Broken Knight: Chapter 26
Broken Knight (All Saints High Book 2)
IÂ wasnât supposed to show up at school this week, for obvious goddamn reasons. I still did. Not to study, God forbid, but to catch Poppy alone, after her accordion class. Yes, she took an accordion class. Who was I to judge? I was a recovering alcoholic before it was even legal for me to drink.
I waited outside her class, loitering about, kicking invisible air to pass the time.
Apologizing to her was a knee-jerk reaction more than anything else, though I could see it was needed after taking a step back from the alcohol and pills and assessing the clusterfuck that was our brief time together. Specifically, the high note with which it had ended, when I was halfway through putting my junk in her trunk, before confessing that I just couldnât do it.
I couldnât do it with someone who wasnât Luna.
Not then. Maybe not ever.
That was the straw that broke Poppyâs back. Iâd watched her descend the tree trunk from our treehouse, fall on her ass, and run in the opposite direction of my neighborhood, where sheâd parked her car. Then, Iâd had to go down and direct her to the right way, which, of course, was more awkward than bumping into your one-night stand in an STD clinic.
Vaughn and Hunter had tried to tell me I shouldnât feel so bad, that Poppy had pretty much single-handedly managed our relationship for us, even when Iâd tried to break up with her several times. But that was a copout, and I was having none of that bullshit.
Iâd hurt her.
Iâd wronged her.
I needed to apologize.
End of.
I caught Poppy timidly making her way out of class, staring down at the floor, wearing a huge-ass jacket and one of those big hats you only see in catalogs or on beaches.
âAre you a spy now?â I pushed off the doorframe and fell into step with her, shoving my hands into my front pockets. She was practically making a run toward the exit. Toward her car.
âWorse. Iâm a hermit.â
âHow so?â
âEveryoneâs laughing at me. Iâm a bloody joke, Knight. Because of you,â she whispered hotly under her breath, tilting her hat down.
âIâm here to make amends.â
âPretty sure youâre here to make my life a living hell.â
âI deserve that.â I sighed, still following her as we burst through the double doors and descended the stairs toward the parking lot.
Poppy stopped on the last step, turning toward me sharply. âLook. This is my first day here in a while. Please donât ruin it for me.â
âItâs mine, too,â I confessed.
âYouâve been sick?â
I shook my head. I didnât want to say it out loud. First, because I didnât think I could. And besides, I didnât want her to think it was some kind of bullshit way to milk forgiveness out of her.
By the way Poppyâs face contorted and her lips clamped, trying to bite down the tears and emotions, I gathered I didnât need to spell it out for her. I was just relieved to know people werenât talking about what had happened in my family too much. Then again, people had to be a special brand of stupid to say anything about meâpositive, negative, or otherwiseâwith Vaughn and Hunter around.
âOh, Knight.â She tore the hat from her head, dumping it on the ground. âIâm so, so sorry. That is horrible. How are you holding up? Are you okay?â
Was I okay?
No, I wasnât.
Not even close.
And in this moment, it felt like I might never be again.
I shook my head, swallowing down all the anger and sadness and bullshit.
âI will be,â I lied. âSeeing how you grew up to be wonderful and kind and understanding without a mom, I know I have a chance of being semi-tolerable as a person. Maybe. But thatâs not why Iâm here. Itâs not, Poppy. Iâm here because I screwed up, and I want to apologize. I understand how shitty it must be to walk these hallways and have people talk behind your back. Iâm sorry I was the cause of that.â
More people began to pour out of different afterschool classes. A stupidly genius idea formed in my mind.
Full disclosure: It was mostly stupid, but I knew Poppy cared about saving face, and I didnât give a shit what people thought about me. I knew Luna didnât give a damn, either.
âItâs quite all right,â I heard Poppy say as I noticed more and more people looking at us curiously as they went down the stairs to their cars. âI knew you were the king of All Saints High. I still chose to pursue you. It is my fault as well as yours.â She sniffed.
âPlease.â I shook her shoulders, crying out all of a sudden. Her eyes bulged in surprise. They asked, Mine answered, âPoppy, I know you dumped me, but I need a redo. I will do anything for a redo, babe.â
So many emotions passed over her face, I thought she was going to faint.
She probably wondered why I was doing this. I wondered the same thing. Maybe Iâd realized during Momâs funeral how loved she was, and I didnât want to leave this world unexpectedly one day, knowing so many people thought I was a world-class cunt. And to some, maybe I had beenâcertainly not on purpose, but it wasnât like that mattered to them.
âNo!â Poppy cried overdramatically, and I wished I could tell her to take it down a notch or two. She flung her arms in the air. âI will not! I will never give you another chance, Knight Cole. Iâm in love with another.â
Who the fuck was she, Billy Shakespeare? Who talked like that? Oh, thatâs right. Poppy. Poppy talked like that. She knew how to play the accordion, for fuckâs sake. She probably knew Latin and how to tie a corset properly, too. I almost smiled at that. Almost. Instead, I shook my head.
âWhoâs the douchebag?â
âI shanât say!â
Shanât? I was vaguely aware of the fact that people were beginning to swarm around us, taking their phones out to record. I didnât mind an audience. I lived for it from Friday to Friday during football season. I just hoped to shit I could explain it to Luna if it ever leaked.
But deep down, I knew I wouldnât need to do any explaining. It was obvious she had whatever was left of my heart. I could never be anyone elseâs.
âDude, I think sheâs, like, expecting you to challenge him to a duel or something. Bitch is cray,â someone called out from a top stair.
I twisted my head and flashed him a murderous stare.
âMind your business.â
âSorry.â
I turned back to Poppy.
âIâm going to try to move on, but Pops, dude, I swear on everything holy, itâs gonna be hard.â I then looked around and threw my arms in the air. âAnyone need a fucking bucket of popcorn? Get the hell outta here!â
The speed with which people scurried to their cars and back into classrooms actually would have made me laugh if it wasnât for the fact that I was newly orphaned.
Three minutes after, Poppy and I were alone in the parking lot.
I opened the door of her Mini Cooper for her. She smiled through her tears. I hated seeing people crying for me. Glass half full: she was no longer crying of me. So there was that.
âYouâre going to make Luna really, really happy,â she said.
âYeah?â I had the audacity to ask her, mainly because I felt guilty about talking about Luna with anyone else.
Poppy nodded. âYou truly are a knight.â
âThatâs punny.â
âItâs true, too.â
âThank you, Sunshine.â I kissed the top of her head. âP.S. soccer is soccer and football is football. Not the same shit. Okay. Bye.â
One by one, I crossed shit off my mental to-do list to accommodate the new situation, in which Mom wasnât alive.
Movie nights on Friday.
Family sushi each Saturday.
Our weekly whatâs-going-on-with-your-college-application argument.
Hushed gossip about Lev and Bailey.
Iâd been working hard at it, perfecting the art of letting go. But I still fucked up sometimes. And those timesâ¦they hurt like a bitch. Like the time Iâd casually strolled into Momâs room, expecting to find her in her throne of pillows and duvets, looking for some feminine advice.
Iâd found her bed emptyâ
âand even though it was hardly news that she was no longer with us, I still allowed myself a nice forty-minute breakdown, consisting of punching everything in sight, ripping one section of the wallpaper, floor-to-ceiling, then proceeding to crack the TV from its base, seeing as I wasnât going to watch any more movies in this room.
But I didnât drink. I didnât drink a drop.
Even when my bullshit, Prius-driving, preppy-looking counselor, Chris, tried to âdig deepâ and help me âfind my way to mindfulnessââpractically throwing me back at the hard stuffâI stayed true to my promise to Mom. To Luna. Most of all, to myself.
Iâd finished things with Poppyâfinallyâbut I needed a plan.
There was no way I was going to approach Luna before I knew exactly what to say to her, and in order to know what that was, I required a womanâs perspectiveâpreferably, a sane, knowledgeable one. Problem was, Daria was a mini-Lucifer, and I trusted her slightly little less than I trusted a bag of fucking rocks. Let me rephrase: at least I could use a bag of rocks as a trustworthy weapon. Daria was uselessly evil, and at the bottom of the talk-to list.
Same went for all the girls I knew from school. They had hidden agendas. Either they hated me for my lack of interest in them or liked me enough to try to sabotage my efforts to get back with Luna.
I could talk to Edie, Mel, or Aunt Emilia, but the truth was, Iâd been meaning to give Dixie the time of day to thank her for, oh, I donât know, saving my life, and so Iâd agreed to meet her one more time on that bench in front of the ocean where Iâd originally told her to piss off.
Only now, I was privy to some information I hadnât been aware of when Iâd suggested she find her way back to Texas:
Dixie was already waiting for me on the bench, hands in her lap, a timid smile on her face. I was fifteen minutes early, yet somehow it didnât surprise me that sheâd been waiting here. Dixie was always three steps ahead, and forever at my disposal since she came to Todos Santos.
Maybe thatâs why hating her was so pointless. It got old fast. Mom was gone now, and my entire range of emotions was directed toward either mourning her loss or putting a plan together to get Luna back. Dixie was no longer a threat, because I wasnât worried Mom would somehow find out about her and feel replaced.
Dixie handed me a purple and blue slushie. Berries and grapes. My favorite, though weâd never discussed slushies, so my guess was it was one of the many things sheâd found out by stalking my ass.
âThanks.â I took a big slurp, squinting at the sunset. She curled a strand of my tousled hair behind my ear in response.
âHow are you holding up?â
Great. Small talk. Exactly what I needed. That, and a hot bleach treatment for my anus.
âFine.â Everyoneâs favorite word.
âNo, youâre not. Iâm relieved to see you hurting. Numbing the pain with substances would have made things much worse.â
I wanted to shatter her hope to miniscule pieces. To tell her that, although I had been soberâas promised to not herâI hadnât been eating or sleeping. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Mom. And every time I opened them, I saw a ghost-like vision of Moonshine walking away from me, getting farther and farther with each blink. I was shit-scared that, as time went on, Lunaâs sense of responsibility toward me would lessen. Sheâd go back to Boon. To April. To FUCKING JOSH.
I wanted to tell Dixie I was haunted by two women, that I had no room for her in my heart, in my brain, or in the space in between them.
Yet, for the first time since weâd met, I didnât say any of that mean shit.
âWhenâre you leaving?â I changed the subject.
Even talking about Mom with Dixie felt like a betrayal. Iâd told Dad I was glad he gave Dix the third degree for attending Momâs funeral, but the truth was, I mostly pitied her while she was there. Yeah, she was alive, and Rosie wasnât, but Mom had been loved. Adored. Cherished by an entire community and put on a pedestal by the men in her life.
Iâd never love Dixie the same way. Hell, Iâd have given my own life for Mom, without even pausing to think about it.
âKnightâ¦â
âItâs a simple question, Dixie,â I snapped.
Silently, she handed me an envelope. It was already torn open and wrinkled to death. I rubbed the back of my neck.
âCouldnât afford the glue?â I crooked an eyebrow.
âRead it.â She ignored my bullshit, nudging me. âPlease.â
âAnd then youâll tell me when youâre leaving?â I flashed a taunting smirk, trying to make her feel unwelcome, but no longer invested in making her feel unhappy.
âThen you will tell me if you still want me to leave.â She jutted her chin up.
That piqued my interest. I took out the letter, and the first thing I noticed was the handwriting. It was like a bucket of ice water in my face. Because I would recognize it anytime, anywhere, even in my sleep. Neat and bold, all long strokes.
My throat went dry, my eyes drinking in every word, as if they were water.
My hands shook so hard, I had to drop the letter because the words became fuzzy.
Mom did this. Sheâd invited Dixie. Sheâd thrust her into my life.
This wasnât betrayal. My seeing Dixie was following Momâs wish. Sheâd wanted me to bond with this chick. This chick, who didnât want anything to do with me, but somehow found the strength to do something good for a woman she didnât know. Pay back a favor. I guessed I should be angryâangry that Dixie didnât want to see pictures of me, didnât want to make an effort or stake her claim on my ass.
But I wasnât.
Honestly, I thought she was a badass for doing something this selfless for Rosie, even though she didnât want to. She did this for my mom, whom I loved dearly. Besides, it didnât matter what had brought Dixie here. She hadnât quit at the first sign of me giving her shit. No. Sheâd .
Stayed while I was an insufferable dick to her.
Stayed through my addiction. Ghosted phone calls. The breakdowns. The tears. The death.
She stayed even after Dad had told her to fuck off, and Iâd cemented the sentiment by coming here and seeing her ass out myself.
Whoever this woman who gave birth to me was, she wasnât the selfish witch Iâd believed her to be.
I picked up the letter from the ground and handed it back to her, searching for the right words, yet somehow knowing they didnât exist.
âOkay,â I said finally.
âOkay?â She tucked her chin to her chest, examining my face in my periphery.
âYou really wanna stay?â I shrugged, aiming for nonchalance.
My heart beat wildly in my chest.
I somehow knew she would, knew there were a lot more surprises with her in them waiting for me down the line. That it was never really going to be over between us.
Guess Mom was like Luna in a lot of ways. We would always be unfinished business. Sheâd made sure of it.
âYes,â Dixie croaked. âI have a good job back home. My family has money. But I want to stay here, with you. I want to get to know you. Rosie wasnât exaggerating. Youâre amazing, and youâre mine. I want to know the entire Cole clan.â
I side-eyed her, hard. She shook her head, sniffing and wiping her tears with her thumbs.
âNot like that. Oh, God. Never. I havenât evenâ¦Iâve neverâ¦â
Her blush could start a fire. Was she a virgin? I mean, obviously not, sheâd had me, but had there been anyone else since the night I was conceived?
âIâve never had a partner.â She answered my unvoiced question. âIâm not planning on having one, either. I just want to return a favor to Rosie. She trusted me so much, she paid for my accommodation here. She even gave me access to your gated community. But, more selfishly, I want to gain a son. If youâll have me, of course.â
If I would have her.
Should I have her?
That was the million-dollar question. Because if I was going to let her up and leave everything she knew and move here, I needed to be damn sure I wasnât going to bail on her ass when things got tough.
âI have a test for you.â I stood up, folding my arms over my chest.
She followed suit, darting to her feet. I tossed the empty slushie cup into a trash can a few feet away without even looking, my eyes still on hers.
Her throat bobbed. âIâm listening.â
âItâs about Luna.â
âYour girlfriend?â she interjected.
She was already doing a great job being a nosy mother. I started strolling along the promenade, and she matched my step, hurrying beside me.
âNo, she is not my girlfriend anymore. She broke up with me.â
âWhy?â Dixie asked breathlessly.
âBecause I was an abusive, drunk idiot. Actually, I was being a real jerk to a lot of people. I hurt another girl trying to get back at Luna.â
âWhat do you mean, hurt?â Her voice caught in her throat.
I immediately knew what she was worried about. I stopped, putting a hand on her shoulder. Surprisingly, she melted under my touch, the worry evaporating from the creases on her face.
âNo, Dixie. Nothing like that. I kind of toyed with Poppyâs feelings, but she pushed hard to stay with me. I didnât even want to sleep with her, though she wanted us to. So yeah, I hurt her, but not physically.â
âOkay.â She nodded. âContinue.â
âAnyway, so Luna dumped my ass. She told me sheâd revisit the subject of us after Iâve been sober for a while. But whatâs long enough? I just lost my mom. I canât lose her, too. She is the only thing that matters to me anymore, other than Dad and Lev.â
The charged pause in the air suggested I should add her name. I was nowhere near ready to even consider such an idea, though. Dixie had just passed the threshold between enemy and acquaintance. She had a long way to friend territory, and mountains and rivers to cross before she was family.
âSo, whatâs the question?â
I stopped walking. So did she.
I turned to face her. âHow do I get her back?â
âYou want my help?â Her eyes twinkled.
Did I? Hell, yeah, I did. Luna had promised to be there for me, and she was, but only as a friend. She knew I was sober, and she still wouldnât let me touch her. Kiss her. Feel her.
I got it. Iâd screwed up. And she needed to give me an incentive to keep away from the alcohol and everything else. Especially now, when Mom was gone. But hadnât she heard her own words at the funeral? If you love someone, donât set them free. Smother the fuck out of them until they realize they have no chance of escaping. Yup. That was the sentiment I was down with, a method I was willing to try.
âYeah.â I stuck my fingers in my hair. âYeah, I want your help, Dixie. Thatâs the test,â I added. âIf you help me, youâre in.â
âAnd if Luna doesnât respond to your advances?â
I knew sheâd asked mainly to know where she stood, that it had nothing to do with Luna and me, but the idea of failing made me want to throw up.
âWeâll discuss it further if that happens.â
âNo,â she said. âI donât agree to this. Iâm about to hand in my resignation. So whatever happens, I want you to promise me I can see you twice a week.
,â she added, which made me want to laugh.
No more of her stalking ways.
âIf you wanna meet up, I get to choose where we meet,â I clarified.
âThatâs fine with me.â She nodded.
âAnd I get to tell you when and for how long. Weâll need to do things my way.â I stubbed a finger to my chest. âBecause your way proved to suck, Dix. No offense.â
âNone taken.â
âSo whatâs your Luna plan?â I asked, getting back to business.
With all due respect to my gaining a mother, I needed not to lose Luna first.
âGive me a little time to form the perfect plan. Meet you at my hotel at eight? We can order Chinese.â
âI hate Chinese,â I deadpanned.
âSushi?â
âSushi is Momâs and my tradition. So, no.â
âSorry.â Her face twisted in apology, like she was the one responsible for Mom not being here. âHow about donuts?â
âDonuts?â
âDonuts will be our thing. You love donuts.â
I said nothing.
âArenât you going to ask me how I know?â She grinned.
âHmm, no. Iâm alive, therefore I love donuts. Not exactly rocket science, dude. Carbs and sugar equal oral orgasms.â
âRight. Let me be more specific, then. Your favorite donut is pistachio and vanilla, and youâre partial to plain donuts, too.â
I hadnât had any donuts in the last few months, so it couldnât have been something sheâd unraveled in one of her stalking sessions. âNow youâre being specific. And accurate.
creepy. How do you know that?â
Although I enjoyed donuts, I also enjoyed having a fucking six pack, and those two didnât go together. True, I was too young and too active to get pudgy, but Dad and his friends said itâs about forming good habits, so you never find yourself looking sixty when youâre forty.
Anyway, this conversation didnât majorly suck, so that was an improvement.
âBecause when you were in my tummy, you were crazy for pistachio donuts.â She blushed.
I just stared, and continued staring at her, waiting for more.
âAnd milk. Oh, how you loved milk with your donuts.â
âI drink a gallon a day,â I confessed.
Fuck the haters. I had good, strong bones because of that shit. Also, Dixie was way more bearable than I gave her credit for.
âI indulged you, of course. I got us one every single day. First, I bought a whole thing of donuts in every flavor and took a bite of each. You kicked the holy Jesus out of me when I took a bite of the pistachio. So thatâs what you and I had every afternoon. Pistachio donuts with a big glass of milk.â
âThatâsâ¦cool.â
âSo, donuts and a plan?â She smiled.
âDonuts and a plan.â I nodded.