Chapter 2
Love Unwritten (Lakefront Billionaires, 2)
By the time I tuck Nico into bed for the night, Iâm about ready to keel over from overexertion after our extra-long practice session today. Nico is supposed to be practicing for his Strawberry Festival performance coming up this July, but something about his restless energy and residual grumpiness told me he needed the additional time to work through his feelings, so I kept him company while he unleashed his emotions on the ivory keys of his piano.
If Nicoâs heartache had a sound, its notes would match that of a sentimental progressionâachy and heartfelt and so damn wishful, it comes across as painful longing.
Even the music he listened to while taking a shower carried a melancholic tune, although I pretended not to notice while I folded laundry in his room next door.
âCan you read with me?â Nico pops out his bottom lip.
I stare at the superhero-themed alarm clock on his nightstand. âIâd love to, but itâs late, and you have school tomorrow.â
âPlease.â He presses his hands together. âIâll only ask for one story this time. I promise.â
Iâve always struggled with saying no to Nico. Itâs one of my biggest flaws, especially when it comes to cute little kids who wield puppy eyes and good manners like a superpower. If Rafael were here, he would roll his eyes and give me a speech about it, but he is locked away in his office.
Over the last few months, Nicoâs bedtime routine became my sole responsibility, and I know Rafael stopped trying because of the awkward tension between him and his son. Iâve tried my best to encourage my boss to try again, but he claims Nico only wants to read stories with me.
Nico and I werenât always this close, especially given his trust issues with others, but little by little, our bonding over music expanded to most aspects of our livesâfrom having divorced parents to our love of Formula 1âwe have built a strong relationship that I cherish.
âEllie?â Nico taps on my shoulder.
I let out a deep sigh. âAll right. Scoot over.â
He carefully removes his action figures from the left side of his bed and lines them up on his nightstand. Compared to all his other toys that lie abandoned around the house until he is ready to play with them again, he takes extra care of the figures Rafael created with his 3D printer. My boss designed and painted them himself, a fact that I try to block from my mind solely because it makes me feel all warm and fuzzy, knowing he spent months working on each one for his son.
Nico pats the empty spot beside him with a smile.
I reach for the two newest options on his bookshelf and hold them up for him to choose. Between the newest comic book about his favorite superhero and a short chapter book in braille, I already know Nicoâs answer, but I give him a choice regardless.
âWhich one are we feeling tonight?â
He squints at the covers for what feels like an eternity. For a kid who spent the last month talking about how excited he was for this comic, he sure is having a hard time picking today.
âIâm giving you three seconds to decide. Oneâ¦twoâ¦â
My brows creep toward my hairline as he passes over the newest edition of his favorite comic book and grabs his braille book instead.
I check his temperature with the back of my hand. âAre you sick?â
âNo.â He pushes me away and yanks his book open hard enough to make the spine crack.
Before he has a chance to read a sentence, I pluck the book from his lap and take a seat on the edge of his bed. âHey.â
He tries to snag the book back, but I place it out of reach.
âWhatâs going on?â
âNothing.â He stares straight ahead.
âI donât like to pushâ¦â
âThen donât.â
âBut Iâm worried about you.â
He remains silent, nearly suffocating me with the tension building between us. If this is how Rafael feels whenever Nico shuts him out, I can now understand his bad mood a bit more, because it absolutely sucks.
Iâm not ready to give up yet, so I try again. âYou can always talk to me about anything. No matter how bad it is.â
His gaze drops to his fists clutching the comforter in a death grip. âI canât. Not about this.â
I tuck my fingers under his chin and force him to look me in the eyes. âWhy not?â
âBecause Iâm scared.â His strained voice can barely be heard over the air conditioning blasting from the vents.
âAbout what?â I wait patiently as he takes a deep breath, only to be disappointed when he stays quiet.
âDoes it have something to do with your mom?â I ask in my softest voice.
He shakes his head hard enough to send water droplets flying off the tips of his hair.
âDad?â
His bottom lip trembles as his eyes flood with tears.
Oh, shit. What did Rafael do? I bite down on my lip to stop myself from asking that and ten different questions at once.
His voice is barely audible as he asks, âYou promise not to say anything?â
My stomach churns with uncertainty. I shouldnât make any promises of the sort, but if it means that Nico will share what is bothering him, then so be it.
I ignore my concerns and nod. âSure.â
It takes him another thirty long seconds to speak again, all while my heart beats rapidly.
A single tear slips down his cheek. âMy vision is getting worse. Itâs harder to see in the dark lately, and the tunnel vision is getting narrower.â
I feel like I just took a brass-knuckled punch to the gut. âOh, Nico.â
Another tear follows the watery path toward his wobbling chin. âIâm nervous.â
âOf course.â I take a deep breath. âWhy havenât you told your dad?â
âBecause I donât want to make him sad again.â
My chest clenches as I absorb the pain on his face like itâs my own.
Iâm at a loss for words as I tuck him against me, wishing I could do anything other than sit around, waiting for time to steal whatever vision he has left.
One day, Nico wonât be able to see much, if anything at all. Itâs unfair, given his young age. A kid like him deserves to experience life and the whole world without a diagnosis hanging over his head, reminding him how he is different from other children his age.
I brush his hair out of his eyes. âYour dad would want to know if youâre having trouble.â
âNo, he wouldnât.â
âOf course he would. Why would you think anything else?â
Nico takes so long to answer, I mistakenly think heâs fallen asleep.
âHe cried at the doctorâs office,â he says with a shaky voice.
I freeze. âWhen?â
âIn January.â His chin trembles. âI heard himâ¦in the bathroom.â
âAre you sure?â
He nods.
My heart breaks for the two Lopez men, knowing they are suffering in silence when they could be relying on each other. Yet no matter how hard I try to push them together, they both continue to resist.
âHe doesnât know that I know.â His sniffle makes the crack in my chest widen.
I give him a squeeze. âItâs okay for people to cry. Itâs normal and can be healthy.â
âYeah, but not when youâre the reason.â His gaze drops.
âBut he wasnât crying because of you. He was crying for you.â Iâm not sure what makes my heart ache more: Rafael having a breakdown about his sonâs eye condition or Nico witnessing his father at a rock-bottom low that was meant to be kept private.
Itâs hard to pick, especially when I picture my cold, emotionally unavailable boss crying.
Wouldnât be the first time. Iâm reminded of a memory Iâve kept at the back of my mind of a teenage Rafael breaking down in a parking lot one Christmas Eve long ago, completely unaware of me sitting in the car parked next to his.
At the time, I had no idea why Rafael was crying, but Iâve been able to piece it together after Josefina shared once that the anniversary of his motherâs death lands on December twenty-third.
The memory fades as Nico speaks again. âThat doesnât make it any better.â
My arms tighten around him. âIâm sorry.â
He snuggles into me. âItâs not your fault.â
âNo, but I am anyway. Youâve been carrying this inside all this timeâ¦â
I should have pushed harder. Asked more questions. Something more than creating a ridiculous smile tracker in hopes of bringing Nico and his dad back together, thinking that would do the trick.
I take a deep breath and voice the opinion Nico will hate to hear. âYouâre going to have to tell him about this.â
His arms tighten around me. âI will.â
âWhen?â
He flinches. âAfter our trip?â
I pull back to get a better look at him. âNo. You canât wait three weeks to tell him about something like this.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause heâs your dad. He deserves to know whatâs going on with you so he can help.â
âTelling him now wonât make a difference.â His shoulders slump like they are single-handedly carrying the weight of the world. âMy eyes arenât ever going to get better.â
As much as I want to deny the truth, Nico is right. Nothing we can do will change his diagnosis, but that doesnât mean he needs to struggle by himself. He can count on us to support him through it all.
âIf youâre scared, I could talk to him for you.â
A look of pure desperation flashes across his face as his fingers dig into my arm, right over a tiny group of butterfly tattoos. âNo! Please, please, please, Ellie. Donât say anything yet. At least not until after our trip.â
âWhy do you want to wait?â
âToday, he smiled, and yesterday, he laughed!â
The chasm in my chest deepens as I remember the sound that took me by surprise. While Rafaelâs laugh wasnât loud or powerful, it was soft and impactful enough to make Nico smile for the remainder of the day.
âHe never laughs anymore.â Nicoâs misty eyes make mine tear up as well. âI donât want to ruin that before our trip.â
My deep breath might not calm my heart, but it gives me a moment to clear my head. âI need you to be honest with me and tell me how bad it has gotten since your exam in January.â
He asks to use my phone and pulls up an example of his current vision. It has begun to dim around the edges, as if he is seeing the world through a pair of binoculars, which was a symptom the doctor warned Rafael about given Nicoâs advanced medical state. His tunnel vision isnât as bad as I had originally thought, but it still worries me given how young he is.
While I donât want to risk my job for a secret, Iâm not sure I have much of a choice unless I want to break Nicoâs trust. If his safety were truly at risk, I would betray it in a heartbeat to protect him, but Iâm going to choose to believe him.
I release a heavy breath. âIâll give you until after your birthday party.â
His face turns a sick shade of green. âBut thatâs in a week!â
âItâs either that or we tell him tonight.â
It kills me to put my foot down, especially when Nico pouts and says, âI donât want him to be sad before our vacation.â
âThatâs fair, but you know itâs the right thing.â
His reply is nothing but a deep sigh of resignation.
I lift his chin so he can look me in the eyes. âHe may be temporarily unhappy, but the trip will help him feel better.â
âYou think so?â
âI know so.â Okay, I may not know for certain, but Iâve never heard a single person say they had a bad time in Hawaii.
With all the effort Rafael put into planning this special trip for his son, including canceling the original Europe itinerary all because Nico became obsessed with Hawaii this year after watching a hundred hours of content about the place, I know he will have a good time.
Or so I hope.
âOkay. Fine. Iâll tell him after next weekend.â
This mini Lopez is going to be my downfall, because where Rafael is rough around the edges and keeps his heart locked behind a wall of ice, Nico wears it proudly on his sleeve for everyone to see.
I would do anything to protect it and him, even if it means making a promise about a secret that isnât mine to keep in the first place.