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Regret (Twisted Hearts Duet Book 2) by Max Henry (27)

TWENTY-FIVE

Belle

“Your mother phoned yesterday,” Dad says with a sigh. “She felt the need to let me know she saw you two at the supermarket. I don’t know what she expected me to say about it.”

I lean back in the staffroom chair, phone to my ear as I listen to Dad. “Probably thought you’d like to know, especially after you called her in to put the hard word on me and all.”

“Yeah. About that.” He pauses. “I might have over-reacted by getting her involved.”

“You think?”

“I’m sorry.” He sighs.

Damn it. I can’t stay mad at him, no matter how much his petty move pissed me off. “Apology accepted.” I frown before asking, “Why does she meddle like this, though? I mean, is there not enough drama in her life without adding more or something?”

He sighs. “I don’t know, sweetheart. She’s….” He falters. “I guess somewhere along the way somebody did her wrong, or somehow she got in her head that she has to always ruin a good thing.”

I smirk, wondering if he realises what he admitted. “So, you think Zeus and I are a good thing?”

He stays silent a while, probably choosing his words. “In your eyes, perhaps. You’re happy, and for now, that’s all that I care about.”

“For now?”

He huffs again, clearly frustrated with the turn this conversation has taken. “I don’t want to be doom and gloom, Belle, but I don’t see how this can work out for you two. I voiced that to you the other day; there’s no need to rehash it.”

I wish I could understand why he’s so adamant about this. “I told Zeus I want to talk to Damien, to clear the air between us.”

“Do you think that’s a good idea?”

“Maybe not, but I feel bad about how things turned out between us, even if he was the jackass who took it too far. Maybe if I had owned up to the truth of it sooner we wouldn’t have reached that point, you know?”

“Yeah, well, from what you’ve told me it was a two-way street. I wouldn’t take it all on your shoulders.”

“You were the one who said I treated him badly,” I remind Dad, picking at a chip on the corner of the Formica table before me.

“I did. But I also didn’t say he was clear of fault.”

“You think I shouldn’t talk to him, then?”

“I think it might just reopen old wounds, is all. You have to ask yourself what the point of talking about it all with him would be.”

He’s right—what is the point? I told him everything there was to say the day we split: although we weren’t suited for each other, I appreciate the fact I had company while I was in Colorado. I appreciated the friendship. But then again, was it even that? I can’t actually quantify what we were into one category or the other: we just didn’t fit, any which way. Square peg, round hole, and three years of twisting and turning before we realised there was no point trying.

“How is Zeus, anyway?”

“Why don’t you ask him yourself?” I cock an eyebrow, even though Dad can’t see me.

He huffs before answering. “Maybe.”

“He misses your friendship, Dad. Don’t punish him for trying to do the right thing.”

“He has a funny way of going about it.”

“He could have gone about it a lot worse,” I point out.

“True.” Dad hesitates. “Maybe we could catch up for a beer after work today?”

“Not today,” I say. “He’s got his last day before he starts a new job Monday. He said the guys are having a few after work with the crew.”

“New job?”

“Yeah. Same thing, more money.”

Dad makes an impressed hum. “Well done him, then.”

I smile, thinking about how quietly excited Zeus is to be making the change. “What are we going to do about Cerise?”

Dad hums before answering. “I’m not sure. There’s only so many times I can tell her to let it go.”

“Maybe I should say something then?”

“I don’t know. Ignore her for a while. Hopefully she gets bored if you two don’t give her reason to nitpick and goes back to the hole she’s found herself.”

“I honestly thought she might have had some ‘Kumbaya’ moment when she got sober.” Dad laughs at my comment. “But she seems just as horrible without the drink, as with.”

“I think we all know that was one miracle that would have been too much of a stretch,” Dad says with a laugh. “Oh, sweetheart. I wish I had a magic cure for you and your mother, I really do. But there’s no way around it: she’s a bitter old cow, and I wish I’d seen that sooner. Would have saved us both a lot of grief. I’m sorry I got her involved again.”

“Would it have, though?” Whether my parents split up when I was a child or a baby, it wouldn’t have changed who Cerise is. “I just wish I knew why she has to be so mean.”

“So do I.” Dad huffs a short breath. “But until then, we tolerate.”

Yeah, I guess we do.

***

I spend the rest of the day wondering what exactly Cerise wants from me. What is her motivation to keep making life hell for me? Why is she so damn invested in a child she so easily abandoned?

Like the remnants of a thorn you didn’t quite get out, she’s there every step I take. A painful reminder.

I message Zeus on my way out the door, throwing a wave over my shoulder to Wade as I step out into the street.

B: How was the last day?

I get halfway home before he replies.

Z: I had my water spiked, the keys to the grader hidden, my lunch stolen, and a cab full of water balloons… so great.

He finishes with a tired-looking emoticon. I smile at the visual of him battling the water balloons out of the machine before he can use it.

B: Wet arse then?

Z: You don’t want to know. Mike’s just opened the box of beers. Let you know when I’m on the way home.

He signs off with his usual heart and dove. Zeus left the bike at home today, catching a lift to work with Mike since he knew they’d drink after. I met the guy briefly as they headed out the door. He seemed nice enough.

My feet ache by the time I reach the house, my heart even more so when I open the door to the dark and quiet of the empty house. I wouldn’t say I’m untrusting of Zeus, but this is the first time he’s been out on his own since we became something official. I can’t fight the worry that creeps in when I think of him out on the town with a bunch of guys who, by the sounds of it, have no reservations in leading him astray.

Cut it out, Belle. He’s never given me reason to worry, but Zeus is a good-looking guy. Man. He’s a good-looking man, and who knows where they are? Who else is there noticing what I do when I look at him?

A microwave dinner spins in its plastic dish as I lean against the kitchen counter and scour social media. There aren’t any new posts, nothing with him tagged in. I set the phone aside with a huff, maddened that I can so easily become one of those girls.

I would never think to cheat on him, so I need to believe that he feels the same.

You don’t trust anyone. No. I don’t. And I wonder whose fault that is?

The microwave sounds its completion, the dish piping hot in my hands as I pull it out. “Ow, ow, ow.” I ditch it on the counter, slapping my palms on my legs to ease the sting.

My phone lights up, the pain instantly forgotten. I sidestep to grab the device, hoping Zeus is on his way home already. Unknown number. I open the message thread, absently retrieving a fork with my other hand, and frown.

Cerise. She hasn’t sent me a message as such, just a bunch of images. My thumb slowly drags up the screen as I stir my dinner, the pictures shots of actual photographs laid out on what I assume is Cerise’s table.

Photographs that not only show my parents when they were younger—much younger—but Zeus and Jodie as well. I slow my scroll, taking in the scenes: Dad and Zeus laughing in what looks like a pub, Jodie on Zeus’s back as they smile for the camera lakeside, the four of them in what appears to be somebody’s living room. And the last image the one that makes my gut turn worst of all: Zeus and Cerise; him staring off at something out of shot deadly serious, and her, smiling at the person who takes the picture, pretending to squeeze his arse while his back is turned.

B: Why have you sent me these?

I shouldn’t engage, but I have to know.

C: You know how old we are in these?

C: 21. 22 at most.

She’s trying to prove a point—one I already know. One I already don’t care about.

C: Know why these are printed photos? Because we didn’t have smartphones back then. Cell phones were only for rich people. We’ve known each other a long time, Zeus and I.

My lip stings under my assault, my bite all I can do to stop from screaming out in frustration.

B: I get it. We’re two different generations. When are you going to realise it doesn’t matter?

C: When are you going to realise it already does?

She sends me a new picture. The phone slides from my grasp. I let it drop to the counter, yet my eyes don’t waver from the candid shot.

Cerise, asleep in bed beside Zeus.

The heel of my hand hits the microwave dinner with such force the tray ricochets off the splashback, sending creamy pasta all over the counter. I can’t stand the thought of eating, let alone the smell of it when my stomach turns so violently.

It was a long time ago. She’s clothed under the blankets; I can tell. And the two of them have their backs to each other. I’m overreacting.

Except if it were true, if they did cross that line once, doesn’t he think I deserve to know? All my previous fears about him out drinking alone, with just his workmates, return in an avalanche of insecurity.

Who is he with now? Who has he been with in the past? What else don’t I know?

Maybe the years between us aren’t so much of a problem when it comes to love between two adults. But one thing I can’t deny, one thing I never considered until now, is a lot happens in seventeen years. A lot happens in however much longer it’s been that Zeus has been friends with my parents.

He might know everything about me, having been there since the start, but it’s never been more obvious than now that I’m not aware of even half of what there is to know about Zeus.

How much worse will this get before I admit the truth? Age can be a problem.

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