God of Malice: Chapter 36
God of Malice: A Dark College Romance (Legacy of Gods Book 1)
Somethingâs not right.
Iâm not sure what or why, but Iâm certain of the red flags when my wife wraps her arm around me, her breathing erratic and her body tense.
Her fingers absentmindedly stroke my chest, but sheâs not falling asleep. Or talking.
Sheâs just caught in a trance of her own making. A phase where I couldnât find her even if I tried.
This brings back horrible memories from when she used to give me the cold shoulder, distance herself from me and leave me battling violent tendencies where all I wanted was to punch anything that moved in her vicinity.
But weâre over that phase. Weâve been over it for more than twenty-six years.
After we officially got together, there were times when Reina was upset with me about small details and chose to use her irritating habit of creating distance between us.
We talked about that in the first few months, and I taught her to never do that again. I told her how much it infuriated me when she didnât consider me part of her life when sheâs the center of mine.
Ever since then, sheâs gotten better at communicating her feelings, her reservations about certain things, and everything in between.
Weâve gotten to a point in our marriage where we donât have to speak to understand one another.
Tonight is different.
My wife hasnât been the same ever since she slipped out of bed earlier. And while I want to shake the answers out of her, I force myself to wait.
And wait.
And fucking wait.
Itâs impossible to go to sleep if she doesnât tell me.
The silence in our bedroom soon turns suffocating, and I slide my fingers into her shiny blonde hair.
It doesnât matter how long Iâve been with this woman, I still canât get enough of touching her. I still think about all the years we lost and canât get back.
Iâm still trapped at that moment when I thought Iâd lose her forever.
A small sigh leaves her lips and her stroking pauses. âAsh?â
âHmm?â
âI think we made a mistake.â
âAbout?â
She continues burying her face in my chest. âRemember when Kill brought us those desiccated mice and told us Look, I can see inside them?â
My jaw clenches. âIt was when we first figured out heâs like her. Of course I remember.â
âHe was only seven, Ash.â
âAnd he already showed the signs.â
âThatâs not the point. Our son was so young, and we mustâve looked at him as if he were a monster.â She stares up at me with an unnatural shine in her deep blue eyes. âHe told Glyndon that Iâve been scared of him since. Our baby boy thinks Iâve been afraid of him all this time, Ash. What are we going to do?â
âHey.â I sit up and bring her with me and she sniffles, her tears soaking her cheeks and my thumb as I try to wipe them away. âItâs okay.â
âItâs not.â Her voice breaks. âItâs not okay for a seven-year-old to think his parents are scared of him. And itâs absolutely not okay that heâs carried that thought for over twelve years. Thatâs how trauma is caused.â
âHeâs not susceptible to trauma. Youâre feeling these terrible emotions, but heâs not able to process them, Reina. You shouldnât project what you feel on him. Heâs not the same.â
âBut heâs our son and we might have let him down.â
âYouâre overthinking this. Besides, he doesnât care.â
âOf course he does. I know you want him not to, and youâve been trying to prove that heâs only a monster with no redeeming qualities, but thatâs not true, Ash. If he doesnât care, would he make sure to answer my texts, call me regularly, and talk to me about his campus life? If he doesnât care, would he bring his girlfriend to meet us?â
âItâs all a façade and a learned behavior. Heâs one hundred percent socialized and has long since perfected fooling the world around him. You can refuse to see it all you want, but that doesnât deny what he is.â
âWhat the hell is what he is supposed to mean? Heâs our son. Our flesh and blood. Heâs not a guinea pig or a freak, stop analyzing him as if he is one.â
âNot when heâs prone to lose control any second.â
She pushes away from me, her delicate brows creasing with a frown, then starts to leave the bed.
I clutch her wrist. âWhere do you think youâre going?â
âAnywhere but beside you until you stop talking about our son like heâs a psychological case study.â
âLike fuck youâre leaving.â I tug her down and she gasps as she falls back in my embrace. âYou can be mad at me while you talk to me.â
My wife puffs out a breath. âPlease try to see him as more than your prejudice about his type. I was hurt, too, extremely, to the point of madness by her, but that doesnât mean Kill is like her or that Iâd take out my pain on him.â
Iâm about to placate her, just to get her out of this mood, when a loud bang echoes from the room beside our master suite.
Reina jumps up, throwing her robe on, and I follow after wearing a T-shirt.
We both rush out and stop in the hallway when the bang comes again.
My wife and I share a look. Gareth.
We hurry to his room and surprisingly, the door is open.
The scene that plays in front of us is straight out of a horror movie. Reina places two hands on her mouth as what I predicted would eventually happen takes form in front of our eyes.
Killian holds his brother by an elbow to his throat, pinning him against the wall. The bang sound is from when he pulls him just to slam him back again.
The savage look on Killianâs face resembles my most frightening nightmares and is nothing like Iâve seen before. Not even when he was seldom caught making trouble at school. All light from his eyesâthat Reina wouldnât shut up aboutâthat he graced us with during this visit is gone.
In its place, complete gloom covers his features.
âIâm not going to ask again. Why did you send her that video?â Despite the darkness in his features, Killian sounds collected, in his element, absolutely not on the verge.
Which is a red flag since heâs the type who gets calmer the more heâs enraged.
The deadly type of calm.
âI told you not to get involved, didnât I? I told you to stay the fuck out of my business if you didnât want me to slice your fucking throat, but you went ahead and put your stupid fucking nose where it doesnât belong.â
Gareth raises a fist and punches him in the face. Reina gasps from the force of the blow, and blood explodes on Killianâs lips, but he doesnât release his brother. If anything, his hold appears to get stronger.
Reina runs to them, places a hand on Killianâs arm, and tries to sound firm but gentle. âLet him go, Kill.â
âStay out of it, Mom. My dear brother and I have a score to settle.â
âYouâre hurting him.â
âHe hurt me first and this is payback.â
âKillian, please.â Her fingers dig into his arm, but itâs like she doesnât exist.
âDonât beg for him, Mom. Just donât.â
âLet your brother go, Killian.â I step forward, approaching them at a steady pace.
When he doesnât show any sign of hearing me, I grab him by the nape and wrench him back with enough force to send him flying against the wall if I release him.
But I donât.
Because as much as I was a violent person in my youth, I donât use that shit anymoreâespecially not on my family.
Gareth bends over, slaps both palms on his knees, and coughs. The color slowly returns to his face as his breathing settles down. Reina pours him a glass of water, from his minibar, that he gulps in one go.
Killian glares at him, his index finger tapping manically on his thigh.
âSuch a golden boy, Gaz,â he mocks, his tone on the verge of exploding. âLook at you being saved by Mommy and Daddy again.â
I tighten my hold on his neck. âKnock it off.â
âI know you donât believe me.â Gareth holds his head high. âBut I didnât do it.â
âYouâre right, I donât believe you. Because, the last time you got in between us, you wanted to ruin me through her. This was your chance to do that.â
âThat was before I realized sheâs the best thing thatâs ever happened to you, asshole. I didnât need to bring you down, because youâve left me alone ever since she came into the picture. You donât actively try to make my life hell like before, and you were starting to seem like a decent human being. But maybe I was just fooling myself.â
âFuck you and your victim speech. Itâs getting old fast.â
âKillian Patrick Carson.â Reina taps her foot on the ground. âI understand youâre upset, but you will not be speaking to your brother in that tone.â
âUpset?â he echoes. âTry fucking enraged, Mom. Your dear oldest son showed Glyndon something she shouldnât have seen and now, she left.â
âI told you I didnât show her that. I even deleted it from the archives.â Garethâs voice rises with frustration. âAsk Jeremy, he was there and told me to bury the hatchet. Besides, you didnât expect her to stay in the dark all her life, did you? She wouldâve eventually found out. If not from me, then from someone else.â
Killian jerks in my hold in an attempt to go at his brotherâs throat again.
âCalm down,â I say with patience I donât particularly feel right now.
âSpare me the bullshit.â He forcibly wrenches himself from my hold. âYou never wanted me to be born? Wonderful. Guess what, Dad? I never wanted to be your son. There, I said it, and you know what? Iâm not even sorry, Mom. I shouldâve told him this a long time ago.â
Reina physically steps backward from the shock, her lips trembling as if sheâs finally seeing what type of monster her son actually is.
The type whoâd assault his brother, jab at his father, and emotionally wreck his mother without blinking.
But I canât even gather the energy to say I told you so, because Killianâs words and the anger behind them catches me completely off guard.
My first thought with Killian is to always subdue him somehow, shackle him in a way, knock him down a few notches so he never grows fully into who he is.
When I first found out about his tendencies, I took him hunting and enrolled him in highly competitive sports. I taught him how to channel that destructive energy and tame it, but he often spiraled out of control.
He eventually grew bored of repressing his true nature and rebelled. He punched his classmates, picked fights with thugs, and sent a few people to the ER.
I refused to bury his actions or let him use any sort of privileges. The first time the principal called me, I told him to suspend him. The second time, my father covered his tracks.
And that continued for all the times that followed.
My father is the reason Killian never learned his lesson. He kept getting him out of trouble so that the Carson name wasnât sullied, even when I told him that he was only making him more untouchable.
âWhatâs wrong with being untouchable?â my father asked without batting an eye. âAt least heâll be powerful.â
My old man only ever cared about thatâpower. Didnât matter how it was attained as long as the family name remained in a prestigious position.
Needless to say, I didnât agree with him, and the fact that Killian stopped calling me and started going to his grandfather started a rift between us.
However, itâs the first time Iâve heard the words, or more accurately, the bomb he dropped just now.
I face him fully. âWhat did you just say?â
His shoulders have tensed, and the expression on his face is the most savage Iâve seen. Heâs losing control.
I feel it.
He must feel it, too.
But he still speaks in that eternally casual tone. âI heard you that night when I was nine and had beat up that tool who was calling Mia names. Mom was depressed, drinking wine late at night in the kitchen, and you came to find her. I was right outside when you told her you shouldâve only had Gareth and that Iâm defective. And you know what? I heard Mom being angry, I heard her telling you to never say that again if you loved her, but your words are the only thing I remember. Thanks for the beautiful childhood memories, Dad. You hate who I am with everything in you, but you should be thankful. If those words had been directed at your golden boy there, he wouldâve developed a trauma. Shouldnât we all be grateful that Iâm not a neurotypical fucking weakling?â
âOh, Kill.â Reina steps toward him, but he holds up a hand.
âSpare me, Mom. I donât want to hear you defending him.â
âIâm sorry, baby.â She grabs a hold of his arm. âIâm sorry you had to hear that and think I was afraid of you because of the mice incident. A mother canât be scared of her own child. The only reason I was horrified back then was because I realized you were like someone from our past. Someone Asher and I loved with all our hearts but ended up stabbing us in the back. Itâs why he said those words, too. We knew there was a chance of having a child who inherited that someoneâs genes, and it happened with you. Asher said we should only have Gareth, but Iâm the one who wanted another child, Iâm the one who wanted you with all my heart, Kill. I know what he said was wrong, but he didnât even mean it. Those were words of anger. Asher loves you as much as he loves Gareth, Kill. But youâre the one who distanced yourself from him.â
And now, I know why.
It wasnât because my father covered his tracks instead of me or because I thought maybe he disliked me.
Turns out he genuinely dislikes me.
A shot of pain explodes behind my rib cage and spreads all over my chest. I couldnât speak even if I wanted to, so I take some time to regulate my breathing.
Garethâs gaze flits between me and his brother as if heâs unable to believe what heâs hearing.
âSo itâs my fault now?â Killian barks out cruel laughter, then it dies out as abruptly as it started. âWow, Mom, I feel gaslighted right now and that definitely doesnât look good on you.â
âDo you not remember how you stopped spending time with your father? You even stopped hugging him in greeting and often left the table first.â She softens her voice.
âThatâs because he prefers his golden boy.â
âNot true,â Gareth says. âWhenever we invited you to come along, you refused.â
âForgive me if I donât like spending time with a father who never wanted me.â
âKillian,â I call, and he slowly faces me, jaw set.
He thinks weâre going to war again, that this will be another fight and Iâll assert my parental position by suppressing him again.
I place a hand on his shoulder and he tenses, ready for the jab or whatever he thinks Iâll do.
âIâm sorry.â
His eyes widen a little, which is about the only reaction he shows, but before he can think about it further, I continue.
âI didnât realize my words, as impulsive as they were, would have this effect on you and I apologize for not looking further into the reason you methodically cut off your relationship with me. But if itâs any consolation, itâs not about your person, son. Your behavior reminded me of painful memories and the young bitter me, and I reacted badly to that. Itâs not your fault, itâs completely mine. Iâm sorry I couldnât be a better father figure to you.â
Reina cries silently and Gareth holds her shoulder, hugging her to his side.
Killian narrows his eyes, but the stiffness has vanished. âYou apologized twice.â
âSo?â
âYouâve never apologized before. Not to anyone.â
âI did to your mother once, and Iâm doing it again to my son. My family members are the only ones Iâll apologize to when an apology is due. And, Kill?â
âYeah?â
âYou and Gareth arenât different in my eyes, not even a little. Iâm only harsher with you because your character is harsher.â
He shrugs. âGareth can be a pain in the ass, too. You just donât see it.â
âHey!â my eldest son protests.
Reina smiles with tears in her eyes and rubs his chest. âI want a family hug.â
And then she pulls us all in a hug, because she can be sentimental like that. All three of us would rather not do this, but if thereâs anything we agree on, itâs our care for this woman.
She can make me and our boys burn a whole town for her by just saying the words.
Then she hugs Kill individually, basically strangling him, considering his expression, then whispers something in his ear.
For the first time ever, his features soften and he looks like that six-year-old boy who used to sit on a swing and stare into space like an old man.
âWhat are you looking at, Kill?â I asked him once.
He sighed with the exasperation of a person whoâs seen it all. âHow boring everything is. How do I make it less boring, Dad?â
I shouldâve known by then that we had a special kid on our hands. Someone who didnât need the world, or even us.
Thereâs no doubt in my mind that if he was on his own, heâd live just fine, maybe even be freer than he is right now. He wouldnât have to worry about hiding his true self or repressing his urges for my and his motherâs sake.
Heâd be a true monster and would probably get away with it for a while before he eventually got locked up.
But we need him in our lives, cold-bloodedness and manipulativeness included.
Yes, he can be a monster, but he usually chooses not to at home. Itâs a mature choice he made a long time ago after the fights stopped, and one heâll continue to make.
But even if he doesnât, weâll deal with it when it comes.
One thingâs for certain, Killian will always be my son.
Iâll never forget the tears in Reinaâs eyes when she held him in her arms for the first time. âLook at him, our baby is so beautiful, Ash.â
âHe is.â
âHe wouldâve been more beautiful if he was a girl, but oh well, we can always try again.â She kissed his forehead. âI love you to bits, baby.â
âCan he play football with me, Daddy?â Gareth asked me while he craned his neck to see his brother.
âSure thing. We can teach him.â
âYes!â He kissed his brother on the cheek. âIâm gonna teach you all the things.â
That moment seems like it happened yesterday. I think the reason itâs coming back to me now is because this scene is creepily similar to it.
Itâs been such a long time since the four of us have felt like a connected family. Killian always, without doubt, ruined it.
He was acting out, I now realize, demanding the attention he thought he was due.
At this moment, he doesnât seem like he feels the need to.
âNowââReina pulls backââdid you say Glyn left?â
Seeming to have recalled the reason heâs been behaving like a beast in the middle of the night, Killian clenches his jaw and nods.
âIt wasnât me,â Gareth says, softer this time. âIf Iâd wanted to do that, I wouldâve done it back at campus, not here.â
My wife strokes Killianâs arm. âWas she mad at you?â
âVery.â
âIf you apologize, she might listen.â
âI donât think an apology would cut it. Sheâ¦â He trails off, then lowers his head. âShe looked both scared and disgusted with me. Sheâs never looked at me that way before and I donât know how to fix it.â
âFirst things first, donât be yourself. Itâd do more harm than good,â Gareth tells him and Killian flips him off.
âOn the contrary,â I say. âBe yourself. If she canât deal with you at your worst, then youâll eventually suffocate her and sheâll hate you. And youâll probably hate her, too, and itâll turn into a vicious cycle.â
âIf you truly care about her, then pursue her, Kill,â Reina supplies.
âYou think?â
âIâm sure. How do you think your father got me? He just refused to leave me alone and I had to settle.â She sighs, eyes filled with glimmering emotions. âIt helped that Iâd loved him since I was a teen, though.â
Iâve been married to this woman for over twenty-five years, and she still makes me fall for her harder every day.
Every single moment.
Sheâs not the reason behind my happinessâsheâs the definition of the word.
Killian marches to Gareth and wraps an arm around his shoulder. âWeâre going back to campus.â
âWhy would I come along?â
âYou need to show me all the archives of that night. I have a theory.â
âCanât it wait till the morning?â
âWhy would it?â
âWhy would it not?â
After some arguments, they finally agree to head back. They even wake my father up in the middle of the night so they can borrow his private jet.
After they change, Reina and I walk them to the entrance. She hugs them together, then one at a time while smoothing invisible wrinkles from their clothes.
âBut I still didnât get my fill of you, boys.â
âWeâll come back, Mom.â Gareth grabs Killian in a chokehold. âIâll make sure to bring this idiot, too.â
âWho are you calling an idiot, wanna die?â Kill tries to get out of his hold and fails.
Gareth only releases him when he hugs me goodbye. âSee you, Dad.â
âSee you, son.â
Killian is about to turn and leave, but I grab his shoulders and for the first time since he was a kid, I wrap my arms around him and bring him close.
It takes him a moment before he stiffly pats my back. Itâll take him some time, but heâll get there.
âStay out of trouble, son.â
He grins as we break apart. âHow else will you ask about me?â I narrow my eyes and he laughs. âThat was a joke.â
Then they get in the backseat of the car so my chauffeur can drive them to the airport.
Reina and I remain at the door long after theyâre gone, arms wrapped around each other as she sniffles.
âWhy do they grow up so fast?â she grumbles but then sighs and smiles up at me. âSilver lining, Iâm so glad we had that conversation tonight as painful as it was.â
âMe, too.â
She strokes my cheek, her touch soft, loving, and the only thing I need. âI know it mustâve triggered that horrible trauma, but Iâm so glad you could look past it and talk to Kill. Iâm so proud of you.â
I can die a happy man if my wife is proud of me. No questions asked.
âI love you, Ash.â
âI love you, too, prom queen.â I tug her closer. âDo you think heâll be able to get Glyndon back?â
âOh, Iâm sure he will. He looks at her the way you look at me.â
I raise an eyebrow. âAnd how do I look at you?â
âLike youâll destroy the world as long as I remain safe.â
âItâs true. Now, tell me, what did you whisper to Kill earlier?â
She smiles as she stares in the distance. âThat we love him no matter how different he is.â