When the great Earl Edric Astor says heâs having a family meeting, everyone must drop to their knees and listen.
Well, not exactly, but something like that.
So weâre all here in the dining room. And by we, I mean, Mum, Eduard the fucker, Lars â because weâve basically adopted him â and yours truly.
Mum sits at the head chair, or more like Dad sat her on it while he stands behind her. Sheâs wearing a beige dress that makes her appear paler, or maybe sheâs been paler than usual.
Lars, like any adopted child, doesnât want to tell me why Mumâs cold has been going on longer than ever. Heâs after the parentsâ favour.
But he still stands beside me, not taking a seat. Itâs like heâs expecting an order of tea and wouldnât want to miss it when it arrives.
Eduard is across from me, throwing a glance my way now and again. Heâs wearing a purple suit that makes him look like a clown.
I shake my head at that image.
He keeps touching his tie, which means heâs nervous as fuck. He probably thinks I talked to Dad or something. I play a dick card and let him think that.
Be nervous, Ed.
I hope you stay nervous until the end of your miserable life.
I retrieve my phone discreetly under the table. There are text messages from my friends. I changed the group chatâs name to The Four Fuckers, like weâre four musketeers. Xan said there are only three musketeers and Cole just changed the name back to The Fuckers.
He has no imagination.
I try to pretend Iâm interested in their texts, but Iâm not, so I go straight to Tealâs messages.
Nothing.
Empty.
Nada.
She hasnât acknowledged my existence since that night. Okay, so maybe throwing my childhood trauma on her all at once wasnât my brightest moment.
And okay, admitting I have no pride when it comes to her is frowned upon in Ron Astor the Secondâs playbook, but sheâs not any girl.
Sheâs Teal.
I canât fight the need to be with her every waking moment. I want to hold her, and maybe if I do so tightly enough, sheâll eventually open up to me, too.
Maybe sheâll feel safe enough to tell me why she puts up walls after we have sex or when she sleeps in my arms.
It canât be the depravity â she loves that as much as I do. Itâs a game we play, and itâs a damn good one at that. I hope to hell itâs not the performance, because Ron Astor the Second and his legendary size would take a rope to his neck, and thatâd be a fucking tragedy.
Maybe I need to kidnap Knox and torture the answers out of him.
Or not.
Kidnapping and torturing your future brother-in-law is frowned upon in ninety-nine per cent of cultures.
Besides, I want her to be the one who tells me, not him.
But if she thinks she can run away from me by skipping school, she must not know me.
Iâm an Astor. We donât stop.
My great-great-grandfather brought his wife from Africa. When his family didnât agree, he kind of gave them the middle finger and married her anyway. Or rather, he pestered her until she agreed to marry him.
Iâm that type of Astor.
He camped out all the way in Africa â Iâm lucky I just need to camp out in front of the Steel household.
âRonan.â
I lift my head from my phone at Dadâs voice, realising Iâve been staring at the lack of texts for way too long.
âNo phones,â Lars whispers. âHow hard is it to follow that simple instruction, young lord?â
I glare at him and he feigns nonchalance, staring at Dad.
I grin, sliding the phone in my pocket. âPlease, proceed. I apologise for my inadequate behaviour.â
Dad must sense the sarcasm in my overly posh tone, but he brushes it off. âWeâre here because your mother and I need you to know a few things.â
âAnother trip?â I scoff. âOh, wait â is it the Maldives this time?â
âMon chouâ¦â Mumâs eyes fall downwards, and I wish I could somehow stab myself in the balls. The jab was supposed to be at Dad, not her. Heâs the one whoâs always whisking her off somewhere.
âRonan,â Dad scolds.
I stand up. âIâm not interested in your destinations, Dad. Lars needs the details.â
âDonât you need the dates, though?â Dad snaps back. âSo you can throw your endless parties.â
âLarsâ¦â I stare at him incredulously. âYou bloody traitor.â
âLanguage,â Dad scolds. âAnd Iâm speaking to you, not Lars. You really thought something could go on under my roof and I would know nothing about it?â
Yes, Dad. It already fucking happened.
It takes everything in me not to stare at Eduard. Iâm trying to erase him from existence.
âWhat are you trying to prove with all those parties, Ronan? The drinking? The weed? The alcohol?â Dadâs voice turns more lethal with every word. âDo you think youâre a kid?â
âNot anymore,â I say, and this time, my eyes slide to Eduard. He squirms in his seat, smoothing out his tie.
âTake it easy, Edric.â He smiles, as if trying to alleviate the tension.
Fuck him.
And fuck Dad.
And even Lars, the fucking traitor.
âStop it.â Mumâs voice turns brittle. âPlease.â
In a second, Dad is by her side, grabbing her by the shoulder.
I turn to leave. I have no time for family drama, and if I spend one more second in the same room as Eduard the fucker, Iâll jam a knife in his throat, and once again, murder is frowned upon in ninety-nine per cent of cultures.
âMon chou, donât go,â Mum pleads.
âIâll speak to you later, Mother.â
âThereâs no later.â Dadâs booming voice stops me in my tracks. âSheâs dying.â
I whirl around so fast Iâm surprised I donât fall on my face. The words he said echo like doom in the asphyxiating silence.
I see them in a different light now.
Dad placing his hands on my motherâs shouldersâ¦her pale face and the tears gathering in her eyesâ¦Lars staring at me with sorrowâ¦
He knew.
He fucking knew.
âWhat did you just say?â I whisper.
âYour mother has uterine cancer, and she has always suffered from immunodeficiency disorder. The cancer relapsed a year ago, and the surgeries failed.â
âWhat do you mean theyâve failed? And why am I just learning about this now?â
âIt was me.â Mum stands up and nearly drops back down. Fuck. When did she become this weak? Why havenât I noticed that she usually only speaks to me while sitting or in her bed?
I run to her and force her to sit down then kneel by her side.
She strokes my hair back. âI asked your father and Lars not to tell you. You were my miracle, mon chou. When I first married your father, the doctor told me I couldnât have kids because of my immunodeficiency disorder. Four years after, I found out I was pregnant and begged your father to let me bring you into the world. Nine months later, you came along, and I was the happiest woman alive. You gave me the privilege of being a mother. The moment the nurse put you in my arms, I cried like a baby while you smiled. Itâs weird, isnât it?â
Her voice catches, and something in my throat does, too. âThe cancer started when you were around eight and we thought we got rid of it back then, but it came back last year. Thatâs why weâve been going on those trips, mon chou. Youâre so young and lively, and I didnât want to put this burden on you.â
âBurden?â My voice breaks. âWhat are you talking about? Youâre my mother.â
âItâs because Iâm your mother that I have to protect you.â A tear falls down her cheek. âBut I canât disappear from your life anymore. I hate it more than anything in the world.â
âYou wonât.â I stare at Dad, whoâs watching us with furrowed brows.
âWe have results to pick up next week,â he says.
âThatâs good news, right?â I stare between them, and the silence nearly suffocates me.
âThe doctors said I only have a fifteen per cent chance of survival, and I failed on a fifty per cent chance before, so we donât have much hope.â
âButâ¦but thereâs chemotherapy andââ
âNo,â Mum cuts me off. âIâm not doing chemo again.â
âSheâs refusing that.â Dadâs forehead scrunches.
âAnd youâre agreeing?â I snap.
âChemo will only keep me away from you, and then I will die in pain without seeing your face.â She cups my cheek. âI donât want that.â
âI wonât leave your side.â I grab her hands harder. âDonât do this, Mother. You canât leave me. Iâm your miracle, remember?â
âItâs because youâre my miracle that I want to spend whatever time I have left with youâ¦â She trails off, a sob catching in her throat. âPlease, Iâm begging you and Edric to not take this away from me.â
She brushes a trembling kiss on my temple, and her tears drop onto my cheeks as she stands up and starts to leave the room. I try to help her, but Dad holds me back with an arm on my shoulder.
Instead, he motions at Lars to follow her.
âShe feels weak when she canât walk on her own,â Dad tells me after she disappears. âThe therapist says to be there for her without making her feel weak.â
âHow could you not tell me this?â I throw all my anger and frustration on my father. âHow could you keep me in the dark about something as important as this?â
âYou heard her. She wanted it this way.â
âOr maybe you made her believe she wanted it. After all, the decisions are always yours and everyone else has to follow.â
âRonan, I understand this is hard for you ââ
âHard.â I laugh. âTry something stronger than fucking hard.â
âEdric, Iâll justâ¦â Eduard motions at the entrance.
The fuck.
I forgot he was here all along.
âNo, wait.â Dad motions at him. âI need to discuss business decisions with you. Stay the night.â
âBusiness decisions,â I scoff. âWith dear Uncle Ed.â
âMaybe you need to cool your head, Ronan,â Dad says.
âFucking maybe.â
I throw one last glare at Eduard before I storm out of the dining room. I go straight to my parentsâ bedroom, but Lars stops me before I go in, telling me Mum needs rest.
I tell him weâre not speaking until he dies then I go to my room, open my laptop, and search everything about my mumâs condition. Then I stop and catch my breath, because sometimes, as I read about the effects and the shit she went through, I feel like thereâs no air in the room.
I spend an entire night like that, researching then staring at the ceiling, thinking Iâll lose my mum then going back to researching again.
In the early morning, I go to Lars and tell him weâre calling a truce so he can tell me all he knows. Apparently, on that nightmare night, Mum and Dad didnât leave me because of a Halloween party, but because Mum had intense pain, and as soon as they got to the hospital, she was admitted and diagnosed.
All the overseas trips were to a private clinic where Mum had to stay with her regular doctor.
The reason they came back after the last surgery is because Mum couldnât take staying in the hospital anymore and wanted to be with me.
Her depression has been reduced since they returned, which her doctor says is a good sign, but they wonât know anything until the test results come out.
âNot telling you was entirely her ladyshipâs choice,â Lars tells me after heâs done with his retelling. âDonât blame your father for it. Heâs suffering as much as her. Why do you think he has that scoundrel taking care of business? Itâs so he can devote all his attention to your mother.â
I point a finger at him. âTruce over. Weâre not on speaking terms.â
âTea?â He offers me a cup.
âNot speaking, Lars.â I leave his kitchen, and just like that, I find myself in front of her room again.
I place a hand on the door, and for a second, I feel like that kid who called her name and got no reply in return.
I can live in a world where Iâm protecting Mum by burying the truth inside, but how can I live in a world where she doesnât exist?
I have no idea how long I stand there, breathing harshly, feeling as if Iâm about to combust.
Itâs long enough that I slide down to the floor in front of the door with my back to the doorframe. Itâs long enough that I relive all the stories she used to tell me when I was a child.
They all had happy endings, because she has always been a romantic at heart.
She always loved too much, cared too much, so why the fuck is this happening to her?
Charlotte Astor is one of the good ones. She does charity. She gives and gives and takes nothing in return. She loves and cares, so why the fuck did cancer choose her? Why didnât it hit a lowlife like Ed?
Or even me?
I pull out my phone and go straight to my conversation with Teal. Thereâs no new text.
It doesnât matter. I can call her, visit her.
Fuck my pride.
I need her like Iâve never needed anything before. I just need to hug her, and thatâs it.
A hug.
I call her, but she doesnât pick up.
If sheâs grown attached to clingy texts then thatâs what sheâll get.
âSir.â Larsâs shadow falls on me.
âWeâre still not talking.â
âSir.â
âAnd I donât want fucking tea.â
âRonan,â he says sharply.
âWhat?â I snap, finally looking up at him.
He holds out a folded piece of cream-coloured paper.
âI donât know where my father is. Sorry â his lordship.â
âHe went out for an early-morning meeting.â Lars thrusts the letter in my face. âThis came for you.â
For me? Who the fuck sends letters anymore?
âWho is it from?â I ask.
âMiss Teal.â Lars raises an eyebrow. âShe left with his lordship.â
Teal sent me a letter then went somewhere with Dad? Why would she do that?
Ah, fuck.
Sheâs not thinking about ending the engagement, is she?
I open the letter, and my heart nearly stops beating.