Tempt Our Fate: Chapter 19
Tempt Our Fate: A Small Town Enemies To Lovers Billionaire Romance
âCan I ask you something?â Camden asks, looking at me from over the top of his coffee mug.
I narrow my eyes on him. âYou donât strike me as the kind of guy to ask before doing anything. Just ask whatever you want to ask.â
Weâve been sipping on coffee and snacking on scones while we took in the landscape. It was long enough for both of us to need a refill of the coffee Iâd packed in a thermos for us. Iâm shocked that weâve made it this far without clawing each otherâs eyes out or at least seriously insulting each other. Weâve only shared small jabs, but for the most part, conversation between us has been easy.
I hate to admit it, but heâs an interesting man. He knows a lot about the world, and Iâve enjoyed hearing about what heâs done in life. I havenât seen much outside of Sutten and Chicago. His stories make me want to take the time one day to see what all the world has to offer.
Camden clears his throat, bringing me back to the fact he wanted to ask me something. He seems nervous about it, which in return makes me nervous for whateverâs about to come from his mouth. If I know anything about him, itâs that he doesnât seem like the type of man to get nervous. He traces a line of thread of the quilt my mom hand-stitched when I was a teenager.
âWhy did everyone in town keep asking how your familyâs doing?â
My eyes go wide as they find his. Iâd been staring at the way his long fingers stroked the delicate threading of the quilt that I hadnât been paying attention to his expression. I try not to look at it, in fear Iâll stare too long. Itâs hard to look away with features as chiseled and striking as his.
âItâs a small town. People just want to know how everyoneâs doing.â
The straight line of his lips tells me he doesnât believe me. He watches me, heat prickling my skin with the path his eyes trace. âIt seemed like more than that.â
Because it is way more than that. When my mom died, it didnât just hit our family hard; it was something that rattled our entire town. She was the light of this town. Friends with everybody. My mom welcomed everyone she met into her life with open arms, and I donât think I was the only one who kind of imagined her in our lives forever.
âWhy do you say that?â My question is meant to stall, and the way he stares me down tells me he knows that. Stupid Camden Hunter. I hate how good he is at reading people, even though I imagine that a huge part of his job is being able to easily read people so he can sell to themâprofit off them.
âBecause there was pity when they looked at you,â he answers softly. His words donât hurt because theyâre true. Itâs one of the hardest parts of grieving. You can think youâve healed as much as you can from a sudden death, but the people around you never treat you the same. The pity in their eyes doesnât go away with time, and it almost makes you feel guilty for doing the only thing you can do after losing somebodyâgo on with your life.
I let out a shaky breath. Am I about to tell him about my mom dying? If I do tell him, how much do I tell?
Do I tell him that I feel guilty Cade was the one who found her? That sometimes I wish it was me who found her because I feel like I could handle the pain better than my brother?
Do I admit that I waited outside the local movie theater the next day because my mom and I had made plans to see the newest rom-com together that afternoon? I hadnât processed that weâd actually lost her, even though Dad had already asked me to begin arranging the funeral and to let everyone know sheâd passed because he hadnât faced our new reality yet. I sat on the curb in the theaterâs parking lot for over an hour weeping because she never showed up.
Do I tell him that I still listen to the old voicemails she left me to pretend sheâs still here?
Do I admit that sometimes I feel really fucking angry at her for dying? And hate myself for feeling that way because I know in my bones she never wouldâve left us on purpose.
There are so many things I could say that could answer his question. I open my mouth to tell him, but no words come. Words fail me.
I didnât know I was crying until Camden reaches across the quilt, wiping his thumb at my tearstained cheeks.
âYou donât have toâ¦â Thereâs a softness to his voice, his words trailing off.
I nod, letting out a shaky breath. I have to tell him. Weâve made it this far. My tears make it obvious that thereâs more to what he already knows. I might as well tell him the rest.
âA few months ago,â I begin, trying to swallow the lump in my throat that makes my words come out shaky, âmy mom passed away all of a sudden. She had a heart attack in the middle of the night.â
Camdenâs body freezes, the rough, calloused pad of his thumb still on my cheekbone. Heâs silent, and I donât hold it against him. At least he doesnât apologize. Thatâs what I hated most when talking to people after my mom died. I didnât need their apologies. I just needed my mom back.
âWe all thought she was healthy. It shattered our world. My dad had been with her his entire life, and Cade was a total Mommaâs boy. She was their world, and our family was a mess after.â
âAnd you?â
He lets his thumb stroke along my cheek again, even though Iâm confident more tears havenât fallen. âWasnât she your world, too? How did you handle it?â
I pause. His words take me by surprise. âI donât know if anyone really asked about me specifically. It was always âhowâs your brother doingâ¦howâs your father doingâ¦howâs your family doingâ¦ââ
âI want to know how youâre doing.â
His eyes are so blue up close. A kind of blue I havenât seen before. Itâs crystal clear, the pigment so icy that his eyes almost seem gray.
He looks at where his hand still rests on my cheek. I donât think deeply into why I miss his touch the moment he pulls it away like my skin had burned him.
âYou donât have to answer that,â he insists. His eyes search my face. I want to know what heâs looking for, what heâs thinking. Iâm grateful that he might be the first person to know about my mom and not look at me with pity.
I try to hold back a weak laugh when I realize the first person to really ask me how Iâm doing without pitying me happens to be a man that I swore I hatedâand one Iâd bet money hates me.
Iâm well aware how truly pathetic that is.
âIf I tell you, are you going to make fun of me later for it?â
He rears back as if I hit him. Of all the insults Iâve thrown at him, why does he seem most affected by this one?
âI must really have been an asshole to you if you think Iâd ever make fun of you for how youâre dealing with the loss of your mother.â
I shrug because I donât know what else to do. We donât have the best track record together, but I really donât think heâd ever use it against me. I just donât like having him know intimate things about me.
âTell me about her.â
I stare at him for a moment, wondering if although he doesnât show it, he feels sorry for me. That could be the only explanation for why heâs asking about my mom. Itâd make sense why heâs acting like he actually gives a damn about me.
âYou really want to know?â I shift on the quilt, my knee bumping against his. He doesnât move at all, even though with my new position, our knees barely touch.
âYeah.â He sounds confident but maybe even a little sad. Taking a deep breath, he looks up from his lap, and I find vulnerability in his icy-blue eyes. âI want to know more about her.â
âOkayâ¦â I begin, hesitant to tell him much about me. I feel like stuff between us should stay surface level. But I like that he knows nothing about her. I like that I can be the one to tell him how amazing my mother was. Everyone in the town knew her and loved her. Iâm excited to be able to talk about my mom and the mark she left on my life without having someone look back at me that pitied me or felt like they lost her, too.
âItâs cliché, and I know every kid says this about their mom, but she truly was the best mom ever. She was born to be a mom.â
âI wouldnât.â The words are said under his breath. Once his eyes go wide, I wonder if he meant to say that out loud at all.
âYou wouldnât what?â
He runs a finger along my motherâs stitching on the quilt. Iâm wondering if itâs something he does when heâs nervous. Iâve noticed heâs also always stuffing his hands in his pockets once his hands get fidgety. He keeps looking down but clears his throat to speak. âI would never say my mom is the best mom ever. She was not born to be a mother. And she made sure every day of my life I knew that.â
I blink, staring at him through a whole new lens. I must admit, the moment he moved into the gallery next door, I googled him. Anyone wouldâve done it. I wanted to know why they sold the business to him and not me. A quick Google search of him brought up a ton of information.
His parents were Russell and Emilia Hunter, both very famous artists who fell in love while on a summer getaway to Venice. Their romance was huge in the art world. They were each otherâs muses in all aspects. From what I read, they had a tumultuous relationship. There were pictures of them with other people throughout the first few years of dating, but they always seemed to make it back to one another.
There was only one photo of his mom pregnant on the internet. Her husband had an exhibit dedicated to his art, and she shocked everyone by showing up ready to pop. They seemed to do a lot with Camden as a baby all the way up to his teenage years. There were countless photos of them as a family. Photos made them out to be a picture-perfect family. With what Camden had just said, Iâm wondering if thatâs really the case.
âDonât feel bad for me, shortcake. Parents fuck up their kids all the time.â He playfully bumps his leg against mine. âNow, tell me what having a mother that loves you feels like.â
I donât talk at first because Iâm lost in what heâs told me, in what Iâve seen about him and his family on the internet. Everything in me wants to pry further about his life, to figure out why he is the way he is.
âIf you arenât ready to talk about her, you donât have to,â he offers, his tone gentle.
I shake my head at him. âIt isnât that. I just was caught up in hearing about your childhood.â
He peels a piece off his scone, popping it into his mouth. âThereâs a reason Iâm a dick. Fucked up childhood. Parents who didnât love me but pretended to when cameras were around. No one in my house to show me love.â
âYou deserved better,â I whisper softly.
âTell me what I missed out on. Tell me about your mom, shortcake.â
âShe was my favorite person in the world. My best friend, my mom, my everything. She volunteered in my classroom every year in elementary school. She was the one who taught me to bake, the one who helped me get ready for my first date and held me the first time I had my heart broken. She loved to drink tea and sit on the front porch, and she was always begging for me to make her fresh biscuits to leave with her during the week. Her favorite thing to do was make me laugh during church and would then pretend to scold me when I did. My mom was the life of every party, and people just flocked around her to be in her presence.â
Camden watches me carefully, hanging on every single one of my words. He seems to be genuinely interested in everything I say, which takes me by surprise. I didnât expect him to care at all.
Things would be a lot simpler if he didnât seem to care at all.