The Rake (Boston Belles #4)(102)
She was all the things I didn’t want to be. He never questioned her love for him.
Dad closed the fridge, popping open his Bud Light, settling against the opposite counter.
“What’s up, kiddo? How’s that baby growing?” He took a pull of his beer.
Fix it, Mom’s voice urged in my head.
Here went nothing and its best friend nada.
“You cheated on Mom.”
The words came out so mundane, so plain, I’d laugh at how easy it was to say them. The smile on my father’s face remained intact.
“’xcuse me?”
“You cheated on Mom,” I repeated, suddenly feeling my pulse everywhere. My neck, my wrists, behind my eyelids, in my toes. “Don’t try to deny it. I saw you.”
“You saw me?” Dad put his beer down on the counter, folding his arms across his chest, ankles crossed. “When and where, if I may ask? We don’t exactly hang in the same circles.”
He sounded amused more than he was worried, but there was no trace of aggression in his voice.
“In yours and Mom’s bed. A lady with dark red hair. I mean, I say a lady, but what I really mean is a skank. Back in Southie.”
And just like that, the blood drained from his face.
He looked pale. Grave. Scared.
“Emmabelle,” he breathed. “That was …”
“Fifteen years ago,” I finished for him. “Yeah.”
“How …?”
“Came home early from school and walked in on you. I didn’t tell you because I was scared. But I saw her on top of you. I heard you whisper her name. And I never forgot. So tell me, Dad, how’s Sophia doing these days?”
Sophia.
The woman I was sure I saw in supermarkets and parks and on the escalators at Target. The harlot who ruined my parents’ marriage without my mom even knowing about it. Some nights, as I’d lain awake in my bed, I thought I could murder her. Other nights I wondered what made her the way she was. What made her seek pleasure with an unavailable man.
“I …” He looked around him now, seeming lost all of a sudden, like we’d just been transported back to the room where it happened. “I don’t know. I haven’t been in touch with her in years. Years.”
He reached behind him to grab the counter and knocked his beer down on the floor. The glass bottle broke, yellow-white liquid running like a golden river between us.
“How many years?” I asked.
“Fifteen!”
“Don’t lie to me, John.”
“Ten.” He closed his eyes, swallowing hard. “I haven’t seen her in ten years.”
He’d been with her until I was twenty-one.
This wasn’t a fling. It was an affair. Of course it was. He wouldn’t have brought his fling over to his house.
“Why?” I asked.
I wanted to know what was missing in his life. Mom was gorgeous, loyal, and sweet. Persy and I were good kids. Sure, we had stuff, everyone had stuff—money issues, Mom losing her sister to cancer, those sorts of things. Life things. Things we went through together.
“Why did I cheat on your mother?” He looked perplexed.
“Yes. I want to know.”
Neither of us made a move to clean up the mess on the floor.
He rubbed the back of his neck, pushing off the counter and starting to pace back and forth. I followed him with my gaze.
“Look, it wasn’t so easy back then, okay? From the moment your momma quit her job to take care of you two and your Aunt Tilda, may she rest in peace, I wasn’t just the breadwinner—I was the sole provider of the family. And there were medical bills and a fridge to fill, mouths to feed, insurance and a mortgage to pay. Persy had ballet classes, and you had track. Things added up, and I just …” He stopped, flinging his arms helplessly in the air. “I was sinking. Going under. Deep. Your mother didn’t want to touch me. I felt too guilty to even ask. She was watching her sister disappear, little by little. I felt like an employee of the household more than the man of it. And then came Sophia.”
“I’m guessing there’s a pun there,” I muttered sarcastically.
He ignored my barb. “Sophia and I worked in the same office building. At first we took lunches together. It was innocent.”
“I’m sure.” I smiled, surprised to find out I was as bitter as I’d be if it’d happened to me. If it were Devon.
Devon is not yours. Devon is getting married to another woman, probably in the next few months. Apologize profusely and tear the check into tiny pieces or move on with your life.
“She was going through a messy divorce,” Dad explained.
“Cordial divorces are hard to come by,” I quipped. “And the fact you did it in Mom’s bed. Ballsy. There’s a pun there too, by the way.”
“Emmabelle,” he chided softly. “Believe it or not, I did it there because a part of me wanted to get caught. Give me a chance to speak.”
Begrudgingly, I pursed my lips, allowing him to go on.
“I was there for her, and she was there for me. She was a mess. I was falling apart. Throughout all this, your mother and I had drifted apart, until I could no longer remember what it felt like to be her partner, her lover. But it was complicated. I still loved your mom. I wanted to believe I’d get her back, eventually. Our love was just on hold.”