âIs it true?â my mother asks. I look up, finding her standing in my doorway, her eyes flashing with anger.
I frown, unsure what Iâve done to anger her this time. Thereâs always something. Iâm always letting her down one way or another. âYouâll have to elaborate, mother.â
She crosses her arms over each other, a hint of sorrow behind the anger in her eyes. âNoah,â she says simply.
My first instinct is to deny everything, to hide it from her the way I hide everything I care about. But I canât. Not this time. I canât lie about Noah.
âYes, itâs true,â I tell her, my voice soft. âWeâre dating.â
âDating?â she repeats. âYou stood right here in this room when you promised me that youâd never get involved with him, that you two would never be more than friends.â
I rise to my feet, my body tense. âMom, he makes me happy. When Iâm with him, Iâm happier than Iâve been in years. He makes me feel like myself again, Mom. Why wouldnât you want that for me?â
She swallows hard, and I freeze when she visibly blinks away tears in her eyes. âDo you have any idea what youâve done?â she asks. âGrandpa fired him. Noah was going places, Amara. You ruined his future, all because you couldnât stay away. Because you wanted something that wasnât meant for you and pursued it without caring about what itâd cost Noah, what itâll cost you. Thereâs no happy ending here, Amara. No matter how much you think you love him, thereâs no scenario in which you two end up happily married.â
I stare at her in shock, her words slowly registering. âGrandpa fired him? Why would he do that? Why would he put so much effort into mentoring Noah only to fire him?â
Mom stares at me, barely able to hide the flash of disgust in her eyes. âBecause of you. Because of your selfishness. Noah promised your grandfather that heâd stay away from you, and he broke that promise. You know full well Grandpa operates under a zero-tolerance policy. Noah broke his trust, and itâll cost him everything.â
I shake my head. âNo. No way. I saw how the two of them were together. Grandpa cares about him. He wouldnâtâ¦â
âBut he did. He did, Amara, and itâs your fault. You took a risk, counting on Grandpa to forgive you two, but he wonât. Heâll never let you be with Noah. I warned you. I pleaded with you. You promised me you wouldnât get involved with him, and yet here we are. Your relationship with Noah is done regardless of how hard you fight to be with him, because heâll never forgive you for taking away the opportunities he had, the life that wouldâve laid ahead of him if not for you. It might take time, it might even take years, but itâll happen.â
I glare at her, swallowing down my own tears. âNoah isnât like you, Mom. He wonât resent me the way you resented Dad. Heâs a better person than youâll ever be â and heâs talented. He doesnât need Grandpa.â
Mom laughs, her eyes filled with disbelief. âYouâre so naïve, Amara. You have no idea what youâve done. You have no idea what your grandfather will do to Noah because of you. Noah will never work as a doctor again. Not unless he leaves you. What do you think heâll choose? You, or the career he worked for all his life? Did you know Noahâs father was a doctor? This isnât just a job to him. Itâs his fatherâs legacy. Do you think heâll leave that behind for you?â
I look away, my heart squeezing painfully. I didnât know that. I didnât know Noah became a doctor because of his father. He never speaks of his parents. A hint of unease settles deep within me. I cling onto my faith in us, but part of me canât help but fear that my mother is right. My love for Noah might lead to his ruin.
âLeave him, Amara. Walk away now, and your grandfather will spare him.â
âIs that what Grandpa told you, back when you chose to be with Dad?â
Her expression falters, and for a moment understanding flashes through her eyes. âIt isnât the same, Amara⦠but even so, I shouldâve done as I was asked. I shouldâve seen that my father wanted what was best for me, the way I want whatâs best for you. For both of you. Leave him and let him live up to his endless potential. Please, Amara. Donât let your selfishness ruin both your lives.â
A tear runs down my cheek as I open my lips to tell her Iâll never leave Noah, but my words remain stuck in my throat. Fear unlike anything Iâve ever felt renders me speechless. I can take responsibility for myself, for the consequences Iâll face because of my choices⦠but I canât drag Noah down with me. I genuinely didnât think Grandpa would fire him. I expected there to be tension between them, and I expected grandpa to disapprove⦠but I didnât expect this.
âIs he home?â I ask, my voice soft.
Mom nods. âHeâs in his office.â
I nod and walk past her, my heart feeling strangely tender, almost as though it knows itâs moments away from breaking. I swallow hard as I raise my hand to my grandfatherâs office door. Itâs a room he and I share so many fond memories in. Iâm the only one that was ever allowed to disturb him while he was working from home, and heâd always drop everything to play with me when I was little, or to help me with homework when I insisted on his help instead of my tutorâs as I grew older.
I brace myself as I knock on his door, not waiting for him to call me in. My entire body is tense as I walk in, and when Grandpa looks up at me with a resigned look in his eyes, Iâve got the answers to questions I donât want to ask.
I ask anyway.
âDid you fire Noah?â My voice breaks, and I clench my jaw, willing myself to keep it together.
He nods. âI warned him, Amara. He broke my trust.â
I look down, unable to face him, unable to hide the pain thatâs slowly tearing through me.
âWhy? Why are you doing this to him? To us?â
Grandpa looks at me, his expression solemn, not a hint of regret in his eyes. Thereâs no remorse. But then again, I never should have expected it from him.
âHe did this to himself, Amara.â
I sniff, holding back my tears as best as I can. My lungs are burning, but I refuse to cry. âHe gave you everything. He worked himself to the bone for you. He looked up to you, Grandpa. You were his hero. How could you? All because he loves me?â
Grandpa looks away when a stray tear runs down my cheek, and I swipe at it angrily. I canât be weak. Not right now.
âI warned Noah. He knew my support hinged on him staying away from you, and he didnât. He knew what the consequences would be, Amara. All I did was keep my word.â
âYour word,â I whisper. âWhat about your promises to me? All my life youâve promised me youâd always be there for me, that youâd always be in my corner. Canât you see that you doing this to Noah is killing me? Itâs me youâre hurting, Grandpa⦠far more so than Noah. I love him, Grandpa.â
He shakes his head and sighs. âLove? You canât love him, Amara. You donât even know him.â
I stare at him in disbelief. âGrandpa, if you love me at all, even just a little⦠then please donât do this to him. Itâs my heart youâre breaking, not his.â
His eyes fall closed, and he inhales shakily. âAmara,â he says, his voice soft, pleading. âI love you more than anything. I always will.â
âThen why are you doing this to me? Wasnât it enough to cut my company off from funding? Wasnât it enough to destroy my dreams? Why are you going after every single thing that makes me happy, just because it doesnât fit in with your idea of who Iâm supposed to be?â
Grandpa stares at me, almost as though heâs at a loss for words. âDo you want to save him, Amara? Do you want to safeguard Noahâs future? Walk away. Leave him, and he wonât face repercussions for defying me.â
I shake my head. âDo this, and youâll lose me. I will never forgive you.â
He sighs and looks out the window. âYou will,â he murmurs. âBut by then itâll be too late.â
I stare at him, too tired to argue with him, to decrypt his words. Instead, I turn and walk away, looking back at him as I reach his office door.
âGoodbye, Grandpa,â I whisper, my voice breaking. I walk away, truly putting myself and my happiness first for the first time in my life.