CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE
Hendrix
N othing has been the same since I told him I loved him.
Since Vince and then Nathaniel came to see me.
Since the rehearsal when his eyes owned mine and his heart took a leap back.
It’s like we’re both tiptoeing around each other, but my heart is on the line while he never gave his to begin with.
At least this is almost over. This charade.
And yet, here I am following Jase as he sneaks out of his own house, clearly avoiding me as he goes.
I can handle the heat the impending divorce will hit me with. What I won’t put up with is not having answers. I won’t tolerate him avoiding me completely rather than explaining why I saw love in his eyes—felt it in his touch—and then it turned off like the flip of a switch.
It’s confounding. Confusing.
And maybe that’s why I follow him.
I’ll force him to talk to me one way or another because I deserve more than this cold shoulder. I deserve better from him.
I tell myself it’s not about jealousy, not about insecurity, but the nagging voice in the back of my mind won’t shut up. The way he’s taken secretive calls, stopped bothering to communicate with me—in any form—and then just slipped out of the house without a word—it’s too familiar. Too cliché.
And pride won’t let me walk away without looking him in the face and getting answers.
I keep my distance, trailing behind his car, all while feeling like an idiot as we weave through the city streets.
When he pulls into a public parking lot, I am fortunate enough to find parking on the street a little way back. But I don’t have any time to collect myself and question what the fuck I’m actually doing, because he’s out of his car and jogging down the sidewalk within seconds.
I hurry behind him and then falter when I see the sign above the door he just walked into.
The shelter.
I stop short, my breath catching in my throat. A different kind of guilt curls in my stomach and twists tight. He’s not cheating on me. He’s not secreting away for a rendezvous that will be blasted all over Page Six and humiliate me. He’s not avoiding me because he doesn’t want to talk to me. Today, anyway.
He’s going to help the less fortunate.
I linger outside for a moment and debate whether I should leave. But a stubborn, desperate need to understand pushes me forward.
Inside, the scent of warm food and disinfectant fills the air. From a distance, I spot Jase as he moves through the space with an ease that says he’s comfortable here. At home in a way I’ve never seen him before. He greets people by name and with a warm smile as he hands out trays. He jokes with a few of the people like they’re old friends.
He’s... this is who he is when no one’s watching.
It’s a staggering thought and one that wins my heart no favors as it falls a bit harder for him with the revelation.
Without thinking, I move across the space and step up beside him, grabbing a stack of trays like he did to help distribute.
He stiffens when he sees me, his jaw clenched tight. “What are you doing here?”
“Helping.”
“Hendrix—”
“You don’t get to tell me no.”
His eyes flicker with something unreadable, but he doesn’t argue. Probably solely because he doesn’t want to cause a scene. Instead, he goes back to passing out trays, to making people smile, all while acting like I’m not here.
I pretend not to notice but it stings something fierce.
He talks to the people like they’re normal, like they matter. And they do. But what’s even more fascinating to me is they all know him. They joke with him, tease him, thank him like this is just a regular occurrence.
Because it is.
And yet, he keeps it hidden.
I want to ask why. Why he won’t tell the world about this. Why he keeps his acts of kindness and generosity locked away. But I already know the answer. Jase doesn’t do things for show. He doesn’t want recognition. This is just... who he is.
I’m about to tell him all of this when she appears before me.
The woman is older with wild hair and a familiar tilt to her chin. Her eyes are weary and her cheeks deepen with dimples when she smiles at someone I can’t see. She approaches hesitantly, her eyes darting between us, and that’s when I hear Jase’s quiet “fuck.”
“Jase?” I say, both of them turning to look at me, the same expression on both of their faces.
Oh my God. Is she? No, she can’t be... family, can she? How could someone in his family be living on the streets and needing food from a shelter?
“Look, I had some unexpected news about a family member that threw me. It wasn’t the first time I got news like that, and I’m certain it won’t be the last.”
Is that what he meant? God, that feels like forever ago now.
My heart shatters for him, because I have an awful feeling this isn’t just any family member. How had he described his upbringing? Nathaniel lived with his dad, and Jase lived with his mom.
“...my mom and me, we did our best.”
Oh shit.
Now I understand. The why. The secrecy. The heartache. The everything . How long has he kept this secret and borne the heaviness of this... alone?
Jase’s entire body goes rigid. He doesn’t say a word. Doesn’t move.
The woman—his mother—looks between us, her gaze lingering on Jase with something like recognition, something like longing, but it fades as quickly as it comes. She mumbles something incoherent about people listening to her before turning away and disappearing into the crowd.