Promises We Meant To Keep: Chapter 11
Promises We Meant To Keep (A Lancaster Prep Novel)
I AM MY OWN PERSON. I am my own person.
I chant the mantra on repeat in my head, reminding myself that I am someone other than my family. I am not just Augustus Lancasterâs daughter or Whitâs sister or Sylviaâs namesake.
Since Iâve been here, all alone on the other side of the country, itâs been easier to believe. The more distance there is between my mother and me, the better I feel.
Though thatâs the hardest pill to swallowâbeing named after the woman who wants me dead. Of course, I was named after her. My mother is the biggest narcissist I knowâand I know plenty. Family lore tells the tale of her first word being, âMeâ.
No surprises there.
My father thinks he picked her, but she told me the truth. I may have been young, but I hung on every word she spilled when she would drink too much and make her drunken confessions. His parents controlled the narrative, just like mine tried to. Sylvia Whittaker wasnât about to let her chance go at sinking her claws into the son of one of the richest families in the world. Once she married my father and gave him the prodigal firstborn son, sheâd done her job. I was the girl she wished for. The child she was desperate to have.
The daughter she could name after herself in the hopes Iâd grow up just like her.
When I was a little girl, she dressed me like her. Everyone said I resembled her when I was little, and I suppose I do.
But I have a hint of Lancaster in me too. The eyes. The blonde hair. Iâm not all Sylvia.
Thank God.
Iâm sure she hates that fact.
I am my own person. I am my own person.
That I have to remind myself of this is surely pathetic, but whatever it takes, right? I already feel better, being out here. In my own houseâthe house that belongs to me and no one else. Iâm all by myself for the first time in my life, and Iâm savoring it. Yes, the woods are scary and there are way too many noises among the trees, especially at night. Little forest creatures always watching as I walk past. Roland, the groundskeeper Earl hired after he bought the property, says if Iâm going to live here year-round, I need a dog. Maybe two. There are already at least three cats on the property. Theyâre not overly affectionate and they leave bloody little carcasses everywhere. Scattered feathers and a birdâs head. Guts from the inside of some rodent. Itâs gross. Cats are ruthless. Sneaky. Cunning.
Like a Lancaster.
I do think Roland is right though. I need a petâa dog. Something to watch over me.
The urge to flee New York City came to me in the middle of the night, a day after I met with my lawyer. I woke up from a dream where Earl was still alive, and he offered the house to me as a token of peace.
For all that I put you through, he told me.
A ten-million-dollar private hideaway is more than enough payment for what that man put me through, which wasnât much, considering he died fairly quickly after we were married. That I still feel responsible is a fact I donât like to dwell on for too long. I may be my own person, but Iâm not a good one.
I have dark thoughts. If I could murder my mother, I would. But I donât have the guts.
So I sit with my dark thoughts in my dark house late at night, all alone, while the walls and the ceiling and the roof creak and groan. Itâs been windy lately, and that makes the house shudder and moan and some nights, I canât take it. I pace the halls, unable to sleep, tears streaming down my face.
Thinking of chances lost.
Thinking of Spencer.
I exit the kitchen and walk out onto the deck that overlooks the thick forest. The hushed silence that greets me was eerie when I first arrived, but Iâm getting used to it. The pine needles rustle with the constant breeze that blows through them, a sound that never stops.
Thatâs what I learned after a few days of being out here. You think itâs silent, but after a while, you can hear birds chirping. Animals calling to each other. The occasional burst of an ocean wave. The rev of a carâs engine, hollow and distant out on the main road.
No voices though. Never voices. Unless Roland makes his appearance, which isnât often enough for me. The only voices I usually ever hear are in my head.
Iâve realized I donât like those voices sometimes. Theyâre mostly full of doubt. And those voices in particular make me feel bad about myself.
I am my own person. I am my own person.
There is nothing more liberating than dumping your phone and everything attached to it. I shut down my social media profiles. I pulled out a lot of cash from the bank, so no one could track me down with credit card usage. I wanted to disappear. Go off the grid.
Become a ghost.
Iâm also lonely. Hence the need for a dog. The cats that live on the property are mostly wild and want nothing to do with me. Except for one. Sheâs silvery gray with long fur, though not too puffy. Her tail is straggly and her face is delicately shaped. She reminds me of a squirrel. So thatâs what I call her.
Squirrel acts like she doesnât like me, yet she follows after me every time I go outside, batting at my ankles when I walk, her claws lightly scratching, but never enough to actually hurt. I turn to try and pet her, and she dashes away every time. Yet never too far, always watching me.
Like sheâs interested, but cautious.
I feel her. I really do.
The flip phone I bought at a local Walmart in Monterey rings, and I yank it from my sweater pocket, frowning when I see Rolandâs number flash. Heâs the only one who has this number in the whole world, yet heâs never called me.
âHello,â I answer.
âMiss Lancaster. I caught someone on the driveway.â
I frown. âWhat do you mean?â
âA man in an Audi. Said he was looking for you.â
Fear slithers icy cold fingers down my spine. âDid he mention my name?â
âYes, he did. Said he knows you real well.â I hear a deep voice speak in the background. âHe wonât give me his name though.â
âIs he there with you?â
âYes. I stopped him. Stood right out in front of his fancy car and wouldnât let him drive past me.â Roland sounds frustrated. Protective. Weâve only known each other for a few weeks, and heâs already taken me under his wing.
âI want to speak with him.â I have no clue who this could be. One of my Lancaster relatives? There are plenty of male Lancasters with the brains to figure out where I might be. No one has taken my disappearance to the media, thank goodness. I assumed my mother would do exactly that to get me to come out and show myself.
It wouldnât have worked. Iâd have stayed in hiding forever just to keep her out of my life forever.
âHere he is.â Roland hands over the phone, and thereâs muffled conversation that sounds tense before a familiar male voice sounds in my ear.
âSyl. Itâs me.â
My heart falls into my stomach. Deeper.
Spencer.
âTell this man you know me and that I have your permission to come to your house,â Spencer demands.
I clutch the cheap phone tighter, my heart racing. I canât believe heâs here, in California. That he came for me despite everything. âI should tell him to kick you off my property.â
An irritated sound leaves him. âYou know you donât mean it. Come on, Syl. Call off your watchdog.â
âLet me talk to Roland.â
Spencer pauses for a moment. âYou promise youâll tell him itâs okay that Iâm here?â
âJust let me talk to him.â
A low growl escapes him and then Roland is back, his breathing accelerated, amplified as he exhales into the phone. âIâll kick his ass if you want me to, Miss Lancaster. Just say the word.â
A laugh escapes me and I cover my lips with my fingers to contain it. âThat wonât be necessary, Roland. Go ahead and let him come to the house.â
My groundskeeper grunts. I can tell heâs not pleased with my answer. âIâm following him. And Iâll stick around until he leaves.â
âThat wonât be necessary,â I start, but he interrupts me.
âIâm doinâ it.â The stubborn tone in Rolandâs voice is one I decide not to argue with.
âSee you soon,â I say cheerfully instead, and end the call.
Men. They go feral around me for some reason, and I donât understand it. Thereâs nothing between Roland and me. Heâs more like an overprotective fatherâsomething Iâm not familiar with.
A rasp of a laugh leaves me and I shake my head. Itâs like I canât help but insult a random family member every chance I get.
Realizing that Spencer will be here in a matter of minutes and I have no idea what I look like, I run into the house, ducking into the guest bathroom, so I can check out my reflection. I wrinkle my nose at what I see, hating how messy my hair is thanks to the ocean wind. I run my fingers through it, licking my lips. I have no makeup onâwhatâs the point? My cheeks are pink, thanks to all the sun Iâve been getting lately. Plus, Iâm not drinking.
I always look better when I lay off the alcohol.
Iâm heavier than Iâve ever been, which isnât saying much. But I do look different. Some might even say healthier.
Not my mother though. Sheâd be disappointed she couldnât see my collarbones protruding. The hollows of my cheeks.
Mommy gets off on skinny, skeletal Sylvie.
I hear the gentle rumble of an expensive engine creeping up the drive and my heart is in my throat, making it hard to swallow. To breathe. Knowing that Spencer is here, that Iâm about to see him again. I blink at myself in the mirror, my chest rising and falling rapidly, nervous excitement running through my veins.
He came, I remind myself. Spencer may have walked away from me that night after Whit and Summer were married, but heâs here now.
That has to mean something.
Blowing out a harsh breath, I give myself a thumbs up and a grimace in the mirror, then march out of the bathroom, through the house and onto the front porch. Just in time to see Spencer roll up the driveway in his sleek black Audi, the engine purring. Roland is right behind him in his older model Ford truck, his blue ballcap pulled low, a grim look on his weathered face.
I wait anxiously, wringing my hands as Spencer cuts the engine. Gathers his things. Taking his time.
Driving me slowly out of my mind.
Roland leaps out of his car as if his butt is on fire, striding toward me so fast heâs directly in front of me in seconds. âWant me to call the police?â
âAbsolutely not.â I slowly shake my head, glancing around him to watch as Spencer finally opens the driverâs side door of his vehicle. âItâs not necessary.â
Roland doesnât know my whole story, but he knows some of it. That Iâm a widow in hiding from my family and friends. Trying to get away from the incessant noise that is my life, and that Iâm searching for peace. Heâs been so good to me from the moment we met, and I appreciate how he checks up on me. Watches over me.
âAre you sure? That young man,â Roland jerks his thumb over his shoulder, âis kind of an asshole.â
I laugh, throwing back my head, letting the joy flow through me. No one could ever call Spencer an asshole. Not the Spence I knew. He was protective of me, watching over me.
Much like Roland does now.
A door slams and we both glance in Spencerâs direction. Heâs wearing a black suit and a white button-up shirt, sans tie. Sunglasses cover his eyes and his dark hair appears freshly trimmed. Immaculate. His shoes are shiny and they make a clipped sound on the driveway as he makes his way toward us, a grim look on his too handsome, too beloved face.
There are no traces of the boy I first met and immediately crushed on. Not a single one. Spencer Donato is all man, and he is beautiful. Sexy. Confident. Faintly irritatedâI can tell by the set of his jaw. The firm line of his lips.
I stand up straighter, bracing myself, waiting for him to say something horribleâwhy, I donât know. Thatâs not his style. Or, for him to grab hold of my hand and drag me back to the car so he can fly me home and return me to my family like Iâm a lost piece of luggage he finally found.
He does none of that. Instead, he stops directly in front of Roland and me, his expression unreadable. I canât even see his eyes, thanks to his sunglasses.
âWhat are you doing here?â My voice is sharp, unable to forget the last time we saw each other and how mean he was. His cruel words, how he so easily walked away from me.
Yet here he is, chasing after me like usual.
I think of the last words I said to him, how I called him a liar.
Looks like I was right.
âIâve been looking for you,â he finally says, his voice a seductive rumble coming from deep within his chest.
I tell myself I shouldnât give in, but when it comes to this man, I am weak. What makes it worse?
I know heâs weak for me too.
âLooks like you found me,â I tell him softly.
The air crackles between us, unseen sparks bouncing from me to Spencer as my body leans toward his despite my inherent resistance. I canât help but notice how Roland looks from me to Spencer, his graying eyebrows furrowed.
He can sense it too. The energy. The chemistry. Itâs probably how Spencer found meâthat unseen thread between us that keeps us tethered. Weâve always been drawn to each other, despite everything thatâs happened over the years.
âDid you want to be found?â Spence asks, his voice as soft as mine.
I slowly shake my head. âOnly by you.â
His lips curve into the slightest smile. Barely there and gone in an instant. But I saw it. And in that moment, I know.
Nothing is ever going to be the same. For once, itâs all going my way. This is what I want.
Me and Spence.
Spence and me.