The Villain: A Billionaire Romance: Chapter 21
The Villain: A Billionaire Romance (Boston Belles Book 2)
The Past.
The first time I stepped into a juvenile treatment clinic was at age fourteen.
Earlier that week, I beat myself up so bad, I was still pissing blood and spitting teeth. My face was so swollen, it took three of my peers to recognize who I was when they found me on the library floor.
My mother accompanied me into the Swiss clinic. Reluctantly. I was covered in a coat, hat, and sunglasses to hide my battered figure, like a D-list celebrity zipping through an airport, trying to remain unidentified. Mother remained silent most of the plane journey from England to Zurich, save for a brief conversation, whispered after the stewardesses were out of earshot.
âYour father canât know.â
That was the first thing she said.
Not how you are doing.
Howâd it happen.
Your father canât know.
I stayed quiet. There was, after all, nothing to say. She was right. Athair couldnât know. And at any rate, there was no way to explain what had happened. One second I was sitting in front of my textbooks in the library, studying my ass off to finish first in class as always, the familiar weird pressureâan intangible tension I couldnât explainâskulking up my spine like a spider, and the other, I was on the floor, beaten to a pulp, not sure who did it.
Now I knew who that person was.
It was me.
I beat myself up to a point of unconsciousness.
âCillian Frances, did you hear me?â Mother linked her fingers together over her lap, face rigid, posture perfect.
âLoud and clear.â I looked out the window at the passing clouds.
âGood.â She frowned at an invisible spot on the cockpit door. âHe will blame it on me, somehow. He always does, you know? I can never catch a break with this man.â
My mother wasnât a bad person. But she was weak. Convenient. Now more than ever, having given birth to my sibling, Hunter, less than three years ago.
The new baby had put a strain on my parentsâ marriage. When I came for a visit during the summer, theyâd barely spoken a word to each other. When my mother asked if I wanted to hold my brother, my initial reaction had been hell no, but then she gave me that sheepish, poor-me look, and added, âYour father never holds him.â
So Iâd held him. Looked down at the tiny, old-looking bald person who stared back at me with big blue eyes that looked nothing like mine and told him, âBuckle up, little bro. You were definitely born into one heck of a family.â
âAnyway,â Mother chimed again on the plane, rearranging her pearl necklace, âI hope this has nothing to do with Andrew Arrowsmith. You wonât be seeing much of him anymore outside of Evon.â
âI havenât heard or seen him since Athair fired his dad,â I admitted in a vain attempt to try to get some info.
âHis father wouldnât have been fired if he wasnât a crook,â Mother huffed.
âI donât care about his father.â
âWeâll see if he finishes his studies at Evon,â she continued, ignoring my words. Iâd often wondered why I bothered answering her at all. âYour father is suing him for everything he stole.â
âThey used to go golfing together. Take annual vacations. Visit casinos in Europe. Go fishing,â I said, leaving out the escorts, strip clubs, and underground joints theyâd promised to take Andrew and me to when we were older.
She rolled her eyes. âDonât be naïve, Cillian. People will do anything to get close to us Fitzpatricks. We canât have real friendships.â
Mother dropped me off at the clinic as soon as we landed, signed the paperwork, and told me sheâd come to pick me up in a few hours.
âI would stay,â she sighed, âbut you know how jittery I get in clinics. Theyâre not my scene. Besides, I have some shopping to do. You understand, donât you, Kill?â She pinched my cheeks. I stepped away, turned around, and left without a word.
A nurse led me to a white small room with a desk and a chair. She locked the door behind me. I sat down, looking up at a security camera that was trained on me. I was obviously being watched.
They kept me like this for twenty minutes or so before a male voice sounded behind a two-way mirror.
âHi there, Cillian.â
âHello.â
I wasnât afraid. I was extremely adaptable. Came with the territory of growing up in the hands of au pairs and attending private schools away from home from age six.
âHowâre you feeling?â
âBeen better. Been worse.â I crossed my legs, making myself comfortable.
âThatâs interesting,â the doctor said. It wasnât, really, but I appreciated his sympathy, whether it was genuine or not. It was more than Iâd received from my own mother, oftentimes.
âDo you know why youâre here?â the pleasant voice asked.
âIâm guessing itâs because I have a thing called the Touretteâs syndrome.â I slouched back in the chair, taking in all the whiteness. The calmness of it pleased me. A long silence stretched from the other side of the window. âHow long have you known?â
âAbout a week.â
I heard pages flipping on a clipboard from the other side. I smiled grimly. Normally, it was the patient who was in the dark.
âHow can it be? It says here your tic attack took place two days ago,â another voice said. A middle-aged female was my guess. Both doctors had accents. One was probably Italian, and the other Swiss from the French border.
âYes,â I said slowly, giving them time to fill in their charts. âBut Iâve been feeling the tension of the attack in the days before building up, so I did some research.â
âSo you knew you were going to get it?â the woman Swiss doctor asked incredulously. âThe attack.â
I nodded curtly. She gasped. She actually gasped.
âPoor thing,â she said. Very un-doctor-like.
âNever been accused of being that before,â I muttered, checking my watch for the time.
âWhere are your parents?â the female doctor asked, her voice growing closer. Were they going to open the door between our rooms? I hoped not. Eye contact wasnât my favorite.
âMy father is in Boston, handling the family business, and my mother is shopping. Zurich is one of her favorite retail spots.â
Knowing Mother, she was going to pick me up with bags full of new shoes, cuff links, and summer clothes for me. Her version of being maternal.
âWhy didnât you tell anyone?â the male doctor asked. âAbout the Touretteâs syndrome.â
âWhat was the point?â I brushed my dress pants from lint. âKnowing my family, we will be keeping my condition under wraps. So either you prescribe me with shit, try new treatment on me, or let me go. Iâll figure out a way to hide it.â
âItâs a neurological disorder,â the female doctor explained, her voice turning even softer. âCaused by an array of very complex things, mostly because of abnormalities in certain brain regions. The tics will come and go, and even though we can offer some treatments to relieve and ease the disorder, it is mostly here to stay. You canât control it. The very definition of Touretteâs is that your tics are involuntarily. You cannot train your nerves. They are everywhere in your body. To numb them, you will have to stop feeling completely.â
Perfect.
âThen it is voluntary.â I stood, heading for the door.
âNo,â the doctor hesitated. âFor you to stop the tics, youâll have to stop feeling. I donât think you understandââ
âI understand everything.â I curled my fist, knocking on the door three times, signaling the nurse I wanted to get out.
âMr. Fitzpatrickââ
I didnât answer.
I got what I came here for.
A solution.
Now all I needed was practice.
Operation Cancel Feelings did not get off to a smooth start when I came back to England.
To begin with, I wasnât big on feelings. That was not to say I hadnât felt any. I was capable of being sad, happy, hungry, amused, and jealous. I hated a lot of peopleâcertainly more than a boy my age shouldâand even loved a little.
Mainly my baby brother, who had the advantage of not being able to talk back, hence not being able to piss me off. But I also loved other things. Polo and Christmas and sticking my tongue out when it rained. The alluring taste of winter.
I also liked my friendship with Andrew Arrowsmith. A lot.
Not in the same way I liked girls. The way they moved and smelled and existed, which I found both magical and confusing. I knew I was one hundred percent straight. I liked Andy because he got me. Because we were the two kids with the Boston accents who did everything together. We studied and hung out and watched movies and shows and played the same sports. We pulled dangerous pranks together. We farted and blamed it on his dogs during dinnertime. We watched our first porno together, and fought over football, and ran away from the cops that one time when we accidentally set a trash can in the country club on fireâ¦
We were being kids and shared whatever childhood our parents allowed us to have together.
He was the closest thing to family Iâd had. Which was why I was furious with Andrew Senior for stealing money from Royal Pipelines, and with my own father for finding out, and also with Athair for acting on the betrayal.
Yes, Andyâs dad stole from our company, but Andy was my lifeline. Couldnât Athair let this shit go?
After weeks of not hearing or seeing Andy at Evon, I finally ran into him at the main chapel. My relief was mixed with dread.
I waved at him from across the chapel. There was a swarm of students between us, and all of us were wearing the same uniform. Andrew noticed me and looked away.
The tinge of pain in my chest alarmed me. I couldnât afford to feel. Feelings would inspire more nerve attacks, and nerve attacks would make Athair disown me. While I truly liked baby Hunter, I didnât want to see him snagging the eldest sonâs title as the heir to Royal Pipelines.
Not to mention, Athair, Mother, and Hunter were the only family I had left, now that Andy probably hated my guts.
I strode across the lawn after Sunday Mass, hands clasped behind my back, frowning at the lush grass. I didnât even care much that I had Touretteâs. It was inconvenient, for sure, but after gulping down a few medical journals and a couple of books about the syndrome, Iâd decided I would overcome it before graduating and moving on to college.
And when I decided something, I never failed, no matter the means it took to achieve it.
The back of my neck seared with sudden pain. I stopped, bringing my hand to rub at it. It felt warm and sleek. I withdrew my palm, glancing at it. It was full of blood. I turned around. Andrew strode toward me with some of his friends, tossing a rock in his hand.
He grinned.
âWhat the fuck, Arrowsmith?â
âThe fuck is your father is a jealous asshole, and my mates here told me that youâre a freak. I heard about the library accident.â
I figured he would. I straightened my posture, reminding myself that there was no need to waste any feelings over this nonsense. He wasnât the first person to leave. He wasnât going to be the last, either.
âYeah? Well, I h-h-heard your da-da-dad stole money to pay your way through Evon. Short on money, Arrowsmith?â I punched my own face out of nowhere.
What the fuck?
Andrewâs eyes gleamed as he advanced toward me, picking up speed. His friends followed suit.
âOh, man, youâre stuttering now!â
âIâm not stuttering.â I let out a low growl, slapping my own face again.
No. No. No.
I wasnât in an empty library this time. I had an audience, and they were watching, laughing, getting a glimpse of the freak show. I had to stop.
Stop feeling.
Stop wanting.
Stop hurting right now.
âThe good thingââAndrew stopped only when he was next to meââis that Iâm not a Fitzpatrick. An Arrowsmith always comes to his friendâs rescue. And you need to be rescued, donât you, Kill?â
His friends laughed, hands tucked inside their pockets, glaring at me, waiting for the word go.
I looked behind me, slapping my own face again. I could probably run, but there was no point. The tics were going to slow me down, and anyway, Iâd always been faster on a horse than with my feet.
I looked back at them. Now was as good a time as any to check the pain box on my list and make sure I couldnât feel it.
Andrew cracked his knuckles loudly.
I did the same thing.
Note to self: cracking oneâs knuckles is very soothing.
âIâm about to fuck your ugly face up even worse than you did, Fitzy.â
I smiled, feeling blissfully numb. âGive it your best shot, Oliver Twist.â
Andrew ended up filming some of his abuse, probably to stash it and remind himself it happened.
But he wasnât an idiot and was careful to never show his face.
It was one of the very things weâd been taught. Never film anything incriminating. The infamous Bullingdon Club had cost Oxford University enough embarrassment, and nobody at fine British institutions wanted their reputation to be stained by a bunch of teenage dirtbags.
The abuse wasnât one-sided.
In fact, during our first fight, Iâd noticed when Andrew beat me up, I stopped feeling. The tics had stopped. And so, I sought Andrew out. Went to his room on a weekly basis. Goaded him into fighting, abusing, and messing with me.
Andrew took over. We crossed the lines many times.
Broken bones. Permanent scars. Cigarette burns.
I grew stronger and more indifferent each time.
And he? He cried when he did those things to me. Cried like a baby.
Going through the trials and tribulations of being bulliedâburned, waterboarded, slapped across the face each time I stuttered or hit myself, each time I twitchedâproved to be highly effective.
By fifteen, the year when Iâd found out Andrew Arrowsmith wasnât going to complete his education at Evon, I was free of symptoms.
Outwardly, anyway.
I still popped my knuckles.
Still breathed deep and slow to lower my heart rate.
Still resisted any type of feelings, smashing them whenever they tried to rise above the surface.
The more I controlled the tics, the worse they had become. Fortunately, I always unleashed them when I was in the privacy of my room.
I kicked, screamed, hit myself, broke walls, tore furniture, and devastated everything around me. But I did it on my terms, and only when I felt I was ready. That was how successfully I managed to suppress my emotions.
Until one day, the tics stopped completely.
Feelings were so far away from my realm of existence that I didnât have to worry anymore.
But the tapes were still out there, and Andrew had them.
Like the one of me lying in a puddle of my own vomit.
Or the one where I sat at the bottom of the pool for a minute at a time until I was blue. Every time I miscalculated the time and rose to the surface too quickly, heâd strike me.
One thing was for sure: Andrew wanted revenge, I wanted complete control, and we both got what we wanted.
By the time we parted ways, his job was done, and so was mine.
I thought we were even.
I thought we both got what we deserved.
I thought I was immune to feelings ever again.
Turned out, every single one of those assumptions was wrong.
The third time I ran to the bathroom to throw up, I threw in the towel and shut my laptop, stashing it under my bed, like the videos could haunt me. I had enough of seeing my husbandâthen a teenagerâabused.
Beaten.
Smashed.
Broken.
Stuttering.
Crying.
Laughing.
Losing it.
Finding it.
I wanted to kill Andrew Arrowsmith with my own hands.
And knew with a confidence that frightened me that I was capable of doing that, too, given the opportunity.
Andrewâs face wasnât on the tapes. But his voice was there. So were his motives to do what he did.
At six thirty in the morning, I rose to my feet and walked over to the shower. My eyes were puffy from crying all night.
There were two things I knew without a shadow of a doubt:
OneâI was going to make sure Arrowsmith was ruined, even if it was the last thing I did in my life.
TwoâCillian was truly incapable of feeling anything after everything heâd been through. But even the unloving deserved to be loved. Even he deserved peace, belonging, and a home.
From now on, I was going to let him have me on his terms.
Even if it slayed my bleeding heart.