Falling Into Love with You (The Hate-Love Duet Book 2) Rowe, Lauren (read aloud TXT) đ
Book online «Falling Into Love with You (The Hate-Love Duet Book 2) Rowe, Lauren (read aloud TXT) đ». Author Rowe, Lauren
She nods.
âThat song is a big âfuck youâ to both my parents.â
Laila puts down her spoon. âYou mentioned your âasshole fatherâ when we drank that bottle of whiskey in Providence. But I didnât realize you have an asshole mother, too.â
âSheâs not an asshole. At least, she tried to raise me for a while, unlike him. Sheâs just not a person who ever should have had a kid.â
âI canât imagine. My mom is so grateful to have my sister and me. And now, my niece. She always says weâre the best thing thatâs ever happened to her.â
âThatâs what Mimi always says about me.â
âWere your parents in a relationship?â
âNo. It was a one-night stand. My father knocked up the bartenderâmy motherâat his favorite bar. Once my mom realized she was pregnant, she tracked my father down, but he denied I was his.â
âNo paternity test?â
I shrug. âIâve never asked her about it. My hunch is she wasnât sure who the father was. By the time I was a toddler, though, it was a moot point. I looked just like him. She said she brought me to him when I was two or three and demanded he take me for a while, so she could have some fun again.â
âShe told you that?â
âMy mother hasnât been shy about her lack of attachment to me. Anyway, she brought me to him, but he didnât want me, either. So, she did her best.â
Laila is visibly floored. âIâm so sorry, Savage. Growing up, did you see your father, at all?â
âI saw him, now and again. Whenever heâd started feeling guilty about ignoring my existence. Heâd come over, but only when he was drunk. Usually on my birthday or Christmas and weâd try to play happy family for a hot minute. But things always turned into a screaming match between my parents, and Iâd run and hide in my closet. Which by the way, doubled as my bedroom, by choice. Iâve always liked small spaces. Anyway, fast-forward to Chicago, after Iâd moved there and had been living with Mimi for a couple yearsââ
âWhere did you live with your mom?â
âPhoenix.â
Lailaâs eyebrows ride up.
âYeah, you hate-fucked me in my hometown,â I say. I wink. âIt definitely made it extra special for me. Anyway, my sperm donor father got out of prison when I was fifteen or so. He showed up at Mimiâs apartment, angry that sheâd taken me in, when he wasnât sure I was his kid. He told her I was conning her. Planning to steal from her. So, I flattened his stupid ass.â I smile. âI was fifteen and my father was three inches taller than meâand I took his ass down.â
âWhoa.â
âIt felt amazing when I was standing over him. That was the moment I realized how small he truly wasâand that he had zero power over me. It was a huge turning point for Mimi and me. Until then, Iâd been a little asshole to her. Always testing her. Trying to prove my theory she was going to throw me out at some point. But after that, I realized I loved her and that Iâd do anything for her. Anything. And thatâs when I said to myself, âWhy not give her a real chance here? Why not stop being an asshole and start listening to her?â So, thatâs what I did. I started following her rules, and giving her the respect she deserved. And it was the best thing Iâve ever done. From that point, everything started falling into place for me. I befriended Kendrick and Kai, seeing as how I was going to be sticking around, and thatâs when I realized I could write songs and sing. Everything came together for me after that.â
âIâm so glad you decided to let Mimi love you.â
âI canât imagine who Iâd be right now if I hadnât.â
âIs it Sashaâs mom or dad whoâs Mimiâs kid?â
âHer father, Frank. He died in an accident at work when Sasha was eleven. Apparently, he was an amazing guy. Really sweet and kind. Thanks to Frank, Mimi knew she was capable of having a normal, loving son. Poor Mimi always blamed herself for my father, her second son, being such a dickbag. But at least Frank gave her some comfort that my fatherâs assholery wasnât her fault. Mimi once told me she felt like my father was born without a complete soul. Like, he just didnât feel things the way other people did. She said it only got worse when his dad, Mimiâs husband, died.â
Laila looks down at her bowl of soup, looking distraught. âIâm sorry youâve had it so rough, Savage.â
âNobody has it easy in life, really. Speaking of which, tell me about your asshole father.â
Laila drags her spoon through her bowl of soup, gathering her thoughts. âMy parents got married when my mom got accidentally pregnant with my sister. When things became rocky in their marriage, they decided in their infinite wisdom to have a second baby to âfixâ things.â
âBrilliant plan.â
Laila rolls her eyes. âYeah. Obviously, my existence didnât fix a damned thing. I remember my dad often being loud and angry when Angel and I were little. Heâd punch holes in walls. Smash plates and lamps onto the ground. And then, one day, my father did the unthinkable: he punched my mom in the face during an argument and broke a bone under her eye.â
âJesus.â
âMy mom took Angel and me to live with my aunt in Whittier. We lived there until my mom could afford an apartment of our own.â
âDid you keep in touch with your father through all that?â
âSort of. My sister was done with him the day we moved out. But I kept in touch for a while, by phone, and listened to him tell me how sorry he was. How much heâd changed. But one day, I heard my mom crying while talking to him on the phone, so I listened in. And the way he was cussing her out . . . Thatâs when
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