The Worst Kind of Promise: Chapter 30
The Worst Kind of Promise (Riverside Reapers Book 2)
âStart talking. Now,â Hayes orders, embers of anger reflected in the aquamarine pits of his eyes.
If my heart wasnât seconds away from bursting out of my chest, the shame wouldâve jumpstarted it. âWe got into a fight,â I say curtly, and no matter how furious I may be at the situation, the only person to blame right now is me.
Fulton peeks his head out of the door. âI donât see her,â he relays.
Fuck! She could be anywhere right now. Itâs midnight, itâs dark, and Riverside isnât safe enough for her to be walking around alone at night. I donât even know if she took her phone, shoes, a jacket, anything.
The roughness of Hayesâ growl chafes my ears, and he digs his phone out of his pocket, the screen illuminating his face. Iâve never seen him so distressed before. Not before a game, not before a big conference, never.
âHer phoneâs still here,â he chokes out, and something changes in his irises. That initial outrage, the shock, the confusionâtheyâve all amalgamated and shapeshifted into pure fear.
He doesnât look at any of us but instead stares at the opaque darkness rolling over our doorstep like a foreboding omen. âWe need to find her.â
Guilt spumes inside me, threatens to revolt from my stomach. âItâs my fault.â
âI donât care whose fucking fault it is. We need to find her,â he repeats, his face strained with bulging veins, spit flying from his lower lip.
Gage grabs his keys from off the coffee table. âShould we call the police?â
âYou can call them once youâre in your car.â Hayes tosses the rest of the guys their keys, and a scurry of sneaker soles, jacket zippers, and jangling bits of metal follows his instruction. The worst kinds of thoughts pistol through my brainâher encountering a horde of bad people without me there to protect her, her running miles away and never being found again. Maybe she darts into the street and an oncoming car doesnât see her.
I shouldnât have raised my voice. I shouldnât have fought with her. I shouldnât have gone to visit Saxon.
For as loud and urgent as Hayesâ voice is, the tremor doesnât go unnoticed. âEveryone split up. We donât rest until she comes home, got it? We call each other if we hear or see anything.â
âI didnât hear a car engine,â I pipe up, the tacky saliva in my mouth seeming to proliferate.
Bristolâs eyebrows stitch together. âWhat?â
âShe didnât get in a car. Wherever she is, sheâs on foot.â
Hayes begins to usher everyone out of the house, leaving me and him the last of the group to exit. And itâs then, in this moment, that I realize weâre both panicking over the loss of the most important person in our life.
âThen sheâll be easier to find,â Hayes concludes.
I donât know how long Iâm driving around for. Maybe an hour and a half. Itâs silent in the Jeep, void of Fayeâs teasing quipsâvoid of her effervescent personality. Thereâs nothing but unending darkness in front of me, around me, behind me. Even the stars have long fallen from the sky, blanketing our town in funeral-like desolation.
Iâve circled the perimeter of town twice, even followed the less-traveled routes hidden by far-reaching willows, and thereâs been no sign of her. I checked the parking lots thoroughly, traversed over rocky, uneven terrain with only my phone flashlight to guide me, spent an hour wanting to tear my hair out and cry and run into my motherâs arms like a little boy. I need to find her. I will find her. Not finding her isnât an option.
I canât imagine what will happen if we donât find her.
I donât want to. I donât. I donât. I donât.
Iâm right back at the intersection before the turn into our ice rink. No other car is on my strip of road. The red glow of the stoplight spills over the front of my vehicle, lighting my interior through the reflective surface of the windshield, and the only noise to bring me any sort of comfort is the steady purr of my engine. My fingers wrap tightly around the steering wheel, compounding the pain under my bandaged knuckles. The bleeding must have stopped, but itâs stained a good portion of the gauze.
I need to change it soon if I want to prevent infection. I need to eat. I need to sleep. But I know I wonât be able to do any of that until Faye is safely back in my arms.
If sheâs on foot, thereâs only so much distance she couldâve traveled. And she doesnât know Riverside. No shops are open. The only place she knows isâ¦
My bloodshot eyes behold the behemoth arena sitting right beside me, and even though the light is still red, I immediately turn from the middle lane into the parking lot.
Iâm not the fastest guy on the team. A lot of my padding slows me down. But I donât even feel the burn in my thighs or the air rushing out of my lungs when I sprint toward the building.
Please be here. Please.
I jostle the handles on one side of the entrance. Nothing. The small morsel of hope Iâve clung to like my lifeâs depended on it is slowly slipping through my fingers, kinetic sand that can never hold its shape.
No, no, no. This is my only lead. If sheâs not here, I have nothing.
My hand skims the handle on the opposite side, and without even putting any pressure on it, the door creaks open. A sliver. No projection of inside light. But a sliver. And thatâs all I need.
Muscle memory carries me through the building that Iâve grown to know as a second home, desperation and fear peddling my legs, the chill from the rink sinking into my skin. I can see my breath swirl out in front of me, and Iâm not wearing enough clothes to combat against the perpetually low temperature, but none of that matters.
Because right as I see that tempered glass, my eyes hook onto the small figure sitting on the curb of one of the side openings. Iâve never felt my heart burst with such relief beforeâitâs almost too much for me to handle. But looking at Faye, unharmed and in one piece, blasts me with a warmth like a varicolored sunrise in the dead of winter, persimmon and purple shades bleeding into one another around an epicenter of gilded sun.
âFaye!â I scream, rushing over to her, ignoring the collision of my hip into the front row of seats.
Her head perks up as she rises to her feet, and my arms immediately bar her in an embrace. I donât know why I thought she would smell or look different, but she smells and looks like my Faye. Sheâs shivering in her tiny pajama set, burying herself into the heat of my body, and now I wish Iâd brought a jacket with me. I donât pull away. Iâm not ready yet.
âAre you hurt?â I whisper against the crown of her head, inhaling her peach scentâhow it still lingers even after a grueling day. The smell of her, the feel of her, just looking at her is like a muscle relaxant. My own slice of heaven that I donât deserve. The one place Iâll always come back to no matter how far away I am or how much time passes.
âIâm okay,â she says quietly, cheek pressed against my chest.
I canât tell you how many times weâve been in this position before. I donât want to repeat it, no matter how familiar it may be. There shouldnât have to be a reunion with us. We shouldnât have to be separated in the first place. And I know each of these instances have happened because of something idiotic I said.
I pull away from herâeven though my body protestsâand I drink in those perfect features of hers, catalogue the smile adorning her heart-shaped lips, the brown of her eyes that remind me of autumn, the freckles that dot her alabaster skin in vast constellations.
âYou scared the shit out of me, Faye,â I tell her, running my hands over the gooseflesh on her arms.
She doesnât seem to respond to my touch like she usually does, and her lifelessness nudges my anxiety into action.
âIâm sorry,â she says. âI shouldnât have said those things to you. I shouldnât have run. I just felt so cornered, and I didnât know what to do.â
âNo. You donât need to apologize. Iâm sorry. I shouldnât have raised my voice at you, and I shouldnât have tried to villainize you when everything was my fault. I was ashamed and angry and didnât want to hear the truth. I thought I knew what was best for you, but I was wrong.â
Iâm never going to go behind Fayeâs back again. Because nothing in this worldâand I mean nothingâis worth losing her. Iâve never been so wrecked in my life. I was fully ready to accept that she was gone. Not, like, dead gone. But just gone. Somewhere better, without me. And if she was, I wouldnât have held it against her. Iâll always put her happiness first, even if that means sacrificing my own happiness.
My life doesnât fucking exist if Fayeâs not in it. Whenever she decides to leave this planet, Iâm going to follow her, because thereâs no way in hell Iâm going to survive if I never see her face again, never hear her voice, never hold her.
There are inky streaks of mascara on her cheeks from crying, and the sight sits on my chest like an imposing anvil, too heavy to move. Sheâs been sitting in this empty rink for an hour, all by herself, in nothing but a tank top and shorts. I know her thoughts can be a dark limbo, a cesspool of negativity and self-deprecation, and I let her run out of the house after saddling her with too much emotion for one person to handle.
She shrugs. âItâs okayââ
âItâs not okay,â I assert, trying to soldier through the thick layer of bile in my mouth that has yet to recede. âNone of this is okay. How Saxon treated you, how I treated you. I was supposed to protect you, and all I did was let you down.â
Thereâs not a lot of space on the ground for both of us, but I lower anyways, folding my legs in uncomfortably so Faye has enough room. She follows suit and sits down next to me, all of her limbs fitting proportionately between the front row of seats and the partition of plexiglass.
I donât have a speech prepared, but I am ready to grovelâwhich, knowing me, is kind of guaranteed at this point.
Iâve never liked talking about my past. It doesnât matter who itâs with. And no, I didnât have the most gut-wrenching and heartbreaking childhood. I didnât witness a major death in the family. I didnât suffer from abuse. I wasnât forced to take care of myself from a young age. I always had a roof over my head and food on the table. My childhood wasâ¦fine. It was just lacking.
I hazard a glance at her, feel the backs of my eyes itch with tears. âI never had a good model of what a healthy relationship is supposed to look like. My parents fought a lot when I was younger. I thought it was something that every married couple went through, until they eventually grew further apart. I donât really believe they were ever in love. They were cruel to each other, blaming the other when they had the chance, lying and manipulating when things didnât go the way they wanted. They created this toxic environment that, as a child, I was completely oblivious to. Iâd fall asleep to the sounds of them yelling, the crash of dishes or furniture or whatever was throwable in the space they were in. If a day passed where they werenât screaming their lungs out at one another, I thought something was wrong.
âAfter they split, home life got a lot easier for me. But my relationships with other peopleâ¦suffered. I was terrible to my girlfriendsâunempathetic, uncaring. I didnât know how to show compassion or how to think about anyone besides myself. I mean, you said yourself that Iâm not necessarily the nicest person.â
âI didnât say that exactly.â
I laugh for the first time in daysâsomething I definitely didnât think Iâd be doing for a while. âItâs true. I donât make an effort to understand people. I donât care about anything unless it affects me. Itâs what I grew up with, what I thought was the norm. Iâd been content living a loveless life because I never really knew what love was. It wasnât until you that I realized Iâd been doing everything wrong.â
âI love you, Faye,â I profess, robbing the breath from her lungs.
Should I have said it sooner? Maybe. Do I wish I had done some big reveal, like flying her out to Ireland on a private jet to show her the flower field I bought that spells out her name? Yes. But all that matters is she knows it now.
Faye stares at me, eyes wide, mouth agape. I donât want to put pressure on her to say it back, so I continue.
âWhen you told me not to reach out to Saxon, I didnât listen to you. I was convinced that I was in the right, and I wasnât willing to change my mind to understand where you were coming from. But in doing so, I fucked up what we had. I broke your trustâ¦again. I believed that love was all about sacrifices instead of compromises.â
She pushes out a quiet breath, but itâs the only noise to be heard in the whole arena. A heavy exhale echoing off a surface of ice and skyscraping walls. I can see the gears turning in her head as she contemplates what sheâs going to say.
âYeah, youâve been kind of a dick lately,â she mutters.
The corners of my lips buoy into a smile. Thereâs my Faye. Tells it like it is. Always holding me accountable. Never sugarcoating anything. âI have. Iâm sorry. Youâre the last person who deserves it.â
âIâm tired of being mad, Kit. Iâm just tired of it all.â
âI know, Princess.â
She turns to fully face me, and I lift my thumb to brush the teary gunk out of the corner of her eye, the softness of her lashes kissing my skin. âHow do I know you wonât hurt me again?â
Because I wonât let it happen. Iâll flip this entire world on its axis and condemn myself to an eternal life of hell if I ever hurt her again.
âI think hurt is a part of life,â I say, the arrhythmic warble of my heart now the loudest sound in the rink. âBut Iâll never do anything to hurt you again. Not as long as I live, because I know that if Iâm hurting, youâre hurting a thousand times worse than me.â
I start to withdraw my hand from the arc of her cheekbone, but she grabs it before I can get very far. Her touch lances heat through my body, searing enough to burn off my fingerprints and cauterize the open wounds left in the devastation of our fight. âWhat if I donât forgive you?â she asks.
âI donât expect you to. But Iâll work until I earn it, just like I said I would at the restaurant. Maybe itâll take days, weeks, months. A year. Iâll work forever if thatâs what it takes.â
âA year?â
âI have to start over, Faye. A clean slate. And Iâm not afraid to.â
Faye goes from holding my hand to wrapping her arms around my torso, nearly knocking me off balance with the force of her hug. I jolt back and drape one arm over the expanse of her ribs, while my other arm keeps us both propped up.
âI love you,â she whispers into my neck.
She loves me. Not just with a âtoo,â either. Not just a response to my profession. A full statement. I love this girl so fucking much.
Sheâs warmed up a little from when I first found her, and her fragrant scent sparks every one of my synapses, whetting my appetite for her. Iâm this close to using her goddamn shampoo myself just so I can have her smell on me at all times.
I want to kiss her. But maybe itâs too soon. I need to give her time.
My phone pings in my pocket, silencing my artillery fire of thoughts, and thatâs when I realize I havenât updated the group chat about Fayeâs whereabouts. Fuck. Hayes is probably still losing his mind.
ME: Found her. Sheâs safe.
Faye leans over to peek at the screen just as a bunch of relieved texts start flooding in from the guys. My eyes arenât fast enough to keep up with everything theyâre saying.
As much as I want to keep her all to myself, I need to get her somewhere where the default temperature isnât fifty degrees. âI should probably get you back to the house.â
She smashes her lips together in that demure way she does sometimes, and nothing could have prepared me for what comes out of her mouth next. âWhat if I donât want to go back yet?â