Dream Chaser (Dream Team #2) - Kristen Ashley Page 0,51
was I at your place forcing whiskey down your throat?”
“Ryn,” Boone whispered.
I focused on him.
“Hang up the phone, baby,” he went on, just as Brian said, “You’re a piece of fuckin’ work.”
I didn’t hang up the phone.
I told my brother, “I have one hope for you, Brian. One hope for you and your children and even Angelica. And that hope is that one day, you’ll sit in front of me with your sheet of paper, reading it to me about the amends you’re making on your way back to yourself and you don’t feel too much of a total and complete asshole that you’ve treated me this way.”
And yeah.
That was when I hung up.
I also turned off my phone.
Not just the ringer.
The phone.
I wanted to throw it across the room.
I also wanted to leap out of the bed and scream at the top of my lungs.
Not to mention, leap out of bed, put on clothes and haul my ass to Angelica’s to look after Portia and Jethro.
I didn’t do any of that.
I just stared at the black screen of my phone, unable to do anything at all to cope with the overwhelming helplessness I was feeling about people who I loved who were fucked up so huge, in that moment, there was no way to unfuck them.
And how much all of that hurt.
“Ryn.”
I continued to stare at my phone.
“Kathryn, sweetheart, look at me.”
I lifted my eyes to Boone’s.
“So, yeah, I’m that girl you give a shot who’s got so much baggage and shit dragging down on her life, you not only wonder what the hell was wrong with you that you gave it a shot, you contemplate moving to another state to escape her and all her garbage.”
“Not even close,” he said gently.
Man, was he this good of a guy?
“They’re blaming me for all of this,” I told him.
“Of course they are, sweetheart,” he replied. “It’s their MO. They don’t do responsibility.”
He got that right.
“Portia’s a good kid,” I told him. “She looks after her brother. She’s not the kind of kid to throw a tantrum. I just…it freaks me out, Boone, to think what’s happening over there that she’d have this extreme of a reaction to me not being around.”
“Maybe you should call your mom,” he suggested.
“And drag her into this mess?” I asked.
“It’s your call, but she might know what’s going down, if she doesn’t, she might want to know what’s going down or she might need to know, in case they blindside her when they call her to help out.”
“One thing I know is going down is that Brenda didn’t look after the kids this weekend after Angelica tried to pull a fast one. Angelica’s been with them all weekend. And obviously, that didn’t go too good.”
“It’s not your problem, Ryn.”
“They’re my niece and nephew.”
He took my jaw in both hands and put his face in mine. “It sucks. It’s hard. I don’t understand how hard it is, but I get that it’s hard. It’s still not your problem. As hard as it might be on those kids, they have to learn how to be a family, however that comes about, and they can’t do that if you pick up the slack for them financially, emotionally and with your time.”
And another sharp shot of air went up my nose.
“Do you think they’re in danger?” he asked.
That thought hadn’t crossed my mind.
At least not in the conventional sense of the word “danger.”
“No,” I answered. “Angelica loves them. Brian adores them. But neglect is neglect, Boone.”
“And that’s what you’re trying to put a stop to, am I right?”
Shit.
He was right.
And I couldn’t put a stop to it if I came running anytime Angelica called and conned, cajoled or threw a tantrum to get me to play her role when she wasn’t feeling like playing it.
That wasn’t being a mother.
She’d started out as young mom, true.
But she didn’t have that excuse anymore.
She had to learn and me doing it for her wasn’t helping.
I knew that Boone knew I’d come to this conclusion when he touched his forehead to mine briefly before he pulled away and dropped his hands from my jaw.
He was right about something else, of course. Mom should know, if only because she would eventually be up to bat to deal with this situation, if one or the other of them hadn’t already called her to go and deal with the situation.