Authors: Laurelin Paige
“It’s my business to tell,” he says, “and I’m tired of this lingering lie.”
“It wasn’t a lie we told for you.” For as much as I’ve resented that I had to keep his secret, I guarded it wholly. There are too many people who will be hurt by this unveiling. My mother. Celia’s parents. Alayna, because I never told her. It was a secret best kept to the grave.
Now the room swarms with the aftermath of this. Sophia’s crushed. Celia’s embarrassed. Jack’s…relieved, it seems. I’m surprised to realize I don’t care as much as I once would have. Everything in my world is dimmed next to the spotlight of my precious Alayna.
In the bustle, she slips away. I rush to follow her, not making the elevator before the doors close. I take the other elevator down and find her in the lobby.
“Alayna,” I call after her. She waits for me, but when I reach her, I realize I don’t know what to say. So I settle on, “Why did you leave?”
“Isn’t it obvious? That was a madhouse, and I didn’t want to be there anymore.”
“Yes, that it was.” There are words sitting at the tip of my tongue. So many of them. Which do I choose?
“I, um…why didn’t you defend me up there?” she asks before I’ve decided how to respond. “Are you that mad about the David situation? It’s me that’s supposed to be mad at you, remember?”
Was it only this morning that I transferred David to my club in Atlantic City? It seems like a lifetime ago that I was worrying about her and him. I don’t regret my decision to move him from The Sky Launch—that club belongs to Alayna—but I admit that I was underhanded in my dealing with it.
Now that feels benign in comparison to the malignancy that I’m about to inflict upon our relationship. But if we have any chance of working past our issues, I have to be sure we’re both mentally able to handle the task.
“Wait—” She realizes it before I have to say it. “You believe her.”
My jaw twitches.
I don’t know.
“Hudson?”
I put my hands on her upper arms. “I believe in you.” They’re the truest words I’ve ever spoken. “And whatever you need, I want to give it to you. If you need help—”
“Oh my god, I can’t believe this.” She backs away from me. “I can’t fucking believe this.”
I clench and unclench my fists as if it will somehow help me hold onto her. “Tell me that you didn’t do it. Tell me you didn’t call her. Tell me you didn’t see her.” If she tells me she didn’t—I’ll believe her.
But she doesn’t.
It’s confirmation that she’s lied to me. I can’t bear to think that she’s done it willfully. She has to be acting out of her illness. It’s the easiest thing to believe.
She shakes her head. “It’s not how it looks, Hudson. I didn’t stalk her or harass her or whatever she’s claiming. Are you on her side or mine?”
“I’m on your side. Always, your side.” How can she not know this by now? Everything I do, everything I say, it’s always for her.
“Then you believe me?” Her eyes are soft, pleading.
It’s not that simple.
I stick my hands in my pockets. If I don’t hide them away, I’ll pull her into me, and then I’m afraid I won’t ask her the hard questions. “Did you call her?”
“Yes! I said I did upstairs!” She pulls her phone from her bra and shoves it toward me. “Here, you want to see? Take it! You’ll see all the times I called her since that’s what you seem to be concerned with.”
I ignore her outstretched hand. “I don’t want proof. I want to help you.”
“I don’t fucking need any help!” She throws the phone across the lobby. It shatters when it lands.
She stares at it while I stare at her. She’s hurting. She feels like I’ve let her down.
But she let me down as well.
I’m
hurting too. I’m new to this pain, and I don’t know how to deal with it. Her constant betrayals are wounds that I know I can learn to ignore, but I’m not sure how or if they’ll ever completely heal.
She turns and runs. Out the front door.
I follow. “Alayna, come back here.” I catch her by her wrist. “I’ll cancel my trip. We’ll find the best treatment—”
“I’m not sick.” She yanks her arms from my grip. “Go to Japan, Hudson. I don’t want to see you.”
Jesus, Japan. I’m supposed to be leaving in a couple of hours. “I’m not going to Japan now.” I’ll cancel everything for her. There is
nothing
without her.
Still, she walks away. “Go to Japan,” she calls back to me. “I don’t want to see you for a while, if not ever. Got it? If you’re at the penthouse when I get home, I’ll find somewhere else to sleep, and I don’t mean for just one night.”
She keeps walking. I let her.
I watch after her for long minutes though. I chose wrong; I know that. I probably knew that as I was pushing treatment on her. She’s not sick. She didn’t do the things Celia accused her of. She was in her right mind when she went behind my back.
I have a new decision to make. I can either choose to let this pain weigh me down and ruin our relationship forever, or I can choose to make my own transgressions right.
The decision’s easy. I won’t lose Alayna. Before I can try to win her back, though, there is an obstacle that must be dealt with—Celia.
***
Crying and yelling meet me when I return to my apartment. Celia and my father are in a screaming match, my mother’s sobbing. Or pretending to sob. There’s no actual tears. Brian is studying the artwork on my walls, seemingly trying to be invisible.
I almost feel bad for the guy.
I don’t feel bad for anyone else. In fact, they need to leave. “Thank you everyone for the chaos in my living room. It’s time for all of you to go now.”
Brian heads first toward the elevator, as if he’d been simply waiting for permission before he bolted.
I stop him. “Not you. I’d like you to stay, if you don’t mind. Alayna has asked me not to be here when she returns, but I’d rather she isn’t alone.”
Brian’s mouth opens, his eyes darting. “I suppose that would be fine.”
“Where are you staying? The Waldorf?” I surprise him with my accurate guess, but he simply nods. “I’ll arrange to have your things moved over here. The guest room is down the hall. Make yourself at home.”
He nods and heads to where I’ve directed him, happy for the escape.
Celia’s tried to sneak past me while I was speaking to Brian, but I catch her before the elevator arrives. “And I didn’t mean you should leave. We have to talk.”
Her eyes are red and tired. “Hudson, I’m not in the mood.”
“Oh, let’s not talk about mood.” My delivery is even and cold. I’m actually surprised I have as much patience as I do for her. Inside, I’m boiling.
“Do you not realize what just happened here?” Her voice is low, but she’s seething. “My parents are going to fucking kill me. They were never supposed to find out about me and Jack.”
“It’s called karma, Celia. You reap what you sow. And today you sowed a lot of bad karma. Would you care to explain?”
“I’ve done all my talking. I have to be somewhere now, so pardon me.” She brushes past me into the waiting elevator.
She won’t get away this easy. I step in after her. “I’ll see you down.”
Celia rubs at her temples. She’s not happy about this, but she has little say.
“I’m coming too.” My mother sticks her hand in just as the doors begin to close.
I may actually snarl when I say, “Take the next elevator.”
But my mother isn’t fazed. She slips in despite my command. “I’m not staying another minute here with
that man
.”
That man
is standing behind her, a surly expression on his face. “
I’ll
take the next elevator.”
I suppose expecting Jack and Sophia to travel down to the lobby together is a bit much at the moment. “Fine,” I concede. I wait for the doors to close before adding, “Though I’m surprised you don’t mind being with this woman.”
Celia throws me a glare.
My mother throws me a glare as well. “I know Jack. He’s the one who’s responsible. It wasn’t her fault.” She wraps an arm around Celia. “He took advantage of you, honey. I understand. He was the grown-up. You were the child.”
Unfuckingbelievable.
Celia leans into my mother’s embrace, putting on the full victim act. “Thank you, Sophia. That means more than you could know.” She even dabs at her eyes, which, as far as I can tell, are dry.
“Jesus Christ,” I mutter. They’re more alike than I’d ever realized.
My mother scolds me as she affectionately pats Celia’s arm. “I’m not happy with you either, Hudson. Covering for that cheating bastard—”
“I wasn’t—” I don’t finish the sentence. It’s not worth it. She’ll never understand. “Whatever. I’m not going through this with you, Mother. Work out your feelings about this on your own.”
“I don’t know why I expected sympathy.” Her terse tone is well-practiced. “I forgot who I was dealing with.”
I roll my eyes. “Like mother, like son.”
“That’s not how the saying goes.”
Celia straightens and pats Sophia with the consolation I’ve denied her. “This must be so hard for you, Sophia.”
As if she wasn’t the exact cause of all the
hard
.
My mother takes the inch and yanks it a mile. “It is. It’s devastating.” She continues as the elevator doors open in the lobby and we step out. “God, it feels like so much of the last ten years have been a lie. The baby. The baby wasn’t even mine at all.”
This time it seems tears might actually be forming in her eyes. Somewhere deep inside, there’s a piece of me that acknowledges this is a big loss for her. As unhealthy as it was to do so, she’d focused so much of her energy on her dead grandbaby. The child that would have continued her union with Jonathon Pierce. Today’s revelation had to shake her to the core.
But frankly, at the moment, I don’t give a fuck. “Save it for your shrink. I said I didn’t want to hear it.”
Meanwhile, Celia has tried to sneak away again. I trot after her, abandoning my mother. “Hey, hey, hey.” I grab her by the arm and escort her across the lobby and out the front doors. “We aren’t done. I’ll see you to your car.”
“I didn’t drive.”
“I’ll wait with you until your driver shows up.”
“I was planning on taking a cab.”
“We’ll cab together.” I don’t let her interject another excuse. “Celia, we’re having a conversation whether you want to or not. And we’re having it now, though you are welcome to choose our location.”
Her shoulders fall as she surrenders to defeat. “Cab, then.”
We hail a cab and slip in the back. I dive in the minute she’s finished giving her address to the driver. “This scam of yours, Celia—it’s not cute. It’s not even clever. It ends now.”
“I love how you immediately assume that anything I say is a scam. You can’t ever give me the benefit of the doubt?”
“I did give you the benefit of the doubt. I believed you when you stood there and told me you were happy for me. That you would give up this experiment with Alayna. Blatant lies is your trick now?”
She stares away from me out the window and shrugs. “I changed my mind.”
“And now you’re changing your mind again. Alayna is not your subject. Your experiment is over.”
Her head spins to face me. “Is there a threat buried in there? Let’s not forget that I know things you don’t want shared.”
There’s not a question of what she’s referring to. Yesterday, I could have said the same about her. But the biggest secret I had over her has now been revealed. I have little to hold over her at the moment, though I plan to change that. And fast.
In the meantime, though, I’ll have to gamble on her loyalty. Not to me—to the game. “You won’t tell Alayna that I played her. You won’t tell anyone. It’s against the rules.”
“You’re concerned with the rules? The game is over for you. What do you care about the rules?”
Her nonchalant attitude incites me. “How dare you?”
“I beg your pardon?”
“You heard me. How the fuck dare you?” It’s too much. All of it. Not only what she’s done to Alayna, but the insinuation that the way I taught her meant less to me than it did to her. It was
my
way of life, for Christ’s sake. How dare she act as though I had no respect for it? “I always adhered to our law. I did everything exactly as I said I would, even with Alayna. My only sin was to fall in love. And that was never against the rules.”
“It was certainly implied.”
I ignore her caustic remark and continue with my attack. “You’re the one who’s gone off plan. You’ve even changed the goal.”
“I changed nothing. The goal was to make her break.”
I pause, my head tilted toward her. “You mean the test was to see if she
would
break. There was no goal to
make
her.” Studying her reaction, I realize that I’m wrong. Celia’s goal was to make Alayna break. Not to simply watch what happened.
I’m baffled by this revelation. “When did our aim become to hurt people? We were scientists, not executioners. We weren’t malicious. We didn’t set out to hurt people.”
She looks at me incredulously. “You’re so fucking clueless, Hudson. We’ve been hurting and destroying people since the game began. You always pretended like that was just an unfortunate side effect, but even pursuing an experiment that might hurt someone is malicious. It’s like performing harmful research on humans. Scientists don’t do that as a rule. You know why? It’s not just unethical; it’s against the law.”
Shaking her head, she faces forward. “I get it, Hudson, I do. You didn’t want to face how fucking cruel you really are, so you told yourself what you had to in order to live with yourself.”
She was wrong. I did know how fucking cruel I was. I knew I was an asshole. I knew that, before Alayna, I had no heart.
But I had been a man with no comprehension of what it felt like to experience real pain. I hadn’t understood the damage I could do to people. Dr. Alberts had likened it to being a blind man asked to describe the color blue. While it didn’t excuse all my actions, it did make them less willful.
“It’s not the same at all.”
We
weren’t the same. All this time, I’d thought we were. “And the fact that you think so shows what a cruel bitch you really are.”