Pretty Reckless: Chapter 21
Pretty Reckless: A Reverse Grumpy/Sunshine Stepbrother Romance (All Saints High Book 1)
Love is so much like death
Certain
Absolute
And out of our control
The future is always blissfully photoshopped.
Weâre always a few pounds lighter, a few brain cells smarter, and soaked with life experience and healthy logic.
The sad reality is, you never grow up to be who youâd imagined yourself as.
Through adolescence and my twenties, I thought Iâd be the best mother in the world. Motherhood was the end game, the goal, the quest. I was so acutely aware of the mistakes my own parents had made with me, and I vowed to be perfect.
From the outside, parenting looked almost easy. Whoever said it doesnât come with a guidebook was wrong. There were dozens of thick, helpful booksâall of which I read while pregnant with Dariaâand a few principles I thought were vital for success:
I was bullied into becoming a ballerina by parents who wanted their daughter to be everything my mother couldnât afford to be. So when Daria came along, and I saw from a very young age that she was spirited, rebellious, and full of the same anger her father harboredâraw fierceness that couldnât be containedâI didnât push her to follow my footsteps. Ballet, after all, is harsh and demanding. I always made sure she knew she wasnât expected to be like me. But it seemed like the more choice I gave herâthe harder she tried to prove me wrong.
I wonder where it all went wrong while folding the kidsâ clothes in the laundry room. Doing the laundry is not a task I need to do with the amount of help I get around the house, but itâs a telling job when you raise teenagers.
I can see, smell, and find all their secrets.
I found Dariaâs pompom string in Pennâs back pocket. Pennâs mouthguard in the pocket of Dariaâs cardigan. There is still a resistant bubblegum-pink lipstick stain that refuses to leave one of Pennâs shirts. A lipstick I know belongs to my daughter. Baileyâs clothes are always full of mudâshe rolls with Lev, our neighbor, on the hills of El Dorado. Via is the only one who is careful not to show where sheâs been. She is, therefore, the kid I know who hides the most.
She thinks she is fooling us. But the fact of the matter is, I let her get away with her behavior because sheâs been through so much.
I stop when I get to Dariaâs pajama dress. It is sticky and heavier than the rest of the clothes as though itâs not completely dried. I turn it around and sniffâa mother always sniffs her kidsâ clothesâand it smells like aloe.
Why would she put aloe all over her behind?
Clutching the fabric in my fist, I leave the laundry room to ask her just that.
Over the past few months, Iâve been begging for crumbs of her attention, knowing somewhere deep inside me that I donât deserve them. Iâve failed her one too many times. She always seemed so strong and opinionated, and I made the gravest mistake a parent could. I treated her like an equal.
But Daria is not my equal. She is my daughter. My very sensitive daughter. Sheâs been hurting beyond belief recently. Iâve done nothing to rectify this situation, only escalating it by bringing in more factors that drove us apart.
I make my way toward her room and stop when I hear my husbandâs voice behind her door. âOf course, you can tell me, Dar. You know thereâs no judgment inside these walls.â
Frozen, my jaw slacks. A part of me, the logical part, tells me to turn around and walk away. She is confiding in Jaime, not me. But another partâthe mother in meârefuses to let go. I resent my own husband for having a superior connection with her. I resent the entire world, including Bailey, and Via, and Penn, and our friends for coming between Daria and me.
âPrincipal Prichard hit me.â
The air leaves my lungs, and I stumble backward. Silence. My husband recovers after what seems to be like a full minute.
âTell me everything, please.â His voice is barely restrained.
She does. My daughter spends the next ten minutes chronicling her last, scarring, infuriating four years. She doesnât leave anything out. Not the fact she destroyed Viaâs letterâsomething I knew but never confronted her aboutâto how she started writing in the journal, and how Prichard used it against her. She breaks down when she confesses to deleting Graceâs messages in New York. Not that I needed to hear it from her to know it to be true. I figured it out when I finally found Graceâs number and called her. By that point, I could hardly blame Daria. I was a no-show for the past six months of her life. Too busy saving Via and Penn and giving Bailey everything she needs. The way I saw it, until the New York incidentâmy own wake-up call, if you willâI was staying out of her way, just as she had asked me to do repeatedly.
Daria always seemed so distant and independent as if she had it all figured out. How could I have been so stupid?
Daria acts like eighteen-year-old Mel. Dazed, confused, and hurt.
In New York, when Bailey and Via fawned over me, and Daria awarded me with long yawns, I did what I always do when I get frustrated with her; I built up an ice wall from the same variety she raised every time I came knocking on the doors of her heart.
I shouldnât have built more walls.
I shouldâve broken them down.
Smashed them and stormed in and given her everything she needed so she wouldnât have to search for them in an abusive educator who took advantage of her.
I hear my daughter crying in her room and muster the courage to tiptoe and peek through the slit in the door. They are so quiet and content and wrecked together. My beautiful, perfect husband sits on the edge of my daughterâs bed, hugging her close to his chest and kissing the crown of her blond head. She is falling apart in his arms, and my heart hurts so much I canât even breathe.
I should be hugging you.
I should be comforting you.
Collapsing against the wall, I suck in air. Sourness rises in my throat, and I swallow it down, but it keeps coming up, wanting to spill over. I want to purge whateverâs inside me on the floor. All the frustration and hate and animosity toward the person I gave birth to. This has been going on for far too long. I need my baby back.
âDaddy?â
âYes, the love of my life?â
The love of his life. I know he means it. Jaime would die just to put a smile on his mini-meâs face.
âI canât stay here, you know. Iâm not going to let Penn throw the game, and I wonât be able to show my face at school after the journal goes public.â
âItâll never come to that. I will hit Gus up tonight.â
âNo.â I hear Daria sniff and know she is shaking her head. Sheâs made up her mind. âItâs too late. My reputation is shit. If the truth comes out, people will know I killed All Saints Highâs chance at taking the championship, and Gus and Via will spin it against me. Besidesâ¦â She takes another deep breath. I know why. I know because I fold their clothes and tuck their secrets into their closets every day.
âI need to put some distance between the Scullys and me.â
âIs that right?â
âIâm so sorry, Daddy. I know you didnât want this to happen. And I know I let you down a gazillion times. By letting the Hulk win. By being jealous. By being mean. By not being the best version of myself I could have been. By falling in love with a person I had no right to fall in love with.â
âShh,â he murmurs into her hair, cradling her. They are moving back and forth to a soundless lullaby, cocooned inside a world Iâm no longer a part of.
âYou are the perfect version of yourself, kiddo. The real deal. Weâre the same, you and me.â He kisses her nose, then the tears from her eyes. âWhen I was your age, I was frustrated and confused. I always had the best intentions, but my actions came out all wrong. As for falling in love with the wrong personâ¦â He chuckles, shaking his head.
A ghost of a smile finds my lips.
Donât say it, Jaime.
âIâm a lot of things, but a hypocrite is not one of them. I fell in love with my high school teacher. And guess what? We still made it work. Donât let people tell you who to fall in love with, and donât think just because the past few years have been shit, the rest of your life will follow suit. Look at your old man. I got my happy ending. You will, too.â
She mulls his words over, munching on her lip.
âI need to get away.â
âFrom your problems? Not a good idea.â
âNo, from the people Iâve hurt. Thereâs a lot of healing to be done. I need to start fresh where Iâll have a chance to reinvent myself. To be who I know I can be, Daddy.â
He says nothing and everything at the same time. His eyes tell her it is hers. The fresh start. He would never deny her anything. Not even if it means leaving us.
I want to hit him. Scream at him. Hug him for keeping our daughterâs mental state above water all this time when I couldnât. Another bone-crushing hug passes between them. Daria is having the most defining moment of her adolescence without me.
Thatâs my punishment for my mistakes. Thatâs the price I have to pay.
âDo you think Mel would let me leave next semester?â She tears away from their hug, blinking up at him.
Mel. Oh, how I hate my name on her lips. Itâs Mom, I want to scream most days.
Jaime grabs her cheeks and draws her in to kiss her forehead. âI think she loves you too much to deny you anything, including breaking her heart.â
My fingers tremble around the steering wheel as I zip toward Gabe Prichardâs house.
Fifteen years ago, after things calmed down and Jaime and I came back to Todos Santos, I decided to volunteer at All Saints High. Form a connection with the other teachers and clean up my reputation for my kidsâ sake. I figured if I wanted to stay in this town, I needed to prove that Iâm not some deranged cradle snatcher.
Connections. It only took one phone call for me to find out where the bastard lives.
Iâm not in the right headspace for confrontation, but I have no doubt Iâll be pulling it off because itâs not about me. Itâs about my daughter. Neither Jaime nor the kids know where I went. I ordered a pizza and stormed out the door without explanation, leaving a trail of freshly done laundry in my wake. Daria was upstairs, oblivious to her motherâs meltdown a few feet away. Iâm glad she didnât witness me at my worst when I found out what he did to her. The last thing I want is for her to feel ashamed or humiliated about what he did to her.
I cut the engine in front of a Tudor-styled house on the outskirts of Todos Santos and pop my knuckles, inhaling a ragged breath.
Do not kill the bastard. Your kids still need you, and youâll be of very little help to them if youâre in jail.
Easier said than done. When I slam the driverâs door and dart toward his front entrance, not one bone in my body can resist going apeshit on his garden, and house, and face.
You touched my fucking daughter.
I forgot to addâeven though I tell the kids to keep it clean, I curse in my headâa lot.
For the sake of appropriateness, and for my plan to succeed, I fix my ballet-teacher smile on my face before I knock on his red door. My relationship with my daughter may be beyond repair, but no one can hurt her like this and get away with it, regardless of the fact she may not fully accept me ever again.
He opens the door dressed in pale gray cigar pants, a crisp white shirt, and a frown that collapses into a wince the minute he sees my face. Was he expecting my daughter? I canât ask even though I want to.
âMrs. Followhill. This is quite unexpected.â
âIs it, though, Gabe?â I tilt my head, wearing a smile Iâm pretty sure is downright nuts. âLetâs think about it for a second. Is my visit really a surprise?â
He does the whole charade. The scowl. The blinks. The grave shake of his head.
âIâm not sure I know what youâre referring to.â His voice is calm, but his left eye is twitching. Iâm already under his skin, and I havenât even gotten to the good stuff yet.
âIâm referring to the fact that today, I spent twenty minutes trying to figure out what the sticky, persistent stain on my daughterâs pajamas was before realizing that it was aloe. Aloe she put on her butt to ease the pain of you ruthlessly beating her with a ruler.â
I deliver the news flatly, knowing if I let my emotions slip, Iâll mess it up. I canât mess it up. Not when Daria is involved. Iâm done letting her down.
âThatâs quite the accusation, Mrs. Followhill, and I must say, I donât know what youâre talking about,â he says, but the blood has drained from his face, and he is clutching the edge of his door as though his life depends on it. I take a step toward him, tilting my chin up so we look each other in the eye.
âShould I refresh your memory? Because I have full access to my daughterâs phone, contacts, and text messages, and I believe one of us has been very reckless while messaging my Daria.â
This is both a blunt lie and an educated guess. While I would never entertain the idea of breaching Dariaâs privacy this way, I still remember my own affair with her father. The lust. The wildness of the situation. The feral need to keep in touch after school hours. He is probably saved under an alias, and maybe he calls her from a separate phone, but there is no way they donât have a connection outside of school.
He shifts from foot to foot, moving his hand over his face when he realizes I might have hard evidence against him.
âMrs. Followhill, please do not patronize me in that department. You were in my position. These kids,â he says, referring to my husband as a kid, âare of legal age, with raging hormones and wicked plans. You, of all people, know lines get blurred.â
âOne,â I say, âDaria was not of legal age when she was fourteen and first came to you. Jaime was legal long before I touched him, so donât compare. And twoââI point at him accusinglyââI never hurt any of my students. Do you realize how much trouble youâre in, Mr. Prichard? I donât think you do.â
Another manipulative twist of my knife. Iâm talking to him as though heâs already admitted to it.
âRegretfully, I feel like this matter should be settled through my lawyââ
âMy, oh my, how this will ruin your perfect track record. Continuous abuseâ¦â I tsk dramatically. âExploiting a minor, inappropriate physical conductââ
âShe needed it! She WANTED it!â he screams in my face, throwing a sudden fist into the door. It swings back from the impact, and he slaps it again with his open palm, crying out like an injured animal.
âYour daughter begged for it! Other than the last time, it was always with her consent. She encouraged me. Lured me in. A seductive little siren, a Lolita with big, blue eyes. Youâve already let her down, and I was there to pick up the pieces and guide her through this world. I stepped up when you stepped down.â It is his turn to point at me, spitting in my face with every word that comes out of his mouth.
âI care for her. I worry about her. I moved schools for her. You think I like dealing with teenagers? With an entitled, untalented football team? Youâre wrong. I did this for your daughter. I stayed singleâfor your daughter. I live in this awful, plastic townâfor your daughter. Donât you come knocking on my door lecturing me about morals. Daria feels half-orphaned because of you. I just became who she needed me to be. The only person in her life to care for her enough to give her the discipline she craved. And the spanking?â He stops, out of breath. His chest rises and falls. He is manic. On the edge of falling apart. He wipes sweat from his brow. âWhen I was young, I got spanked, a lot. It corrected my ways when I strayed from Godâs word. And look at me now.â He gestures toward his body with his hand. âIn one piece.â
For now, bastard.
I take a step back, steadying my breath. His words cut me like a knife, but what Iâm about to do is going to split him in half. I clutch the pearls on my neck, pushing the buttoned-up pale baby blue shirt down to reveal a little recording device clipped to the shoulder strap of my bra. Would this hold up in court? Who the hell knows? All I know is that Prichard is not dumb enough to find out.
âMy bad, Mr. Prichard, this makes everything you did okay. I just hope the authorities will find your version of things sufficient, as well.â
His eyes drop to the recording device, and I know this is my in. I have all the evidence in the world to bring him down now. A blatant admission. But I donât want the messy way out. I donât want to drag my daughter through court. I want his quiet, silent defeat. Even though nothing brings me more pain than to know he is about to get away with this.
There canât be a trial.
This canât go public.
Daria has suffered enough.
âName your price,â he growls, his eyes darkening.
âQuite simply: your job, your location, and your word. I donât want you anywhere near kids or teenagers again, Mr. Prichard, and youâre about to sign on it.â