Page 47 of Wanting Mr Black

Font Size:

Page 47 of Wanting Mr Black

“I can’t lose you.” His voice bounces off the walls as he rockets from calm to explosive in five seconds.

I shrink down onto the edge of the bed, momentarily stunned at the sudden outburst. He’s worried I’m going to leave him once I find out. My stomach turns over with anxiety.

“What the hell is it?”

His spine stiffens with tension as he drags a hand down his face. “It’s difficult.”

“There’s something in everyone’s past that they wish wasn’t there. A blot, or several, in the copybook of our lives. We can’t go back and change or erase it, but we can learn to live with it – we must because it makes us who we are. I want to be with you, but it’s hard for me when one minute, I think I know you, and the next minute, I feel as if you’re a stranger.”

He swallows, and his eyes remain fixed on the floor. The fact that he hasn’t looked at me for an age has me worried.

“You won’t understand.”

“Try me,” I demand.

He heaves a sigh and paces over to the French windows, standing with his back to me. His head drops as he jams his hands into his pockets, looking like a man defeated. “After Dad died, I was drinking heavily all the time. I didn’t really know how to cope. On the day of his memorial, I got absolutely wasted and thought it would be a good idea to take my car out for a drive. I went too fast around a bend on one of the country lanes. Lost control. Hit another car head-on.” Silence fills the bedroom as he shakes his head in remorse. “I went to prison. Did nine months. It was the worst time of my life.”

I feel sick. “Like what happened to Dad.” Memories of losing him, which are always bubbling just below the surface, rush back. “What … what happened to the other driver?”

Seconds tick by before he replies, and I already know the answer.

“He died instantly. They said I was lucky to be alive.”

I stare down at my hands in my lap as I try and work out how I feel at this perverse twist of fate. “You took an innocent man’s life. Like the lad who took Dad’s because he thought it would be a good idea to be totally bloody irresponsible one night and race around in a vehicle he couldn’t control.” I hang my head in my hands. I can barely say the words. “You killed someone.”

Out of the edge of my vision, I see him turn round to face me, and there’s a desperate note to his voice when he speaks, “It was a terrible, tragic accident.”

Years of anger rear its ugly head at his lame justification, and the words fire out of my mouth like bullets from a gun. “Yes, it was terrible. Terrible for that man’s poor family. Just like it was a terrible accident that killed Dad. It doesn’t make it any better.”

Silence stretches out across the room between us. An age passes before he speaks, and when he does, I barely recognise him. “Can you understand why I struggled to tell you?”

I jump to my feet in rage and glare at him. “Don’t try and use what happened to Dad as an excuse for not telling me about this. That’s even more of a reason why you should have been honest with me. Do you know how many nights I cried myself to sleep after he died, wishing it had been the other person who had died instead?” Tears prick in my eyes. “And you’re that lad, aren’t you? The guy you killed had a family he never saw again, kids he’s never seen grow up. And you …” Tears stream down my face as I angrily jab my finger at him. “You took that all away from them because of your own fucking selfishness.”

Dark, wounded eyes stare back at me. “Do you think I don’t realise that? Do you think I don’t think about that guy and his family every day?”

I cut my eyes at him. “Oh, that’s really decent of you.”

“Sophie, please.”

I rack my brain.How could I have not heard about this?Art’s a successful businessman from a wealthy family. The press loveraking up dirt on people like him. This would have been front-page news. It’s so close to what happened to Dad. I would have definitely remembered reading about it.

“Why wasn’t this all over the papers?”

He looks awkward. “My PR guy at the time … he thought it would be best if we shut the story down …” He doesn’t finish the sentence. He doesn’t need to.

“Because it would have been bad for business, and can’t have that, can we?” I snap.

This is a total mindfuck, and I need some time to think. “I can’t be around you right now.”

I angrily dash the tears from my cheeks with the back of my hand and hurry to the wardrobe, hastily pulling on my blue jeans and black T-shirt and grabbing my overnight bag from off the top shelf.

“What are you doing?”

I ignore the frantic edge to his voice as I pull clothes from hangers and open the drawer with my paperwork – birth certificate, passport – and hesitate.Am I going to Ibiza? I guess I am.I put the passport in my handbag. It feels like a big, serious decision, but I don’t have time to think about this. I can’t remember what time Lucy’s flight is, but I need to get going.

“You can’t leave.”

Something inside me snaps, and I fly round at him. “Watch me.”




Top Books !
More Top Books

Treanding Books !
More Treanding Books