Free Read Novels Online Home

Just Don't Mention It (The DIMILY Series) by Estelle Maskame (53)

PRESENT DAY

I watch over Eden for hours, listening to her soft breathing as she sleeps. I have opened the curtains again and am leaning against the window, watching the party carry on without us. It’s the middle of the night, but all of the lights are still flashing, even brighter now through the darkness. I can still see the crowds down on the beach partying by the stage. Very faintly, I can still hear the music.

I hear movement from behind me, and I crane my neck to look over at the bed. Through the darkness, I see Eden stirring. She pushes the sheets away from her and rolls over, desperately reaching out and fumbling for her water on the bedside table. She props herself up on her elbow and chugs it down as though she has been thirsty for weeks. I know how it feels waking up after the night before.

“How are you feeling?” I ask her gently.

Eden stops drinking and tilts her head up, her surprised gaze coming to rest on me in the corner of the room. She stares at me for a few seconds before she finally says, “Better. What time is it?”

“Three,” I say. I glance out of the window again and let out a small laugh. “The party’s still going strong.”

As she comes into focus through the dark, I notice she has her eyebrows furrowed. “Didn’t you go back?”

“No,” I tell her. Did she think that I would? Did she really think I would leave her here alone? “I was worried that you’d throw up or something,” I admit, and my voice grows quiet. “Plus it was probably best that I just stayed away from it all.”

Around this time last year, I would have been at Tiffani’s place by now, probably suffering through my seizure with no idea what was actually going on. I seemed to totally black out, but from what my friends have told me about that night, it sounds pretty damn terrifying. It’s been an entire year, and I still haven’t learned from it. I’m still hitting Declan up a couple times a week.

“What’s wrong?” Eden asks as she sits up.

“Nothing,” I lie, pulling my knees up to my chest and resting my elbows on them, interlocking my hands. I have opened up to her about things before, but this is something I really don’t want to talk about. I don’t even want to imagine what she would think of me.

“I know there’s something wrong,” she says, and she takes another sip of her water as she studies me over the rim of the glass. Firmly, she asks again, “What’s wrong, Tyler?”

“It’s just . . .” I try, but I can’t get the words out. My shoulders sink with defeat. I don’t have the guts to tell her. I’m scared to.

“Just what?” she presses.

“This time last year,” I start, but it’s all I can say. I can’t tell her that I was an idiot, that I almost killed myself because I was searching for a high that would get me through another day.

“You passed out,” she says for me, and my eyes flick back up from the floor to meet hers. So, she does already know, and she is definitely sober now, because this is the Eden I know. The one who tells me the truth straight up. “Rachael told me. You passed out because of the drugs.”

I swallow the lump in my throat and get to my feet, stuffing my hands into my pockets as I lean back against the wall. “Just drink your water,” I mumble.

She tilts the glass of water to her lips again and quickly finishes it, then dumps the glass back on the bedside table before she slides out of the bed and stands up. She takes several wary steps toward me and quietly asks, “Why do you do it?”

Tonight of all nights, I really don’t want to go through this again with her. She is always pushing for an answer to that question, but it’s an answer that I’m just not emotionally strong enough to give her yet. “Why are you asking me about this again?” I mutter as I throw my hands up out of my pockets. It’s such a sensitive subject to me that already my temper is rising.

“Because I want the truth,” Eden says.

“I already gave you the goddamn truth,” I snap at her, and I end up balling my hands into fists by my sides. I am fighting hard against the anger that is brimming. “I do what I do to distract myself.”

“From what?” she asks, but she raises her voice, unable to hide her frustration. I think this is what she has been trying to figure out the entire summer, and she isn’t going to stop until she finds out the truth. “That’s what I want to know, Tyler. I want to know why you need all these bullshit distractions.”

“Distractions make everything easier,” I hiss under my breath. I was so calm before, so in control, and I hate that I am now losing that. I’m not angry at her, though. I never will be. I only get angry when I’m forced to face the truth.

“Makes what easier?”

I’m grinding my teeth together as I go quiet, and I look her straight in the eye. “Stop, Eden,” I say slowly, my voice firm. I hope she can see the plea in my eyes. I really don’t want to do this.

“Stop what?” she asks, taking another step toward me.

“Stop trying to figure me out,” I say, but my pulse is already racing. I look down into her eyes and I pray that she will care about me enough to not put me through this. If she figures out the truth about me, she will know that I’m broken inside.

“Tyler,” she says, “49ers or Chargers?”

No fucking way did she just change the subject like that. From asking me why I get high to asking me which football team I support . . . Wow. I will take anything I can get, though. “What kind of a dumb question is that? 49ers.”

Eden’s face falls and she widens her eyes at me, parting her lips. “I saw a photo in Dean’s house,” she says slowly, her voice low, husky, “of you and him and your dad before a 49ers game. If you’re a fan, how come you looked like you didn’t want to be there?”

I stare back at her, my expression frozen. I know exactly what photo she is talking about. It’s the same photo I spotted in Dean’s garage earlier this week, the photo that triggered such a turmoil of painful emotions in me. “Dean was supposed to take that down,” I tell her. I don’t know what else to say.

“Answer the question,” she says, her voice demanding. “What was wrong that day?”

She isn’t ever going to let this go. I wonder if she looked closely enough into my eyes in that picture to see the pain I was in. It was a much bigger pain than any injury Dad could ever inflict on me. I was heartbroken that night. I felt worthless. I was breaking down inside.

I can’t look at Eden right now, because those same emotions are hitting me all over again at full force. I am breaking down now too. I walk away from her and pick up her empty glass from the bedside table and tighten my hand around it, squeezing it hard to release some of the fury that is taking over me. I pause by the window, looking out again at all of the lights. My life is a mess.

“What is it with you, Eden?” I murmur. I keep my head down, my eyes closed, my back to her. “You’re not supposed to figure me out. No one is.”

“Tyler,” Eden whispers, and my name sounds desperate on her tongue. Slowly, I look back at her over my shoulder, and her eyes are gentle but intense as she stares back at me, her hand pressed to her chest. “Trust me. Please.”

I look back down at the floor and close my eyes again. She wants to know so badly, but I am terrified of letting her in to my biggest secrets. I have never told anyone before. I have been holding the weight of this secret for five years and I just can’t let it go. It has become part of me. “Don’t make me tell you.”

Eden edges her body in between mine and the window. She moves close to me, gently placing her hand on my chest, feeling the erratic thumping of my heart. Her gaze meets mine. “Please,” she whispers.

And I can see it in those sparkling hazel eyes of hers that she cares about me, that she is desperate to know the truth so that she can understand me better. I have always kept the truth about my dad a secret from everyone, because I have worried people would never look at me the same. I didn’t want pity and I didn’t want sympathy. I wanted to move on, to show that I was stronger than everything that I had been through, that Dad wouldn’t define me. I don’t want to leave myself vulnerable again, but there is something about Eden that is reassuring, like she’ll make sure everything is okay, that I’ll be okay.

“My dad’s an asshole,” I whisper and my words cut me. My voice is cracked and my heart is beating so fast I think I may suffer a heart attack. I’m really about to do this. I’m really about to tell Eden the truth. “I told everyone he’s in jail for GTA. That’s not true.” I can’t look at her now, not when I’m about to say the words that will tear me up inside. My jaw is clenched tight and I stare at the wall, blinking fast to stop myself from welling up. Then, so quietly it’s almost inaudible, I say, “He’s in jail for child abuse.”

All of the color drains out of Eden’s face, and I close my eyes. My heart is sinking as I hear her sharp intake of breath. “You?” she squeaks. I nod, but I never open my eyes. They are stinging; my throat is tightening. Eden exhales that same breath of air. “Jamie and Chase?”

“Just me,” I say. I wouldn’t have been able to cope if it had been any other way.

“Tyler, I . . .” Her voice cracks too and grows huskier as she keeps her hand on my chest, reminding me that she is here with me. “I’m so sorry,” she whispers.

There it is: Sympathy. I don’t need that.

“I do a pretty good job of keeping it a secret,” I mutter as I open my eyes again. Eden is pale, and her eyes are wide and brimming with tears, but this is exactly what I didn’t want. I step back from her and she drops her hand. “No one knows. Not Tiffani, not Dean, not anyone.”

“Why haven’t you told them?”

“Because I don’t want pity,” I snap. My anger is returning and I can feel it rising all the way up through my chest, tightening around my heart. I walk away from Eden and grab onto the edge of the bedside table for support. “Pity is for pussies. I don’t wanna look weak. I’m done with being weak.” I hate Dad so much. Why did he do this to me? Why did he ruin my life? My rage comes to an explosive head and I throw a punch, slamming my fist straight into the bedside table. My knuckles should ache, but I don’t feel pain that much anymore. “That’s all I ever fucking was. Weak.”

“You weren’t weak,” Eden says, shaking her head at me. “You were a kid.”

She’s wrong. I was weak. I should have been stronger, I should have stood up to him, I should have told someone. I storm across the room and lean back against the wall, sliding down onto the floor and inhaling. “You know, I didn’t really get it for a while,” I admit after a moment, after the anger has subsided. I need to tell her more. I need to open up for once, even if it is only a little. I can’t tell her everything, but I can tell her enough. “I never understood what I did wrong.”

Eden sits down on the carpet in front of me, crossing her legs and remaining silent. She is listening, and I realize that right now, that’s all I really need. Maybe Mom is right. Maybe talking to someone can help.

“My mom and my dad . . .” I begin, but I’m struggling to find the right words. It’s a complicated story. It’s tough to tell. “They were just teenagers when they had me, so I get that they probably had no clue what they were doing. They both got a little obsessed with building careers. Dad had his dumb company, the one I told you about.”

“Grayson’s,” Eden says quietly. She remembers.

“Grayson’s,” I confirm. This is going to take some time to explain, so I clear my throat and lean forward, folding my arms over my knees. My heart is still pounding. “It was great to start with. The business really took off for a few years, but when I was, like, eight, some deal fell through. Dad had a shit temper. He came home one night and Mom was at the office working late and he was super pissed off and he took it out on me. I kind of let that one slide. I thought it was a one-off. But then his employees were all quitting and it stressed him out and he took it out on me again. It kept happening more often. It went from once a week to every single night. He’d tell me I couldn’t do anything I wanted to do, because I needed to focus on school instead. Said he wanted me to get into Ivy League so that I didn’t end up fucking up my career the same way he was. But the truth was, I didn’t want to have a big-shot career or get into an Ivy League school, yet I spent every single night locked in my room trying to study so that he wouldn’t get mad at me. I thought, I’m trying, right? That’s enough, isn’t it? But it wasn’t. Every night, he still came upstairs and threw me around.” For a second, I feel as though I can’t breathe. Talking about this is so hard. Memories of Dad are flashing in front of me. The way he used to look at me, the way he used to grab me, the way he used to tell me he was sorry. “Every single night,” I whisper. “Four years.”

“I’m sorry,” Eden says again, still choked up. She doesn’t need to apologize.

“Mom was so busy, she seriously had no idea,” I continue. “She blames herself for it now. She tries to ground me, but it just doesn’t work, because she never reinforces it. I think she’s terrified of trying to be strict, you know? It’s not her fault, though. She did notice sometimes. She’d be like, ‘Tyler, what have you done to your face this time?’ And I just made up some lame excuse each time. I would tell her my face was busted because I was playing football during gym class or that my wrist was broken because I fell down the stairs. When really I broke my wrist three times one year, because Dad just loved to see how far he could bend it back.”

“Why didn’t you tell someone?” Eden whispers, and it’s a reasonable question. Mom has asked me that same question so many times. “Does my dad know?”

“Because I was fucking scared of him,” I admit. My voice is so strained. I don’t sound like myself. “There was no way I could tell. The only person who doesn’t know is Chase. He was too young. Mom didn’t want to scare him. The rest of the family all hate Dad now.”

“When did it stop?”

“When I was twelve,” I say. Five years ago. Five years ago it all ended. Or at least it should have. These past five years have been hell, and my rage returns. Dad’s actions have caused a ripple effect through my life. “Jamie came upstairs one night and saw Dad hitting me,” I explain as I push myself up from the floor. “Called the cops, even at his age. Dad was arrested that night. It didn’t go to trial, because he pleaded guilty, so it was never publicized. I got to keep it a secret. I get to pretend that I’m fine.” But I’m not fine.

I begin to pace around the bedroom, trying to keep my anger at bay before it can manifest even more than it already has. “I really fucking hate him,” I spit. “Really, really hate him. After a year or something I started to believe that there must have been a reason for it all. I thought I deserved it for being a worthless piece of crap. I still do. I can’t even move on from it, because it’s impossible to forget, which sounds so pathetic, but it’s true. I’m supposed to be on antidepressants, but I don’t take them, because I want to drink and get high instead, and you can’t do both. And you know what, Eden? You’re right. I’m lost. I’m totally fucking lost in this mess.”

Eden gets up from the floor too. She stands still, watching me while I pace, unsure what exactly to say to me. There is nothing anyone can say. At this point in my life, I have accepted what happened. My past is a part of me. It has shaped me into who I am today; it has made me the mess that I am. That doesn’t mean that I think what happened was okay. It wasn’t, and I’m furious.

“I depend on distractions!” I yell across the room to Eden, even though she is only a few feet away. “They make coping easier, because in the hours that I’m drunk or high or both, I forget that my dad fucking hates me!”

I need to release the fury that’s running through me, and so I stop pacing and grab the empty glass, hurling it at the wall. I love smashing things. It’s satisfying to me, it keeps me calm, and I watch as broken pieces of glass shatter onto the carpet, breathing heavily. Eden gasps.

All of my energy seems to leave my body. I hate what Dad has done to me. I feel so lifeless, so empty. I sink down onto the bed behind me as my pulse continues to race, and I lock my eyes on the dark sky outside. The moon is full and bright.

“I hate him,” I growl, swallowing hard. I hate him so much.

Eden walks over, stepping in front of me. I tilt my head back to look up at her, to meet her eyes which are full of warmth and reassurance.

Delicately, she reaches out and presses both her hands to my jaw, cupping my face. Her gaze never leaves mine as she sits down on my lap, our bodies pressed together, her skin warm. My breath catches in my throat. She is so close. She brushes her thumbs over my cheeks, then leans forward, moving her lips toward mine. They don’t touch, though. I don’t need them to. It’s amazing just having her next to me, feeling her breath on my skin, knowing that in this moment, she is completely mine. I close my eyes, and we remain huddled together like this for a long time. I don’t want her to ever let go.

Finally, she breaks the silence, her gorgeous voice whispering, “Thank you for trusting me.” Then, she kisses me.

And right now, she is everything that I need. She is the only thing I want. My desire to kiss her is overwhelming and I bask in the feeling of her mouth against mine as a new fire rises within me. I have just let her into the darkest parts of my soul, and she is still here with me. She has seen me at my weakest and my most vulnerable. She has seen me. And she’s still here. She’s in front of me, she’s kissing me, she’s holding me, and I am completely in love with her.

I kiss her desperately as a single tear breaks free from my closed eyes, and I run my hands up her thighs, under her ass. As she presses her chest into mine, I sit up and tighten my hold on her, lifting her up. I never tear my lips from hers, and she is still grasping my jaw in her hands as I lay her down on the bed. I hover over her, kissing her faster, deeper. I need more of her. She is kissing me back with just as much energy and adrenaline, and from beneath me, she manages to shrug off her sweater. Her hands move to my T-shirt, tugging at the material, trying to pull it off. She is struggling, and the only reason the kiss breaks is because I can’t hold back my soft laughter.

I sit back, swipe off my shirt and toss it onto the floor while she smiles sheepishly back at me. We are in the dark, but she radiates brightness, color. She takes her lower lip between her teeth as she runs her eyes down my chest, but I can’t keep my hands off her for long. I’m back above her, kissing my way along her collarbone. My hand is clasping her waist, the other is traveling up her thigh, under her skirt. She is running her hands through my hair, resting her chin atop my head. She is trembling a little, but so am I. Maybe I’m nervous too.

I’m exploring her body, touching every inch of her. She is pulling on my hair now, and my face is buried into the crook of her neck as she writhes beneath me, arching her back, grinding her body into mine. She is breathing heavily into my hair and I can’t get enough of her. I place a hand on her cheek, feeling the flushed warmth of her skin.

I am reaching for her top, pulling at it, but I can feel her growing stiff under me. Protectively, she is crossing her arms over her chest whether she realizes it or not, and I remember what she told me the other night. About what those girls told her. She’s insecure about her body, so quickly, I sit back from her to give her some space for a second. I take her hand in mine, interlocking our fingers as I meet her anxious gaze. She glances down at herself and takes a deep breath. When she looks back up at me again, she gives me a small smile and pulls her top off herself. She reaches for me, drawing me back to her, her mouth against mine.

We are fumbling around one another. She is undoing my belt, I am releasing the clasp of her bra, my fingers are in her hair, her hands are on my chest. My heart is racing. So is hers. I’m breathing deeply. So is she. My clothes are on the floor. Hers are too.

She means so much to me, even if she doesn’t know it. I trust her, and I don’t trust easily. She is there for me, she cares about me, she wants me to be okay. That is the most anyone has ever done for me in years.

Our hips are rolling together, she is digging her nails into my back, I’m groaning against her ear. It is all so perfect. She is perfect, and I wouldn’t change any of this for the world, even though it is terrifying.

I may have told Eden my secrets, but now I have a new one.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Bella Forrest, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Michelle Love, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Penny Wylder, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Pucking Parker (Face-Off Legacy Book 1) by Jillian Quinn

Accidental Daddy (The Single Brothers Book 3) by Stephanie Brother

Tokyo Heat (Nights Series Book 3) by A.M. Salinger

Taken by Temptation: Rage Ryders MC by Liberty Parker

Unintended: A Sin Series Standalone Novel (The Sin Trilogy Book 5) by Georgia Cates

Mr. Dangerous (The Dangerous Delaney Brothers Book 1) by July Dawson

Blaze by Teagan Kade

Confession by Lily Harlem

Broken by Lies (Bound and Broken Book 1) by Rebecca Shea

Sassy Ever After: Sassy in The Snow (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Tracey Steinbach

Seth... Saved by Mar-Gerrison, Heather

Ache for You (Slow Burn Book 3) by J.T. Geissinger

STRIPPED (The Slate Brothers, Book Three) by Harper James

Prisoned: A Dark Twisted Erotic Standalone by Marni Mann

Second Chance Love: A Gay Romance Story (Lost and Found Book 1) by Romeo Alexander

Raider by Justine Davis

Bought by the Badman (Russian Bratva Book 10) by Hayley Faiman

Overlooked by Lulu Pratt, Simone Sowood

Miss February (The Calendar Girl Duet Book 1) by Karen Cimms

Bad for the Boss: A BWAM Office Romance by Talia Hibbert