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Sweet Little Memories ~ Abbi Glines by Abbi Glines (12)

Stone

SCANNING THE RESTAURANT, I FOUND her easily enough. Hilda hadn’t changed much over the past six years since Wills’ birth. Men still turned their heads to watch as she passed. The excitement for life, however, was now void in her eyes. Coldness had taken the place of the once youthful gleam that had resided there. A reality that living with my father would do to anyone. My mother also had the same hardness in her gaze, although I’d never known what she was like before my father ruined her.

Walking toward Hilda, I feared this conversation would end the way the last few had. My lawyer was adamant that I attempt to get her to work with us one more time. I was done dealing with her, but I needed her cooperation to fight what was to come.

She lifted her gaze and a tight smile touched her red lips before she took a sip of her champagne. This meeting had taken me several calls to arrange. Hilda was currently living in Chicago as a congressman’s mistress. The diamonds on her ears and the ones dangling from her wrist told me he was keeping her happy.

Taking the chair across from her, I sat down.

“Winston,” she said in acknowledgment.

“Hello, Hilda.”

“I would like to say that it’s nice to see you, but we both know that’s a lie.” Her smile was gone replaced with a smirk.

“Thanks for agreeing to meet me. It’s important.”

She shrugged. “It’s pointless, Winston. You know it is. Why you keep battling this, I don’t know. It’s a waste of your time and money. He’ll never give Wills up.”

I didn’t expect him to. But if Wills was mine, I would take him.

“Life with my father is a living hell for anyone. You know that. How can you so easily accept the fact he has Wills? As a mother, don’t you want to protect him?” I asked this knowing the answer already. Hilda was selfish. She only cared about her plans. Wills wasn’t included in those plans.

“I didn’t want to be a mother, Winston. You know that. I wasn’t cut out to be a mother. I’m not the motherly type.”

I grimaced. She sounded so much like my mother. The damage Wills had already suffered because of her and my father would be hard to repair. Every day he spent in that house, it only grew worse. I didn’t want him to have my life. He deserved more.

“Obviously.”

She looked at me with a bored expression and continued drinking her champagne. “When was the last time you saw Wills?” I asked.

She frowned. “I think in April, maybe?”

Wills had told me it was February since she’d last visited him. She’d patted his head and talked on her phone the entire visit. I wanted him to talk about how she treated him and how it made him feel. My hope was having him face it would keep him from withdrawing and letting the bitterness darken him. As it had me.

“You don’t care what happens to him. You’ve made that clear. But I do. Even if he’s my brother I don’t want him to grow up the way I did. I’ve got to save him.”

She lifted her left shoulder slightly. “You turned out just fine. Successful. Happy.”

I laughed. My laugh held no amusement but disgust. She honestly thought I had turned out fine. Because I had been successful? The shallowness that consumed this woman was hard to be around. I didn’t want to talk to her. If I could do this without her I would. But she was Wills’ mother.

“Success doesn’t equal happiness, Hilda.”

She raised her eyebrows as if what I’d said was ridiculous. “Winston, you have never wanted for anything. Not once. I was cold in the winter, I went to bed hungry every night, and my clothes were either made by my mother or they were found in trash bins, thrown out by others. I lived in poverty. I watched my mother die from a cough that eventually consumed her in a cold, little one-bedroom shack. That is real fucking life. What Wills has is everything I didn’t. I love my son and I know that he has more than I ever imagined having.”

I’d never known anything about Hilda’s youth or family. And although that was a sad story I still asked, “Did your mother try to keep you warm? Did she beat you or call you names to belittle you? Did she take care of you when you were sick? Did she love you?”

I stopped and waited for her to respond. Hilda tensed and I watched as she took a deep breath through her nose. I’d hit a nerve. She finally gave me a tight nod. That was it.

“Yes, she beat you? Or yes, she took care of you the best she could? She loved you?”

Hilda cut her eyes away from me. “She did the best she could.”

“Did you feel loved?” I repeated.

There was no response for several seconds. When Hilda finally turned her gaze back to me she said, “Yes. But love didn’t feed me or keep me warm. Love didn’t give me a fortune.”

She was right about one thing. I’d never been cold or hungry.

“A child needs love just as much as they need warmth and food. The lack of love damages you. I want Wills to feel loved. I don’t want him hiding for fear his father will get angry with him and use his fists. That fear never goes away, even as an adult that can easily handle himself. It’s there in your nightmares reminding you that you were weak once. You were alone.”

Hilda sighed and took the napkin from her lap and placed it on the table in front of her before she stood up. “I can’t keep doing this with you. We are not going to agree on what is best for Wills. If he’s your son, I know he’ll have just as much advantage in this world than if he is your father’s son. Do whatever you think you must. But leave me out of it. I gave Wills up before he was born. That pre-nup made sure of it.”

Hilda picked up her purse and tucked it under her arm.

“I swabbed the inside of his mouth while he slept during my last visit. I’ll know If he is my son or my brother soon,” I told her. “If he is, I will fight for him. If he isn’t, I will still fight. If you won’t, I will.”

She gave a nod. “Like I said, do what you think you must. Goodbye, Winston.”

I sat there as she walked away. I’d flown to Chicago hoping I could persuade her to stand with me in court. Having Wills’ mother there testifying against my father would be huge. However, I knew that was a long shot. Hilda hadn’t been cooperative any of the other times I’d tried to get her with Wills. Even after she’d been on the receiving end of my father’s fist. She knew how brutal he could be.

Standing, I laid money to cover the check on the table and left.

This was my last chance to get her on board before I moved forward either way. I would know tomorrow, if not sooner. They’d assured me the express test would take no longer than seventy-two hours.

If Wills was my son, I’d probably never forgive myself for not saving him sooner. The pain of that reality would haunt me. Forever.

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