Nate is gone.
He disappeared the same day my life shattered to pieces after I learned Iâve had a mother all along who didnât know I existed.
The same day my dad threatened to remove her from my life again.
The same day I cried until there were no tears left, then instead of going home, I went to Nateâs apartment because I needed him. Not anyone else, just him.
Heâs the only one whoâs able to chase away the chaos and make me feel at peace.
Heâs the only one I think of when my world splinters to pieces. Itâs not that he mends it togetherâheâs not my fixer. Heâs just the other half who helps me in being me.
In fighting away the emptiness.
But he wasnât there and his phone was turned off.
So I called Sebastian and he said he had no clue where his uncle was. He still doesnât. Because Nate left nothing behind and the perpetrator is my father.
I could feel it deep down in my heart that Dad had something to do with it. Not only did he drive Nate away, but he also made him the devil and said heâs no good for me.
âThis is what people like Nate do, Angel. Once they get what they want, they leave without a word.â
I didnât want to believe him. I still donât most of the time, but itâs been two weeks. Two whole weeks of not sleeping or eating properly, because every time I do, his face comes to mind. Vanilla milkshakes, ice cream, and cupcakes donât taste the same without him.
Theyâre flavorless.
Just like my life.
Dad denies sending him away, saying that it was his choice and he canât make Nate do anything. I agree, he canât. He wasnât successful in forcing him to divorce me, so how did he make him leave me?
And now of all times. When I needed him more than anything.
At first, I didnât believe it, so I searched everywhere. I checked at every W&S branch in case he changed locations, but heâs at none of them. Then I was mad at him for leaving without notice, then I fell into that empty hole that has no way out. Iâm in that phase right now.
The sadness. The damning sadness with no end in sight.
Nothing makes sense anymore and Iâm waiting for a change that wonât happen. An end that wonât come.
Every day, I come to the firm and stare at his closed office door, and sometimes, I just sneak in there and take a nap on his sofa. The same sofa where he fucked me and whispered dirty words to me.
The same sofa that he told me to sit on and behave so I wouldnât distract him, but I ended up being a brat anyway.
Thatâs where Iâm lying right now. On his sofa, hugging my knees to my chest and breathing him in, because I donât have much of his smell left. Itâs been disappearing over time and soon enough, itâll vanish just like he did.
Soon, Iâll go back to that hollowing emptiness with no change in sight.
The door clicks open and I jump to a sitting position, thinking itâs Dad. I could swear he saw me come out of here the other day, but he didnât comment on it. Maybe that was a one-time thing and he wonât let it slide this time.
I really donât want to fight with him. We barely talk at home and thatâs painful enough as it is.
But itâs not him who walks inside. Itâs Aspen.
My mother, Aspen. I still canât wrap my mind around it, so I donât. Itâll just go away with time, or thatâs what Iâd like to believe.
Every time she sees me, she tries to talk to me, but I just bolt or hide because I canât face her. Because I hated her, was jealous of her for very illogical reasons.
And now that Iâve learned about our biological relations, itâs even harder to come to terms with my previous feelings for her.
Despite knowing her reasons and that she didnât really abandon me, that she was so young when she had me, Iâm unable to beat those facts into my brain.
So I opt to run again, avoid her again. Maybe Dad was right and I can pretend she didnât happen.
But thatâs a lie, isnât it?
She was always there, at the back of my mind, and during every birthday where I cried because she didnât want me.
Turns out, that was never the case.
I mourned you. She said. Every year, I mourned you.
She appears flawless in her dark blue pantsuit with her red hair falling to her shoulders. As always. Sheâs the most elegant, classy woman Iâve ever seen.
âPlease donât go.â She stops a safe distance away, not attempting to take a seat. âI justâ¦want to talk to you.â
âWe never talked in the past. You hated me and I hated you.â
âI never hated you. I justâ¦hate your father, and you were an extension of him, in a way, but not anymore. Youâre an extension of me, too.â
âNo, Iâm not. I told you, I donât want anything to do with you.â
âI know and I understand, but I just want a chance, no matter how small, just one chance to prove that I care, that I always have. A few months ago, I got drunk while visiting the grave that I thought was my daughterâs, but now, I know it isnât, and Iâm so thankful for just being able to watch from afar and making sure youâre well. Thatâs all I ask for. But if you still canât give me that, itâs fine. I understand. I just want to tell you Iâm sorry.â
The stupid feelings that I canât stop flood my insides and I start clinking my nails. âFor what?â
âFor not being there all these years. Iâm so sorry.â
âYou didnât know.â
âI still lost you for twenty years. You still felt abandoned and cried on your birthdays like I got drunk on them.â
âYou mourned me for twenty years?â
âI did.â
âI think I mourned you, too, even thinking you abandoned me, I still mourned you.â
âIâm sorry. So, so sorry.â
Clearing my throat, I try not to let the tears loose and lift a shoulder. âI had Dad. Though he can be too much sometimes.â
âIâm sorry your father is giving you a hard time about Nate. Heâs a jerk.â
I jump to a standing position. âDo youâ¦know where Nate is?â
Dad has been insinuating that Nate and Aspen have always had a thing going on, and I know what heâs doing. Heâs trying to make me feel as if Nate would choose her over me because sheâd fit him better.
He knew I harbored such thoughts myself and in a typical Kingsley Shaw lawyer move, he played on them to make me give up. And he almost succeeded.
However, Aspen didnât leave with Nate. She stayed, and I think thatâs partly because of me. And anyway, Nate would never hurt me that way, and she wouldnât either. I felt her words just now. The pain in them is so relatable to mine that I can sense it slashing my chest.
Her shoulders droop a little. âNo, I donât.â
âYou do. You always know about things. If you want me to give you a chance, tell me where he is.â
âI would if I knew, but I really donât. I know one thing for certain, though.â
âWhat?â
âHe would never give up on you. Iâve been with him long enough to know he doesnât allow himself to get attached. Heâs not the type to care about anyone very much, but he does care about you. He looks at you like he never wants to look away.â
âBut he did.â I fight the emotions in my voice and fail. âHe left.â
âBecause of King.â
âDad said he left of his own volition.â
âYour dad is skewing truths with lies. He does it all the time. Believe me, heâs the one behind all of this, so if you want to find Nate, you need to strike there.â
âHe wouldnât just tell me where he is if I ask.â
âI agree. He wonât. We need to think of a solution.â She appears thoughtful for a while, her eyes bright and the most focused Iâve seen them.
âWhyâ¦why are you helping me?â
âBecause youâre my daughter,â she says it with ease as if itâs a given.
âArenât you supposed to hate me? Everyone thinks you have a thing with Nate. Maybe you did, or still do.â
âNate and I were never like that. If sex had entered the equation, we wouldâve lost each other a long time ago. In case youâre not aware, he stops seeing the women he sleeps with, since theyâre a complication he doesnât want to deal with. Thatâs how I know youâre different.â
âAnd youâre okay with that? Us being together, I mean.â I shouldnât care about her opinion, but I do. Deep inside, I really do.
âWhy wouldnât I be?â
âBecause heâs eighteen years older than me and Iâm still young.â
âYouâre not young, youâre a woman. And women have the right to make their own choices.â
âDad doesnât think the same.â
âYour dad is an asshole.â
I wince.
She grimaces and clears her throat. âSorry. Sometimes, I forget heâs your father.â
âHeâs not that bad, you know.â
âYes, he is.â A sheen covers her eyes and they darken before she blinks it away. âAnyway, do you want to bring Nate home?â
âOf course.â
âIn that case, I have an idea.â