The Cinderella Arrangement (29 page)

BOOK: The Cinderella Arrangement
12.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

What does he mean by that?

I jumped as someone pounded the door and I peered through the hole, recognizing the two reporters. “Let us in!”

“Shit.”

Will reappeared in the foyer. “Who is it?”

“The reporters your dad hired,” I said in a quiet voice.

“What?” He whirled around to look at him. “Dad, what is she talking about?”

Mr. Pardini looked unconcerned with the menace in Will’s voice. “Yes, I hired them to clean up this mess.”

“No,” he roared. “I won’t have them following me around when I do this. This is my problem.”

“It’s my company! It’s my name!” Mr. Pardini shouted back. “Do you think you’re the only one affected by all of this? Your mother and I have tried everything to make you happy. I’m done! I’ve had enough of you. All you’ve done for me is make my life difficult. You embarrass me. I am through cleaning up after you.”

Mr. Pardini’s thin frame shook; flecks of spit flew from his mouth as he screamed at his son. William’s eyes widened, and he took a step back.

Wow.

But he still wasn’t done. “You’ll never make CEO of this company! I let you believe that you had a chance because I wanted you to focus on something in your life, but it didn’t work.”

“Wow.”

“Will—” I stopped as they both looked at me, surprised that I was still there. “It won’t be as bad as you think. You’ll get to meet them like you wanted, and the public will stop hounding you for retribution. If they see the families forgive you, they might leave you alone.”

“I don’t care about any of that. This was supposed to be private.”

“It stopped being private a couple weeks ago, son.”

William looked at me for help, but I shrugged and grimaced.

“Fine, but you’re staying here, Dad.” He nudged his head toward the door.

Mr. Pardini gave me a small nod as Will waited for me at the entrance. My heels clicked on the wooden floors and my heart hammered as I stood beside him and heard his fast breaths. He was scared to leave his quiet sanctuary. His hand twitched by his side and I lifted my hand to grab it. It was the first time we touched in days and my blood heated in response. I wanted to tell him how much I missed the feeling of his hands around my waist, his lips pressed against my face. I missed being around him, but all I did was try to squeeze some of those thoughts into his hand.

* * *

U
gly
, industrial South San Francisco rolled by as the driver took us down the Peninsula. I balled my fists over my knees as I watched Will’s face growing more and more anxious. He fingered a bottle of water in his hands.

“You know, I pictured this moment many times in my head. What I would say, what they would look like…When I saw myself doing this, I didn’t see a bunch of fucking reporters documenting the whole thing.” He looked at me. “I hate this.”

“I know you didn’t, but your dad’s right. This is affecting him, too. We have to do something.”

 He made an impatient noise and stared out the window. “I can’t believe he dangled that job in front of me to fix me.”

At least your parents care about you.

“Are you going to go back to work?”

“I don’t know.”

He said it in a closed way that made me realize that the conversation was over. Disappointed, I fell back into my seat. William’s quiet gloom spread throughout the car like a heavy fog, and I felt his anticipation when the car suddenly stopped in front of a modest home in a quiet suburb. This was the place that held one of the families that Will had a part in destroying.

Will craned his neck to look inside the windows where a few dark forms shifted inside. “They’re here.” His pupils were like pins.

I moved across the car and sat next to him, wrapping my arm around his back. “You can do this.”

The door swung open as the driver got out of the car to let us out. At the sight of the reporters standing by with their cameras, he swallowed hard.

“Go on, I’ll be right behind you.”

It was so bright outside I flung my hand in front of my face. Remembering I was supposed to be Will’s “girlfriend,” I took his hand and tried not to look at the cameras following us across the trimmed lawn. He stopped in front of the door, his face a blank mask. He closed his eyes and grimaced every time he heard the cameras beep.

“I can’t do this with them there.”

Will gave me a pleading look, and I sighed and nodded.

“I need you to wait outside,” he said to the two reporters behind us.

“That’s not what we agreed on.”

“Just stay the fuck outside.”

“Your father paid us.”

I placed a hand on his arm and stepped forward, blocking him from the reporters.

“This will all go easier if you stay outside. You’ll get the photos of them together, I promise.”

“Fine.”

“Yeah, whatever.”

Will nodded, looking relieved. “Okay, I’m ready.” Before he could rap his knuckles on the door, it unlocked and swung inward. I grabbed Will’s hand in a vice grip.

A tall, heavyset man with graying hair answered us, unsmiling. “You must be William.”

He flinched as if the man struck him, but there was no anger in his voice—no accusatory stare. He sounded tired.

“Yes, Mr. Metsky.”

I never heard him speak in such a quiet voice, and then I realized with a shock that this must be the father of Julian Metsky, the youngest victim.

That’s why he looks so terrified.

I could see him forcing himself to look the man in the eyes.

“Come in,” he said in his rolling, deep voice.

I followed Will, feeling horrible as I walked through the narrow doorway, brushing past Mr. Metsky. Inside was a small, carpeted family room. Two couches surrounded a coffee table where a large portrait of a young girl sat upright, grinning. Will shuddered to a stop and stared in horror at the photo until I sidled up against him and pinched his arm, hard enough to snap him out of it.

On the couch were several people with varying degrees of hostility. There were Julian’s mother, a teenage boy, and others who I assumed to be part of the Ramos family. I froze.

What do we do now? Do we shake their hands and introduce ourselves?

Will shoved his hands deep into his pockets. “I’m Will. This is my girlfriend, Natalie.”

I gave them a weak smile and flinched as their eyes flicked to me like hot, stabbing knives.

“I’m sorry that it took so long for us to be in the same room together.”

Mr. Metsky gestured toward the couch and Will and I crammed ourselves beside the others, uncomfortable beyond belief. The tall man sat down on the leather chair opposite us.

“You’re having some week, aren’t you?”

Having nothing to say to that, William kept silent. He couldn’t stop staring at the giant portrait of Julian, which was in front of him. It seemed like it was placed there deliberately, to remind him of the beautiful little girl he destroyed.

“I wanted to visit for many years, I couldn’t pluck up the courage. I—”

“Give me a break,” the boy suddenly spat out. “He’s just here because he wants to make himself look better.”

“Jimmy!” The father snapped at his son.

So he’s Julian’s older brother. That would explain the hostility.

“We wanted you to come because we thought that the media was treating you unfairly,” Julian’s mother spoke beside him.

What?
I shared an incredulous look with Will.

“Really?”

The father cleared his throat. “You weren’t the driver. We don’t blame you at all.” His eyes flicked toward the Ramos family, who so far said nothing. From the looks on their faces, they didn’t seem to agree.

He shook his head, looking miserable. “I didn’t stop him. It was my car.”

I saw them exchange glances. This was not going how they expected.

Will was breaking down. He couldn’t tear his eyes away from the picture; he couldn’t quiet the grief stirring in his body.

“I’m sorry!” he burst out. He opened his mouth to speak but all that came out was a strangled sob, then he broke down completely, his back heaving with sobs.

Julian’s parents looked at me with shocked expressions. Julian’s mother, a woman with long blonde hair, reached out and held his hand, and Will looked at it as if he couldn’t believe what he was seeing. Neither did I.

Will sobs subsided, and he took a tissue box on the table and dabbed his eyes. “Every day, I hate myself for not being able to save her. I didn’t come here to absolve myself of responsibility. I wanted to come here and apologize and—and ask you whether I can—if there’s anything you want me to do.”

Forgiveness
, I urged him.

“Can you bring up my daughter and her husband from the dead?”

He swallowed. “No.”

“Then there’s nothing you can do.” She turned around to her husband. “Tim, let’s leave. I can’t stand looking at this guy.”

Will was stricken as they stood up to leave.

Mr. Metsky was upset. “Please don’t. You said in the beginning you only wanted to see if he felt any remorse.”

“I can’t take it,” she said, gathering her coat from the stand.

Tim shook Mr. Metsky’s hand and looked at Will, whose fist held the crumpled tissue. “You rich people think you can get away with anything. You'll burn in hell.”

The Ramos family swept out of the house, slamming the door in their wake. Mr. Metsky looked at Will’s horrified face and his eyes creased with pity.

“You have to understand that they’re very furious. We were angry, too for a long time, but we realized that it was destroying us.”

The tall form of his body blurred as tears blinded me. I reached for Will’s hand and squeezed hard.

“Julian wouldn’t want us to live the rest of our lives like that. We wanted to see remorse that’s all. You know, Dan never attempted to visit us. Never called to apologize or anything.”

Tears slid down my face as I looked at him. Never? I couldn’t believe it.

Will shook his head. “I’m sorry, I didn’t know. I don’t talk to him anymore.”

Mrs. Metsky held her arm around his shoulders and whispered something in his ear, which made him break out into fresh tears. The rest of the visit passed in a whirlwind of tears from everyone, including me, and then they gathered outside to take pictures. I watched them, hoping beyond hope that this would help William heal.

* * *


H
ow was it
?”

Mr. Pardini’s face was anxious as we reentered the apartment, with the reporter’s promise that the story would be published the next day. I looked at Will as he shrugged and headed straight for his bedroom, ignoring his father’s questions.

“It went okay. The Ramos family is still furious. They made that clear.”

He gave a look that was nonplussed. “Of course they’re angry.”

“He didn’t take it well,” I said in a whisper. “I’ll go talk to him.”

I headed over to his bedroom and knocked before opening the door. Will sat on his bed, his beautiful blue shirt lying on the floor in a crumpled heap. His eyes flicked toward me, that same deadened look on his face. I could tell that it wasn’t enough.

Will, when are you going to come back to me?

I sat next to him. “What are you thinking?”

He said nothing for several seconds. “I’m still in shock, I think.”

I grabbed his arm and squeezed it until he looked at me. “They forgave you. Even they pointed out you did nothing wrong!”

“Not all of them.”

“The others are just angry because they have no one else to be angry with! Dan is out of the picture.”

“I know.”

I stood up from the bed, suddenly tired. Then I walked toward the door.

“Natalie?” His low voice lifted in surprise.

“I need to go home.”

The bed bounced as he stood up. His hand slammed the door shut as I opened it. I was surprised that he followed me. His bare arm blocked my path, followed by the rest of this body as he leaned against the frame. I hated myself for the hope gathering in my chest.

“No, you will not leave like this.”

 “I’m not upset, I just—I’m tired.”


Natalie
.”

Other books

Honor Bound by Samantha Chase
Crossing the Line by J. R. Roberts
The Affair of the Chalk Cliffs by James P. Blaylock
París era una fiesta by Ernest Hemingway
The Darkest Lie by Pintip Dunn
Intertwined by Gena Showalter
A Hellion in Her Bed by Sabrina Jeffries
Dragon's Honor by Mina Carter
Elizabeth Street by Fabiano, Laurie
The Bathing Women by Tie Ning