Hate You: Chapter 35
Hate You (Rebel Ink Book 1)
Zachâs hand holds mine impossibly tight as we walk up toward his parentsâ front door the next morning. We did as I suggested last night and fucked on every surface we could in his flat before falling exhausted into his bed sometime in the early hours.
As I walk, my muscles pull and my core aches, but itâs the most delicious feeling, especially with him still standing beside me.
Part of me was worried about what Iâd find when I woke this morning, but much to my delight, Zach just pulled me tighter into his body and held me like he never wanted to let go.
âYou okay?â I ask as we come to a stop at the door. His hand trembles slightly in mine, and when I glance over at him, his features are pulled tight with tension.
He nods once. I know itâs his way of saying no but not wanting to verbalise it. We might have only really known each other a few weeks, but already I can read him unlike most others.
He lifts his hand to open the door, but at the last minute he hesitates and looks at the doorbell.
âJust do what you normally do. No matter what theyâve got to tell you, they still love you.â
He nods again and goes back to the handle. Behind the door is a home much like my own parentsâ, but instead of the cold and unhomely space Iâm used to this one is filled with family and love. Everywhere I look there are photos that span over thirty years. I canât help but smile, already feeling at ease, and Iâve only walked through the entrance hall.
âTheyâll be in the kitchen.â
âLetâs go then.â
Every head turns toward us as we step into the kitchen.
âZach,â his mum breathes as she rushes for him. Her arms wrap around his shoulders and she holds him like sheâs not seen him in years, not only a week. âIâm so sorry,â she whispers quietly in his ear. âI love you so much, I always have. I need you to know that.â
Zach stands as still as a fucking rock while she falls apart around him.
After a few more seconds she pulls back and wipes at her eyes. âTabitha, what a nice surprise.â
I smile at her, not really knowing what to say in this situation, before his dad sweeps her into his arms.
When I look up, I find Danni smiling at me from the breakfast bar. I give Zachâs hand a squeeze and take a step over to her, but Iâm pulled back into his side. He shakes his head ever so slightly. The look in his eyes pulls at my heart. Heâs so close to the edge right now, and the fact that he needs me beside him means more to me than I think heâll ever believe.
âWould you both like a drink?â Zachâs dad asks us.
When Zach makes no move to say anything, I answer for both of us. âCoffee would be great, thank you.â
With our hands still joined, I lead a silent and tense Zach over to where Danni and Harrison are sitting and pull us out a stool.
âGood night?â Danni asks with a wink.
âFantastic, thank you. Iâm surprised you want details.â
âI donât, what Iâm seeing right now is enough.â She makes a fake gagging gesture as she looks between the two of us, but she canât help the small smile on her lips at the same time. âSeriously though, if youâre happy and he treats you right,â her eyes drill into Zachâs, âthen Iâm happy for you. Just⦠think twice the next time Iâm only the other side of the wall, eh?â
Zachâs hand tightens in mine. âMotherfucker,â he grunts. âShe was your friend that night?â
âLucky for you, I was so drunk that I didnât hear a thing.â
âIâm not sure that makes it any better.â Hearing the lightness in Zachâs tone as he jokes with his sister fills me with hope that heâs also going to be able to walk out of here with a smile on his face once everyone has had their say.
âHere we go.â Two steaming mugs are placed in front of us before Zachâs parents join us all. âZach, Iâm so sorry that you had to find out like you did. It was never our intention toââ
âBefore we do that. Iâve got some things I need to say first.â
âOkay,â his parents say in unison, while Harrison also leans forward slightly to hear what his younger brother has to say. Danni just sips on her tea, seeing as Iâve already filled her in on Zachâs mystery life.
âWhile weâre all being honest, I need you all to know that Iâm not the waste-of-space fuck-up you think I am who lives on his trust fund and is doing nothing with his life.â
âSon, thatâs not whatââ
âYes it is. I can see it in your eyes, your disappointment that Iâve never made anything of my life like the rest of you. But actually, thatâs not true.â Everyone leans in that little bit more as Zach prepares to rock their world slightly. âI own and run a chain of tattoo studios.â
His mother gasps, her hand covering her mouth in shock. His dadâs chin drops, and pride fills Harrisonâs eyes.
âHe doesnât just mean a couple here in London either,â I add, needing them to fully understand and to break the silence. âHe has studios in the US as well. Heâs building an empire.â
My chest swells with pride at the look on their faces.
Silence falls around us as everyone absorbs what he just said.
âThatâs awesome, bro. Iâm proud of you,â Harrison says, getting up to slap his brother lovingly on the back.
âThanks, man.â
His mum and dad follow suit before everyone is once again silent as the weight of the impending conversation presses down on everyone.
âZach,â his dad starts. Zach visibly flinches beside me, his hand tightening in mine as he stares at the counter in front of him instead of his fatherâs eyes. âWhat you⦠what you discovered this week. Itâs true. Kassie is your sisterâyour half-sister. Iâm not proud of the mistake I made back then, but equally, I canât regret it because it gave me you, and thatâs not something Iâd change for the world. After we had Harrison, your mum was desperate for another, but for whatever reason, it wasnât happening. Years passed and still nothing. Neither of us were in a good place. Fertility help wasnât available as easily back then as it is now, and it was taking a toll on our relationship. Watching your mum suffer was the worst thing Iâve ever experienced.â We all watch as he takes his wifeâs hand and squeezes gently, as if heâs apologising for taking her back to that time. âShe was so desperate to carry another baby. She wasâisâ an incredible mum, and the fact it wasnât happening was devastating.
âI went out with some friends one night. I didnât want to go, but they were adamant that I let my hair down. They could see things werenât good at home and that I needed a breather. I had more to drink than I usually would, enjoying the freedom I suddenly had, and one thing led to another andââ A collective gasp sounds out around the room.
âYou cheated on Mum?â Harrison growls, anger filling his voice as he stares daggers at his father. Zach sits straight, his eyes boring into his dadâs, his fingers clenching in mine with his need to do something.
âI did.â All the air rushes from their dadâs lungs as he admits his mistake. His eyes glisten with emotion and regret, and if it werenât for the vice-like grip Zachâs holding my hand with, Iâd get up and hug him. Just talking about it all these years later is ripping him apartâI can only imagine how bad it must have been at the time.
âShe was young, and I was stupid. I can give you all the excuses under the sun, but at the end of the day, I fucked up. I knew the moment I did it that it was the wrong thing to do. I loved your mother with all my heart, but things hadnât been easy. But I knew then that Iâd spend the rest of my life making up for that one mistake. Sheâs the only one for me.â He wraps his arm around his wife as the tears filling his eyes finally drop.
âI came home, admitted everything, and after a very, very long time in the dog house, she thankfully gave me a second chance.
âI thought no more of it, just grateful not to have lost my family. At no point did I consider that a few months later there would be a knock at my door and a familiar, pregnant woman would be standing on the other side.
âAs I said, she was young, she didnât have a very desirable lifestyleââ
âShe was a hooker, wasnât she?â Zach suddenly asks, his cold voice startling me. Iâve never heard him sound so cut off. Itâs like heâs just a shell of the man I know as he listens to this heart-wrenching story that shatters everything he thought he knew about his life.
His dad looks at the table, allowing everyone to assume his answer, although after a few seconds he gives one of his own. âI didnât pay her, if thatâs what you mean.â
âNo, you gave her something much more meaningful,â Zach snaps. I squeeze his hand in support when I fear heâs about to let go of the final bit of restraint heâs desperately clutching at right now.
âI did, and I wouldnât change him for the world. Anyway, like I said, she was young, her life was a mess. When she told meâtold usâthat she was pregnant and that it was mine, we offered to help her, but she was adamant that she wasnât capable of bringing up a baby. We tried to support her, we got her into a rehab and organised some counselling. It worked while she was pregnant. She did what she needed to do to ensure you were looked after and brought into the world as you deserved to be. But the day she had you, she told us that she wouldnât be your mother. That you had a family who could love you in a way she wasnât able to. It was heartbreaking to watch, but none of us could deny that she was right.
âWhen you left that hospital, it was in your motherâs arms.â Zachâs mum sobs on her husbandâs shoulder as he retells the heart wrenching story. My chest aches for what they all went through, for the woman who was selfless enough to do the right thing for her baby.
I glance from his emotional parents to Zach. His lips are pressed into a thin line and his jaw works as he grinds his teeth. I canât imagine how hard it must be to hear all this. How you even go about accepting it.
âShe was a good person, Zach. She was just in a bad place in her life. Fallen in with the wrong people. She desperately wanted better for you.â
âWhaââ His voice cracks, and it causes my eyes to burn knowing how much this is hurting him to hear right now. âWhat happened to her.â
âI kept tabs on her for a long time. Itâs how we know she went on to have Kassie. She seemed to be in a better place with a stable relationship. Seeing that sheâd rebuilt her life, we took a step back. It wasnât our job to keep an eye on her. She was a fully-grown woman. But it gave us peace of mind that sheâd turned things around.â
âSheâs dead.â His voice is cold and empty. I desperately want to crawl onto his lap and hold him.
His parents suck in sharp breaths. They had no idea.
âItâs what brought Kas to the studio. She wanted a tattoo to remember her.â
âFucking hell. Iâm so sorry, son.â
Zach drops his eyes from his fatherâs and to the table, his head shaking back and forth slowly. âDoes she have any other family?â
âIâm sorry, but I donât know.â
âFuck,â he barks, suddenly pushing the stool out behind him with such force it crashes to the floor.
âZach?â I ask, my eyes wide with panic. His chest is puffed out like heâs about to fight, and Iâm terrified of what might happen next.
He looks at me and everything about his demeanour softens. âItâs okay,â he mouths, and I nod. Our eyes hold for a beat before he turns back to his parents. âThank you forâ¦â he trails off, lost in thought. âThank you for everything. Iâm sorry it had to come out this way.â He digs his hand into his pocket and pulls his wallet out. âHere. This is where I am. I live in the flat above the studio if you ever want to⦠err⦠visitââ
âOr get a tattoo,â Danni throws in from behind me, her attempt to lighten the mood.
His parents smile sadly, standing with him. His mum moves first and rushes around the table to embrace him.
I donât hear the hushed words she says to him, but the tears that fill his eyes almost break me. Since the moment I first met him as a child, Zachâs always been this larger-than-life character. Heâs the one who leaves tears in his wake, heâs never the broken one, barely holding on to his own emotions. His dad steps up and wraps his arms around the two of them.
Unable to look away from the three of them, I jump when Danni steps up behind me and wraps her arm around my shoulders. âI think you might be the best thing that ever happens to him,â she whispers in my ear, and my tears finally drop.
âOh, I donât know about that,â I sniffle.
âYou know what I do know,â she states with a wicked smile on her tear-stained face. I arch a brow as I wait for what sheâs got to say. âYour parents are going to fucking hate him. Please can I be there when you introduce him?â
âOh god,â I groan, not needing the reminder that weâve still got another set of parents to deal with at some point.
The trio in front of us breaking apart thankfully pushes thoughts of my family from my mind. One lot of family drama at a time is more than enough.
Zachâs mum kisses him on the cheek before stepping away. He immediately searches me out and lifts his arm towards me. I donât hesitate in sliding my fingers into his and accepting his embrace when he pulls me into his side.
âI know you already know her, but this is Tabitha, my girlfriend, if sheâll have me.â The lump that climbs up my throat is so huge that thereâs no way I can answer him with words. Instead, I look up at him, a huge smile on my face, and nod.
His mum, whoâd just about got herself under control, sobs once more.
âI think that might be the most shocking thing about this whole morning. Zachâs found a girl whoâll put up with him,â Harrison goads, earning himself a slug to the shoulder.
After a few minutes, everyone says their emotional goodbyes and Zach leads me back to the front door.
His car, a huge blacked out BMW, sits out the front of his parentsâ. He opens the door and waits for me to climb in before heading to the driverâs side to join me.
The second heâs in, he rests his head back against the headrest, closes his eyes and blows out the longest breath.
Reaching over, I place my palm on his thigh, just so he knows Iâm here while he takes a moment to process his information overload.
âThere are two things I really want to do right now,â he admits. I turn toward him, eager to find out what they are. âI need to ink someone, and I need to fuck someone.â His eyes open and find mine immediately. My breath catches, because his eyes are telling me that that someone is me. My skin tingles in anticipation of both. Having his hands on me in any sense is mind blowing. âBut thereâs something else I need to do first.â
âOh?â I watch as he pulls his phone from his pocket, taps the screen and places it to his ear.
âItâs me. We need to talk. Where are you?â Heâs silent for a few seconds as he listens. âOkay, weâll be there in ten.â
He drops his phone into the centre console and puts the car into drive.
The question is right on the end of my tongue to ask where weâre going, but the determination on his face stops me. Iâm already pretty certain I know anyway. I sit back and allow him the thinking time that he must so desperately need.
Ten minutes later, he pulls into a side road, and Iâm not surprised when a feisty little brunette steps out from the shadows. She looks just like she did the first time I saw her. Terrified. Her blue eyes are wide as she takes in the over the top car and walks towards the driver.
âYou hungry?â
âStarved.â
âGood. Hop in, weâre going for lunch.â And just like that, a brother-sister bond is formed.