Mason
MASON
S eventeen. I called her seventeen fucking times. It hurts worse knowing she left me for something other than the one reason she should. Knowing that I couldn’t keep her on my own. I held on too tight. It’s my own fucking mistake.
But I saw what I could do for her.
What I could do to her.
And that made me feel … something other than this. This fucking hate that I have brewing inside of me.
What the hell did I expect? I expected to keep her. For her to learn to love me. For that to cancel out what I’d done.
The ice clinks in my glass as I grab a bottle of Macallan single malt.
No reasoning or any amount of logic justifies why I feel betrayed and alone. Not a damn explanation can leave me feeling as though this is something that doesn’t need to be mended. The liquor sloshes in the bottle as I read the label, my fingers playing with the seal.
My father gave me this bottle as a gift when I started the company with Liam. When I told him I was going into business for myself, but still doing what I loved. I felt so much pride that day. My breathing quickens and my grip on the bottle tightens.
Relax. I grit my teeth, feeling an uneasy tightness settle through my body.
Jules was a sweet distraction; how fucking ironic. She pulled me away from reality. She made me feel like I had time. Like I had a choice.
I toss the seal onto my sideboard buffet, opening the bottle and not bothering to appreciate the rich scent before pouring it into the glass.
If my father were here, he’d give me hell for drinking it over ice.
“But that bastard’s not here,” I sneer under my breath.
“No one is.” The last thought leaves my chest feeling hollow.
I take a long drink of the whisky that flows so easily.
Burning and traveling through my chest, down deeper and stirring in the pit of my stomach.
My head still tipped back I take another and finish the damn thing, the ice frigid against my lips.
I slam the glass down a little harder than I should and let the liquor hit me.
It takes too long and I find myself gazing straight ahead to the family portrait sitting on top of the buffet. This room, the dining room, is the only room in the whole place where there’s a picture of anyone.
The rest of the house is devoid of anything truly personal. But what do I really have that’s personal anyway? My lacrosse stick and all those fucking uniforms stayed at my parents’ where they belonged. I’m sure they were thrown away long ago.
I pour more of the whisky into the glass, feeling my breathing slow as my body sways and I remember the first day I walked in here.
I’d just gotten all new clothes, all new furniture, all new everything.
This home was the start of the professional version of me.
All that was in the cardboard box I was holding were a handful of old tee shirts and a few postcards from a friend of mine in Germany I’d met after I graduated high school and got my first job in construction. We’ve lost touch since then.
I take a sip, listening to the ice rattle against the glass. The whisky sits on my tongue and I press it against my teeth before swallowing. All the awards I’ve won are in my office. Framed and arranged just so on the wall.
My gaze drifts back to the portrait of the three of us.
I’m standing between the two of them in it.
I don’t look a damn thing like her, like my mother.
I’m the spitting image of my father. Mom’s smile is soft, but her eyes are what sparkle.
She was so expressive. Soft spoken, but she made what she said count.
She could make an entire room laugh by only speaking once the whole night. I let out a breath, looking at the firm hand my father has on my shoulder in the photograph.
He liked that about her. He told me once she was the perfect example of what a wife should be. That was before he caught her cheating.
I wonder if that man, the one she risked her marriage to sleep with, loved to hear her talk. I wonder if that’s why she did it. Because she had more to say than just a single sentence.
I down the whisky, dragging out the chair at the head of the table and taking a seat. I sag and let my head lean back against the crest rail of the antique chair.
This room is so dark. With black textured wallpaper on the longest wall and the other three painted a soft gray, I wanted it to feel masculine. I remember telling the designer that. I told her I wanted it to feel like me.
On the right, centered in the room and next to the dark mahogany buffet, is a long gas fireplace. It’s surrounded by a sleek marble hearth. More black. Even the light fixture in the room, a circular pendulum that holds the light inside, is black.
I huff a breath into the short glass and suck an ice cube into my mouth.
This is me.
A heart of fire that’s never lit. A dark past that only holds a single moment of time in significance.
I wonder if that bitch designer knew what she was doing.
I kick the leg of the antique chair next to me. It’s carved wood that’s been stained. The deep brown leather of the chairs has a worn look to it.
What’s ironic is how much I loved this room. I loved everything about it when I first laid eyes on it. The only addition I made was that fucking silver picture frame and then I filled that buffet with liquor.
Thank fuck I did that. I raise my glass even though it’s empty, save for ice. “To you, you fucking prick,” I toast the picture and take another ice cube into my mouth.
I crunch down, wondering if the last three words were for my father or for me.
Pushing the glass across the slick table that I’ve never sat at for more than a drink or two, I pull out my cell phone from my back pocket.
I fucking want Jules.
She’s pure and sweet. Even if she overthinks every last detail, there’s so much about her that I want to keep. I really shouldn’t have her. I’ve already been given more than I deserve.
I can’t do this anymore.
The screen lights up as I hear her words in my head. She shouldn’t get to decide when it’s over. Not by herself and not like that. Not because of something so fucking unimportant.
We work together. We make each other happy. I’m tired of living this life with nothing to fight for. I want her back.
My phone rings in my hand, startling me and I drop it on the table. It vibrates, moving slightly as the ringtone goes off again.
Groaning and rubbing my eyes, I feel the heat of the drunken night start to take me in before answering the call.
“Hello?” I think my voice is even. I’m fairly certain it comes out strong.
“Mason, we need to talk.” I recognize Liam’s voice immediately.
I brace my elbow on the table and rest my head in my hand before pinching the bridge of my nose. We do need to talk; we need to have a long talk about how I can’t go through with this.
All the money is spent.
But I can’t keep pushing forward.
I need to return it all to my father and cut ties. I need to turn him in.
Every bit of breath in my lungs leaves me, making my body feel light and my stomach sick. We’re going to go fucking bankrupt, but I can’t be under his thumb any longer.
“We need that investment from your father’s firm.” A sad, pathetic laugh leaves me as I register what Liam’s said.
“We already have it.” I stagger to the buffet, placing the phone on speaker, leaving it on the dining room table as I pour another glass. The bottle’s already halfway gone. “We’ve already spent it,” I say loud and clear as I bring the amber liquor to my lips.
This time I inhale the sweet scent. Fuck, it smells as good as it tastes.
“We need more.” I gulp down the drink, staring at the phone on the table as Liam continues. “We got the estates on the Upper East Side and the committee approved the demolition plans.”
As I take a step forward, I start to regret having the last two drinks. My head feels groggy and my body hot. “No, they didn’t.”
“I got it overturned. We’ve got everything approved, Mason.” I can hear the glee in Liam’s voice. Pride even. He claps on the other end of the phone, a rough laugh filling the room as it spins around me. “We just need that last check from your father.”
Setting both of my elbows on the table to steady myself, I tell him, “We don’t need shit from him.”
It takes a moment for Liam to respond, “What?” He took so long I almost forgot he was on the phone.
“Are you drunk?” Liam asks, his annoyance only thinly veiled.
“No.” I’m quick to deny it, but I know I am.
“What the hell’s wrong with you?” he asks. “What’s going on between the two of you?”
I shake my head, not wanting to answer. “We aren’t taking shit from my father.” It’s all I can say.
“We are. We need those funds by Monday.” Liam’s voice is hard but also panicked.
“We’ll find someone else.” My eyes narrow as I steady my breathing and steel my resolve. I refuse to owe a man like him. I refuse to play by his rules.
“By Monday?” he says, raising his voice and the disbelief rings through. “Mason, we can’t. We’ll lose the deal. It’s not like no one else was waiting for this property. It took almost a year to get it.”
Liam’s voice drones on as he lists off every reason why this plan is fucked. How we’ll be ruined. How everything will fall around us.
I already knew it, though.
I stand, leaving the glass where it is and the bottle of whisky open, taking the phone and leaving the dining room.
“I don’t give a fuck.” I take a deep breath, listening to the silence on the other end of the phone. “I’m not taking another cent from him.”
I have to face reality. Even if it fucking kills me.