Chapter 149
Grey: Fifty Shades of Grey as Told by Christian (Fifty Shades 4)
And there it isâher coup de grace. I pushed too far. Now she knowsâand all the arguments I had with myself before I embarked on the pursuit of this girl flood back to me. Sheâs not into the lifestyle. How can I corrupt her this way? Sheâs too young, too innocentâtooâ¦Ana.
My dreams are just thatâ¦dreams. This isnât going to work.
I close my eyes; I canât bear to look at her. Itâs true, she would be better off without me. Now that sheâs seen the monster, she knows she canât contend with him. I have to free herâlet her go her own way. This wonât work between us.
Focus, Grey.
âYouâre right. I should let you go. Iâm no good for you.â
Her eyes widen. âI donât want to go,â she whispers. Tears pool in her eyes, glistening on long dark lashes.
âI donât want you to go, either,â I answer, because itâs the truth, and that feelingâthat ominous, frightening feelingâis back, overwhelming me. The tears trickle down her cheeks once more. Gently I wipe away a falling tear with my thumb, and before I know it the words tumble out. âIâve come alive since I met you.â I trace my thumb along her bottom lip. I want to kiss her, hard. Make her forget. Dazzle her. Arouse herâI know I can. But something holds me backâher wary, injured look. Why would she want to be kissed by a monster? She might push me away, and I donât know if I could deal with any more rejection. Her words haunt me, pulling at some dark and repressed memory.
You are one fucked-up son of a bitch.
âMe, too,â she whispers. âIâve fallen in love with you, Christian.â
I remember Carrick teaching me to dive. My toes gripping the pool edge as I fell arching into the waterâand now Iâm falling once more, into the abyss, in slow motion.
Thereâs no way she can feel that about me.
Not me. No!
And Iâm choking for air, strangled by her words pressing their momentous weight on my chest. I plunge down and down, the darkness welcoming me. I canât hear them. I canât deal with them. She doesnât know what sheâs saying, who sheâs dealing withâwhat sheâs dealing with.
âNo.â My voice is raw with pained disbelief. âYou canât love me, Ana. No. Thatâs wrong.â
I need to set her right on this. She cannot love a monster. She cannot love a fucked-up son of a bitch. She needs to go. She needs outâand in an instant, everything becomes crystal clear. This is my eureka moment; I canât make her happy. I canât be what she needs. I canât let this go on. This has to finish. It should never have started.
âWrong? Whyâs it wrong?â
âWell, look at you. I canât make you happy.â The anguish is plain in my voice as I sink deeper and deeper into the abyss, shrouded in despair.
No one can love me.
âBut you do make me happy,â she says, not comprehending.
Anastasia Steele, look at yourself. I have to be honest with her. âNot at the moment. Not doing what I want to do.â
She blinks, her lashes fluttering over her large, wounded eyes, studying me intently as she searches for the truth. âWeâll never get past that, will we?â
I shake my head, because I canât think of anything to say. It comes down to incompatibility, again. She closes her eyes, as if in pain, and when she opens them again, they are clearer, full of resolve. Her tears have stopped. And the blood starts pounding through my head as my heart hammers. I know what sheâs going to say. I dread what sheâs going to say.
âWell, Iâd better go, then.â She winces as she sits up.
Now? She canât go now.
âNo, donât go.â Iâm free-falling, deeper and deeper. Her leaving feels like a monumental mistake. My mistake. But she canât stay if she feels this way about me, she just canât.
âThereâs no point in me staying,â she says, and gingerly climbs out of the bed still wrapped in her bathrobe. Sheâs really leaving. I canât believe it. I scramble out of bed to stop her, but her look pins me to the floorâher expression so bleak, so cold, so distantânot my Ana at all.
âIâm going to get dressed. Iâd like some privacy,â she says. How flat and empty her voice sounds as she turns and leaves, closing the door behind her. I stare at the closed door.
This is the second time in one day that sheâs walked out on me.
I sit up and cradle my head in my hands, trying to calm down, trying to rationalize my feelings.
She loves me?
How did this happen? How?
Grey, you fucking fool.
Wasnât this always a risk, with someone like her? Someone good and innocent and courageous. A risk that sheâd not see the real me until it was too late. That I would make her suffer like this?
Why is this so painful? I feel like Iâve punctured a lung. I follow her out of the room. She might want privacy, but if sheâs leaving me I need clothes.
When I reach my bedroom, sheâs showering, so I quickly change into jeans and a T-shirt, Iâve chosen blackâsuitable for my mood. Grabbing my phone, I wander through the apartment, tempted to sit at the piano and hammer out some woeful lament. But instead I stand in the middle of the room, feeling nothing.
Vacant.
Focus, Grey! This is the right decision. Let her go.
My phone buzzes. Itâs Welch. Has he found Leila?
âWelch.â
âMr. Grey, I have news.â His voice grates over the phone. This guy should stop smoking. He sounds like Deep Throat.
âYou found her?â My spirits lift a little.