Read After It's Over Online

Authors: Michelle Alstead

After It's Over (3 page)

BOOK: After It's Over
7.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Paige stood in the front room of her home and forced the memories of Matt back into her internal abyss of repression.

Not much has changed since then.

Her mother’s absence was still a constant ache in her heart, and she was in another unhappy relationship. Paige exhaled and wished for a time machine or, at the very least, a one way ticket away from her selfish husband and a clogged toilet.

“Paige?” Bianca’s voice pulled her out of a fog.

She looked at her stepdaughter; the young girl stood at the bottom of the stairs with an apprehensive look on her face.

“What’s up?”

“I’ve been calling your name for at least a minute. Didn’t you hear me?” Bianca asked.

“Sorry, I was lost in thought.” Paige fought a yawn.

It’s been a long day, and I have a divorce to contemplate. No more cheaters for me.

“What was all that noise?”

“I broke a few plates, but everything’s ok.”

Well, kid, your father is most likely a cheating bastard, but let’s just smile and pretend it’s all-okay.

“Oh. Where’s my dad?”

“Um…he had to run an errand or something.”

Bianca gave her a look that said she knew her father wasn’t out running errands.

Paige forced a smile. “You ready to talk about the boy in your room?”

“Nope.”

“Okay…Did I ever tell you that I started college when I was seventeen?”

Bianca shook her head and yawned.

“Well, I did. I wanted to get out of my house as fast as I could. So I took extra classes, went to summer school, and graduated a year early. You know what my grandma said when I told her I was leaving?”

“What’s your grandma got to do with anything?” Bianca frowned.

She doesn’t know anything about my childhood or how my parents died for that matter. This is not the time for that story.

“I lived with my grandma for a year after my parents died.”

“How’d they die?” Bianca asked.

Paige briefly looked away, unsure of how to answer.

“It doesn’t really matter. The point is that my grandma said I shouldn’t be in such a hurry to grow up because the faster I grew up, the sooner I’d have to take on adult responsibilities.”

Bianca rolled her eyes. Paige reached out and touched her arm.

“My grandma was right. Once I stopped being a kid, I couldn’t go back. I was stuck with a job, rent and all the other not-so-fun stuff adults deal with,” Paige explained.

“Whatever.”

“Bianca, there are some decisions that always come with consequences. Do you understand what I’m saying?”

The young girl rolled her eyes again.

“Okay, I give up.” Paige smothered her own frustration and turned to face the mess on the kitchen floor. Pieces of broken plates were scattered everywhere.

“Want some help?” Bianca asked.

A real smile spread across Paige’s face.

“I would love some help.”

“Do you think we could make some cookies after we’re done?”

“I thought you were gluten-free?”

“Eh.”

“Okay, cookies it is.” Paige followed Bianca into the kitchen.

She looks older than fourteen. But still, she’s just a kid. There’s no reason to rush to a place that she can’t come back from. I wish I’d learned that. Things could have turned out so differently.

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER THREE

 

 

“Let’s do the dishes tomorrow,” Bev said. She stood on her tip-toes and peered into the dirty Kitchen-Aid mixer.

Paige surveyed the damage. The kitchen was a mess. She’d let the girls make chocolate chip cookies, which meant there was flour from one end of the kitchen to the other. The sink overflowed with dirty utensils and mixing bowls.
This is going to take some time to clean up.
She looked at her watch. It was well past eleven and all three of her stepdaughters were still up.

Oh, no. They have school tomorrow!

“I didn’t realize how late it is. You have to go to bed,” Paige said.

I fed them copious amounts of sugar and kept them up too late. Yep, ‘Stepmom of the Year’ right here, folks.

“Tomorrow’s Saturday, remember?” Bev replied. She yawned and patted her stomach. “I’m tired and full. I think I’ll head up to bed anyway.”

“Brush your teeth, okay?”

Bev nodded and waved goodnight. Paige waited until she was out of sight before letting out a loud groan. Ben still wasn’t home, and she needed to face the hard truth. She’d been naïve with Matt, but she wasn’t going to be that way with Ben.

There are so many of the same red flags. He’s out late. He won’t answer his cell phone half the time, and he’s vague about his whereabouts when he finally comes home. I need to face it—he’s having an affair. And this is what I get for marrying a guy that I dated for like two seconds. Well, at least we’ve only been married a year and not twenty. But what about the kids? How will they take it if I jump ship? Could I really do that to them?

“Paige!” Bianca’s panicked voice called out to her from the family room.

The fire alarm is constantly going off around here.

“Paige!”

“I’m coming!” Flustered, she hurried down the stairs with a dishtowel in hand.

***

The family room was the most comfortable room in the house, which was why it was always a mess, despite Paige’s best efforts to get the girls to clean up after themselves. Games littered the floor like land mines, and toys stood like soldiers at attention. The huge overstuffed sofa doubled as a trampoline in front of Ben’s plasma television. She carefully navigated the chaos to reach Bianca’s huddled figure on the couch.

“What’s wrong?”

“She hit me in the nose! I think that freak broke it!” Bianca replied.

The teenage girl’s large brown eyes filled with tears as she clutched her nose. Blood dripped from between her fingers. Several drops plopped onto the white couch.

Only Ben would insist on white furniture with kids in the house.

“What exactly happened?” Paige asked. She gingerly pulled Bianca’s hand away from her nose and placed the dishtowel under it. “Lean forward, please.”

“Billie sucks,” Bianca muttered. “Worst little sister ever.”

“Billie, what did you do?” Paige glanced over at her youngest stepdaughter.

“I was just being a puppy,” she replied matter-of-factly.

Six-year-old Billie sat perched on the other end of the couch. She grinned impishly and assumed the position of a puppy begging for treat. She pawed at Paige to distract her from Bianca’s obvious distress.

Is this age appropriate behavior, or should I be making an appointment with a therapist?

“You attacked me! You crazy little freak!” Bianca yelled.

Billie stuck out her tongue and taunted her older sister until Paige gave her a you-better-knock-that-off look.

“I’m going to kill you!” Bianca shrieked.

“No one is killing anyone! Bianca, calm down. I need to see if your nose is broken,” Paige said. She’d played enough basketball in high school to know what a broken nose looked like.

“Don’t touch it!” Bianca pushed her hand away.

“It’s either me touching it or us spending the rest of the night in the emergency room with some of the weirdest people you will ever meet.”

“How do you know they’ll be weird?” Billie asked.

“My ex-boyfriend’s dad was a doctor. He said that every full moon, which it is tonight, the ER would fill up with the biggest nut jobs in town.”

Paige pushed the thought of Kade out of her mind. She couldn’t think about his father, the doctor, without thinking of him.

“Is that true?” Bianca asked.

“Yes, I ended up in the ER on a full moon once, and there were plenty of crazy people. So, can I please check your nose?”

Bianca nodded. Paige lightly touched her nose. There was slight swelling, but it didn’t appear to be broken.

“Why were you in the ER?” Billie asked. She curled her body into a ball along the back of the couch; she looked like a kitten.

“Um…” Paige hadn’t seen that question coming, and she wasn’t prepared to tell them the truth. “Can you breathe through your nose okay?”

“Yeah, it mostly just stings,” Bianca answered, her eyes fixed on Billie.

“I don’t think it’s broken. Let’s put an icepack on it to keep it from swelling though.” Paige looked over her shoulder. “Billie!”

The tiny girl stuck her tongue out and thumbed her nose at Bianca.

It’s moments like this when I could really use some help
.

“Billie, go get an ice pack out of the freezer. Then we’ll talk about why you attacked your sister,” Paige ordered.

“I told you already. I was expressing myself by pretending to be a dog,” Billie said, as if every other person in the world pretended to be a dog at one point or another.

It’s late. I’m tired and I have no idea how to reason with this child. Where’s Ben?

Paige frowned. “Don’t you ever just want to be a little girl?”

Billie cocked her head to one side as if the question were too perplexing to answer. She blinked, shrugged and bounced up the stairs toward the kitchen.

“She’s a freak,” Bianca said.

“That’s not nice. She’s just…” Paige shrugged. She tried to think of a positive adjective for Billie’s behavior, but couldn’t. 

“Is my nose going to be normal by next week? The ninth grade dance is Friday, and Nick is going to be there. And since Madison likes him too, I have to look good. Well, not just good—great. I have to look great.”

Bianca’s face radiated the dramatic seriousness of a fourteen-year-old girl who thinks a school dance is the most important event in her life.

“Is Nick the half-naked boy that I found in your room?”

“No, that was Bobby.”

“I’m confused. Who do you like—Bobby or Nick?” Paige scratched her head and tried to remember if life was that complicated for her at that age.

No, it wasn’t like this because I had Kade. It was always just Kade.

“I like them both,” Bianca said, her eyes averted.

There’s more to this than she’s saying.

Billie returned with an ice pack and Paige lost the chance to inquire further.
Not that I think she’d tell me anyway
. She gently placed the ice pack on Bianca’s nose and motioned for her to hold it.

“It’s cold.”

“Yeah, that’s kind of the point. It’ll help with the swelling.” Paige pushed a strand of Bianca’s long brown hair out of her eyes and gave her a reassuring smile.

“It’s going to be okay.”

“I don’t know. That nose looks pretty gross to me!” Billie blurted out.

“Does it look that bad?” Bianca cried.

Without waiting for an answer, she sprung up from the couch and raced up the stairs to the second floor. Paige’s eyes narrowed, focusing in on Billie. The little girl gulped. Her smirk disappeared as she backed away from the couch where Paige sat.

“You don’t think you did anything wrong, do you?” Paige asked.

“Nope.” Billie flipped her hair and grinned.

Paige raised an eyebrow; she studied her stepdaughter. Billie was small for her age and was often mistaken for being younger. Her long dark hair, big brown eyes and pale skin made her seem like a precious doll and not the precocious little pistol she actually was. What Billie lacked in size, she more than made up for with attitude. Charming and evasive, she was highly skilled at manipulating adults in order to get her way. Paige, however, was immune to her skills. She saw her stepdaughter for exactly who she was––charming, intelligent and completely undisciplined.

“You have to be respectful to the people around you. You can’t just go around attacking people!”

“Well, maybe I wouldn’t have done it if you took better care of me,” the little girl retorted.

Like I don’t already agonize on a daily basis about whether I’m a good stepmom or not.
Don’t get upset, Paige. You know she’s just working you.

“Don’t put this back on me. You know better than to hurt your sister. There are consequences for that type of behavior,” Paige said.

“Can I go live with my mom?” Billie yawned and stretched.

“No, Billie. Mommy is sick and needs time to get better. Besides, you can’t ask to go live with another parent just because the one you’re with punishes you.”

“But I want to go see my mommy. Why can’t I see her?”

“Well, that’s a complicated question.” Paige gulped.

How do I explain drug addiction to a child? I can’t. It’s late, and I don’t have it in me to even try.

“Why don’t you call her tomorrow and ask if you can visit next weekend? Maybe you could hang out for a couple of hours.”

“I don’t want to visit. I want to go live with her. Where’s Daddy?”

“I don’t know, kid.”
I wish I knew. I wish he were here to take the insults and deal with each crisis.
“When your dad comes home, you can ask him about living with your mom, okay?”

“Okay.” Billie eyed Paige warily. “Am I really getting consequences?”

“Yep. You’re grounded for a week. No television, computer games or sleepovers with Danielle.”

Billie’s face registered her shock and disbelief. The computer and television she could live without, but her best friend? Well, that was worth a few genuine tears.

“A week?” she repeated. Fat tears coated her thick eyelashes.

“Yes, a week. You hurt your sister. Now go apologize to her and make it good.”

Billie let out a low wail that sounded a lot like the wounded howl of a cat. She begrudgingly headed up the stairs to find her oldest sister. Paige gave her a thirty second head start before she climbed up the stairs after her. She wanted to make sure the little imp actually apologized. Noise from Bev and Billie’s room drew her attention. The door was open a crack so Paige peered in.

Bianca and Billie were on Billie’s bottom bunk bed while Bev appeared to be reading and ignoring them from the top bunk. Bianca sat on her little sister’s legs.

“Get off me, Bianca!” Billie raised her hand to smack her sister in the face.

Bianca grabbed her hand and held it down. “Not until you agree to stop giving Paige a hard time.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about!” Billie squirmed and tried to push her sister off.

“I heard what you said about her not taking care of you. You’re too little to remember, but there were days when Mom wouldn’t remember to feed us. Why do you think we ended up here?” Bianca asked.

Billie looked at her blankly. “I don’t know. I just figured Daddy wanted us more.”

“Have you met our father? He only took us because social services said being with him was the safest place for us.” Bianca held her sister’s arms down as the younger girl swung at her again.

Bev can seriously read through anything.

“But Mommy loves us!” Billie’s voice squeaked as she fought to get out from underneath Bianca.

“Yes, she loves us. But she also loves Vodka, Tequila and Jimmy who lives down the street. Paige is nice to us, feeds us, and even takes care of us when we’re sick. Do you see Dad doing any of that?”

“No.”

Paige watched as Billie relented and Bianca let her go. Billie folded her arms and looked petulantly at her sister.

“Then why are you tormenting the only person who actually cares about us?” Bianca asked.

“You’re one to talk. You said you hated her tonight,” Bev said.

“Well, I didn’t mean it. Not really anyway. So let’s make a pact that we’ll all be nicer to Paige. Maybe she’ll stick it out a little longer with Dad if we’re nicer,” Bianca said.

There was a tense pause as Bianca waited for a response from her sisters.

“Don’t look at me,” Bev called down. “I’m always nice to her. You two are the jerks.”

“Alright, I’ll be nicer,” Billie said. “But it won’t be easy.”

“Yeah, yeah. We all know you live to torment, squirt,” Bianca responded. “Turn out the light when I leave.”

Paige took that as her cue to slip away. Stunned by Bianca’s words, she walked back to the kitchen and sat down at the table. She put her head in her hands and sobbed. Part of her really wanted to leave Ben and forget she had ever married him, but there were the kids to consider.

BOOK: After It's Over
7.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

A Woman's Worth by Jahquel J
Siege 13 by Tamas Dobozy
Better Off Red by Rebekah Weatherspoon
One Pink Line by Silver, Dina
Watchstar by Pamela Sargent