Lucas

One Month Later …

“Mom, what’s going on over there?”

I was stationed in the middle of hell, and my life was slowly unraveling on the other side of the world. To say I was hanging on by a thread would be the biggest understatement of my life.

My left hand held the phone so tightly I heard the plastic groan from the pressure over the sound of my mother’s hysterical sobbing through the phone.

I had called my parents’ house because I had received something in the mail today that had all but ripped my beating heart from my chest—a letter from Ginny.

My hopes had soared at the sight of that familiar handwriting on the outside of the envelope. I had written Gin several times before leaving for my deployment, unable to give her space. Something inside had told me it was imperative that I make my angel understand I was sorry for everything I had done. It was vital to get her to talk to me so I could finally give her the three words I should have told her years ago.

I love you.

All of my hope had been crushed after opening that envelope, though. Then, once I tried to find answers from my sister, my gut warned me that shit back home was a lot worse than I’d feared when I had gotten my mother, instead.

My mother’s sniffles were breaking my heart almost as much as the words she was giving me.

“Mrs. DuBois died last month in some freak car accident,” she rambled.

Just hearing those words was enough to tell me how distraught my mother still was from losing one of her closest friends. “I know Gin’s mom died, Ma. You told me that the day after it happened—last time I called. What I want to know is if they figured out why she had the accident.”

“From what poor Ginny explained to us, her brakes went out, and she slammed into a huge tree after she lost control of the car. She was going downhill, and her car was going so fast that, when it slammed into the tree, it exploded. There was nothing left of her by the time the fire trucks got to the scene.

“I’m so worried about her, Lucas! She’s not talking to anyone. She’s losing weight. Our sweet Ginny needs us now more than ever!” By the end of her speech, my mother was crying so hard she could barely speak.

I heard my sister taking the phone away from her as my father coaxed his overwhelmed wife away to calm down.

I completely understood how my dad felt right then. There wasn’t anything I wouldn’t give to be able to comfort the woman I loved, and I couldn’t. I would soon learn my troubles didn’t end there, though.

“Lucas?” Olivia’s watery voice asked.

Logically, I knew my sister had suffered right along with my mother, even Ginny, over Mrs. DuBois’s death. Unfortunately, I wasn’t feeling very logical at the moment.

I was torn between anger at myself for being half a world away from everyone who needed me and fear that I was somehow on the verge of losing more than I had ever thought I would.

“Why the fuck didn’t you tell me what’s going on with her?” I snapped at Olivia, knowing I shouldn’t take out my frustration and worry on my sister, but the overwhelming feeling of helplessness had taken over.

Men like me didn’t do helplessness. If something was wrong, we fixed it.

I couldn’t fix this. Not for Ginny. And that meant I had failed my girl again.

Maybe it was irrational thinking, but it was all that was swirling around in my head. My girl had lost her mother, and I hadn’t even been there to hold her hand to comfort her.

“It’s not like I can call you, Lucas!” Olivia snapped back. “Mom and I both wrote letters, trying to let you know what’s going on, but they must not have gotten there yet. I couldn’t send you a Red Cross message, because Mrs. DuBois wasn’t a direct family member, and neither is Ginny. I did everything I could.”

Olivia wasn’t the only one who had written letters. I had written one to Gin every day since I had received the news Mrs. DuBois had died, begging her to pick up the phone when I called, doing my best to put into meager words just how sorry I was that she had lost her mother. I knew it took time to process mail from deployed soldiers, but I also knew she had received at least my first few letters already and had chosen to ignore my phone calls, anyway. Not exactly the reaction I was hoping for. No, the epitome of all my damn nightmares was what I received from Gin today.

I tried to run my hand through my hair but couldn’t; Ginny’s letter was still clutched in that hand. As a result, I stood there with my fist clutching her devastating words, resting on the top of my head.

Everyone in the room around me knew bad shit was going down for me, and they were either leaving the room or moving farther away to give me space, not that it mattered.

If I had thought I was standing in hell before, I knew better now. Hell wasn’t a desert with an enemy trying to blow you up with roadside bombs. Hell was being half a world away from the woman you loved while she went through the worst moment of her life, and she didn’t want a goddamn thing to do with you.

All the proof I needed that Gin wanted absolutely nothing to do with me was written in black, daintily scrawled ink on the paper I was clutching in my fist as if my life depended on never letting it go.

That one piece of paper contained the embodiment of my worst fears. It told me in no uncertain terms that she had finally given up on me and decided to move on from her foolish dreams of being in love with me, something I would have gone out of my way to dissuade her of if it weren’t for her parting line.

If you have ever cared for me in any capacity, Lucas, if the years between us have meant anything at all, I ask that you respect my request for no further contact. Don’t write me any more letters and don’t call me anymore. I need some time to process everything that’s happened. If you can’t do that, then I’ll be forced to sever all of my ties with your entire family, even Olivia. Please, don’t make me do that.

The knowledge that I had hurt my angel so badly she was willing to give up the only pseudo-family outside of her mother that she had ever known was a brutal blow to my conscious.

Could I take that chance of pushing her away from any semblance of family she had left?

A desperate part of me wanted to run home, drop to my knees, apologize for every shitty thing I had ever done to her, and then tell her I was so fucking sorry I wasn’t there for her when she needed me. I couldn’t do that, though, since the Army would waste no time labeling me a deserter before throwing my ass in the brig.

I could say all that in a letter, but what if, in her grief and devastation, that letter finally pushed her over whatever fragile sanity she was holding on to, and she really did turn her back on my family who loved her so much, just to get away from me?

I couldn’t take that chance. I couldn’t let my angel be completely alone in the world.

Since she wouldn’t turn to me, I had to agree to her request so she would at least have my family to turn to. It was the least I could do for fucking things up so badly between us.

When you loved someone, you were supposed to make them happy and build them up with your love. In my ridiculous attempts to push away the woman I knew was meant for me alone, due to my insecurities and doubts, I had shredded the amazing gift of love I had been given.

The bad news didn’t end there, however. What Olivia said next between her hysterical sobs was enough to send chills down my spine.

“She’s leaving, Lucas. She’s leaving, and I don’t know how to stop her!”

“What the fuck do you mean she’s leaving?” I growled, my voice cracking, which caught the attention of a few of the guys in the room with me, but I couldn’t bring myself to answer their concerned looks.

“She came over two days ago to tell Mom and me that she accepted a job in Chicago. Why would Ginny leave us after she lost her mom like that?”

Because I had probably finally pushed her away, not that I was going to admit my mistakes to my little sister. I didn’t think I could get the words out of my mouth if I wanted to. Not just because I was too proud to admit I had screwed it all up, but mainly because my heart hurt so much right now that I was half convinced I was having a heart attack.

I had done this—well, me and fate. I’d pushed and pushed and pushed her away until I had broken her, and then fate had come in and taken her mother away, too.

There was absolutely no one to blame but myself, and even though it went against every fiber of my being, I was going to give my angel exactly what she wanted from me now.

Absolutely nothing.

I wasn’t going to call her, and I wasn’t going to write her a letter or mail her another postcard.

It was the least I could do for the woman I loved.

Even if it destroyed me.

Blowing out a weary breath, I broke the silence between my sister and me. “Listen up, Olivia, and listen good. I know you’re worried and upset about her leaving, but you’re going to keep your opinions to yourself and help your best friend through this. That means you’re going to go over to her house, help her pack up her shit, and then tell her you’ll always be there if she needs you. And you’re going to do all of that without giving her any shit, you got me?”

“How can you say that, Lucas? Why would you want me to help her leave us when she needs to stay here where we can take care of her?”

“Because it’s not about us, Olivia. It’s about her, and she obviously needs this right now, so you’re going to have her back like a best friend should. If we’re lucky, after she’s been in Chicago a while, she’ll decide to come back home.”

“I can’t believe you’re telling me this! How in the hell could you give up on her like this? I thought you cared about her!”

What small hold I had on my temper snapped.

“I love Gin, so I’m giving her what she asked me for in the letter she sent me—time. I’m hoping that, if I give her what she wants, she’ll get over the pain I caused and talk to me when I get home. Now, get over yourself and help your best friend with what she wants to do. This isn’t about you, and it isn’t about me. It’s about what Ginny needs, and apparently, right now she needs to get away from it all. Weren’t you the one who told me not too long ago that she needed space?”

Olivia was quiet for a moment before she whispered, “You love her?”

Huffing in resignation, I finally answered, “Yeah … I do. Too bad I screwed it up so badly she doesn’t want anything else to do with me. Since I haven’t been able to tell her that yet, that means you keep your big mouth shut about it. I’ve made mistakes—big ones—and I have to find a way to show her.”

There was a loaded silence, and then Olivia quietly said, “Okay, Lucas.”

I let out a small sigh of relief that I was at least able to help my girl in some small way by reining my crazy-ass sister in to help Ginny instead of giving her grief. It wasn’t much, but it was all I could do at the moment.

Tired and very defeated from the reality of my situation with my angel, I gave my sister one last order before getting off the phone. “Let me know when she leaves and give me her new address when you get it from her.”

“Okay, Lucas. Take care of yourself over there.”

“Don’t worry about me, Olivia. I’ll be okay as long as I know Gin is.”

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