Share

Chapter 5

Penulis: Chloe Laurent
Rosalie's POV

Seven Years Later

"Mommy, I'm hungry."

I looked down at my daughter. Lucy had my dark hair but her father's eyes. Those same deep brown eyes that had haunted me for seven years.

"I know, sweetheart. We'll eat soon. I promise."

We were walking home from her school. It took us forty minutes because we couldn't afford the bus pass this month. My feet ached inside my worn-out sneakers. My back hurt from scrubbing floors all morning.

But Lucy skipped along beside me, happily telling me about her day. She was six years old and beautiful.

She was my entire world, and her father didn't even know she existed.

When I'd found out I was pregnant seven years ago, I'd been terrified. I almost told my father and Jeffery.

Then I saw the post on Facebook.

Aiden King was engaged to Elena Vasquez.

The announcement was everywhere. There were photos of them at a military ball. Her hand resting was on his chest, showing off a huge diamond ring, while he looked handsome and distant in his dress uniform.

The caption read: [She said yes. I couldn't be happier.]

I stared at it for hours.

He'd been engaged the entire time. When he'd kissed me, taken my virginity, and told me I was perfect… He had a fiancée.

And I'd been the other woman without even knowing it.

That was when I made my decision.

I packed a bag, took every dollar I'd saved from my part-time job at the library, and left.

I didn't leave a note. I didn't say goodbye to anyone.

I simply disappeared.

I moved three states away. Changed my phone number. Deleted every social media account I had. Enrolled in community college under my mother's maiden name. Found a tiny apartment. Got a job waitressing.

And nine months later, I had Lucy.

My father reported me missing. I knew because I'd seen the posters.

I even called him once from a pay phone to tell him I was alive and safe, but that I needed space. He begged me to come home.

I hung up.

That was six years ago. I hadn't spoken to him since.

I hadn't spoken to Jeffery nor had I told anyone from my old life where I was.

I told myself it was for the best. Aiden had made it clear that he didn't want me. So I wasn't going to force a man to be a father if he didn't want to be one.

"Mommy, look! A bird!"

Lucy pointed excitedly at a pigeon.

Despite my exhaustion, I smiled.

"That's a pigeon, sweetheart. Remember? We saw them at the park."

"Oh, right. Can we go to the park this weekend?"

"Maybe."

If I could pick up an extra shift. If we had enough money for groceries. Or… if the universe decided to give us a break for once.

We finally reached our apartment building.

It was old and run-down. The elevator was broken again.

We climbed four flights of stairs.

Inside our tiny one-room apartment, I made Lucy a peanut butter sandwich with the last of our bread. She happily ate it while watching cartoons on our ancient television.

I sat down at our small table and opened the mail I'd picked up downstairs. A bill. A past-due notice. An eviction warning.

My hands started to shake.

It was the second eviction notice.

If I didn't pay the rent by the end of the week, we'd be out on the street.

I had two hundred dollars in my bank account, while the rent was eight hundred.

I buried my face in my hands.

I'd worked so hard. I'd earned my associate's degree and had become an elementary school art teacher.

But the pay was terrible, and there were never enough hours.

I'd taken a second job cleaning hotel rooms on weekends and evenings.

Lucy stayed with our neighbor, Mrs. Willow, a sweet elderly woman who refused to accept any payment.

But it still wasn't enough.

"Mommy? Why are you sad?"

I looked up. Lucy was standing beside me, worry written all over her little face.

"I'm not sad, sweetheart. Just tired."

"You're always tired."

"I know. I'm sorry."

She climbed into my lap and wrapped her arms around me.

My heart shattered. She deserved so much better than this.

Better than a cramped apartment with peeling paint or macaroni and cheese five nights a week.

Better than a mother who was too exhausted to play with her.

She deserved a father, but I couldn't go back.

I couldn't face Aiden or watch him reject Lucy the way he'd rejected me.

That night, after Lucy fell asleep in our bed, I sat on the fire escape and cried for hours.

I'd made so many mistakes. Loving Aiden. Sleeping with him. Running away. Believing I could do this all on my own.

But I had to keep going, for Lucy. For my daughter.

Tomorrow, I'd ask my boss for more hours. I'd sell my laptop. I'd find a way. I always did.

The next morning, I dropped Lucy off at school and headed to my weekend job at the Grandview Hotel.

It was the nicest hotel in the city. The kind of place I'd never be able to afford to stay in.

I changed into my housekeeping uniform and grabbed my cart.

My supervisor, Mr. Gregor, stopped me in the hallway.

"Rivers. Conference Room Three. Now."

A knot formed in my stomach.

"Did I do something wrong?"

"Just go."

My legs trembled as I made my way to the conference room.

Was I being fired? I couldn't lose this job. I needed it.

I knocked on the door.

"Come in."

I opened it… And my world stopped.

Sitting at the conference table in an expensive suit, looking older, harder, and far more dangerous than I remembered, was Aiden King.

Our eyes met. At that moment, seven years of running and hiding was gone in an instant.

"Hi, Rosie," he said softly.

"We need to talk."

Lanjutkan membaca buku ini secara gratis
Pindai kode untuk mengunduh Aplikasi

Bab terbaru

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 30

    Rosalie's POV The number came up as Unknown on a Thursday evening. I almost let it go to voicemail. Over the years, I'd gotten into the habit of not answering unknown calls. Partly out of caution, the kind that comes from spending seven years making yourself difficult to find. Partly because unknown numbers were usually either wrong numbers or sales calls, and I didn't have the energy for either. I answered on the fourth ring because something made me. I couldn't have said what. It was an instinct that had nothing to do with logic. "Rosie." As I heard that voice, my world tilted. I sat down, not by choice. My legs made that decision for me, and suddenly I was in a kitchen chair with the phone pressed to my ear, every nerve in my body humming with something I couldn't name. It was my brother's voice. Seven years… It had been seven years since I'd heard it in real time. I’d only spoken to my dad once, briefly, maybe eighteen months after I'd left. A call from a payphone

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 29

    Aiden's POV I'd been staying at the Grandview for six weeks. Four thousand dollars a night for six weeks was insignificant from a practical standpoint, but symbolic in every other way. I didn't need to live in a presidential suite. I'd grown up in a two-room apartment with water-stained ceilings and a father who spent the rent money before the first of the month. I had money now because I'd earned it. Through hard work and the particular determination of someone who remembered exactly what it felt like not to have enough. But I'd never confused comfort with meaning. The apartment on Addison Street was a twenty-minute drive from Rosie's building. It had three bedrooms, a decent kitchen, and a building with a functioning elevator. That had mattered to me The elevator in Rosie's building had been broken since before I arrived, and she climbed four flights of stairs every day carrying everything she needed while raising a six-year-old child. I didn't tell her about th

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 28

    Aiden's POV Marcus called on a Tuesday morning while I was signing a lease. I let it ring. He called again while I was carrying the first box from a delivery up to the third floor of the building on Addison Street. I ignored that one too. By the time the movers had finally brought up the rest of it, a bed frame, a decent couch, a kitchen table that would do the job, I had four missed calls and a text message that read: [I know you're still in that city. You've been there for six weeks. We have a defense contract review meeting in eleven days, and two clients are asking where you are. Call me back or I'm getting on a plane.] I called him. Marcus Chase had been my business partner for four years. We'd met during a period when I was transitioning my investments into more structured ventures. He possessed the practicality I lacked, and I had the military connections he needed. The arrangement worked so well that neither of us had ever felt the need to formalize it beyond a ha

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 27

    "Can I get the big set?" Lucy asked. She was holding a watercolor box with twenty-four colors. "You can get whatever you want," Aiden said. Lucy dropped the box into the small basket he was carrying for her and moved on to the next section. I was studying a display of round paintbrushes with no intention of buying any of them when I heard her ask the question. Her voice was clear and direct, the way she asked most things. "Captain Aiden," she said, "are you going to be my dad?" The store didn't actually go quiet. The background noise remained. Someone talking at the register. Music drifting from a small speaker near the entrance. The ordinary murmur of a business going about its day. But something in my immediate world froze. I didn't turn around. I stayed where I was in front of the paintbrush display, holding a size-six round brush without really seeing it, and waited. I heard Aiden make a small sound. Not an answer. A breath. Slow and deep. Then I hea

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 26

    Rosalie's POV The visits had settled into the rhythm of the week, like everything else. Wednesday afternoons and Saturday mornings were marked on the refrigerator calendar with the same blue pen I used for Lucy's dentist appointments, school picture day, and library book return dates. The first few outings had been to the park. Then Aiden suggested the children's museum one Saturday, and I agreed because Lucy had been asking to go for two months. I'd been putting it off because admission was seventeen dollars per person, and when money was that tight, even seventeen dollars felt like a luxury. So we went. Lucy spent forty-five minutes in the science section conducting an experiment involving water and tubes. She ended up slightly soaked and completely satisfied. Aiden paid for admission and lunch at the museum café without making a thing of it, and I let him. After the rent situation, I'd decided some battles cost more energy than they were worth. That was what I told m

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 25

    Rosalie's POVI was furious. I was sitting at my kitchen table holding a rent statement that said my account was paid in full, and I was experiencing a feeling I'd almost forgotten the texture of. That strange physical sensation of a weight lifting. A weight you'd been carrying for so long that you'd stopped noticing it was there. Four thousand eight hundred dollars. For six months, I wouldn't have to do end-of-month calculations. I wouldn't have to check my bank balance before buying ingredients for Lucy's lunches. I wouldn't have to choose between paying the dental copay and buying groceries. I wanted to throw the statement across the room. Instead, I sat perfectly still. "This doesn't change anything between us," I said. My voice was neutral. "I know," he said. "I'm not going to change how I feel about this situation because you paid my rent." "I understand." "I need you to really understand that. This isn't the beginning of something. You're not buying goodwill."

Bab Lainnya
Jelajahi dan baca novel bagus secara gratis
Akses gratis ke berbagai novel bagus di aplikasi GoodNovel. Unduh buku yang kamu suka dan baca di mana saja & kapan saja.
Baca buku gratis di Aplikasi
Pindai kode untuk membaca di Aplikasi
DMCA.com Protection Status