The Worst Kind of Promise: Chapter 32
The Worst Kind of Promise (Riverside Reapers Book 2)
Pressure. But not the kind that makes diamonds. The kind that crushes the strongest, most resilient objectsâthat reduces them to irreparable debris.
Itâs everywhere. I can feel it sitting on my chest like a gargoyle, crushing my diaphragm. I can feel it in between my legs, but itâs less pressure and more a biting pain. Itâs too dark for me to see anything. Itâs too dark for me to identify the warmth pooling beneath me, whether itâs blood or piss or something entirely different.
It hurts. It hurts so much. But I canât stop it, no matter how hard I try. I donât know why I canât stop it. I justâ¦canât. All I can do is scream. The thing about screams, though, is that theyâre only heard when they want to be.
âDoes that feel good?â
âThis is what you want, remember? Youâve wanted this the whole time.â
âDonât try to move. Itâll only hurt worse. I donât want to hurt you, Faye.â
A slew of tears dance down my face, cries and sobs mutilating my vocal cords. I try to speak, but nothing comes out. Itâs like the words are fully formed in my brain, but they glitch as they transfer to my tongue.
Somethingâs holding my arms down. Iâm completely helpless. Not just helpless but forced to watch whatâs being done to me.
A repeated invasion. A repeated memory. A repeated trauma trapped in my brain. A ghost that always lingers in the shadows, whether Iâm asleep or awake, haunting me for the rest of my life. No matter how far I get away from it, itâll never be far enough. He will always find me.
I awake in a cold sweat, depleted of breath and panting for air, my soul feeling like itâs been pulled from my physical body and forced to solidify in an incompatible world. My voice breaks on a cry, and my vision doesnât adjust quickly enough to unknot the panic gnarling inside me.
I immediately search for Kitâs arms in the darkness, my hands patting the mattress distraughtly, but the lack of warmth beside me reminds me that heâs not hereâthat Iâm alone in the bed. My heart rages behind my ribs, and the moisture lacquered on my face mustâve followed me from my nightmare. Tears ambush my eyes as I pull my knees into my chest, condensing myself into a small ball, as if thatâll protect me from my hyperactive mind. The words stay with meâbraying, derisive, preying on the progress Iâve made, insistent on squashing my resilience like scraps of metal in a trash compactor.
With my head buried, I canât see who charges into the room, but I know the feeling of the arms that encircle me. I switch from folding in on myself to leaning on the one person whoâs been my rock this whole time, letting him take some of the pain like he promised.
âShh, Faye. Youâre okay. Youâre safe,â he whispers, his hand stroking the back of my head, and his scent surrounding me like a second skin.
I clutch at the cotton material of Kitâs shirt, trying to remind myself that Iâm in Kitâs room, physically safe from Saxon, with no chance that heâll ever hurt me again. But itâs hard for me to suppress the memoryâbecause God knows I could never forget. I sob hysterically into his arms, not caring if the loudness of my cries notifies the rest of the guys in the house.
âBreathe, Faye. Iâm right here.â
Hiccups lay siege to my raw throat. âI canât.â
Kitâs voice is a low rumble in his chest before it tickles my eardrums. âYou can. In and out, Princess. Follow my breathing.â
I can feel his ribs expand against my legs with said breath, and thanks to being in the darkness for so long, my vision isnât nearly as blurry as it was before. The image of Kitâs silhouette in front of me neutralizes my abject terror, slowing my pulse and arming me with enough composure to try and mirror his breathing.
In. Out. In. Out.
Fresh air reaches the farthest corners of my lungs, circulating through me on swift wings, and that paperweight on my sternum lifts slightly.
I know I probably shouldâve said something along the lines of âThank you,â but all that spews from the cusp of my lips is âYou came.â
He brushes the back of his knuckles over my cheekbone. âIâll always come when you call,â he says.
Comfort. Something Iâve never known much about. Not from my father, not from my exes, not from the man who raped me. I only found it in the shape of my brother, but even then, I had convinced myself that his comfort only existed out of obligation. Kit, though. Kit is a different story. Heâs synonymous with comfort. A lighthouse guiding me to shore in the bowels of a violent storm.
âIâm sorry I woke you up,â I apologize, dabbing the tears from under my eyes, shame cartwheeling through my stomach.
I wish I could see his face, but all that my vision allows is the sight of his defined profile under a canopy of shadowâone that manipulates moonlight across the ceiling like a master puppeteering a marionette.
âDonât be sorry. I couldnât even sleep.â
âBecause I took your bed,â I finish guiltily, mucus congesting my naval cavities and trickling down the back of my throat.
âBecause I couldnât stop thinking about you,â he corrects, moving his hand to thread his fingers through mine, giving me one of his consolatory squeezes.
Love acts as a soothing balm on my hacked heart, and slowly, the pain from my nightmare begins to deescalate. âOh.â
His chuckle sounds sweeter than the early-morning trilling of mourning dovesâa precursor to a new dawn. It reminds me that only hope is stronger than fear, that hope is the answer to surviving my trauma.
âOh,â he mocks.
The mattress dips to accommodate Kitâs weight, and he sidles up beside me, his back flush against the headboard. âCome here,â he coaxes.
Even in the darkness, Iâm able to find his body, find the space in his arms where I have always fit. I curl up against his chest, resting my ear over his heart, where I hear his lifeblood rushing through him. A strong plinth holding up my fragility.
He kisses the crown of my head as he forks his fingers through ratty tresses of my hair. âYou wanna talk about it?â
Iâm surprised that I donât instantly shut him down. âIt was aboutâ¦Saxon.â
âIâm so sorry, Faye.â His tone, although croaky from exhaustion, is packed with empathy powerful enough to scare away the monsters skulking on the outskirts of my mind. âIs there anything I can do?â
Realistically, thereâs nothing he can do. Or I guess heâs done everything he can do. When he mentioned to me that he may or may not have rearranged Saxonâs face, I was furious at him for going behind my back. But now, after I found out why he really did it, Iâm not going to lie and say that a little part of me isnât satisfied. Kitâs scaryâIâve seen the way he flattens players on the iceâand by the amount of blood he lost that night, I donât doubt that Saxon looked way worse.
âThat night you went to visit Saxonâ¦werenât you worried about word getting out? How it would affect your reputation?â I ask.
âFaye, the only thing I was thinking about that night was you. If you hadnât noticed, you pretty much live rent-free in my mind.â
âYou could lose your career, Kit. You could go to jail.â Fed up with the darkness, I turn on the lamp on the nightstand, watching as rays of light lengthen over his handsome features, sharpening the cut of his jaw and the angular slant of his cheekbones.
âI wonât.â
He sounds so confident. Kit was willing to sacrifice his career for me. Everything heâs worked so hard for couldâve disappeared within the service of a lawsuit. It doesnât sound real.
When I settle back into his chest, I crane my head to look up at him. âI donât understand.â
âAfter I finished âtalkingâ with him, I told him that if he told anyone what happened, Iâd tell the whole world what he did. Of course, Iâd only go through with it if I got your permission. So I was bluffing, but dude was scared shitless at that point,â he explains.
I frown. âEven if I wanted to take him to court, thereâs no evidence.â
A half-cocked grin graces Kitâs lips. âYou do know Iâm rich enough to hire a private investigator, right?â
âYou know I donât watch Law and Order. I donât know what any of that means.â
âDeleted texts, call records, and voice memos can be restored. It takes a while, and itâs fucking expensive, but itâs possible. So if we really needed evidence of what transpired that night, itâs retrievable.â
I never thought about anything like that. One, because I donât have the money. Two, because I know jackshit about laws. And three, because itâs preposterous. Thatâs the kind of shit billionaire Mafia heroes do in romance novels, not the teammate of your older brother.
After the assault occurred, I did reach out to Saxon. I tried to get a confession out of him. I was confused and hurt and didnât understand why heâd do something like that to me when we were supposed to be best friends. The worst part was that he didnât even deny anything. He told me it was consensual. He told me I asked for it. So there is evidence floating around somewhere in the catacombs of my phone.
I regret not screenshotting it at the time for evidence. I wanted it gone. I wanted the reminder to be gone. I couldnât stare at those pixelated words any longer. I wanted to try to move on and forget. Moving on doesnât work when you always have one foot planted in the past.
âAnd if I didnât want the world to know?â I whisper uncertainly.
He shrugs. âThen I wouldâve been rocking a sick jumpsuit.â
I gasp, punching him in the arm. âKit, thatâs not funny!â
âIâm not joking. I look great in orange.â
I want to laugh, and maybe I would if my emotions werenât off-kilter. But all I can think about is what would happen if I lost Kit. Not being able to feel his arms wrap around me. Not being able to talk to him whenever I want to. Adjusting to life back in Pennsylvaniaâs gonna be a challenge as it is, but I canât imagine adjusting to life without him. Period.
I can feel the tears coming to a boiling point inside me, and the wet patches on Kitâs shirt havenât even dried yet from when I used him as a tissue ten minutes ago. âI donât want to think aboutâ¦â
He uses his forefinger and thumb to gently tip my chin up, our lips merely a breath apart. If I leaned forward a centimeter, Iâd be kissing him.
âPrincess, youâre gonna have to do a lot better than that to get rid of me.â