DOM: Chapter 53
DOM: Alliance Series Book Three
The ceiling lights are still on, so I watch Val walk around the bed and notice her thick sweatpants and my Yale sweatshirt.
Iâm starting to recognize this as her comfort outfit, and as much as I wish she didnât need it, I canât help but feel pride that my wardrobe is a part of it.
Instead of lying on her side, like she does when sheâs ready to fall asleep, she lies on her back.
I roll onto my side, facing her profile.
Her eyes are open, but sheâs staring at nothing.
Something twists inside me, and I move closer until her shoulder is against my chest.
âWant to tell me?â I ask quietly.
She bites her lip even as she nods her head. âItâs a lot.â
âWe have time.â
Val pulls the blankets up to her chin, and I slip my arm under the covers. She only tenses for a moment when I rest my hand on her stomach. Sheâs so soft. I want to be touching her always.
âIâm⦠Iâm just gonna start at the beginning.â
I nod against my pillow. âI want to know everything about you, Valentine.â
I watch as her throat works.
She opens and closes her mouth. âHold on.â She leans away from me, reaching out to turn off the ceiling lights.
Thereâs still ambient light from the city, but darkness settles around us.
Val lies back, and I put my hand back where it was, feeling her body rise and fall with breaths.
âI donât know how much you know from your, um, research.â She exhales. âSo you can tell me to skip stuff.â
âI donât really want to talk about the background check I ran on you,â I admit, knowing I need to give her something in exchange for what sheâs about to give me. âI know you have a different mom from King and Aspen. And that you grew up in a different house. But I want to know how itâs possible that youâve never had a birthday party.â
The blankets shift, and one of her hands starts to settle on top of mine on her stomach, but I lift my hand a little, and she slips hers underneath, trapping it between my palm and her body.
I close my fingers around hers.
Sheâs quiet for a long moment. And I give her the time.
âI really loved my dad.â She takes another deep breath. âHe would bring me presents on my birthday. They were always great kid gifts. Toys, stuffed animals⦠And there were a few times when heâd bring cupcakes, too. But there was never a party. My mom⦠sucked. She only ever pretended to be kind when my dad was around. When he wasnâtâ¦â I can feel her shrug. âShe was mean.â
Her mom was mean to her?
Rage starts to creep in on the edge of my vision. My mom is my rock. Sheâs always been there for me. For everything. To imagine growing up in a world where she was cruel to me⦠I canât.
âDid she hurt you?â I ask as calmly as Iâm able.
Valentine shrugs again. âNothing bad.â
I squeeze her fingers. Thatâs a terrible answer.
âShe liked to pinch,â Val tells me. âBut she wielded her words with much more precision.â
âAngelâ¦â I donât even know what to say.
âWhen I was like eight, I found a book about pregnancy and birth. It was really simple. A childrenâs book with illustrations. But it talked about how a baby needs nine months in their motherâs stomach before they can come out. Iâd always been told that I was a Valentineâs Day baby, which is what I was named after, so I pulled the calendar off my wall and counted back from my birthday. And when it didnât match up, I made the mistake of asking my mom about it.â She huffs out a derisive laugh. âShe told me I was stupid and I didnât know what I was talking about.â
Val slides her other hand on top of mine, sandwiching my hand between hers.
âI was a stupid kid, though. Because I always believed her. I believed her when she told me I came out late, rather than her conceiving later in February, because she wasnât with my dad on Valentineâs Day. Because he was probably with his actual wife. And I believed her when she told me my dad was too busy and too important to live at home with us. I didnât know seeing your dad only six times a year wasnât normal.â
âYou werenât stupid.â
She clutches her fingers around mine. âThe first funeral I ever attended was my fatherâs. I was nine. And I couldnât figure out why we had to sit in the back.â She swallows. âDom, I was so confused.â
I move even closer.
âThere were so many people there. It was likeâ¦â She sniffs. âIt was like your cousinâs funeral. Really nice like that. Lots of people. But my mom⦠I cried so much when she told me heâd died, but she only ever seemed angry about it. I didnât see her cry once over him, and the more I cried, the angrier she got. I remember her pinching me during the service. Mad that I was being so emotional.â
âFuck,â I whisper, wanting to wrap child Valentine in my arms and protect her.
âThat was before the priest mentioned my dad was survived by his wife and kids, which he referred to by name.â
âFuck.â It comes out louder this time.
âPretty much.â She sighs. âIt broke my little heart. Because he was the only person that ever told me he loved me. And⦠it was a lie.â
âHe mightâve been a cheating asshole, but thereâs no way he couldnât love you,â I say, meaning it, before I realize how true the words really are.
Who wouldnât love this woman?
Her stomach trembles with a choppy breath. âWhen the service was over, and the family walked out first, Kingâs mom glared at me like I was the worst thing sheâd ever seen. I canât even really blame her now, but at the time⦠It was bad. Made me feel really bad. And Aspen had the same look on her face.â
âIt wasnât your fucking fault,â I grit out.
âI know. But I was living proof.â
âWhat about King? You said you were nine. Heâs twenty years older, right? He surely wouldnât have blamed a kid for his dadâs infidelity.â
âI wasnât brave enough to watch him walk past.â
Wasnât brave enough. Itâs like every sentence she speaks rips another piece of my soul.
I focus on her hands around mine. âWhat happened after? Howâd you end up becoming close with them?â
âIâm not,â she whispers as her fingers tighten their grip on mine. âAfter the funeral, my mom got worse. She was a user. Different drugs. Different people. Whatever she could use to pretend life wasnât real. We moved apartments a lot, but when I turned fifteen, King showed up at our front door.â
âWas that the first time youâd seen him since the funeral?â
âYeah,â Val confirms. âAnd he was there to tell me that my dad had left me in his will. And that Iâd be attending a private high school and that it was all paid for.â
âThose arenât the actions of a man who doesnât care,â I tell her quietly, hating that she thinks neither of her parents loved her.
âYouâre probably right,â she concedes without conviction, and I have to wonder how intimidating a thirty-five-year-old King Vass would have been to a fifteen-year-old Valentine. âBut it just made my life worse. Because my mom resented me even more.â
âHow?â I seriously canât understand this bitch.
âBecause my mom got herself pregnant with me thinking sheâd be set for life. And she kinda was. He paid her rent and gave her an allowance for food and stuff my whole life. Until he died and the money dried up, and my mom was still stuck feeding another greedy mouth.â The way she says the last line tells me sheâs heard it said before. âSo when King came to tell us about the tuition, my mom lost it. Demanding that she should get that money. And how come King couldnât just write her a check for the total amount of the tuition and let me go to public school. He obviously didnât do that. And even though he was nice to me, I could feel how much he hated my mom. He scared me.â
âDid you go to the school?â
âI did. And eventually, my mom just got used to it. Or forgot about it. But she mostly left me to my own devices. Until I turned eighteen.â
I almost donât even want to ask. I know the answer isnât going to be a birthday party. âWhat happened when you turned eighteen?â
âKing came back and told me that my college was paid for, too.â My eyes have fully adjusted, so I watch as Val blinks toward the ceiling. âHe also told me my dad had left me seventy-five thousand dollars in a trust. That Iâd get twenty-five thousand when I turned nineteen, twenty-five thousand when I turned twenty-one, and twenty-five thousand when I turned twenty-five. I know that might not sound like a lot to you, but for me⦠it was life changing.â
âIt is a lot. And smart of him to spread it out.â
Val huffs. âFunny, my mom didnât agree. She wanted seventy-five in a check written to her, right then and there. King told her it didnât work that way. And that the money belonged to me, not her, and she had no say or access to it. He told me that he set up an account for me at a bank my mom wasnât a customer of, and since I was over eighteen, she couldnât access it.â
âSmart man.â
âHe was nice to me.â Sadness fills her voice. âHe gave me his phone number and told me to tell him when I got into college and that heâd arrange the tuition payments, just like heâd done for high school. And he did.â
âYou say that, but why does it feel like he wasnât nice to you?â
Val shakes her head. âHe was. I think he knew how shitty my mom was and felt bad for me. We werenât, like, friends or anything, but he never seemed bothered by my existence.â
I grind my teeth. âAngel.â
âI just mean that he didnât actively hate me. Like our moms did.â
I close my eyes. âJesus.â
This poor fucking girl. Not being actively hated is her gauge for niceness.
Val had nothing to do with her shitty parentsâ actions, and yet all the adults that shouldâve been protecting her put the blame on her tiny shoulders.
âI got into a college in the Twin Cities and found an on-campus job for the summer that would allow me to move into a dorm early.â
I slide my eyes open to look at her profile. âMy smart girl.â
âIt felt really good to finally feel safe.â
Fucking fuck me.
Needing her closer, I push my hand through her grip and hook my arm around her waist.
Valentine rolls to face me, and I pull her into my body, slipping my other arm between her and the mattress.
Her hands are between our chests, her little fists pressing against my bare skin over my heart.
I want to rip her childhood apart.
But I canât, so I just tuck her head under my chin and wrap both arms around her in a hug, keeping her where she is. âYouâll always be safe with me,â I promise her.
âI know,â she breathes. And her acceptance settles inside me.
âDid she leave you alone once you moved?â I have a sense of dread for what must still be coming.
âMostly. The month after I moved out, she met a guy and followed him to Florida. I think she lived with him for a while because I didnât hear from her for a few months.â Tension builds in Valâs shoulders. âKing reached out at the start of the school year. Heâd seen Iâd taken a summer course while I was working. Told me I did a good job. And then reminded me that Iâd be getting my first payout in a couple months. As though I could forget.â She scoffs. âHe told me not to spend it all at once. And when I told him I was thinking about getting a car, he said to send what I was looking at to him first. It felt a little overbearing at the time, since no one had ever been that involved before, but I was grateful to have someone to help me. Itâs not like I knew what I was doing.â
âDid you buy a car?â I try to picture what nineteen-year-old Valentine would buy. Something practical, Iâm sure.
But Val shakes her head. âMy mom called me on my birthday and asked me to come visit her in Florida.â A rumble of anger vibrates my chest, and Val flattens her hand against me. âI thought the worst, too, at first. But she never mentioned the money. And I wanted⦠It was so dumb, but I just wanted to believe she wasnât awful. So I told her when the semester was over, Iâd visit.â
I hug her a little harder, my own throat starting to itch.
âThat was the first thing I spent any of the money on. A plane ticket to see my mom.â
Val is quiet for a long moment.
âWhat happened?â I ask against her hair.
âWe got into a huge fight. The guy sheâd followed down there ditched her, and she said she needed some money to get by. And I told her no. I told her no because I was hurt. I wanted her to want me around, but she only asked me to visit because she wanted my money.â
I press my lips to the top of Valâs head; the theme of being tricked and used isnât lost on me. âYou didnât owe her anything, Valentine. You did the right thing.â
âShe called me all sorts of names, but that was the first time I ever shouted back.â Her body starts to tremble. âI packed up my bag to go, didnât even care that Iâd be wasting money on a hotel if I left, but then she convinced me to stay. Said sheâd drop it and that we could go out for breakfast in the morning. So I stayed.â
It falls together. Before she tells me, it all falls together.
Her mom died when she was nineteen.
I curl my fingers into her sides. âValentine.â
âShe killed herself that night.â The tears finally fill her voice.
âAngel.â I kiss her head again.
âIt was a shitty little one-bedroom apartment. And she told me I could have her bedroom and sheâd sleep on the couch.â Her fingertips press into me. âI figured sheâd just drink until she passed out, so I locked myself in her room and cried myself to sleep. When I got up in the morning, I found her sitting at the little dining table. Slumped in her seat. With an empty bottle of vodka and an empty bottle of painkillers prescribed to someone else.â
I canât imagine. I cannot fucking imagine.
âWas she already gone?â I have to ask.
Val nods against me. âI didnât realize at first. I thought she was asleep. But when I touched her shoulder⦠She was stiff.â
âJesus Christ.â I stare over the top of Valâs head. I know exactly what happens to dead bodies, so I know exactly what teenage Val wouldâve seen. âDid she leave a note?â
âNot in the way you mean.â
I close my eyes. âWhat did she leave?â
âHer stack of bills.â
âI fucking hate her,â I snap.
And I swear Val laughs a little.
âIâm serious.â I hook my leg over Valâs thigh. The hug doesnât feel like enough. âIf she wasnât already dead, Iâd kill her myself. You didnât deserve that. Tell me you knew that you didnât deserve that.â
Her hand flexes against my chest. Itâs all she can do with how tight Iâm holding her.
âA part of me knew it. I knew she was miserable, and no matter what I did, sheâd always be miserable. But it was still hard, ya know? Because she set those there for me to find.â I feel her shake her head. âIâd been used to being on my own, but once she died⦠I really was.â
âI hate her,â I repeat.
Valâs exhale tickles my chest hair. âThe second funeral I ever went to was my momâs. And it turns out everyone else that knew her hated her, too. Because it was just me and the priest. Or, well, funeral director, I think.â
âYou had a funeral?â I furrow my brows. âShouldâve just fed her to the alligators.â
Valentine snorts. âFirst, gross. Second, I was a stupid nineteen-year-old. I thought you had to have a funeral.â
âYou planned it?â I canât hide the shock in my voice. But I donât know why Iâm surprised. Like she said, there was no one else in her momâs life that wouldâve done it.
âUnintentionally. I called 9-1-1 when I found her, and the ball just kinda started rolling on its own. Her body was brought to a funeral home. The director called me and asked what I wanted to do with the remains and if I wanted to do the service in their hall. I just kept answering questions, and before I knew it, there was a funeral.â I make a mental note to look up this funeral director because if heâs still alive, Iâm putting him in his own incinerator. âAnd then her landlord was demanding payment for rent she was behind on and that I deal with moving all her stuff out.â I add landlord to my list.
âYou paid for all that, didnât you?â
âIt was the second thing I spent my money on,â she admits, and I curse again. âI was worried Iâd get in trouble with King over spending it on my mom. But he never said anything, so I figured he didnât know.â
âWait.â I pull back a little. âWhat do you mean?â
She leans her head back to look up at me. âWhat do you mean what do I mean?â
âYou said you were at the funeral alone. Why wasnât King there?â
Val tries to lift a shoulder, but Iâm holding her too tightly. âWhy would he be? I didnât expect him and Aspen to actually come when I invited them. Their family didnât exactly like my mom.â
âSo fucking what? Heâs your brother!â
She shakes her head. âNo, Dominic, itâs okay.â
âItâs not fucking okay. Donât make excuses for him. You told him your mom fucking died, and he left you to deal with her suicide alone.â Iâm mad. Iâm so fucking mad. My sweet, precious little Valentine didnât have a single person to count on.
âDom.â Her tone is soft as she tries to comfort me. âIt wasnât like that. I donât even think he knew how she died.â
âYou didnât tell him when you told him about the funeral?â
âWell.â She dips her chin so sheâs back to looking at my chest. âI left a message.â
âSay that again,â I growl.
âI only had his office number. I left a message with his assistant.â
âAnd he never called you back.â I donât ask it. She, at nineteen, left a message for her brother telling him her final living parent had died, and he never even called her back.
Heâs going to pay for that.
âDonât be mad at him.â She tries to defend her piece-of-shit brother.
âNone of that is okay, Valentine.â I donât care if he has the power of the free world at his back. Iâm going to hurt him.
âItâs in the past. Weâre okay now.â
âIf you were okay, tonight wouldnât have been your first birthday party.â I stroke a hand up her back. âWhat happened after the funeral?â
âI came home and went back to school. And that next summer, King invited me over to have dinner with him and Aspen.â
âAnd you went?â
âI went.â
âWhy?â I canât imagine letting all that go.
âBecause I wanted a family.â
My eyes close.
I fucking hate them all.
Valentine deserves a life full of gold, and all she got was ashes.
âAsk me about the third funeral I went to,â she whispers.
âI donât want to,â I say truthfully.
Val moves her arm from between us so she can wrap it around my waist, hugging me back. âThe third funeral I ever went to was for your cousin.â
I breathe through the ache behind my eyes.
And I hate myself the same way I hate King.
That funeral was the day she woke up with a tattooed finger.
It was the day after I revealed my plan to join The Alliance and destroyed her heart.
It was one more horrible fucking experience for her to go through alone.
And I was the one who did it to her.
I remember the way she paled when I told her we were going to a funeral. And the urge to apologize, for the first time in twenty years, grips at my throat.
But then Val continues. âIt was everything Iâve always dreamed a family could be. Could mean.â She presses her forehead against my sternum, and I slide my hand up to grip the back of her neck. âI was terrified to go.â
âValââ
She cuts me off. âI want to thank you for letting me be a part of that. It doesnât change the other funerals Iâve been to, but it proved to me that it doesnât always have to be like it was.â
This fucking woman.
âIt will never be like it was. Not for you,â I promise her. âWe grieve together.â
âI know.â Her lips press against my skin. âI like your family.â
Her muscles loosen under my hold. âTheyâre your family now, too,â I say quietly because I think sheâs falling asleep as we talk.
âOnly if you keep me.â
I barely hear her.
âIâll keep you forever.â
Her tired fingers grip my sides. âBut now you know.â
âKnow what?â Weâre both whispering now.
âThat Iâm not valuable.â
Iâm not valuable.
Her words hit me with such force I canât breathe.
I hate the people who made her feel this way.
I curl around her, trying to protect her from her own past, her own awful emotions.
Sheâs so fucking valuable.
She thinks because King is a shitty-ass brother to her that Iâll just⦠what? Return her? That I suddenly wouldnât want her anymore?
I press my nose into her hair and inhale her scent.
Of course thatâs what she thinks. Every member of her family has either betrayed her, ignored her, or left her.
I inhale again.
Not me.
Never again.
âYouâre worth more than everything I have,â I tell her a moment too late, as her body relaxes fully into sleep.
I stay that way, holding my wife, for the next hour as I stare into the distance.
I fill my lungs with her.
I donât shy away from the story she told; I replay it. I do my best to understand how sheâs felt all these years. I listen to what she said she wanted.
And then I contemplate if thereâs anything thatâs too far when it comes to making sure I can keep her.
There isnât.
So if my wife wants a family, Iâm going to give her one.
Carefully, I extricate myself from the bed and silently move into the bathroom. I shut the door to block the light, then go into the closet and open the safe I have hidden in the back wall.
I donât hesitate. I just reach in and take out the three rectangular sheets of pills.
This is how I keep her.
And how I give her everything she craves.
I open the drawer where I know she keeps hers and replace the two backup sheets with two from my hand, and then I pick up the one sheâs currently using and pop out a matching number of pills on the last sheet from my safe.
I let the water run, washing away the evidence, while I make sure to put the last packet down exactly how I found it.
Then, with a feeling of rightness filling my chest, I put Valâs real birth control pills into the safe. And lock it.