HUGE F BUDDIES: Chapter 23
HUGE F BUDDIES: A STEPBROTHER REVERSE HAREM ROMANCE (HUGE Series)
The next afternoon, Steve calls a family meeting, and I donât know if I can deal with it. The check arrived in the mail this morning. Iâve seen the envelope with my scratchy handwriting on the side and Amber disappearing into the kitchen for hushed conversations that my stepbrothers have been oblivious to. Steve has no idea that Amber told me about his illness, or that Iâm the one who sent the money to pay for his treatment. He doesnât know that Jefferson knows heâs sick either. The whole thing is a disaster waiting to happen.
I donât do emotions. I deal as well with the pain of others as I do with my own. Badly, really badly.
By the time I make it down to the den, everyone is already there. Jefferson is perched on the edge of a wooden chair in the corner, his hands clasped in front of him, his tension palpable. The others are slumped back on the couch, perfectly oblivious.
Amber and Steve are on the love-seat, their thighs touching. My dadâs face is grayer than Iâve ever seen it. Heâs been dealing with his illness okay by himself, but now itâs time to tell the people he loves, he looks as though he has the weight of the world on his shoulders.
Carson shifts so that there is enough space for me to sit. I look to Jefferson again, but his eyes are on the floor, his hands still tightly clasped as though heâs trying to hold himself together.
This is bigger for him than for me. Steve has been his father for a decade, and mine for five minutes. They may not be blood, but this is their family. Iâm just an outsider.
But it doesnât feel that way. The lump in my throat tells me that it isnât that way at all.
âIâm sorry to do this,â Steve says. âBut I have something I need to tell you all.â
âYouâre not getting divorced, are you?â Brayson blurts.
Amber shakes her head, and Steve takes hold of her hand to show the boys how together they are.
âWeâre not getting divorced. Iâm sick. Weâve known for a while, but we didnât tell you because we didnât want to worry you.â
âHow sick?â Anderson says, leaning forward.
âCancer.â Itâs the word that no one wants to hear from the person they love, and I hear the rush of air leaving the mouths of my stepbrothers next to me, the shock palpable. Jefferson shakes his head gravely, still focused on the floor in front of him.
âIâve been having treatment but nothing has changed. Now the doctorâs recommended some experimental treatment. I wasnât going to go ahead with it because itâs so much money, but a check came through the mailâan anonymous donationâand so Iâm going to try.â
âSomeone sent money for your treatment?â Jefferson asks. âWho knew about the cancer?â
âThatâs just it. We donât know who itâs from. We havenât told anyone before you guys,â Amber says. âAll we can think is that it might be someone from the hospital, but we donât know who.â
âWe do know that itâs a lifeline,â Steve says. âAs much as I donât want to take someone elseâs money, the doctor is excited about the treatment and I donât really have a choice.â
âAnd if it doesnât work?â Anderson asks.
âThere are other treatments,â Amber says, but her voice is shaky, and her eyes drift to the floor, making it obvious that everything is riding on this. At that moment, I see the likeness between her and Jefferson so clearly.
âItâs going to be okay,â Carson says firmly. âYouâre strong. You can fight this.â
âYeah,â Anderson says with passion. âYouâve got this, Steve. If anyone can fight this, itâs you.â
My dadâs eyes find mine, and I donât have the words to reassure him. Iâm not like Carson with his fighting talk, or Anderson with his compassion. Iâm dead inside.
âIâm sorry, Sara,â he says gently. âI didnât want to have to tell you this way. I didnât want to ruin your visit.â
Jefferson makes a grumbling noise, and Steve turns to him. âWhat is it, son? Do you have something you want to say?â
Jefferson looks between his parents butâby some miracleâdecides to keep his mouth shut. Whatever he has on the tip of his tongue is kept to himself, but I think I know what it is. He believes that Steve has put me before his treatment and that my visit has taken the focus away from him trying to get better from the cancer. Jefferson resents that Steveâs had to keep the knowledge to himself for all this time, and blames me for it all.
The anger in his touch makes sense, but the desperate need I felt behind it is still a mystery. I canât hate him for being the way he is because weâre so similar, plastering over our hurt with whatever tools we have. Fury. Sex. Itâs all the same.
âI wish youâd told me from the beginning,â I say softly.
âI wanted us to have time togetherâ¦time that wasnât overshadowed by this.â
âA visit based on a lie?â
Steve shakes his head. âIt wasnât a lie, Sara. I was trying to protect you all.â
âWell, maybe itâs time for you to focus on yourself,â I say firmly.
Amber squeezes Steveâs arm. âSaraâs right. This is all about you now. You just let us know what you need to make this easier and that is what weâll do.â
âI just need you to all be normal, okay? I donât want to see you looking sad or concerned for me. I donât need pity; I just want things to be as they were.â
âWe can do that,â Brayson says softly.
âWe can,â I say. âItâll be like nothing is happening.â
âThatâs my girl,â Steve says. âAnd now I think that we should watch a movie. Someone pick something thatâll make us all laugh. And I want a beer too, and for the rest of you. Letâs drink, eat popcorn and laugh, okay?â
âIâll get everything from the kitchen.â Brayson is out of his seat before anyone else has a chance to volunteer.
âIâll help.â I stand quickly, wanting to get out of the room for a few minutes so that I can get it together.
In the kitchen, Brayson inhales deeply and grips the edge of the counter. âFuck.â I slide my hand over his back, feeling his ribcage moving in distress. This is how I should be reacting, but instead, I just have an empty feeling inside.
âHeâs going to be okay,â I say. âThe treatment is going to make all the difference.â
âYou think?â His eyes find mine, and theyâre watery, swimming like quicksilver with unshed tears.
âDefinitely. Your mom said itâs been really effective in trials so far.â
âWhen did she say that?â
My heart thuds as I realize Iâve slipped up. He knows I already knew, and I kept it a secret from him. I blink, my mind whirring over what to say next. I donât want to make this worse than it already is, or worse, work out that it was me that sent the money. Nothing can risk my dadâs treatment going ahead.
Nothing.
âJust as we were leaving the room,â I say quickly and brightly. I start to gather the beers from the fridge, hoping to distract Brayson from whatever heâs thinking, and it seems to work because heâs bending down into cupboards for the snacks.
âWe just need to keep his spirits up,â I say. âThatâs the most important thing. Positive thinking goes a long way toward recovery.â
Brayson nods. âYouâre right.â But I donât miss the way he looks at me with an edge of suspicion in his eyes.