Ruthless Empire: Part 2 – Chapter 37
Ruthless Empire: A Dark Enemies to Lovers Romance (Royal Elite Book 6)
Silver hasnât said a word the entire way.
Sheâs slumped in her seat, staring out the window and trying her hardest not to break down.
Itâs like sheâs there but isnât.
Not really.
She left a part of herself at that doctorâs office. I know, because I left a part of me too.
For a moment, I allowed myself to consider the prospect of becoming a father. Despite what I told her on the plane, my vision of fatherhood appeared a lot like blood in a pool.
Being a father meant becoming my own version of William and I would never be that fucking man.
However, the idea of being the father of Silverâs children⦠Well, thatâs an entirely different thing altogether.
I started plotting where weâd go. How weâd live. All of it.
I started picturing a future where I wouldnât have to sneak into her room or pull her into a dark corner to be able to touch her.
A future where sheâs all mine in front of the world.
The doctor killed it. He aborted a dream that hadnât fully formed yet.
Not knowing what to say or how to say it, I remain silent. Iâve always loved silence â it allows me to read in peace and let my thoughts be loud. Silence is my sanctuary.
Not now.
Now, I want to slice through it with a knife and end it once and for fucking all.
By the time we arrive to Lucienâs house, itâs almost evening.
Silver steps out of the car like a robot, hugging her bag, as I follow after. A butler greets us in front of the property. Itâs built near the cliff of a beach. The nearby town is visible from here, but itâs far enough that no one would wander around the house.
Lucien must be a private man.
âBonsoir,â a butler greets us at the entrance with a welcoming smile and motions at Silverâs bag. âSâill vous plait.â
She hands him the bag and asks in a tired voice, âWhereâs Mum?â
âMadame Davis?â I ask when he seems to be lost. I doubt he didnât understand; he must be one of those French people who refuses to acknowledge any language other than their own. The level of his snobbishness is similar to Ronanâs favourite butler, Lars.
âAh, oui. Madame Davis a retourné à lâAngleterre avec Monsieur Lucien.â
Really? Cynthia went back to England with Lucien without telling her daughter about it?
âWhat?â Silver retrieves her phone and winces. âUgh. I forgot itâs on airplane mode.â She dials a number, then places the device to her ear. âMum? Where are you?â
Silver paces the entrance while the butler just stands there, completely oblivious to the scene.
âIâm already in freaking France. Lucien mustâve told you I was coming. How could you leave?â She listens for a second. âItâs always emergencies this, work that. What about me, Mum? Me? Have you ever thought about me in all the decisions you make?â
Realising she snapped at her mother, she quickly backpedals. âIâm sorry. I didnât mean toâ¦okay⦠Talk to you later.â
She hangs up with a sigh and keeps concentrating on her shoes as she speaks. âMum had a work emergency. Lucien will be able to send the jet back to us tomorrow evening. Iâm going to stay the night. You can catch a flight at the airport if you want.â
And with that, she steps inside and the butler follows her with a nod at me.
I release a long sigh, then go after her. My shoulders are tense and the back of my neck is about to snap with how rigid it feels.
I find Silver upstairs, standing in the middle of a room.
Itâs similar to that time when I first touched her, first tasted her, when Mum and Sebastian announced they were getting married.
Iâve never been a believer of the butterfly effect, the fact that one simple alteration of initial conditions in a non-linear system can cause a catastrophic outcome later on.
However, I believe that small incidents, like Silver hearing that I lost my virginity that time, have led to a whole lot of clusterfuck. Itâs because of what she heard that she retaliated. She fought back. And since then, weâve kept on fighting and challenging each other in a vicious cycle.
Now, weâre here and nothing can be undone.
âWhy are you still here?â She fiddles with her bag on the bed. âGo home. The driver can take you.â
âI know what youâre doing and itâs not going to work. Youâll never be able to push me away, so you might as well stop trying.â
She pretends to not hear me as she yanks all the clothes out of the bag, her back bowing and rigid under the denim jacket.
I stride to her and grip her arm, forcing her to face me, to look at me. She canât be alone right now.
Tears glisten in her eyes as she pushes at my chest. âWhat do you want from me? Just leave me alone.â
âI canât.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause youâre in pain. I hate it when youâre in pain, Butterfly.â
She breaks down then. A sob tears from her as she wraps her arms around my waist in a vice grip and hides her face in my chest.
I pull her close, a hand on her back and the other protectively around her head. I let her pain soak mine because if I had the option to take the hurt in her cries or the rawness of her grief, I would.
Iâve been emotionally fucked up since I was a child anyway, whatâs one more pain to add?
Only, this one has an entirely different meaning.
Silver is the type who doesnât cry often, and when she does, itâs like sheâs breaking your heart. Itâs in those small sounds and the sniffles. Itâs in the way her whole body shakes with the force of her pain.
âIt hurts. Why does it hurt so much, Cole? Itâs not supposed to. I should be happy I wonât be forced to have an abortion, but why do I feel like I killed a baby that was never there in the first place? Why do I feel so horrible?â
âYouâre not horrible. Youâre just human, and you feel pain. Itâll eventually go away.â
âW-what if it doesnât?â she speaks through her hiccoughs. âWhat if I always feel thisâ¦this loss.â
âThen weâll feel it together.â
She peeks up at me with her tear-streaked face and bloodshot eyes. âWhat do you mean?â
âI told you, youâre not the only one responsible for this. Your pain is my pain, Butterfly.â