I stalk into Rickâs cramped apartment, grab my mother by the wrist and yank her up all before she even recognizes that itâs me.
âCadey, what aâwhat a wonderful surpriseâ¦â
âWeâre leaving,â I growl. âWhereâs her stuff?â
âShe didnât have much.â
âI borrowed his girlfriendâs clothes.â Mom smirks. âSheâs a little on the thick side so the clothes donât fit right, but we have to do what we have to do.â
Rickâs eyes harden.
âShut up, mom,â I snap.
She slurs, âWatch your tone, young lady. Iâm still your mother.â
âMy mother? Arenât you ashamed to call yourself that?â
Mom tilts her head, eyes innocent as can be.
Inside my chest, Iâm screaming bloody murder. âWeâre leaving, Rick. Whatever clothes mom used, burn it. Tell your girlfriend Iâll pay for new ones.â
âCadey, slow down,â mom whines.
A shadow fills the door while Iâm pulling mom to the exit.
Itâs Hunter.
His soulful brown eyes fall on me and my breath hitches in my throat.
âCadence?â
I donât have time for an awkward reunion right now. Stepping past him, I drag mom behind me. She bats her eyelashes at Hunter when she passes him by, and slides a veiny finger down his forearm.
âOoh. Muscles,â she whispers.
I give her a big yank and drag her down the stairs.
âCadence, wait!â Rickâs footsteps thunder behind me. âLet me help you.â
âYes, Ricky-baby.â Mom pats his cheek. âYou should help your mommy.â
Rickâs jaw works. He looks like heâs being tortured.
How did he put up with mom for this long? Why would he put up with her at all?
I jerk momâs arm hard. My eyes on Rick, I grind out, âWeâre leaving. Donât follow me.â
Rick remains standing on the stairs, looking at us and not coming any closer. Why would anyone want to come close to this mess? If I had a choice, Iâd run away too. Run so far that no one could catch me.
But Iâm chained here.
Thereâs no running from a darkness this thick.
âCadence, youâre hurting me.â Mom yelps in pain when I tighten my grip in response.
I pull her with me to the bus stop. Sheâs drunk off her face, which makes it a lot easier to maneuver her around. Unfortunately, her flopping arms means she slaps me in the face every time the bus takes a steep curve.
By the time I walk off the bus, night has fallen, my cheeks are stinging and Iâm so pissed off that it feels like my skin is on fire.
When I finally wrestle mom to the apartment and stuff her through the door, Vi is sitting in the living room with her phone, a ring light and all her makeup tools.
She sees mom and immediately shuts her camera off. âWhat happened? Where did you find her?â
âAt Rickâs.â
Viâs face goes pale. âAll this time?â
âNo, it seemed like a recent thing.â
âWhere was she staying before that then?â Vi asks.
âI donât know.â
âUgh.â Mom kicks off her shoes and wiggles her toes. She digs her fingers into her thinning hair. âEveryone hates me. Everyone!â
Vi stares at mom with anguish in her eyes. Itâs been a long time since weâve seen mom on a bender. Itâs frightening when the person whoâs supposed to be taking care of you canât even take care of herself.
âVi,â I touch her arm gently, âgo to your room. Iâll handle this.â
My sister doesnât argue. She nods and hurries away, leaving all her makeup things behind.
I stare at my motherâs thin face. A seemingly innocent statement Rick said to me after his birthday party rises to memory.
At the time, I didnât know what he was talking about. But in hindsight, my brother was warning me about mom. That means mom was leeching off him before she even thought of stealing from us.
Disgusted, I glare at her. âWhy would you ask Rick for anything after the way you abandoned him? Donât you have a heart? Shouldnât you be ashamed to even look at him?â
Mom scratches her wrist. Sheâll need a fix soon.
My heart balloons with pain and I feel like Iâm going to explode. I need a breath. I need a moment to just⦠not hurt.
But I force myself to keep being the strong one.
I step into Viâs room. âAre you okay?â
âYeah.â My sisterâs long brown hair swings over her shoulder. âItâs just weird, you know? Iâd gotten used to life without her. Now, it feels like things are back to normal and the life we were living before was the dream.â
âViâ¦â
âWhat?â Her sweet, innocent eyes fall on me. I want to protect her so much it hurts, but Iâm so tired.
Dutchâs words sooth me. What would happen if I abandoned my senses and let myself fall into him? Would I find that protection in Dutch? Would it hurt less than it does right now?
I want to.
So badly.
I want him to rescue me.
Iâm trembling, but I donât even realize it until my sister walks into me and slides her arms around my waist. I feel the tears pressing against my eyes, but I donât let them drop.
âItâs okay,â Vi says, smoothing a hand down my back.
âIâm the one who should be telling you that.â
Vi eases back and gives me a smile thatâs wise beyond her years. âWe can remind each other.â
I swallow past the lump in my throat.
Suddenly, I hear a crash from outside.
Vi and I hurry out and find mom rummaging through the cupboard, looking for food.
âDo you have any chips?â mom demands.
Iâm not surprised by her sudden energy boost. Mom can crash into a drunken slumber one minute and then wake up, fully present and annoyingly smug, the next.
âMy head is killing me,â she complains. âRick buys the cheap stuff. I need to teach him where to get the goods.â
I frown. âSit down, mom. Iâll make you a sandwich.â
âI donât want a sandwich.â
âThen you wonât eat,â I snap.
She frowns at me and sinks into a chair around the table. âTesty.â
Vi joins me. âNeed some help?â
I shake my head.
âViola, baby, can you get your mommy some water?â
Vi gives me a look as if asking for my permission first.
I jut my chin at the fridge.
While Vi pours, I slap two pieces of bread on a plate and slather it in condiments.
âI heard you had a busy day yesterday, mom,â I say tightly.
âMff.â She makes a coarse grunt before gulping down all the water.
âWhat did you think about Dutch when you met him? Heâs a little intense, right?â
Mom chokes and a flood of water spews from her mouth.
Vi shrieks and jumps back to avoid getting doused.
Unbothered, I slap meat on the bread, shove the sandwich together and drop the plate in front of mom. âWhy did you send Dutch to Sinnerâs Den?â
She glances away.
âDid you know Iâd be there?â
The dots connect.
Mom lying about having evidence on Jarod Cross.
Jarod telling me to get evidence on Dutch.
Me coincidentally spying on the brothers âwith drugsâ.
I lower my voice urgently, âMom, are you working with Jarod Cross?â
Her eyes dart back and forth.
Vi brings mom a napkin. âCadey, why would mom know a celebrity like Jarod Cross. Thatâs like a homeless guy having Oprahâs phone number.â
âAnswer me, mom.â
Mom ignores me and points a strained smile at Vi. âHow was your weekend, sweetie?â
âFine,â Vi mumbles. âWe hung out with Dutch and then I had to do a group project.â
I cringe at Viâs mention of Dutch.
Mom pounces on it right away. Her body stiffens. âCadence, you were with that boy all weekend?â
âNo,â I lie.
âYes,â Vi says.
We both glance at each other.
Mom stiffens. âYou were with him ?â
I say nothing.
Mom pins her dark eyes on my little sister. She looks sharper than she ever has before.
Viola breaks easily. âCadey stayed out with Dutch all night an didnât come back until morning.â
âViola!â I hiss.
âSorry. She scares me.â
Mom shoots up so fast, the chair behind her topples. It crashes to the floor, making both me and Vi jump.
âCome with me,â mom barks.
âIâm not going anywhereââ
âNow!â Mom hisses.
My anger rushes to the surface and I stay right where I am.
âNo, mom. You donât get to do that. You donât get to rush in here after disappearing and act like my mother when youâve been anything but a mother to me. Iâm not going anywhere with you. Not until you tell me exactly what kind of deal you have with Jarodââ
âDid you use a condom?â
I freeze.
âHow many times did he discharge? Were you using protection every time? Was it around or before your period?â
My eyes widen.
Viâs are about to pop out of her head.
My chest heaves, but Iâm trapped. Mom is going to keep talking about this in front of Vi and I donât want her to hear such crude discussions.
At least, not when Iâm the subject.
Muscles so tense I feel like Iâm a walking tin can, I stalk past mom and open the door. She doesnât immediately follow me. Instead, she goes into my room.
âGet out of there!â I hurry after her.
But I donât have to drag her out. She meets me in the hallway and tosses my purse at me.
âWhy do you have this?â
âYouâre gonna need that.â Her expression is hard.
Thoroughly pissed off, I trail mom to the door.
âWhere are you going?â Violaâs voice trembles.
âVi, lock up behind me. Weâll be right back,â I say. I try to muster up a smile, but I canât pull it off.
Vi gives me a worried look, but I donât have time to comfort her. Mom is already halfway down the stairs.
I follow my mother outside. âWhere are we going?â
She doesnât answer. Her body cuts through the night, dipping in and out of the shadows and the pockets of light offered by the lampposts.
We jog through the streets for what feels like hours.
Finally, I get enough and wrench mom around by the shoulder. âTell me where weâre going.â She opens her mouth, but I stop her with a raised finger. âAnd if you think Iâm going to buy you drugs right now, youâre insane.â
Mom gestures to the store up ahead. Itâs the same pharmacy where Dutch bought me flip-flops and patched up my bleeding heel.
The man behind the counter is the same guy from that night too.
He points at me. âFlip-Flops.â
I frown.
âWhereâs the Tattoo Guy?â He wiggles his eyebrows.
âHow long have you been here, boy?â Mom grunts. âDonât you know not to ask questions in this neighborhood?â
The clerkâs smile disappears and he gives mom a sullen nod.
I stumble when mom yanks me down an aisle. Past the tampons. Past the pads. Past the pregnancy tests.
âGrab them.â She reaches for a thin box and then another.
The price tag makes me gag.
I stop her, my hand on her wrist. âWhat are you doing?â
âWe canât take any chances.â Her voice is low, urgent. She sounds like sheâs about to rehash her alien abduction. âGrab those over there. Theyâre more experimental, but it might be effective. We may already be too late. Itâs hard to be sure.â
âMom, I already asked you. What isââ
âPlan B.â She spears me with her glazed eyes. Iâm stunned when I see genuine fear in them. âYou canât get pregnant, Cadey.â
I blush, feeling exposed. Me? Pregnant? The thought is foreign. I never once dreamed of having a family someday, and I sure as hell donât dream of having one now.
âWho said Iâm pregnant?â I snap.
Mom berates me. âSex has consequences, girl. Itâs a principle. You jump off a roof, gravity doesnât give a damn about you or what you want for your future. Itâs going to pull you down. You sleep with Jarod Crossâs son⦠itâll pull you down the same way.â Her eyes cut into me. âYou should have never gotten involved with him.â
On that we both agree.
Dutch is temptation wrapped in ink and I kept finding myself under his spell. Itâs like he has a hold on me that I canât break.
âAnd you should have done this earlier,â mom scolds me. Her hands are trembling as she turns a box over and compares it to the other. âWhen was the last time you twoâ?â
âMom.â
âWhen?â
I blush harder. âToday.â
Her bottom lip goes stiff.
âBut it wasnâtâ¦â My cheeks burn so hard it hurts. âIt wasnât our first time. That was a while ago.â
Mom grits her teeth. âYou better hope you didnât take too long to take your meds.â
âItâs not like I didnât try,â I mumble. After Dutch took my virginity, I went to ask for medication just in case. The pharmacists said I couldnât buy the pills if I was under eighteen.
I didnât freak out about it. Back then, I thought me and Dutch would be a one-and-done thing. I didnât know he would be this insatiable. I didnât know⦠it could happen anywhere, at any time.
And it seems like Dutch wants me all the time.
âStop.â I push the pills back on the shelf because the only thing worse than buying this by myself is buying it with my mother. âIâll handle it.â
âOh, youâll handle it?â Mom taunts.
âIâll come back. I swear.â I lower my voice. âBut right now, I donât have enough money to get all this.â
âSo youâre going to throw away your future because you donât have a couple hundred?â
âDutch and I will talk aboutââ
She lets loose a cackle so loud, that a couple in the row behind us peer around the corner.
âDutch isnât going to take care of this for you, Cadey. He this problem.â
My eyebrows knot.
âHow could you let him use you?â Mom hesitates, her hands over the pregnancy test. She swipes it into her arms. âHow could you be so unbelievably stupid? At the very least, you should have made sure you were on the pill.â
I lower my head. I didnât have anyone I could talk to about this, especially not Breeze who would rake me over the coals for getting this deep into the boy who tortured me.
âIf Dutch gets what he wants, itâs over for you,â mom hisses. âOver!â
âWhat do you mean?â
Her eyes dart back and forth as if someone is watching her. âHurry and pay for this. Youâre taking one right now.â
âNo,â I grab her arm, sensing that thereâs something she isnât telling me. âSpit it out. You know something.â
âNo, I donât.â
Sheâs shaking like a hurricane now. A mixture of withdrawal and nerves.
âIâm not taking a single pill until you tell me.â
Discomfort etches into her weathered face when she says, âLook, Iâm not supposed to know this and you arenât either.â
I lean closer, my heart pounding and my palms sweaty.
Momâs throat bobs and she whispers, âI overheard a conversation I wasnât supposed to. Something about the Cross family, an inheritance and two conditions the heir has to meet.â
As she talks, invisible thorns wind around my body and dig into my flesh.
âWhat were they?â I choke out.
Mom flinches.
âWhat were the conditions!â I shriek.
âWhoever gets the money has to be marriedâ¦â
I stumble back, my throat closing up.
â⦠And,â mom adds, âthey need to have a son.â
My knees weaken and Iâm crashing into the ground. My hands flail for purchase, but I canât save myself. My mad descent is followed by boxes and boxes of pregnancy tests and morning-after pills thundering to the ground.