âMum?â
My voice is incredulous, even to my own ears. The woman I thought I would never see in this lifetime stands in front of me.
Her hair is straight and blonde and falls to her shoulders, just as I remember. Sheâs wearing one of the elegant dresses fit for the upper class, and she still has a brooch over her clothes.
If I didnât know weâd separated more than twelve years ago, I wouldâve thought we saw each other yesterday.
Her face has that familiar permanent small smile and her blue almond-shaped eyes have no wrinkles surrounding them.
âHow have you been, kids?â She stares between me and Kim as if this is an everyday occurrence, as if she went out for a stroll and just returned.
âYouâve grown up so much, Kim.â She smiles. âThankfully, you donât look like your snake of a mother.â
What the fuck?
First, my mum is here.
Second, did I mention my mum is here?
âCan I talk to Xander?â she asks Kim, whose eyes remain wide, as if sheâs witnessing a ghostâs appearance and probably thinking about ghostbuster options.
Same for me.
âUhâ¦â She shakes her head, then squeezes my hand. âIâll beâ¦home if you need me.â
I donât even have the right state of mind to nod or do anything. Iâm still staring at my mum and trying to figure out if I had enough alcohol to end up with another âdreamâ.
Soft lips seal against my cheek and itâs enough to pull me out of my trance. I glance down at Kim and she smiles in the warmest, most considerate way any human would.
Her smile says words she doesnât have to utter out loud.
I smile back, showing her the dimples she loves so much. âGo ahead, Green.â
She nods, chances one last glance at Mum, then slowly heads to her house.
The only two who remain are me and the woman who brought me into this world.
The woman who left because Dad was too much.
âShould we go inside?â She motions at our house â mine and Dadâs, not hers. Because she left it without a look back.
I donât say anything as I stride through the door, knowing sheâll follow. The sound of her heels echoes in the empty hall.
Ahmed greets us at the entrance and stops upon seeing her.
âHello, Ahmed. How have you been?â She smiles at him with a warmth that she used to give me.
A warmth thatâs a little bit sad, a little bit forced, a little bit fake.
And I used to gobble it all down because it came from her, my mother.
âHello.â He turns into his completely professional stance. âCan I get you anything, Xander?â
âNothing,â I breathe out.
âA glass of wine for me,â Mum says.
âIâm afraid we have no wine.â He nods and disappears around the corner. I have no doubt that heâll call Dad and inform him about our unexpected guest.
Before Dad comes home, Mum and I need to talk.
Shoving a hand in my pocket, I turn around and face her. Sheâs sitting on the sofa, both legs tucked to her side like a refined lady.
Mum was never a refined lady. She was a waitress prior to knowing Dad â and Calvin.
Dad brought her to the upper-middle-class side of the tracks and after that, she cut all contact with her extended family and switched social classes.
Her gaze sweeps over me. âYouâve become a man.â
âNo thanks to you,â I say without even thinking about the words. But I guess thatâs all I ever wanted to say since that day she abandoned me in the middle of the street and never looked back.
âXander, listen to me.â
I lean against the counter and fold my arms. âIâm all ears. Letâs hear what brought you back after ghosting for twelve years. Spoiler alert, the address didnât change.â
She thins her lips. âI see youâve become fluent in sarcasm.â
âWhat can I say? Growing up with no mother made me fluent in many things. Like lying, drinking, fighting. You name it.â
âI wonât have you stand there and blame your life choices on me. You have Lewis and his money.â
Is she for real? Is there a way I can reach into my eyes and somehow blind them so I donât see her face?
For twelve whole years, Iâve wondered what it would be like to see her again. If maybe sheâd return and fill the hole Dad was never able to.
Hope is a dangerous thing; it makes you believe in things that might never exist.
I believed in Samantha Knight, and that hope is now dimming to nothing at the first conversation.
Sheâs not here to save me.
âWhy are you here, Samantha?â
âIâm your mum and youâll address me as such.â
âNope. You kind of, , stopped being my mum the moment you abandoned me in the streets while I was crying and calling your name.â
She stands up and I expect her to come at me or something, to try to prove her biological status, but she heads straight to the drinking cabinet Lewis always keeps at the corner of the room. She curses when she finds nothing, her fingers shaking.
âRemember that drinking problem I have?â I tilt my head to the side. âDad banned alcohol from the house because of it.â
âHeâs such an expert at throwing away good liquor.â She rubs her neck and her fingers tremble.
I reach into the side cupboard and retrieve a small bottle I keep there, then throw it her way. âI see where I got that problem from.â
She clutches the bottle and opens it with over-eager fingers. âVodka, seriously? Donât you have any wine?â
âEveryone picks his poison of choice, I guess.â
âWhatever.â The moment I see her gulping the liquid like sheâs been in a desert, a sense of disgust hits me.
Itâs so hard, I physically clutch the counter for balance.
I look like that. Just like her.
Now that I think about it, she always walked around with a cup of wine in her hand. She even mixed it with my redberry juice once, and that was my first sip of alcohol. I finished it all and was acting weird. Thatâs how Dad found out about it and they had a huge fight.
Then he took me to the doctor and I might have had my stomach cleaned.
Maybe thatâs why Dad has been an extra dick about the drinking since the beginning of this year.
âAre you even sorry?â I ask.
She wipes the side of her mouth, but doesnât give back the small bottle. âSorry? For what?â
The fact sheâs asking is enough to say sheâs not, but I speak anyway, âThat you left your only son behind with a man who isnât even his biological father.â
âYou know,â she murmurs.
âYup, kind of figured about all the cross-breeding.â
âJust so you know, I donât appreciate sarcasm.â
âJust so you know, I donât fucking care.â
She shakes her head. âI didnât leave you with a stranger. Lewis considered you his son from the very get-go. Besides, he and Calvin came to an understanding a long time ago to supervise on their biological children from afar. Why do you think Calvin picked you up sometimes and Lewis picked Kim up at others? Or when the four of you had fathersâ days out in the park and all that rubbish? They had it all planned.â
I figured Dad and Calvin were exchanging information behind the scenes, but I never thought they were this much in tune about how everything was playing out.
âDid the arrangement bother you?â I ask. âIs that it?â
âI didnât care.â
âOf course you didnât. Thatâs why you left.â
She says nothing, and her silence is more painful than her words. I thought I was immune to pain about now. Turns out, I was fucking wrong.
âAnd why did you come back?â
She sits on the sofa again and takes another drink of my vodka, more gracefully this time since she doesnât have an itch to satiate.
âWhatever happens, youâre my son, Xander.â
âBullshit.â
âWhat did you just say?â
âYou heard me.â
âListen here, Xan, as your mother, I demand respect.â
âBullshit,â a stronger male voice says from behind me.
Dad.
That was faster than I thought. He probably was in Silverâs fatherâs house nearby.
He places his briefcase on the table and strides inside to stand beside me. âYou heard him.â
âLewis.â She smiles. âIâve been waiting for you.â
âI told you not to ever come here.â
âWait.â I stare between them. âYou meet? Are you like tea partiesâ mates? I thought she was in fucking Brazil or something.â
âCan you leave us alone?â Samanthaâs hand trembles around the bottleâs lid.
âFuck no,â I say.
âJust go.â Lewis motions behind him.
âI canât believe this.â I stare at her. âYouâre here for him, not me?â
She taps the lid of the bottle, keeps her posture, but says nothing.
I scoff as I exit the room, but not the scene. I hide behind the corner and do something I used to when I was a kid â eavesdrop on my parentsâ fights, hoping theyâd end soon.
When they didnât, I went to Kim because she was the only one who weaned down the chaos. She still is.
âWhat the fuck are you doing here, Samantha?â Lewis yanks on his tie.
âYouâre not answering my calls.â
âThatâs because I donât want to. Take a hint.â
âYou donât get to ignore me, Lewis.â
âWatch me.â He stands by the table, towering over her. âI told you last year that would be the last fucking time youâre getting money from me.â
âMikeâs business went bankrupt again. We need help.â
âYou wonât be getting it from me. Last I checked, Iâm not your husbandâs sponsor.â
Wait a fucking second. She remarried and Lewis has been giving her money all this time?
What in the actual fuck?
âYou better well be.â She stands up, clutching the bottle in a death grip. âOtherwise, the press will know about your illegitimate daughter. How do you think your campaign will go, huh? The mighty politician Lewis Knight has an illegitimate daughter and is raising another bastard child as his own. I can see it as the headlines. And remember, I have the DNA tests to prove it.â
âYou thought I was giving you the money because Iâm scared of you? What a mess have you become to think that way? I only funded your loser husbandâs companies because youâre the woman who gave birth to my son and I donât want to see you hit rock bottom, but if you threaten my children in any way, Iâll bury you and Michael so deep, no one will be able to find you.â
âWeâll see whoâll be able to bury the other one first.â Her face reddens. âEither I find the money in my bank account or you can kiss your peaceful childrenâs lives goodbye.â
She heads to the door.
âSamantha,â he calls after her.
When she turns around, a hopeful expression covers her features. âChanged your mind?â
âDonât you ever show your fucking face here again. Keep your alcoholic influence away from my son.â
The door closes behind Samantha with a loud clink. Lewis breathes harshly and runs a hand through his hair as he sits down and retrieves his phone.
He places a call to Sebastian Queens to tell him he wonât be making it to the rest of the meeting, then to his secretary to let her know there could be changes to the plan, and finally to Calvin to inform him about Samanthaâs visit.
As soon as he finishes that call, I come out of my hiding spot, placing both hands in my jeansâ pocket. âWhy didnât you tell me sheâd remarried? Why did you tell me she was in Brazil?â
He lets the phone drop beside him and stares at me. âI shouldâve known youâd eavesdrop. Iâd prefer it if youâd never heard that.â
âYou mean the part about my mum being a gold digger?â
âThat part, too.â
âWhat else did you hide from me? Because hiding things seems to be your modus operandi around me.â
âDoesnât matter.â
âIt matters to me.â My voice rises. âThis is my life; I have the right to know whatâs happening in it. Iâm not a kid anymore and you donât get to make the decisions on my behalf.â
âFine.â He sighs. âSamantha had an affair with her current husband for the last year of our marriage. I asked her to stay for your sake, but she didnât want to. She said this life wasnât as she expected it to be and it was suffocating her. She hated being a mom and this whole lifestyle. She also became neglectful of you and your safety. When she decided to leave, I didnât stop her.â
My fist curls in my pocket. âWhy havenât you told me any of that? Why did you let me hate you all these years?â
âFor that exact same reason. You already blamed me, so I didnât want you to hate your other parent, too.â
âWell, donât expect any applause, Dad.â I turn to leave.
âXander.â His stern voice stops me in my tracks.
âWhat?â
âYou said youâre not a kid. So donât act like one.â
I face him fully. âWhat do you mean?â
âThe drinking needs to stop. Donât make me use force, because Iâll do it.â
I release a long breath. âHow about you think about a solution to her threat? If this goes to the press, itâll fuck Kim up. People will start thinking of us as siblings and thatâs off the table.â
âHow about you?â
âWhat about me?â
âYou said itâll screw Kimâs life, but itâll also screw yours.â
I lift a shoulder. âI can manage.â
âItâs okay if you canât. You have me for that.â
âI donât need you,â I mutter.
âI know. Iâm just putting it out there in case you do.â He rises to his feet and places a hand on my shoulder. âYou are my son, no matter what DNA tests say.â
I wiggle him away. âSappy doesnât suit you.â
âI figured as much.â He chuckles, the sound rare and I know it shouldnât be taken for granted. Lewis Knight doesnât laugh, at least not genuinely. He doesnât stand there and offer his hand without expecting something in return.
For the first time in forever, I stare at him through a different lens.
Heâs my dad.
While I respect Calvin, Lewis is my dad.
All biological ties be damned.
With that thought, I ask him something I would never ask of other people.
Kim is right, Iâm too proud to ask for things. Help, for instance, or a brake to put on my life thatâs spiralling out of control.
âCan you stop her?â
âIâll do everything in my might,â he tells me.
âWhat if you canât?â
âWorst-case scenario, we all have to leave the country.â
âCalvin, too?â
âEspecially Calvin. He works for the diplomatic circuit and thatâs even more scrutinised than politics. No scandals are allowed.â
âShit.â
âI know, but we have to think about the worst-case scenario. I can always give her money, but she will never stop. Besides, I wonât deal with someone who threatens you.â
âThanksâ¦I guess.â
âNo sarcasm this time?â He smiles.
âDonât get used to it.â
He squeezes my shoulder. âI need you to focus on you now. Think about that program.â
âFuck.â
âFuck indeed, young man. This situation will not go on.â
And the dick Lewis is back.
âKim is worried about you,â he says.
I lift a brow. âSince when are you and Kim pen pals?â
âI told her the other day to tell me if she needs anything. I found her pacing in front of her house earlier and once she saw me, she ran to me and said these exact words, âYou said to tell you if I need anything, and I do. Whatever you have to give me, give it to Xan. He needs help as much as I do; heâs just too proud to admit it. So donât give up on him. One day heâll look back and thank you for it and I will, too.ââ