Mile High: Chapter 48
Mile High (Windy City Series Book 1)
Stevie flips my mother off with both hands, and I canât help the sickeningly satisfied smile Iâm wearing as I watch from above, out my penthouse windows.
Iâm all too obsessed with that wild girl, and itâs hard to explain the swell in my chest from knowing she still has my back, regardless that sheâs not ready to talk to me yet.
But that sense of pride quickly shifts to panic when I watch my mother disappear below me into the lobby of my apartment building.
Iâve been thinking about this for days, constantly practicing the words I want to say to her. But regardless of how ready I felt when I booked her flight or paid for her hotel, at this moment, all that preparation has flown out the window.
My sister tracked down her phone number last week, and all morning my thumb has been hovering over that same contact, wanting to cancel this meet-up altogether. Panic has been racing through me, anger too. But I couldnât cancel. Iâve needed to face this woman since I was sixteen, but it wasnât until now, realizing that my past with her was holding back my future, that it became an urgent necessity.
I canât even count the number of messages I typed to Stevie, telling her what I was about to do, needing her help, wanting her to be there for me. But I didnât send a single one. How selfish would that have been? Her desperate and pleading face, her strained and cracked voice have all been ingrained in my mind since that day I broke up with her. I couldnât ask for her help when I did that, when itâs all my fault. So, Iâm going to get through this on my own while knowing itâs a step to help me win her back.
As Iâm pacing my living room, finally, the speaker by my door rings.
âMr. Zanders, I have aâ¦â my doorman hesitates. âA Mrs. Zanders here?â
Sheâs still using that name? Convenient.
Inhaling a deep breath through my nose, I exhale just as slowly. âYeah, thank you. You can let her up.â
Itâs less than two minutes later that I hear the elevator stop on my hall, and another fifteen seconds after that, her knock echoes through my penthouse, causing an unwelcome shiver to run up my spine.
Fidgeting with the watch on my wrist, I then adjust the collar of my shirt, unable to get comfortable. I contemplated dressing down, but Iâm treating this as a business meeting, so a button-down shirt and slacks it is. Regardless, itâs not my attire thatâs making me feel itchy and claustrophobic right now. Itâs the woman standing on the other side of the door.
But this is my home, and this is my life. Iâm in control here. Iâm successful and proud of what Iâve created for myself. No thanks to her. I wonât allow her to make me feel as unimportant as she did the day she left.
With another calming breath, I straighten my spine and reach for the handle, swallowing my nerves as I open the door.
âEvan,â my mom says with pride. âItâs so good to see you.â
She holds my stare, her smile forced with hidden intention, and having this woman standing in front of me, I sense myself crumbling, turning back to that hurt sixteen-year-old boy she left.
Her eyes are as I remember, mirroring my own. Her hair is styled to perfection, but her light brown skin has aged over the last twelve years. She showed up at my game two years ago, but I only saw a small glimpse of her before security escorted her away. I hadnât noticed the details.
Her clothes are designer, seasons old at this point. Her shoes and bag are worn beyond belief, reminding me why she left in the first placeâfor money. And why sheâs most likely back nowâfor more.
âCan I come in?â she asks, breaking me out of my daze.
I move aside, allowing her into my home. It feels wrong, having her here. She brings a cold energy, fake and almost venomous as she enters, vastly contradictory to Stevieâs bright aura, wild spirit, and sweet nature. But I have to remember Iâm doing this all to better myself and get that girl back.
âWow.â My mother takes in the space, head spinning. Her eyes may as well be shining with dollar signs. âYour penthouse is amazing. How long have you been here?â
âJust over six years.â
She nods, silently appraising every little thing and reminding me that nothing has changed. âCan I have something to drink?â
âI have water.â
She lightly laughs. âA spritzer or even champagne would be fine.â
I roll my eyes, heading to the kitchen, leaving her to find the living room. My fridge is stocked with IPAs and sparkling water, neither of which sheâs getting.
âYour neighbor with the curly hair is something else,â she calls out from the living room, and I canât stop the smile spreading across my lips. âQuite the attitude on that one.â
I have no plans to explain who Stevie is. It doesnât matter because the woman sitting in my apartment will hold no value in my life after today. She doesnât need to know about the most important piece of all.
Putting the glass down on the coffee table in front my mother, I take a seat in a chair perpendicular to her.
âWhat is this?â She eyes the glass as if sheâs shocked I didnât pop a bottle of bubbles specially for her.
âWater.â
She forces that fake smile again before taking a sip. âIâm so glad you called me, Evan.â
God, I hate that name when she uses it.
Clearing my throat, I adjust my watch once more before spinning the rings on my fingers. My mother eyes me, watching the whole thing, probably calculating how much all my jewelry costs.
But as my thumb absentmindedly traces the ring on my pinky, I remember why Iâm doing this.
âI called you because we need to talk.â
âI was hopingââ
âI need to talk,â I correct.
Her hazel eyes widen before she adjusts her shoulders. âPlease do.â
âWhyâd you leave?â
Her chest vibrates with a sharp breath. âEvan, can we leave the past in the past and move forward? Thatâs what I want most in the world, to move forward.â
âNo. Whyâd you leave?â
She shakes her head, looking for something, anything to reason her abandonment. âI sacrificed a lot when I was with your father.â
âLike what?â I challenge, not letting her get off the hook with vague answers.
âI sacrificed the life I envisioned for myself. The things I wanted.â
âMaterial things. Your family wasnât enough for you.â
âNow, thatâs not true.â
âIt is. You chose money and bullshit material things over your kids.â
She stays silent, having no argument.
âDo you know what it felt like, being sixteen years old, getting out of hockey practice, and sitting in the parking lot waiting for you to show up? All my friends were driving off with their parents, and I sat there waiting. Dad showed up two hours later, and when we got home, all your things were gone. Who the fuck does that?â
âEvan, I want to move forward.â
âSo do I!â I yell from my seat, causing Rosie to jump up from her dog bed before sitting attentively next to me. âThatâs why youâre here, Mom. I want to move forward, and Iâm holding on to so much anger for what you did that I canât. You were the one woman who was supposed to love me unconditionally, and you didnât.â
I pause, allowing her to tell me Iâm wrong. To tell me that she did love me. That maybe she didnât love my dad enough, or maybe she didnât love our small town in Indiana, and thatâs why she had to leave, but that it was never about me.
She doesnât say she loves me.
âSo, where do we go from here?â she asks instead. âHow do we move forward?â
âWe donât. I do.â
Her brows pinch in confusion.
âI brought you here so I could look you in the face and tell you that Iâm done. Iâm done holding on to the anger and hurt you caused. Iâm done hiding your name from the press because Iâm afraid people will find out about you. And Iâm done letting your inability to stay when I needed you most hold me back from the people who want to be in my life. People who would never abandon me the way you did.â
She sits there, emotionless as a jolt of pride flows through my body.
Tilting my head back, I close my eyes, a slight smile sliding across my lips. Every muscle in my body relaxes, feeling the physical effects of my words.
âI came out here, expecting you to want me to be in your life again.â
âNo. You came out here, expecting me to pay to have you in my life again, but guess what, Mom. Iâm not sixteen anymore, and I donât give a shit about you.â
Her lips part, falling open. âThatâs why you brought me all the way here? You flew me here for this?â
âYep.â
She stays silent in shock.
âLet me guess. You thought Iâd fly you out here, pay for you to stay close by. Put you in your own box suite at my games.â
Her act completely dissolves in front of me. âI thought you wanted me in your life again. I thought you flew me out because you missed me!â
I shake my head. âNo, Iâm good.â
Sheâs getting flustered on my couch, fidgeting and looking around the room, eyeing every little thing that may be of value. As if sheâs cataloging what she expected to gain from me.
âYou donât want to be in my life again anyway, Mom. Admit it. You were hoping I was still that sad teenage boy who missed you and would do anything to have you back. You thought I would give you whatever would make you stay. You donât love me. You donât want me. You want the things that come with me.â
Stevie runs through my mind first. The person who means the most to me, who has never taken anything from me, yet I want her to have it all. Next is my dad, who I blamed for my motherâs absence. That man worked double-time to make up for her lost income, so I wouldnât have to stop playing hockey. I always thought he abandoned me the same way she did, but in fact, it was the complete opposite. He stayed and worked more so my life wouldnât have to change.
Those are the people I want to give everything to. Not the woman across from me.
My eyes fall on her purse. Itâs designer, but at least a decade old at this point, and all the pieces fall into place. âWhen did he leave you?â
I have no idea what the man she left us for looks like, though Iâve tried to picture him for years, wondering what she saw in him. He breezed through town for work, taking my mother away on his private jet. But deep down, I know exactly what she saw in him. She saw dollar signs, enough to leave her family.
My motherâs shoulders straighten, holding faux confidence as if the reason sheâs here has nothing to do with the bankroll that left her. âSix years ago.â
Figures. Right after I got into the league, she started trying to worm her way back into my life.
âDo I have any siblings I should know about?â
She exhales a disbelieving laugh. âNo.â
I nod repeatedly. âOkay. Donât call me again.â
Her hazels dart to mine. âAre you serious?â
âDeadly.â
I watch as the wheels turn in her mind. âI know how secretive you are from the press. I know things theyâd love to know. Things theyâd pay to know.â
Sheâs desperate now, grasping for straws.
âGo for it. Iâm not hiding anymore. You want to tell them what a terrible mother you are and throw yourself under the bus, be my guest. I kept you hidden because I was embarrassed that my own mother couldnât love me, but thereâs nothing for me to be embarrassed about. Iâm enough. Lindsey is enough, but itâs you who places value on all the wrong things. When you go, who is going to be there for you? Your purses? Your shoes? Your money? Thatâs a sad life, Mom, and Iâm not angry at you for it anymore. I feel bad for you.â
How the hell did this woman cause me so much panic over the years? Sheâs not worth it. She never has been. The desperation is seeping out of her, and itâs pathetic. In fact, looking at her now, I feel nothing. She means nothing to me.
âYou know I blamed Dad for you leaving? You werenât here for me to be angry at all these years, so I was angry at him instead. But that man stuck around and worked his ass off for Lindsey and me. You did him a favor by leaving. He deserves so much more than you.â
âEvanââ
âYou should go.â I stand from my chair, Rosie at my side.
My mother hesitates, her brows lifting in disbelief. She gathers her bag and smooths out her top as she stands. I lead her to the door, sensing her following behind reluctantly.
âYour flight leaves at two, and youâll be checked out of your hotel in an hour, so Iâd hurry and pack your things if I were you.â
âWhat?â She stands in the hallway outside my apartment in shock.
âThanks for not loving me enough to stay, Mom. It made it a lot easier to recognize the people who do.â
I close the door on her partway, but change my mind.
âOh, and you should really retire that bag. Outdated if you ask me.â
Okay, that was petty as fuck, but I couldnât help it. Closing the door, I lean back on it, feeling the freest I have in twelve years.
Once I pass security, I essentially run across the tarmac at Chicagoâs OâHare airport, racing towards the plane. Iâve been dying to talk to Stevie while trying to respect her boundaries of needing time.
The Stanley Cup Finals start tomorrow with game one in Pittsburgh, and Iâve been itching to get this road trip started for reasons outside of hockey. It took everything in me not to call her after my mom left yesterday, but weâre going to have three days in Pittsburgh together, and Iâll be able to explain it better in person anyway.
I hope sheâs proud of me. I think she will be.
Coaches, staff, and my teammates litter the aisle as I wade through the crowd to my seat in the exit row. Standing on my toes, I look over the boysâ heads and into the back galley for Stevie, but there are too many people in my way.
Taking my seat, my knees bounce, anxiously waiting for her to come do the safety demo. Everything will be okay. It has to be.
âJesus.â Maddison plops into his seat next to me. âYou fucking sprinted out here.â
âSorry.â I look towards the back galley again but find no sign of Stevie. âI get to talk to her today, so Iâm just anxious.â
âDonât worry,â Maddison reassures. âSheâs going to understand. Just tell her everything.â
After Stevieâs name got released, I was worried sheâd be fired. But sheâd tell me if she had, and I havenât heard a word from her yet.
âAre you two ready for me to brief you on the window exit?â
Finally.
But looking up, itâs not my curly-haired flight attendant wanting our attention. Itâs not Indy, and itâs not that bitchy one either.
âWho are you?â I harshly ask.
âIâm Natalie.â She offers a kind smile, the innocence radiating off her.
âWhereâs Stevie?â
Her brows furrow. âWhoâs Stevie?â
Whoâs Stevie? What the hell?
My eyes shoot to Maddison, but heâs equally as confused as I am. Jumping from my seat, I dart towards the back galley, shoving my teammates out of the way when I have to.
âWhere is she?â I ask Indy with desperation.
She inhales a deep breath, eyes unable to meet mine.
âIndy, where the fuck is she?â
Finally, she looks up at me, her gaze full of sympathy. Unable to answer, she simply shakes her head.
âDid she get fired?â I frantically ask, my voice rising. âDid that chick really fire her when her name got released?â
I take a quick step towards the front of the plane, ready to give that lead flight attendant a piece of my mind, but Indy grabs my arm, holding me back.
âShe didnât get fired. She quit after our last flight. Before her name was even released.â
What? Thereâs no way. She promised sheâd talk to me today. She wouldnât lie to me.
Would she?
âDid you know?â My throat is tight, my eyes burning as I desperately look at Stevieâs coworker.
Indy shakes her head. âShe didnât tell me until after we landed. I had no idea.â
I melt into the wall behind me in disbelief. Is this really happening? Why wouldnât she tell me? Whyâd she let me believe I still had a chance?
She was the best part of this season, and now in the final hours, sheâs gone.
I need to see her. I need to talk to her and apologize. Tell her about my conversation with my mom. Take responsibility for breaking up with her because I was scared. Beg for her to understand.
I need her, but sheâs not here, and Iâm not sure I can wait three more days until weâre back in Chicago.
âOne more thing you should know,â Indy says, regret lacing her tone. âShe took a new job. Sheâs moving to Seattle.â