Promises We Meant To Keep: Chapter 13
Promises We Meant To Keep (A Lancaster Prep Novel)
I REMIND myself Spencer is only here because of my brotherâs concern, but I canât help but be giddy at his nearness. The way he smiles at me. How normal it all feels. The last time we were together, he was cruel. Punishing. The hatred in his eyes was obvious and I believed Iâd lost any chance I couldâve had with him in that one moment.
Now, I have hope. Iâm stupid to believe he could forgive me for marrying Earl without telling him, but I canât help it.
Itâs there, a tiny glimmer flickering deep in my heart. If anyone wouldâve shown up out of the blue, I wouldâve wanted it to be Spencer. No one else. Not even my brother or sister.
Especially not them. They wouldâve eventually told our mother and sheâd come right out here and try to drag me home. If sheâd shown up when I first arrived, I mightâve let her. It was so scary, so quiet, so dark at night.
The darkness terrified me at first. What could be creeping out there? I had visions of people dressed in black slipping through the trees. Like a gang of ninjas sent on a mission to abduct me and bring me back to New York City against my will.
My imagination has always run totally wild. When I was young and under my motherâs supposed care, my life was simple. Boring. Locked up in a room, forced to remain in bed. Alone with my thoughts and imagination, which grew and grew.
I needed something to entertain myself.
Fortunately, no ninjas came out of the forest ready to abduct me and I grew more and more comfortable staying here. Living here on my own.
Sometimes it hits me, that this is my house. That it belongs to no one but me. I donât know what thatâs like, to own something thatâs only mine. Anywhere Iâve lived has belonged to the Lancaster family. Or when I married and moved in with Earlâthat apartment Iâm still in now may belong to me, but it was Earlâs first.
Earl may have bought this, but he put it in my name before he died, and never came out here. Itâs basically untouched by anyone I know or am related to.
Itâs all mine.
And now Iâm sharing it with Spencer.
I lead him through the house, not embarrassed in the least that itâs seen better days. It has good bones, and eventually, Iâll have it remodeled.
When I pull him into the elevator that will take us to the second floor, he finally breaks the cool façade.
âAn elevator? For two stories?â He strokes his chin. âKind of unnecessary, donât you think?â
âWhat if youâre handicapped? In a wheelchair? This is so much easier. Itâs nice to have options,â I remind him, bracing my hand against the wall when the elevator shudders before it starts its ascent. âItâs not in the best condition though.â
It halts at the second floor, giving another heaving shudder before the doors slide open.
âIâll say,â Spencer drawls as he exits the elevator.
I follow behind him, dodging around him so I can continue showing off the house. I point out all the bedrooms, saving mine for last. Itâs at the end of the hall, and when we walk inside, he stops short at the wall of windows that greets him. The vivid green forest the sole view.
âIt looks like youâre sleeping in the trees,â he says, his voice tinged with awe.
He described it perfectly. Thatâs exactly what it feels like. The towering redwoods surround the window, the glass so clean it looks like you can reach out and touch them. The house sits on a hillside, and the second floor makes it feel like youâre suspended in air. Among the trees.
I love it, and Iâve never been one whoâs drawn to nature. I grew up in the city after all.
I watch him stand in front of the windows, staring out at the scenery. He looks completely out of place, standing in this rundown house while clad in a ten-thousand-dollar suit. Immaculate and without a hair out of place, despite traveling over five hours in a plane to find me.
Most likely a private plane, so it wasnât too much of a hardship, but still.
âThis is the best room in the house,â he declares, glancing over his shoulder to look at me.
I nod my agreement. âThe view is stunning.â
âThere are no curtains on the windows,â he observes.
âI wake up to the view every morning.â He turns away from me, staring out at the forest once more. âThereâs no point in covering it. The trees are so dense, the sun doesnât penetrate enough to be overly bright. And no one is out here. Thereâs no need for privacy.â
âI donât know if I could ever get used to this. Living out here,â he says absently, almost to himself.
âItâs amazing how quickly you can adapt.â
Spencer turns once again, his expression neutral as he watches me. âThatâs how you survive. Youâve always been able to easily adapt to your surroundings.â
I squirm under his observation, wishing to change the subject. Iâve never liked the way he assessed me, always trying to figure me out, and most of the time, I want to tell him to kiss my ass.
Only because, most of the time, Spencer is correct in his assumptionsâand itâs infuriating.
He slowly scans the rest of my bedroom, stopping when he notices the cream-colored vase on top of the dresser, a bouquet of black feathers sticking out of it. It totally doesnât fit in with the rest of the décor in the room, but I found the odd arrangement at an antique store in Carmel and knew I had to have it.
âNice feathers,â he drawls, his gaze finding mine.
I smile. âThey reminded me ofâ¦me.â
âStill the fallen angel, Syl?â
âMore like the black hearted angel who finally knows how to defend herself,â I correct him.
He nods. âI like this version of you.â
Pleasure courses through me and I tell myself to ignore it.
âDo you want to change out of your suit?â I ask.
âAm I deemed worthy enough to stay?â
âDo you want to stay?â
âI should probably head back.â
Disappointment crashes through me, but I lift my chin, fighting against the emotion. âThen go back. Make your report and let my brother know Iâm fine.â
He lifts a brow. âYou think Iâm going to draw up a report on your current status for Whit?â
âThatâs why youâre here, right?â
âI didnât tell Whit I was coming.â He hesitates for only a moment. âHe doesnât even know I found you.â
Shock courses through me, rendering me still. âReally?â I squeak.
Spencer nods. âI told him I wasnât going to look for you, but then I couldnât help myself.â
I love that confessionâfar too much. âAre you leaving today or not?â
âI should.â
Irritation makes me snappy. âAnswer me, Spence.â
âIâll stay.â
Relief makes my knees wobbly. âFor how long?â
âUntil I have to go back.â His vagueness is irritating, but I donât acknowledge it.
âYou should change then.â
âYou donât like me in the suit?â He glances down at himself.
I like him in the suit too damn much, not that I would ever tell him. âYou canât make the hike in your fancy suit.â
âI can do just about anything in this suit.â He undoes the button, the jacket gaping open, showcasing the flat expanse of his stomach and how the crisp shirt is tucked into the waistband of his trousers perfectly.
âNot hike through the woods to the ocean. You donât want to ruin it.â
âI suppose I donât. Iâll grab my suitcase.â
âSo you did bring a suitcase.â
âJust in case. Donât read too much into it.â He strides toward me, pushing past me as he makes his way to the door. âIâm taking the room next to yours.â
He doesnât ask, just tells me what heâs going to do. Which isnât normal.
But Iâm realizing younger, sweeter Spence is nowhere to be found. Heâs been replaced by older, fiercer Spencer, and I have to admitâ¦
I kind of like it. This new version of him.
The sun shines down upon us, warm despite the chill in the wind that sweeps over us. The hill in front of us appears easy enough, but the ground is mostly sand, and weâll continuously fight to gain traction as we climb it.
Spence just doesnât know it yet.
I hid out in the kitchen when he dragged his suitcase to his bedroom, and I never said a word about the size of said suitcase either. Itâs large. Looks like he brought enough to move in. I thought I wanted to be alone here, but I know when he leaves, thereâs going to be a hole where he was, and I will never be able to fill it.
Perhaps it was a mistake that I allowed him to stay. It will be hard to recover from his visit. Iâm only torturing myself.
But I donât tell him to leave. Itâs already too late. I need him here.
I just need him. Period.
He took his time upstairs while I puttered around the kitchen, picking up my dishes from breakfast earlier and rinsing them off, then stashing them in the dishwasher. I wipe the counters down and tidy up, marveling at the fact that I even know how to clean the kitchen in the first place. Every little thing has been done for me since birth. Servants everywhere to attend to my every whim. Enough money to buy whatever I want without a second thought.
Iâve never had to work for a single thing my entire lifeâexcept for Spencer.
Finally, he appeared, like a breath of fresh air clad in a NYU sweatshirt and dark jeans, ready for adventure. He didnât say a word when he caught me wiping down the counters, but Iâm sure it threw him off. Sylvie Lancaster doesnât clean.
Well, guess now I do.
âThis is a struggle.â I wave a hand at the hill we stop in front of.
He squints into the sun. An attractive look for him, the wind ruffling through his dark hair, the creases at the corner of his eyes new from age. Tantalizing. âItâs not that high.â
âItâs the sand.â I wave a hand toward it. âIt runs deep.â
âI can handle it.â
His confidence is appealing, but I glance at his feet, noting that theyâre clad in a pair of expensive Nikes. He shouldâve worn boots.
âThe sand will get in your shoes.â
âIâm not worried about it.â He points toward the trail. âLead the way.â
I do as he demands, marching up the hill, working hard to make my climb appear effortless. Heâs directly behind me, keeping pace, and the more I huff and puff, the more irritated I get.
We finally get to the top of the hill, the ocean spread out before us in the near distance, the wind whipping around us at a frantic pace. I shade my eyes, staring at the white-capped water, the expanse of flat, wet sand beckoning. Itâs still a ways till we actually get to the water, and I sort of want to hear Spencer groan in dread. I want him tired and panting, like me.
Heâs not even out of breath. And Iâd bet money thereâs not a grain of sand in his shoes either.
Infuriating.
âThe view is gorgeous.â
I glance over at him to find heâs watching me. âThe ocean is beautiful. Itâs different on this coast. A littleâwilder.â
âI wasnât talking about the ocean, but youâre right.â His gaze drifts to the water, and I fight against the hot flush coating my skin. âIt does look wilder. Letâs go.â
âThe beach is farther than it looks.â
He looks down at me, his lips curved in a faint smile. âAre you trying to scare me, Syl?â
âIf I havenât already with everything youâve had to deal with over the years, I donât think a laborious hike to the beach is going to do it,â I tease, the realization hitting me as I say it.
Iâve tried to scare him away all these years. Yet heâs still here. With me in California. The man deserves a medal. Or a stern talking to for being such a sucker.
We start down the hill and I let Spencer take the lead, my gaze snagging on the breadth of his shoulders. The elegant curve of his back. His perfect ass in the well-fitting jeans and those long, strong legs. Heâs tall, over six feet, and he walks with a confidence I donât remember him having when we were younger. Back when we were at Lancaster Prep and he supported me no matter what. He was always there for me when I needed him, and I took advantage of that. Of him.
God, I was awful then. So conniving. Everything I learned, I got from my mother.
By the time we make it to the beach, Iâm exhausted. I find an outcropping of rocks and go to sit on one, Spencer continuing to walk along the waterâs edge. His silhouette gets smaller and smaller the farther he gets, until heâs a sliver of a human in the distance, and I worry that heâs going to keep on walking and never come back.
But eventually he returns, his form coming back into view until I can make out his every feature, and the relief I feel at his closeness threatens to overwhelm me. He joins me at the rocks, sitting on one that hovers above mine, so he looms over me. Heâs windblown and glorious, his dark hair sweeping over his forehead, his eyes squinting against the sun.
âCan I ask you a question?â
âShoot,â he says, though I hear the caution in his tone.
âWhy were you always so nice to me, when I was nothing but awful to you?â Itâs a hard question, with an even harder answer, and I brace myself for the truth.
He doesnât say anything for a long time, the wind whipping his hair into his eyes, so he has to brush it away every few seconds. âI was in love with you.â
My heart lurches in my chest and the air stutters in my throat. That was not the answer I expected.
âAnd you shit all over it. Continuously. Itâs like I couldnât help myself. But I suppose thatâs the way it always is, right? We canât stop the way we feel, even when we know itâs wrong.â
âAre you saying it was wrong to be in love with me?â
âI donât know. All I know is it hurt, being in love with you.â
Misery courses through me. His confessions are like a punch in the gut. One blow after the other. âI was young and stupid back then. The only kind of love I was shown was alwaysâ¦conditional.â
âI know.â
Weâre both quiet. I bend my knees, wrapping my arms around my legs to ward off the cold that comes from his words. I didnât know what I had. I always counted on him returning and he always did. He still does, because here he is, on the beach with me on a sunny day in the middle of the week. Thereâs still so much unsaid swirling between us, and the ocean and the wind and sun canât swallow it up. Our feelings need to be let out. Laid bare.
No matter how painful.
âI canât blame my treatment of you on my parents,â I finally say. âI shouldâve known better.â
âDo you know better now?â
I have to be one hundred percent truthful with him. âIâm not sure.â
That was a blow to him, Iâm sure.
âI canât keep giving you a chance,â he admits, his voice so low I lean in closer, wishing I was sitting next to him on the rock. Pressed against his warmth, my head on his shoulder. âThe last time I did, you ditched me for another man.â
I stiffen. I know what heâs referring to. âI just wanted one more night with you.â
âOne more night so you could fuck me and leave me, then go on to marry someone else. Someone old enough to be your fucking dad.â The venom in his voice has me leaning away from him, now glad Iâm not sitting on the same rock as he is. âWhy did you do it?â
âLike I said, I just wanted one more nightââ
âNo.â He shakes his head. âI know why you came to my apartment that night. Iâm talking about you marrying that old ass man. Why, Sylvie? Why did you do it?â
Panic suffuses me and I climb off the rock, marching away from him, my feet making prints in the wet sand. Tears stream down my cheeks and I let them flow, not bothering to wipe them away.
I donât want to admit why I married Earl, when I barely understand it myself. My weak explanations wonât make any sense to him because they donât make sense to me. I couldâve fought against it. Against her. But I didnât. I gave in and I did what she wanted, damn the consequences.
âSylvie.â His voice ripples on the wind, making me break out into a run, and soon enough, I hear him drawing closer, until heâs practically on me, his long fingers encircling my upper arm and yanking, so I have no choice but to whip around and face him.
His expression is a steely mask and it drops the moment he sees my tears. Men are always weak when it comes to tears, even this one. Especially this one. âWhat the fuck? Why are you crying?â
âI donât know how to explain to you what happened,â I admit, backing away from him.
He lurches toward me, grabbing hold of both of my arms so I donât run. âJust start with the beginning.â
I gape at him, struggling to find the words, and he gives me a little shake. As if thatâs going to jump-start my explanation. âIt was my motherâs fault. She made me do it.â
Doubt clouds his already stormy gaze and he shakes his head, his lips thinning into a straight line. âI donât buy that. You were an adult.â
âStill under her care.â
He barks out a laugh. âUnder her care? By the way you always made it sound, she was out to get you every chance she got. I always believed she cared a little too much.â
âYouâre right. She did.â My throat is dry, my stomach roiling. Like I might vomit at any second. Iâve never talked about this with anyone, not even her. âShe cared about me, but not in the right way. More like she wanted to kill me. She tried to kill me for years.â
His gaze scans mine, his expression turning to disbelief. âWhat are you saying?â
âAll those years I was sick? That I said I was going to die? It was because of her. She wanted me sick. Dying. It got her attention, it got me attention, but it was all fake. None of it was real.â