Breaking Her (Love is War #2)(54)


Where to even begin?

I felt my head shake. A slow, precise movement. A little to the right, a little to the left.

It was enough. So simple but so telling.

Her face froze. "That," she said dully. "Of course. For how long?"

"You know," I said.

I watched as comprehension struck. It was a terrible thing.

The look in her eyes would haunt me. To the end of my days. Haunted.

Like everything with us, the hurt cut both ways.

"She made you break up with me." She said it like she didn't quite believe it.

You'd think the truth would be less harmful than the lies I'd told her. But sometimes the truth is the hardest thing to stomach, especially if you knew that some part of you should have seen it all along.

"Of course." Two words. Straightforward. Brutal in their simplicity.

She jerked like she'd been struck, her blinking eyes searching the room frantically, looking anywhere but at me.

"When you made that phone call," she paused, "both of those phone calls," she corrected herself. "She was with you, wasn't she?" Her voice broke on the question, her tone so raw it made my chest ache and my eyes sting.

But I answered her. "Of course."

And there it was.

She staggered where she stood. I was over in a beat, going to her, but I was a second too late. She had collapsed to the floor.

I'd only ever seen her once like this, bowed in on herself. Broken, bent, boneless in her pain. A pile on the floor.

Completely defeated. Destroyed.

Even with the way I'd known, because I had absolutely known, that I'd broken her heart, the pain of it had never made her shoulders less straight. Her pride, which was both the bane of my existence and one of the things that'd saved us both, had only ever left her one time before.

And now.

I scooped her up in my arms and carried her to bed. She was shaking and crying. The sobs quiet but powerful, rocking her entire body in waves until she was convulsing against me.

I'd hurt her, and myself more. I'd had to lie, had to, but I wished I could make her believe one truth: Her pain was always worse for me than my own.

She was inconsolable, sobbing in my arms like her heart was breaking all over again.

Eventually she spoke, haltingly and in near incoherent fragments. "The things we've done to each other. . . . The things we've done to ourselves . . . You don't know . . ."

"It's all in the past," I murmured into her forehead. I was running my hand over her head, over and over, petting her. It was an old familiar gesture, the way I always used to comfort her before our lives had gone to shit. "We can put it in the past and leave it there. We can move on. We will find a way to move on," I told her, the words ringing desperate because I was trying to convince myself, as well.

"You don't know," she sobbed brokenly. "You don't know."

I shut my eyes, old, familiar pain washing over me. My voice was thick with emotion when finally I said, "I do know. We both do now. All that's left is to move forward."

She started shaking her head and didn't stop. "No. No. You don't know. You don't know."

"What don't I know, angel? Tell me. I'll try to fix it, whatever it is."

But she wouldn't say. She was done talking and back to weeping. She was so upset she'd bitten her lips bloody. She didn't seem to notice, her eyes shut tight, but I did.

It was another thing I'd only seen her do one time before.

Quietly and firmly, with my fingers, I made her stop.

"Shh. Shh. It's okay," I soothed her, blotting at her lips with my shirt.

All the while, my heart was breaking all over again.

She didn't ask me any more questions that night, and I was relieved.

We'd both reached our threshold on suffering for the moment.

I hoped that the worst was past us, but I've never had much luck with hope.





CHAPTER

TWENTY-THREE

"Life is hard. After all, it kills you."

~Katharine Hepburn





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SCARLETT





"Do you know the kind of trouble that old bitch has gotten me into? Do you even care that you're messing with my career? All I've ever done is care about you and try to do right by you, and this is how you repay me?" Harris spoke to me in a low, mean voice, pitched quiet enough that his words didn't carry beyond his usual stalking booth in the diner.

That was the first time I started to get a real sense that he was delusional. He seemed to have some idea in his head of what our relationship was, and it was not even remotely close to reality.

"I don't know what you're talking about," I said stoically. I started to move away.

"Vivian Durant. She's been prying into my actions, questioning my methods. She went over my head, to my superiors, and, because she's filthy rich, they're listening to her."

Finally an encouraging development. It made me feel brave enough to say, "Good. Maybe you should stop bothering me every day. Maybe you should give up on stalking teenage girls altogether if you don't want to get into trouble for it."

I dodged away when I saw the look on his face. If we'd been alone with him looking at me like that . . . I'd have been very concerned for my safety.

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