His Missing Wife Jaime Hendricks (popular romance novels .txt) š
- Author: Jaime Hendricks
Book online Ā«His Missing Wife Jaime Hendricks (popular romance novels .txt) šĀ». Author Jaime Hendricks
āWhy did you put up with that?ā
āBecause it was still better than the alternative. I went from bad relationship to bad relationship, since I was a kid. Sure, every guy in my life knocked me around. Itās just the way it was for me. Itās the only thing Iāve ever known. My motherās boyfriends were horrible to her, and she just took it. My sisters used to date these pieces of shit too. Even my brothers used to rag on their women. So, with him, that Asshole, I thought it was my ticket out. He at least had a stable job. He wasnāt a trucker or bookie or drug dealer, like the rest of my exes.ā
I pause to gauge his disgust, but heās looking at me with softness in his eyes.
āI didnāt graduate from high school. I lied about going to RISD. I was a waitress at a grease pit when I met him. I lived in a shack. I already had a legal state ID with a different Social Security number, something I figured out how to do when I ran from the last foster home. I preferred to work for cash. I did whatever I had to do to get by. And before you ask, no, I was never a prostitute.ā
He chuckles. āWell, you mentioned the Edward Lewis thing from Pretty Woman.ā
āHardy har.ā I clear my throat and go on, quietly. āBut yeah. Hereās this guy, in a suit, shiny watch, perfect hair, all that stuff. And he took interest in me. Now I know he saw me as a target, but I didnāt know that then. I thought he was rescuing me. The happy ending. He wanted to feel better about himself by telling me all the ways he saved me, probably because he was insecure about shooting blanksāthank God he never fathered a child. With me or anyone else. And you know what? I got the house, the dresses, the shoes, but when the violence started, well, I was already used to being hit by others, so yes, I stayed because at least this time he provided for me.ā
āWhat was it that made you leave?ā
I swallow hard. āHe smashed a mug into the side of my face with all his strength. The previous broken bones we were able to better explain away, but I knew he was going to kill me.ā
James winces. āJesus. Wasnāt that right before Damonāā He doesnāt finish the sentence because he doesnāt have to.
I nod. āYes, and then there was you. It all happened so fast. So, so fast. And I know heās looking for me. Iām afraid heās going to find me.ā
āLook at me, Tessa,ā James says, and grabs both of my hands. Our eyes meet. āI wonāt let anything happen to you. Iām going to protect you at any cost.ā
I know he wants to. James means well, but what could he really do to protect me from my past?
30
James
James waited anxiously for the phone to light up with Robertās number, even though heād told him it would be a few days before they found out who Bella Johnson really was. He couldnāt believe heād been dupedāso desperate to prove his side that heād fallen prey to a vulture.
Looking online, the articles from real reporters now spread past the city rag and the county news pages. There was statewide coverage in New Jersey. Fake Bella Johnson had been his only hope, because the other articles were savage, and so were the comments.
For his mental health, which was never a problem in the past, he needed to stop reading all the shit that was said online about him.
The doorbell would ring on occasion, and Candy would bark, but James knew better now. If he didnāt recognize the person on the stoop immediately, he didnāt open the door. Heād been relegated to sitting upstairs in his bedroom with Candy, so she wouldnāt get so anxious whenever there was a noise outside. He drew the shades, turned on the TV, pet his dog, and wondered where his wife was. Every time he opened her closet door, he cried. Her perfume smell still clung to some garments that hung, and every time it hit his nose, heād remember her smile or her crazy hair days, her cooking or her determination. Her side of the sink still had her hair dryer and curling iron and makeup. Like sheād walk in at any second and need a shower and a little grooming. It was what he prayed for.
The cops still had her hairbrush.
James texted Gwen, asking her to come over to sort through her things. Maybe sheād spot something that he couldnāt see.
Her reply text was cold.
Yea, thanks, but no. I believed you last week but now I donāt know what to believe anymore. You were screwing around on her, werenāt you? Donāt contact me or Nick.
He was about to tap back a reply but decided against it. It wouldnāt help. It would be seen as aggressive, even if he just wrote Thanks.
Then, the damn doorbell rang again. James went into the bathroom and looked out the window facing the front of the house. A cab was parked outside next to the sidewalk. He cautiously walked down the stairs and through the window next to the door, he saw a familiar face. He wasnāt sure what the point of the visit was, though, so he only opened the door a sliver.
āHey,ā James said. Relief.
āJames. You poor thing. Do
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