After We Fell (83 page)

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Authors: Anna Todd

BOOK: After We Fell
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“Okay . . .” I don't get the point here.

“She had so much ambition and compassion then. It's really fucked up, because Tessa's grandma was just like Carol, if not worse.” He laughs at the thought, but I cringe. “Her parents hated, I mean
hated
me. They never hid it, either. They wanted her to marry a stockbroker, a lawyer—anyone except me. I hated them, too; may they rest in peace.” He looks up at the ceiling. As fucked up as it is to say, I'm grateful that Tessa's grandparents aren't around to judge me.

“Well, obviously you two shouldn't have been married, then.” I close the lid on the trash can, where I've just dropped the bag of popcorn, and lean my elbows on the counter. I'm frustrated with Richard and his stupid fucking habits, which are upsetting to Tessa. I want to kick his ass out and send him right back onto the streets, but he's almost become like a piece of furniture in this apartment. He's like an old couch that smells like shit and always creaks when you sit down on it, and it's uncomfortable as shit, but for some reason you can't throw it away. That's Richard.

His face falls, and he says softly, “We weren't married.”

I tilt my head slightly out of confusion.
What? I know Tessa told me that they were . . .

“Tessa doesn't know. No one does. We were never married legally. We had a wedding to please her parents, but we never filed the paperwork. I didn't want it.”

“Why?” But maybe a more important question is, why am I so interested in this shit? Minutes ago I was imagining slamming Richard's head through the drywall; now I'm participating in gossip like a fucking teenage girl. I should be listening at the door of my bedroom, making sure Tessa's mum isn't filling her head with bullshit to try to take her away from me.

“Because marriage wasn't for me”—he scratches his head—“or so I thought. We did everything as a married couple; she took my last name. I'm not quite sure how she pulled that off—I think it was like she thought that by doing it, I'd finally consent or something, but no one knew the sacrifices she made for my selfishness.”

I wonder how Tessa would feel about this information . . . she's so obsessed with the idea of marriage. Would this diminish her obsession, or fuel it?

“Over the years, she grew tired of my behavior. We fought like cats and dogs, and let me tell you, that woman was relentless, but I took it from her. Once she stopped fighting me, that's when I knew it was over. I watched the fire slowly die out in her over the years.” Looking at his eyes, I can see he's removed himself from this room and launched himself into the past. “Every single night she would be waiting at the dinner table, her and Tessie both in dresses and hairpins, only for me to stumble in and complain about the burned edges of lasagna. Half the time I'd pass out before the fork hit my mouth, and every night ended with a fight . . . I can't remember the half of it.” A visible shudder passes over him.

A vision of a very young Tessa, all dressed up at the table, waiting excitedly to see her father after a long day, only to have him crush her, makes me want to reach out and strangle the man.

“I don't want to hear another word,” I warn him, meaning it.

“I'll stop now.” I can see the embarrassment plastered on his face. “I just wanted you to know that Carol wasn't always like this. I did it to her. I made her the bitter, angry woman she is today. You don't want history to repeat itself, do you?”

chapter
one hundred and twenty-four
TESSA

M
y mother and I sit in silence. My mind is reeling, and my heart is pounding as I watch her tuck a lock of thick blond hair behind her ear. She's calm and collected—not overwhelmed the way I am.

“Why would you let your father come here? After all this time. I can understand you wanting to see him more after running into him on the street, but not allowing him to move in,” she finally says.

“I didn't allow him to move in; I don't live here anymore. Hardin let him stay out of kindness, kindness that you misinterpreted and threw in his face.” I don't hide my disgust about the way she treated him.

My mother—everyone—will always misunderstand Hardin, and why I love him. It doesn't matter, though, because I don't need them to.

“He called you because he thought you would be there for me.” I sigh, mentally deciding which way I want to steer the conversation before she bulldozes me into acquiescence in her typical Carol Young fashion.

My mother's blue eyes are somber, cast to the ground. “Why do you turn against everyone to defend that boy, after all he has done to you? He's put you through so much, Theresa.”

“He's worth the defending, Mother. That's why.”

“But—”

“He
is.
I won't keep having this discussion with you. I told you before, if you can't accept him, then I can't have a relationship with you. Hardin and I are a package deal, whether you like it or not.”

“I once thought that about your father.” I do my best not to flinch when she lifts her hand to smooth the front of my hair.

“Hardin is nothing like my father.”

A light laugh sounds from her painted lips. “Yes, oh yes, he is. He is like him in so many ways.”

“You can leave if you're going to say those things.”

“Calm down.” She repeats the smoothing action on my hair. I'm torn between being irritated by the patronizing gesture and being comforted by the decent memories it brings. “I want to tell you a story.”

I'll admit I'm intrigued by her words, though I'm skeptical of her motives. She never told me stories about my father while I was growing up, so this ought to be interesting. “Nothing you say will change my mind about Hardin,” I tell her.

The corners of her mouth turn up slightly as she declares, “Your father and I never married.”

“What?”
I sit up straight on the bed, crossing my legs beneath me.
What does she mean, they never married?
Yes, they did, I've seen the pictures. My mother's lace gown was exquisite, despite the fact that her belly was slightly swollen, and my father's suit wasn't tailored properly, it hung off him like a potato sack. I used to love to look through those albums and admire the way my mother's cheeks glowed as my father looked down at her as if she were the only person in his world. I remember the awful scene that ensued one day when my mother found me looking through them; after that, she hid them away, and I never saw them again.

“It's true.” She sighs. I can tell that this disclosure is humiliating for her. Her hands are shaking when she says, “We had a wedding,
but your father never wanted to be married. I knew that, I knew that if I hadn't gotten pregnant with you, he'd have left me much sooner. Your grandparents pushed the marriage on him. You see, your father and I could never get along, not even for a day. It was exciting in the beginning, thrilling even”—the blue of her eyes is lost in the memory—“but as you will come to see, there's only so much that one person can take. As the nights came and went and the years passed, I prayed to God every night that he would change for me, for you. I prayed that one night, he'd walk through that front door with a bouquet of roses in his hand instead of liquor on his breath.” She leans back and crosses her arms in front of her chest. Bracelets that she can't afford hang from her wrists, a tribute to her excessive need to look stylish.

My mother's confession has left me silent. She's never been one for open discussion, especially when the topic is my father. The sympathy that I suddenly find myself feeling for this cold woman brings me to tears.

“Stop that,” she scolds me before continuing: “Every woman hopes to be the one to reform her man, but that's all it is: false hope. I don't want you going down the same path that I did. I want more for you.” I feel nauseous. “That is why I raised you to be able to get out of that small town and make a life for yourself.”

“I'm not—” I begin to defend myself, but she raises her hand to silence me.

“We had our good days, too, Theresa. Your father was funny and charming—she smiles—“and he was trying his best to be what I needed him to be, but his true self overpowered that, and he became frustrated with me and with the life we shared for all those years. He turned to liquor, and it was never the same. I know you remember.” Her voice is haunted, and I can hear the vulnerability in her tone and see it shining in her eyes, but she recovers quickly. My mother has never been fond of weakness.

I'm once again taken back to the screaming, the breaking of
dishes, even the occasional “these bruises on my arms are from gardening,” and feel my stomach get tied up in knots.

“Can you honestly look me in the eyes and tell me that you have a future with this boy?” she asks as the silence ticks on.

I can't respond. I know the future that I want with Hardin. Whether he'll be willing to give it to me is the question.

“I wasn't always like this, Theresa.” She gently dabs both index fingers under her eyes. “I used to love life, I was always excited about the future . . . and look at me now. You may think I'm a horrible person for wanting to protect you from my fate, but I'm only doing what's necessary to keep you from repeating my history. I don't want this for you . . .” I struggle to picture a young Carol, happy and excited about each new day. I can count the times that I've heard the woman laugh in the last five years on one hand.

“It's not the same, Mother.” I force myself to say the words.

“Theresa, you cannot deny the similarities.”

“There are some, yes,” I admit, more to myself than to her, “but I refuse to believe that history is repeating itself. Hardin has already changed so much.”

“If you have to change him, why even bother?” Her voice is calm now as she looks around the bedroom that once was mine.

“I haven't changed him, he's changed himself. He's still the same man; all the things that I love about him are there, only he has learned to handle things differently and has become a better version of himself.”

“I saw his bloody hand,” she points out.

I shrug. “He has a temper.” A massive one, but I won't go along with her putting him down. She needs to understand that I'm on his side, and that from now on, to get to him she has to go through me.

“So did your father.”

I stand. “Hardin would never purposely hurt me. He isn't perfect, Mother, but neither are you. Neither am I.” I'm amazed at my own confidence as I cross my arms and match her glare.

“It's more than his temper . . . Think of what he's done to you. He humiliated you; you had to find another campus.”

I don't have the energy to argue with her statement, mostly because it holds a lot of truth. I'd always wanted to move to Seattle, but my bad experience this first year at school gave me the extra push that I needed.

“He's covered in tattoos . . . though at least he removed those hideous piercings.” Her face twists in disgust.

“You're not perfect either, Mother,” I repeat. “The pearls around your neck hide your scars, just as Hardin's tattoos hide his.”

My mother's eyes quickly flick over to me, and I can clearly see the words repeating in her mind. It's finally happened; I've finally made a breakthrough in dealing with her.

“I'm sorry for what my father did to you, I really am, but Hardin isn't my father.” I sit back down next to her, and dare to place my hand over hers. Her skin is cold under my palm, but to my surprise, she doesn't pull away. “And I'm not you,” I add as gently as possible.

“You will be if you don't get as far away from him as you can.”

I remove my hand from hers and take a deep breath to stay calm. “You don't have to approve of my relationship, but you have to respect it. If you can't,” I say, struggling to stay confident, “then
you and I
will never be able to have a relationship.”

She slowly shakes her head from side to side. I know she was expecting me to give in to her, to agree that Hardin and I could never work. She was wrong.

“You cannot give me that type of ultimatum.”

“Yes, I can. I need as much support as possible, and I am beyond exhausted with battling against the world.”

“If you feel as if you're battling alone, perhaps it's time to change sides.” She raises an accusatory brow at me. I stand again.

“I'm not battling alone, stop doing that. Stop it,” I hiss. I'm trying my best to be patient with her, but my resolve is wearing as thin, as this night is long.

“I'm never going to like him,” my mother says, and I know she means every word.

“You don't have to like him, but you won't be spreading our business to anyone else, including my father. That was incredibly wrong of you to tell him about the bet, and not in the least justified.”

“Your father had the right to know what he has caused.”

She doesn't get it! She still doesn't understand. My head is going to explode any moment; I can feel the pressure building in my neck. “Hardin is trying his hardest for me, but until now he's never known any better,” I tell her.

She doesn't say a word. She doesn't even look at me.

“That's it, then? You're going to take the second option?” I ask.

She stares at me, silent, the wheels of her mind turning and turning behind her heavily shaded eyes. She has no color left in her cheeks, despite the rosy blush she clearly swept across her cheekbones before she arrived. At last she mutters, “I'll try to respect your relationship. I will try.”

“Thank you,” I say, but really I don't know what to make of this . . . truce with my mother. I'm not naive enough to believe what she's promised until she proves it, but it still feels pretty good to have one of the heavy stones lifted from my back.

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