Chapter 29
LAINE
MY HEART HURTS and I feel sick.
“You’re so kind…”
He takes Ted from my arms and finds his missing leg. My poor, poor Ted. His battered body breaks my heart. My voice is choked up as I ask Nick the question.
“Do you think you can save him?”
“I’ll give it my very best shot,” he tells me, and I believe him. He looks around my bedroom. “There’s nothing else worth saving,” he says. “I’m sorry, Laine, we’ll have to get new.”RêAd lat𝙚St chapters at Novel(D)ra/ma.Org Only
“But I don’t…” I cough to hide the embarrassment. “I don’t have any money… not enough… not even if I did have my purse…”
“You don’t need to worry about that.”
But I am. I am worried about that. He’s done far too much already, and I tell him so. I tell him I can’t take any more from him, that he hardly even knows me, but he waves his hand, won’t hear any of it.
“I’ll call a locksmith when we’re back at home,” he says. “Some cleaners, too. They’ll salvage anything that can be saved.” He runs a hand down my chipped paintwork. “I think we’ll need a decorator, too. They’ve
done a real number on the place, vile little cunts.”
I gasp. It shocks me so much to hear him swear like that.
“Sorry,” he says when he sees my open mouth.
But I like it. I like the way he sounds when he’s angry. He sounds so strong… so fierce…
“I just can’t believe there are people like this out there,” he snaps.
“Low-life scum.”
“They didn’t do all of this…” I admit. I point at the chipped paint. “That was already there.”
“We’ll get the place spruced up,” he says. “I promise.”
I smile, say yet another thank you, and I even try to sound convincing.
It’s not that I’m not grateful, because I am. It’s not that I’m not aware how lucky I am that I ran into the road and Nick’s path, because I’m very, very aware of that.
It’s because I know that when we leave this house, and all the tattered broken things in here, I’m never going to want to come back.
HE DIGS out a box from the garage. Sadly, one single box is going to be more than enough to contain the remnants of my life.
I’m relieved to find my college work intact above my wardrobe. I pack up my folders and text books, and place Ted on top, being careful with all his frayed pieces.
That’s just about everything I can save. Everything I want to.
Everything that matters.
Nick carries it out to the car. He loads my measly possessions into the back and smiles as I slip into the passenger seat and buckle myself in. He closes the front door and locks it, and I wait in the car as he calls at the neighbors on either side.
He says nothing about what they tell him, and I’ve never much liked the neighbors anyway, so I don’t ask.
I don’t want to know what happened here. I already know enough.
“I still think we should call the police,” he says as he reverses away from the house.
“No point,” I reply. “They won’t care anyway.”
“Of course they’ll care, Laine. They’re the police. It’s their job to care.”
“And this is a dead-end street. There’s always crap going on around here. They’ll probably think it was a party I had myself while my mum was away. A party that got out of hand, and now I’m trying to cover my tracks before Mum gets back.”
“They won’t think that.”
“They will,” I insist, and he doesn’t argue. I guess he knows it too.
We head back towards Brighton, and the further away from Newhaven we get, the more relieved I feel. He parks up at a multi-story in the middle of town, and I look at him curiously as he gestures I should follow him.
“You need things,” he explains as we head for the exit. “New clothes.
Toiletries. A phone.”
“But I…” I grasp his wrist and he stops. “I can’t take all this from you. I just can’t.”
He sighs. “Laine, I’ve more than enough money. It’s nice to have someone to spend it on.”
I think of Jane. I think about all the people a man like Nick should have in his life. A wife maybe. Friends. Just… people.
It’s on the tip of my tongue to say so, but his hands are on my shoulders before the words are out.
“Please, Laine. It’s my pleasure. Allow me to enjoy it.”
“Just a few bits…” I say. “Just to tide me over… and I’ll pay you back,
I promise.”
“No,” he says. “You won’t.”
He takes my hand, and his fingers are solid. He walks quickly, and I have to take two steps for every one of his. It makes me feel so alive, to be rushing along at Nick’s side. I let the sensation wash over me.
He leads me into the first clothes shop we see, one of the lovely little boutiques on the front. Everything looks expensive, really expensive, but he doesn’t seem to care. He heads for a section at the back, with loads of pretty pastel colors, and I’m pleased. It’s where I’d have headed myself.
I balk at the price tags and tell him it’s all too much, but he won’t hear any of it. He’s gathering up clothes more quickly than I can look at them, pretty shades of pink, and bright whites, lovely purples and teals and pale blues.
He’s chosen the smallest size on the rack, and he’s right.
“Choose whatever you want, Laine,” he says. “Anything you like.” But he’s already chosen everything I like. I tell him so and he smiles.
“Great minds,” he says, and heads for the changing rooms. I follow him, a little lamb dancing along behind such a powerful man. Everyone is looking at us. At him.