Shattered Vows: Chapter 10
Shattered Vows: An Arranged Marriage Standalone Romance (Tarnished Empire)
The rest of the evening, I waited like prey ready to be slaughtered any second. I jumped at the slightest sound and my grandmother even scolded me
âMo, is this so scary to you? Whatâs got you so tense?â
âOh, I donât know. The mob being in our town, for one.â
She sighed and rubbed a hand over her wrinkled brow. âItâs not like you think. I fluff my own ego by acting as though weâre still at war. Like a soldier wounded in battle that gets to remember those days as some of the bravest ones he ever lived, I like to talk like it still might happen, huh? Donât get your panties all in a bunch. Theyâre mostly businessmen now. Like I said, gentleman mobsters.â
I took a deep breath. âWhat do you mean, Grandma?â
âAch. They have hearts now. They live by new rules. They make clean money instead of bleeding those who crossed them.â She waved toward the big city. âThey know how to move things without death now. I think itâs better this way but maybe more cruel. Iâve heard of how Bastian works. Heâll cut off dealings with those he doesnât want to work with and let the wolves underground rip apart those he doesnât protect. He wants everything legal but still holds everyoneâs cards in his handâ
âThat sounds just as scary.â I shivered as a breeze passed through.
âMaybe. But thereâs ethics now. Code he lives by more than his dad ever did. Itâd serve you well to marry into that.â
Sighing, I dug my nails into my hands so as not to jump down her throat right away.
Grandma meant well. In her mind, marriage still could smooth over many things. She thought Bastian would be protecting me with his name but she didnât understand. âThey love me here, Grandma. You know that right? Jonah is out on the water every day with me, Iago is at the food truck bright and early and Iâve worked at the humane society for years. Dr. Nathanââ
âDonât be naive, Mo. Men love a pretty woman to look at. They wonât risk their lives for you. And whoâs going to take care of you when Iâm gone?â
I stumbled at her question in shock. I tried to school my expression but she caught it.
âOh, I know. You think you take care of yourself but I pay the bills. I run the numbers of the real businesses we have. Iâm your protection.â
Her words were like a punch to my gut. âIâm perfectly capable of doing all of that, Grandma.â
âWe will see.â She murmured and went to her room.
She died that very night, her last words loomed, now ominous with their weight.
There wasnât a sound made. No glass fell to the ground, no cry for help, not even a great sigh from her bedroom. She went the way everyone hopes they will: quiet and warm in her bed.
My grandmother had taken life by the horns and maybe sheâd wanted to ride out of it softly. Either way, I liked to think she chose it. Sheâd always been able to steer things her way. Why not death?
Iâd taken one breath, two breaths, and then maybe fifty more as I stood over her the next morning.
In the end, weâd planned out her funeral, wake, how sheâd wanted to be spread across the beach. Or maybe that was for me but, either way, weâd agreed on everything.
It was all planned perfectly.
Except what I would do the day it happened.
I was alone and the only sound in her room was my breath, not hers. The gulls outside, the waves and their rhythm with my breathing.
Not hers.
Just mine.
Life was too quiet without her rattling breaths. The room was so empty with just my own.
The sun shone into the window as if mocking me and I turned the bracelets on my wrist for far too long before deciding to call the non-emergency line.
They came right away, much like if Iâd called 911.
Yet, no sirens. No sound.
Maybe that was the benefit of a small town. The sheriff pulled me in for a hug. Heâd heard from the non-emergency call and decided to come with. He told me to swing by the tiki bar later, that heâd tell Bradley to have a drink waiting for me.
I didnât go.
I sat in that empty house and listened to the new silence.
I was silent when I cried that night too.
The night after.
The night after that.
Complete quiet except for the rhythm of my breathing and the rhythm of the waves.
We worked together to get me through those hard days.
Losing my grandmother was like losing my life. Sheâd been both of my parents for so long. When theyâd passed, sheâd stepped in.
Sheâd always stepped in, even when theyâd still been there.
Losing her was bigger, more detrimental, and much more heart wrenching.
Iâd planned for it all but I couldnât plan for the pain and for the loss of myself.
So many gifts came over those next few days. Flowers and more flowers and pies and food, as if I wanted to eat and have a nice-smelling house.
I set it all in the house next to the urn I had to hold on to until the funeral.
I ignored calls and the doorbell ringing until that day.
It was the day I had to pull on my big girl dress and face the music.
The world still turned and grandma was gone even if I didnât want her to be.
The funeral home was small and dark. It was not a place my grandmother would have ever enjoyed. I didnât enjoy it either, not with the fabric of the wooden chairs yellowed and worn like so many people had come to say goodbye to their loved ones and sat in those same spots.
So much pain.
So much death.
Over the past few days, a beating had started in my soul. Angry. Sad. If you could imagine a drum of death and darkness, that was exactly how it sounded. Sometimes the thump was so roaring, it sounded just like thunder, so loud in my ears I couldnât hear anything else. Maybe it was my heart.
It went up and down, up and down like the ocean, like my breath.
âMorina.â Bradleyâs hand on my shoulder made me jump. He yanked it away and winced. âSorry.â
âNo, no.â I shook my head to try to right myself. âItâs fine. Iâm just on edge today.â
âAs you should be. Itâs a hard burden to carry yourself,â he blurted out and then immediately followed up with, âI mean, not by yourself. Weâre all here.â
âOf course you are.â I patted his back and kissed him on the cheek. His kind eyes searched my face. Bradley would have provided me comfort any other day, his muscular frame always dwarfing mine and making me feel protected. Today, though, no one could protect me from the grief.
He hesitated from saying anything more and I squinted at his awkwardness. âDonât tiptoe, Bradley. It was never your strong suit.â
He sighed but his shoulders relaxed a little. âItâs a hell of a day, Mo. Everyoneâs going to walk on eggshells around you.â
I turned and found the whole town piling into the funeral home. âDonât I know it,â I mumbled.
I gripped my bracelets, one a deep, earthy green color with spots of bold red. Bloodstone for courage and bravery. I wore another made of howlite for patience and compassion. Iâd also slid a rose quartz crystal in my black dressâs pocket. I would grip it when I needed the confidence and calm that I surely wouldnât feel today.
People filled the seats, bustling around the empty spaces, and most of them werenât just idly talking. They moved flowers around, waving in others, hugging the ones who cried, laughing with the ones who shared memories.
The town was a family, and I smiled because grandma had been a big part of it.
The director came to talk over logistics, but Grandma had said she wanted a speech from the priest, nothing from me, and wanted one thing played before they ended the ceremony.
Nothing from me. A part of her probably always wanted me to do nothing. Sheâd never ever wanted to be a burden. Today, more than any other day, I appreciated that.
I sat next to Bradley and he put his arm around me while the priest spoke of Grandmaâs love for the town, the work she and my grandfather had done, and how every moment spent with her was a joy.
Everything he said, people nodded along.
I didnât let a tear escape as he talked. Iâd cry alone in the silence tonight.
Today, Iâd let the town cry for her instead.
The priest announced that there was one song sheâd chosen and motioned for the funeral director to play it.
Grandma hadnât let me know this part but as the beat started up, I think I was the first to chuckle.
Weâd always played Eminem and requested it just to irritate patrons of the tiki bar. When, âWithout Meâ started to play, I couldnât help but laugh.
The words were absolutely ridiculous and those who knew them started laughing too.
We sang along, and the tears that streamed down my face were happy ones.
When it ended, the funeral director hurried forward but I stopped him. âI just want to say one thing.â
My breath shook as I took it in. âIâm not good with words. We all know Iâm mercurial by nature. Iâm a product of my parents, right?â
Most of them laughed at my joke.
âMaybe my grandma was a little perturbed with my mom marrying a guy that bent with the wind. And when the accident took them, I think she was a little mad even. Still, she never bent to anything, the wind, the water, this town could have tried to push her and she would have stood her ground. We were lucky to have that, I think.â
I took a shaky breath and tried to smile instead of cry. I caught Bradleyâs eye and he nodded for me to continue. âWe knew we could count on her in anything. Bradley even counted on her to take down more moonshine in the tiki bar than anyone else. Iâm pretty sure she made you thousands with the bets you won every time a businessman stopped into town.â
Everyone laughed at that.
âI guess we all know with me, you canât do that. Iâm always doing my own thing.â
More chuckles.
âExcept for the food truck, our puppies at the humane society, and the ocean. Youâll know Iâll always be there for you when it comes to that. So, sheâs gone but sheâll always be a part of the city, and hereâs to hoping that her spirit flying through here will make us all a little more like Maribel.â
Bradley whooped and everyone clapped.
I stepped down from the podium and went to lay a hand on the urn. Some heavy weight lifted from my chest and I believed in spirits, in things of the atmosphere shifting, and if she was there, I think the weight lifting was her spirit sighing in relief.
âIâll be fine, grandma,â I whispered.
That moment marked the exact second that I finally felt I would be. This town was going to be the place where Iâd never feel alone.
When I looked back into the crowd, the air around me changed. I donât know if it was because Iâd slept with him or if it was because of the aura he carried everywhere but Bastian tampered with my atmosphere every time he showed up. What the hell was he doing here?
I finally needed the rose quartz in my pocket. I squeezed it.
I glanced at the beads on my wrist and eyed my newest addition up against the bloodstone and howlite. Pure black tourmaline for protection, confidence, emotional stability, and strength. But I also wore it for Grandma. She was strong and I wanted that strength with me always.
His eyes met mine as he looked up at me on that stage near the urn. I shot daggers his way. He nodded, turned, and left.
Good.
This was for our town today. Not an outsider.
I received more condolences, hugged more members of the community, and accepted more gifts.
Bradley stayed through most everyone leaving and through the funeral director letting me know the next steps.
Then, we stepped out into the sunshine together.
I thought fatigue would set in, that I would want to go home and curl up with a glass of wine, but outside stood Bastian in a navy suit. His Ray-Bans covered those dark eyes that always pierced my soul. He had one ankle crossed over the other and his hands in his pockets as he leaned against his Rolls Royce.
The sun shined down on him like not a thing had gone wrong today. The birds still chirped, cars still drove by, the wind still blew, and in the distance I could still hear the waves rolling in and out.
In and out.
Was I breathing the same way? Or was it faster, more furious than before?
I knew my heart was beating more rapidly too, because the thudding was deep, hard and mournful.
I fisted my hands and Bradley asked beside me, âYou okay?â
I nodded, not looking at him. âYes. I need to handle something. Iâll call you later.â
His lips pursed but he kissed me on the forehead and told me to call if I needed him. Then he left me as I walked toward Bastian. âWhat are you doing here? Why didnât you leave?â
âI came to say Iâm sorry for your loss.â He didnât attempt to come any closer. He didnât even take his hands from his pockets like he wanted to give me a hug and share his sympathies.
We werenât friends. We didnât know each other. My grandmother had wanted us to meet again after she passed awayâsheâd given me that information at least. Bastian said he would be in touch. But this was not the time or the place. âI appreciate that. but the wake is only for family and friends.â
âI understand. We will be meeting about her final will tomorrow. It seems weâre both on it. I thought I would stop by to let you know that itâs scheduled for ten.â
Final will? Both of us? None of these words made any sense. âIsnât that a little soon?â
âI requested that we get business taken care of as quickly as possible so I can get out of your hair and everyone elseâs. I just want to confirm partnerships with the ports would stay the same and that she honored her side of the will.â He shrugged like his callousness was completely warranted.
âMy grandmother just died,â I practically hissed as I glared at him, the crack in my voice a surprise to even me.
He jerked back at the fury and pain that laced my words.
âMy condolences, Morina,â he said softly. His hand lifted a little like he was about to pat my arm but then it dropped just as suddenly. âShe will be missed.â
âNot by you,â I threw back. âYouâre here to circle like the shark you are. Iâm not in the mood to be accommodating to that.â
âMorina, come on now.â The gentle coaxing from him wasnât going to work.
âCome on?â My hands went to those beads on my wrist that I could pull energy from. Courage, poise.
Strength.
Maybe the black held fury too.
âYou need to leave,â I almost shouted.
âDonât do that. Donât make a scene with me.â He said it quietly, like he had the audacity to try to calm me with a smooth command.
âOr what?â My eyes widened at my own boldness.
âOr youâll learn who owns this little town and the whole state very quickly. Donât disrespect me, especially in public, unless you want the punishment to be served in public just the same, piccola ragazza.â The name flew from his mouth like a menacing laser, not at all a sweet term of endearment anymore.
âIs that so, daddy?â I shot back. Maybe I wanted a reaction. Maybe I was spiraling. Because I wasnât stopping. âYou wouldnât know the first thing about punishing me and getting me back in line.â I always was one to go where my emotions led me, but this was different. This was taunting a dragon full of fire, one that everyone thought was asleep, but Iâd seen the spark behind his eyes. Bastian had smacked my ass in the dark of the night like a man who owned the world even if he stood here now trying to appear docile.
Rage coiled around him. Every feature on his face hardened, ready to strike out at me. Still, he murmured, âNot here. Not today. You get this day, Morina.â
I bit back a retort, not wanting to make more of a scene than I already had.
He sighed and pulled a little glass bottle from his pocket. When he held it out to me and I didnât move to take it, he gripped my wrist gently and set it in my hand. âItâs a mix of rose, lavender, and chamomile oil for healing and comfort.â
âYouâ¦where did you get this?â I stuttered. Heâd only seen me use the oil on my food truck and heâd remembered like I mattered to him.
âI believe the oils are from Europe. They use sustainable operating procedures and itâs organic.â He cleared his throat and glanced around. âI researched it just to be sure.â
âFor me?â I squeaked out, completely confused.
âFor your grandmother passing, yes.â He straightened his tie as if he was uncomfortable. âAnyway, I want to make sure this town is taken care of. Please donât fight me on it, Morina. Iâd like to see you at the reading.â
âThis town can take care of itself. It isnât ruled by anything but the people in it.â I said as I pocketed the oil, trying to forget our odd exchange.
âItâs a small town surrounded by a lot of big ones, piccola ragazza.â He rocked back on his heels, the name he called me in his native tongue suddenly felt like it was filled with condescension.
âHonestly, Bastian, I donât care about this at all right now. I donât care about the date or time or the will in general.â
âI think the will is a little more important than your grandmother made it seem.â
I stepped up to him fast, my boots clomping on the cement. âAre you calling my grandma a liar on the day of her funeral?â
âIâm calling her a caring woman who wanted to protect her only granddaughter a little while longer. Thereâs a lot of responsibility youâre about to take on.â
People didnât listen to their gut instinct when biology and nature was trying to tell them something. My heart pulled to Bastion in a way that it didnât with most men. I couldnât figure out if it was just attraction or something more. All I knew was that, although my heart was pulled to him, my gut screamed for me to run the other way.
The sun shone on him like some higher power knew he held more weight than the rest of us. This man walked in a dimension that I was not familiar with. And I didnât want to be familiar with it. I wanted to move with the wind and water and leave the multiple dimensions to men like him.
âYou and your suit along with your security teamââI looked at Dante who was still in the car but stared at me with a look of remorseââand your Rolls Royce can go to the will reading without me. Or shove the will up your ass for all I care.â
He started to say something, but my body veered off its natural course.
âI donât want any part of this will. I donât want anything. All I want is the food truck and for you to leave.â I waved my arms about like a child, my bracelets jangling as I did. âThis is completely unnecessary. They can mail me the information for all I care, Bastian. But the only place Iâm going is home. Iâll be there for days. I donât think I need to do anything after losing the person I love most in this world. So, you can expect whatever you want, but Iâm not going to that will reading.â
âMorina,â His voice came out low and menacing, not at all gentle like it had been before. It was a warning, meant to snap sense back into the chaotic blood running through my veins. His eyes had darkened, his face changed. Gone was a man willing to negotiate. âGet your ass to that will reading tomorrow. Or I will personally be at your home to drag you to it.â