For as much as Alexander has shared with me over the years, he’s kept a lot hidden. I often wondered if he’d done that because he wanted to protect me or if something worse was lurking in his sadness.
I lie still, so still, as he slips out of bed and walks to the French doors that lead to a large balcony overlooking the grounds. He has a ritual. Time on the balcony in the moonlight—I used to think he found peace under the stars, but his unrest overtook most nights and soon he started leaving for a few hours. Not every night, but three or four, depending on his restlessness. I was rarely asleep, but I pretended to be. Just like now.
He moves with assurance, every step taken with purpose. When I met him, he oozed confidence, but I discovered that he didn’t know who he was. It was as if his mother’s death had caused him to lose track of himself. He made me feel safe and secure, taken care of, and loved. He was never unsteady around me. But I would catch him lost in his own thoughts when he assumed I was studying. I remember a night when music played softly in the background, a fire flamed in the fireplace, my books were scattered on the coffee table, and his room was dim with the heaviness of his mood, he stood in the open doorway that led to the balcony. The anguish seemed to cover him like a cloak, his shoulders sagging and his head seeming too cumbersome to hold up. Alexander leaned against the railing and closed his eyes . . . “Kingwood Enterprises is the only thing left of my mother.”
“You’re left of her.”
“No.” He laughed, looking up at the night sky. “I’m all bad, just like my dad.” Glancing over his shoulder back at me, he sighed. “When are you going to see the real me, Sara Jane?”
“I see the real you every time I see you. This is who you are. I don’t know why you think you’re so bad when all I see is the good.”
With a smile on his face, he turns around, and crosses his arms over his chest. “You’re the smartest decision I ever made. You know that?”
“Yes,” I say, feeling sassy. “Now come and kiss me.”
“You’re so demanding when you get compliments.”
“You like it.”
Hopping over the arm of the couch, he lands with a thud next to me sending my textbooks to the floor. “I do like it. A lot.”
That was a good kiss. A kiss that went from chaste to more in seconds. I still remember it so clearly.
Alexander may not have known who he was at the time, but he knew who he was going to be. I often wonder if it was a self-fulfilling prophecy or falling into a trap set long before he was born. There are a lot of ghosts haunting this manor and I don’t intend to let him be the next.
Tonight, his secrets are protected by a solid wave of muscle that rolls over broad shoulders, crashing down strong arms. I turn over to get a better look at him before he disappears outside. He’s been working out a lot more lately. He says it’s to get rid of pent-up energy. I think it might be preparing for battle.
I’m tired after a long day of school and studying late at the library. Making love wore me out even more after we had dinner in bed. I move up so my back is against the headboard and my arms around my knees. The sheet covers most of my body, but my shoulders are exposed and cold. Just when I’m about to sink back down under the covers, I look up to find Alexander watching me. “I thought you were asleep,” he says.
“You weren’t here.”
A wry grin lifts the right side of his mouth, and he comes back to me. “Since when do you need me to sleep?”
“I always need you, Alexander.”
Coming around to my side of the bed, he sits, resting his arm around my legs. “My father is selling Kingwood Enterprises.”
“What? Really?”
“I thought it would be mine one day.”
Leaning forward, I rest a hand on his leg and kiss his shoulder. “I thought you didn’t want it.”
“I want it. I don’t want to run it, but I want it. It’s my legacy.”
When I straighten my legs, he moves down until his head is resting on my lap. I stroke my fingers through his hair. “Why is he selling it?”
“I don’t know. He blindsided me in front of some guys he’s hired to help restructure and sell it off in pieces.”
“I’m sorry,” I say, failing to find anything that will reassure him.
“I’ve been thinking about why it bothers me when I’ve never liked being there. My mother gave him her trust fund to start the company.” I don’t realize I had stopped moving my hand until he looks up at me. “I feel like she’s slipping away from me.”
Running my fingers gently over his temples, I whisper, “She’s with you, Alexander. Always.”
“She gave everything up for him. Her last name. Her money. Her love. And I hate that it was never enough for him. He always wanted more, like all her time, her attention, and everything she had. It was never enough for him. He consumed her like a drug he couldn’t get enough of. And then she was gone. The photos went away, her items disappeared from view. The curtains were drawn, and I was left on my own.”
“You had me.”
The smallest of smiles appears, but I catch it. “Yes, Firefly, I had you.”
“You have me.”
He kisses my bare leg while the feel of his arm tightens around me. “Since she’s been gone, the company is the only tangible part of her in this world.”
“There’s still Kingwood Manor.”
“She hated this place.” A small, but discernible smile creases his mouth before disappearing again just as quickly. “She complained it was too big for two people, and when I came along my father used to demand she stay in their room when all she wanted to do was stay in mine.”
“Your father’s room is in the other wing.” Alexander looks at me, a shared understanding passing between us. “You had to live in this part of the house by yourself?”
“I had a lady who worked nights to tend to me.”
His choice of words startles me. Tend, not care. “Tend to you? I don’t even know what that means Alexander.”
“She would cry as he pulled her out the door and made her take a pill to calm her down.”
“That’s awful.” I look around the large room he calls his quarters. A family could live in this room it’s so big. It’s made up of a huge walk-in closet, an even larger attached bathroom, a sitting area with a couch and large screen TV, and the bed with a nightstand flanking either side of the bed frame. A vision of a crib here instead and a child, Alexander, being separated from his mother brings tears to my eyes. “Why would he make her leave?”
“Because he needed her.”
“You needed her,” I reply, a harsh demand in my tone.
He nods. “I will never do to my child what he did to me.” His fingers run over the skin of my inner thigh. “My family, my wife and kids, will always come first.” Anger seeps into his tone as if he’s threatening the world with a long held vengeance.
Maybe he is.
A tear slips down my cheek—the sadness of his story and the fate of mine clashing in the middle of the night. “My heart hurts, Alexander. Tell me something happy.”