Broken Knight: Chapter 13
Broken Knight (All Saints High Book 2)
Why had I asked for this?
Why had I for this?
Why had I put myself in this situation in the first place?
I blinked back at Edie, who had her face buried in her hands, her shoulders quaking.
Normally, she was strong for both of us.
Normally, she knew what to do.
But nothing about our situation was normal.
It terrified me that so much had changed in such a short period of time. My life had derailed from the endless, straight line Iâd been sailing through, to a roller coaster with no beginning, middle, or end.
I was living in another state.
Knight hated me.
I hated Knight.
Rosie was dying.
Iâd kissed a girl. And, pardon the poor cultural reference, but Iâd liked it.
Iâd really liked it. Not enough to change teamsâwell, maybeâ¦though the only person Iâd really ever wanted was my best friendâbut enough not to regret it. That was a complication I couldnât even focus on right now.
Iâd broken a heart. Well, mightâve. Josh had stopped texting me. His unanswered messages were piled up in a neat corner of my phoneâs memory like broken dreams, hung on a clothesline, damp from my tears of guilt.
And now this. The indigestible news I somehow still needed to swallow. The report sat between Edie and me, on the table, waiting to be acknowledged.
I stood up, slapped my open palm on the table, and yelled, âNo!â
Only I didnât do that.
I darted up and paced from side to side in our kitchen, throwing my head back and letting out a rabid laugh. âGood riddance!â
Only I didnât do that, either.
I broke down in tears. I ran to my room. I felt. I .
Or I wished I had.
In reality, I just sat there, staring at my mom. My mom. The one whoâd been there for me from the moment she knew of my existence. The one who counted. Edie.
âIs that all heâs given you?â I whispered.
I hoped my voice would shock her into pulling herself out of her meltdown. It worked. She peeked at me between her fingers, then straightened in her seat, wiping the tears from her face.
âThe private investigator?â She cleared her throat, trying to be cool.
I knew she would be cool about it. Knew she wouldnât make a big deal of it, make a show, make me feel uncomfortable.
I nodded.
âHe said sheâd been living in Rio for the past eight years with her mother. Worked a job selling knock-off perfumes at a mall down her block. No partner, no kids, no family. Had a cat named . She seemed to have gone through a really dark time. She died of an overdose eighteen months ago.â
My biological mother was dead.
I should feel devastated. I should feel free. I should , period. I poked my lower lip, tugging at it, not sure how to react.
Val was still my biological mother.
Also, the woman who gave me up.
The woman whoâd screwed me .
The woman whoâd wanted to use me as a pawn.
But also the woman who named her cat â
in Portuguese.
Val wore many hats in my life. All of them had painted her in an ugly way. People were wrong. I wasnât Saint Luna. I was capable of hating, too. I just didnât know it until now. Somehow, I stood up. Edie rose to her feet after me.
âYou have a mother,â she stressed, slapping her palm over her chest. âYou have me, Luna. Youâll always have me.â
âI know.â I smiled.
âSpeak more.â Her expression softened.
âI try. Iâve been trying my whole life. Itâs just thatâ¦when the words come out, they do it of their own accord.â
âDonât you get it?â She held my arms, giving them a gentle shake.
She had a goofy, lopsided grinâone Iâd catch on Dad when he looked at her lovingly. Sheâd always had the courage to look at me and not through me.
âYouâre free now. Free to speak. Free to talk. Free to be someone else, not the person she made you when she walked away.â
âI know,â I whispered.
But did I? What if this didnât free me? What if I was destined to speak in random bursts?
We both shifted from foot to foot. There was a major elephant in the room, and we needed to address it.
âYour dad needs toââ
âIâll tell him,â I cut her off.
Yes. I knew what I had to do, what I was capable of doing. Val was no longer here to remind me my words didnât matter, that my voice held no weight. Edie was right. It was time to shed the dead skin of the person I was, and to become someone else.
The person Knight needed.
The person Dad, Edie, and Racer deserved.
I was going to talk to Dad.
With words.
âCome in.â
Dad looked up from the paperwork on his office desk, still clad in his suit. He shuffled some papers around for the sake of doing something with his hands, flashing me a tired smile. There was something pathologically wary about his expression when he looked at me nowadays. Love dipped in misery, wrapped in a bitter crust of pity.
Not disappointment, though. Never disappointment.
I closed the door behind me, moseying to the camel-colored leather armchair in front of him. I sank into it, the weight of what I was about to do pulling me down. Without breaking eye contact, my nails dug into the tender flesh of my palms until they pierced through my skin. I breathed through the pain.
I could do it. Iâd done it with Knight. With Edie. At a party full of complete strangers.
But somehow, this was different.
My father had been tricked by Val. She got pregnant on purpose. He hadnât wanted me. Yet he had been forced to raise me on his own for the first few years of my life. And it hadnât been easy, with my lack of communication. Theyâd called him The Mute because he didnât speak much, but his daughter truly crushed him with misery over her lack of words.
âIs everything okay?â He furrowed his brows, seeming to realize the atmosphere in the room had shifted. Maybe that Iâd shifted, too.
I used to be dependent. Small. Scared. The last few months had changed me. And I was still evolving, changing like clayâspinning through tiny changes that made small, yet significant differences in my life. Each dent shaped me.
I opened my mouth.
He dropped his pen.
My lips moved.
His eyes widened.
I smiled.
He .
âNot everything,â I whispered, aware of the way my lips molded around the words.
Sadness laced in my victory. The only reason I was able to speak was because my birth mother had died. There was no reconciliation possible. Iâd lost something permanentlyâbut gained something else.
I reached for his hand across the desk, clutching it with shaky fingers. Free at last. The pen heâd been holding a second ago bled ink onto his new leather planner. I only noticed because everything was illuminated, like I was on ecstasy or something.
âI have a confession, Dad.â
I wasnât sure how I expected him to react. My father had tried everything to get me to talk. I had award-winning speech therapists knocking on my door, the best psychologists and experts in the world at my disposal. Iâd seen his back shake from weeping dozens of times when he thought I wasnât looking, as he mourned the words that never left my mouth.
Then, I wasnât ready. Now, I was.
âLunaâ¦â He put a shaky hand to his mouth.
I dragged my hand from his, fanned my fingers on his desk. âVal died,â I said.
âHow do youâ¦â
âI asked Edie to hire someone to investigate. Iâm so sorry, Dad. I didnât mean to hurt you. I needed to know.â
He made a sudden move. The bleeding pen rolled across the desk and dropped onto the carpet. He shook his head, paused for a second, then stood up, rounding his desk and yanking me to my feet. His eyes bore into mine, saying so many things heâd bottled over the years. I thought he was going to hug me, but to my astonishment, he got down on his knees, staring up at me, his eyes twinkling.
âYouâre talking.â He looked puzzled.
I laughed. I actually laughed, which was horrible, seeing as my moment of greatness was tainted by the death of my biological mother. But then I started crying, too. Tears ran down my cheeks, following one another along my neck, soaking my shirt. Talk about bittersweet moments.
âI meanâ¦are you?â His throat worked. âTalking?â
âTo some people.â Guilt, guilt, guilt. Piles upon piles of messy, black, foggy guilt.
âSome?â
âYou. Edie. Knight.â
âSince when?â
âSinceâ¦a few weeks ago.â
âLuna,â he whispered.
âDad.â
âSay it again.â
âDad.â I smiled. He closed his eyes. Took a deep breath.
â
Please.â
âDad.â
His shoulders shook. Not with sobs. With happiness. Happiness Iâd put inside him. I was drunk on my newfound power.
âTell me again.â His voice was soft.
The pen behind him spread blue ink all over the lush crème carpet.
âDad. Trent. Mr. Rexroth.
.â I wiggled my brows, and he opened his eyes, laughing. The crowâs feet fanning around his eyes squished up his entire face adorably.
âWhat about your brother?â
âWhat about him?â
He gave me a look, and I pulled him to standing. I buried my face in his chest, inhaling him. I hated that he looked like a man whoâd just been released from prison. Happier. Lighter. Iâd sentenced him to a reality he hadnât wanted, caged him into a situation heâd struggled with every day.
âIâll try. Iâ¦I donât control it, Dad. Itâs not like that. Yet. Iâm sorry.â I swallowed. âArenât youâ¦mad?â
âWhich part should I be mad about? The fact that my daughter wanted to understand her past better and I obviously failed her if she felt she couldnât ask me about her birth mother, or the fact that youâve just given me the only thing Iâve truly wanted since the day you stopped talking?â
âThe first one. Definitely the first one.â I laughed.
Melancholy dripped between us. This was the big moment. The top of the hill. Me, talking to my dad, telling him I knew my mother was dead. He didnât look surprised. Why didnât he look surprised?
Ever the mind reader, he cleared his throat and looked down.
âYou knew about Val,â I said. There was no accusation in my voice.
He nodded. âIt seemed redundant to bring her up after all these years. Plus, she hurt you in such a vital way, I couldnât bring myself to think what would happen ifââ
âItâs okay,â I cut him off. I got it. I did.
âGod.â He shook his head, pulling me into another hug. âYour voice. Itâs beautiful.â
âI love you,â I whispered into his suit. My words had life, and weight, and a pulse. I said them again. âI love you, Dad. I love you. I love you. I love you.â
He lifted me up like I was a little girl, spinning me in place and burying his nose in my hair. Tears rolled down our faces. The pen bled the last of its ink, marking this page in our lives forever in my fatherâs office. I knew, with certainty that made my heart swell, that he was not going to replace that carpet.
He was going to look at it every day, remember the day it had happened, and cherish it.
âI love you, too, baby girl.â