“Keep it,” he says, his voice soft. “If we ever meet again, you can return it to me.”
I nod and fold the fabric carefully. “Thank you, Si. Not just for the handkerchief, but also for sitting here and talking to me without asking me who I lost or what happened. It’s… it just…”
“I know,” he says, a cute smirk on his face. “I know, because I’m in just as much pain, and I definitely don’t want to talk about it either. Remember what I said, okay? Don’t lose yourself in your grief. Let the people who love you be there for you.”
“Yes,” I murmur, nodding. I hadn’t really thought of it that way before, and he’s probably right. Dad must be hurting too, and maybe the two of us will get through this together.
Si turns and walks away, looking back at me once he’s a few steps away. I don’t want him to leave, but I don’t know how to ask him to stay. “See you around, Alanna.”
I bite down on my lip and wave at him before he walks in the opposite direction of where I need to be. I stare at his back for a few moments as I try to gather my courage.
Normally it’d be Mom I’d turn to when I’m as upset as I am today. But how can I, when it’s her I lost?
I’m absentminded as I walk back to her grave, not wanting to face the fact that we’re burying her today. I wish I could just go home and pretend this isn’t happening, but I can’t.
“Alanna!” Dad rushes up to me, his eyes red from the endless tears he’s shed, his expression worried. “Are you okay, sweetheart?”
Dad wraps his arms around me, hugging me tightly, and I hug him back with all my strength. “No,” I admit. “I’m not okay, Dad. It feels like I’ll never be okay again.”
He rests his chin on top of my head, his body trembling just as mine is. “I know, sweetie. I feel the same way, but we will be fine. So long as we’ve got each other, we’ll be okay, won’t we?”
I nod. “Yeah,” I whisper. “I just don’t understand. Why weren’t we enough, Dad? Why would she… why didn’t she stay for me? Didn’t Mom love me? Why wasn’t I enough?”
Dad tightens his grip on me. “She did, Alanna. Mom was just very sick, and the medication never made her better. It just… It just made her more depressed. It isn’t anything you did, my love. It isn’t your fault at all, okay?”
I nod, but I can’t help but wonder what I could’ve done to prevent my mother’s death. If I’d told her that I love her more often, would that have prevented her from taking her own life?
Chapter Three
Silas
This can’t be right. I look up from the document in my hand, barely comprehending what I just read.
“I’m sorry, Silas,” Michael, my father’s lawyer, says. “Your father left everything to your stepmother. Neither you nor your brother inherited anything at all.”
I rise from my seat and place the document on his desk with trembling hands. “Is this real, Michael? You were there when he signed this?”
He nods, his expression apologetic. When the will was read, I assumed my stepmother was pulling a trick of some sort, but this entire document is in my father’s own handwriting. He’s leaving his entire estate worth millions to Mona.
“Why would he do this? Why would he cut Ryan and me out like that?”
I bite down on my lip, my thoughts reeling. Of course Mona would take care of her own son, but Dad must have known that she’d never do the same for me. It’s no secret that she and I haven’t been on good terms in recent years.
Not since I found out that she’d been cheating with the gardener and told my father about it. That was over three years ago, and though it didn’t seem to affect my father and Mona, my bond with her was severed the moment my father confronted her.
“I don’t know, Silas. I asked him whether he was sure when he came in with this will, and he was. Perhaps he assumed your stepmother would continue to care for you as she has for the last thirteen years.”
I shake my head in disbelief. How could he possibly have believed that? The older I get, the more I see Mona for who she really is. She’s a vicious little bitch, and I thought my father was finally starting to realize it too.
I’m certain he never even would’ve married her if she hadn’t shown up on our doorstep, six months pregnant with Ryan. I know how much my father loved my mother, and at the time I was far too young to understand, but I see it now.