Chapter 23 Natasha
NATASHA
I’d watch the funniest spoofs on gangster movies where the mafia dad wanted to protect their daughter from the bad boy. But when the laughter ended, I still lived in this life.
In my world, if Pop asked, Hey, should I pop this guy for you?, it wouldn’t be a joke. It wouldn’t be cute. It would be deadly.
But more frightening than this dilemma? Pop hadn’t mentioned the short video clip. The photos of Lachlan and some random Latina, embracing at his front door in the dead of night.
A booty call.
A hook up.
A betrayal.
And me?
I was the punchline.
Because the paparazzi didn’t stop at one clip. No. They stitched the images of his late-night visitor beside every soft, romantic photo Lachlan and I had taken in Greece. Every kiss. Every smile. Every moment that once made me feel safe, treasured … loved.
How had they gotten those pictures?
The screen flashed as my alarm blared, a reminder of my therapy appointment in an hour. Didn’t need the alarm. A pitiful laugh clawed my throat. I glanced around the peaceful, nature-themed waiting room. Light green walls. A stone facade with water trickling down. I’d arrived over an hour early.
But the ambiance didn’t touch the grief scraping in my chest. Not the green walls. Not the gentle bubbling of the water feature. Not the scent of lemongrass and eucalyptus pulsing from the corner diffuser.
Grief didn’t care how peaceful the room appeared. Sorrow wrapped around my ribcage like a wire, digging deeper with every breath. My limbs were heavy. My face, hot. I drowned in my own body while Beverly Hills moved on outside this stupid room with its fake river and throw pillows.
I blinked. A tear escaped.
Then another.
Some life moments caused a heart to crack.
This wasn’t that.
Someone reached into my chest with a fist, ripping out my heart, and showing it to me still beating—before throwing it onto the dirt and stepping on it.
I clutched the phone without meaning to. Like I needed answers from the man I loved. He was everywhere. In my hands. My memories. My blood.
A name I couldn’t say.
A face I couldn’t forget.
A man I couldn’t stop loving.
Another text buzzed.
I flinched, the sound an insult.
Lachlan.
He was still reaching for me. He’d left voicemails and texted even before the news broke. He knew the destruction of us was just about to go viral.
And somehow I wanted to answer him.
God help me.
I yearned to hear his voice.
To beg him to tell me it wasn’t what it looked like. To explain. To lie to me. That was how deep this went.
Forcing myself to avert my gaze from the screen, I caught my reflection in the shiny, glass tabletop. Mascara smudged. Eyes red. Just another stupid girl crying over a … cheater?
Footsteps approached, then the therapist’s secretary tilted her head. “We have you down for 11 a.m.?”
My bottom lip quivered. “Yep.”
She nodded, knowingly. “Dr. Vashone’s 10 a.m. usually arrives a hair after the grace period. If they’re late, I’ll send them away. Squeeze you in early. Okay?”
“Thanks,” I murmured.
Two more text ribbons popped up on my phone. Jordyn’s was first.
Was she trying to vouch for him or—
Nope.
JORJOR: Are you free tonight? Let’s go to dinner, Cutie Pie. My treat. Or let’s double with Jamie and you know who.
Ugh. I didn’t need her in my ear about Lorenzo. She’d endured frequent abuse. Any sign of disloyalty, and she’d jump ship. Made sense.
Instead, I responded to my brother’s text.
BOOBIE: How you holding up? Sis??
ME: Jordyn married an asexual who worships her. No exaggeration. Against my wishes, she’d told me Jamie’s very generous in bed. Sexual assault victims, they can be intense.
Yeah, deflection at its best. My eyes returned to the last line. Sexual assault victims, they could be intense. Take me, for instance. I placed my heart on my sleeve and made myself transparent to Lachlan.
What if my confession bothered him? I was beginning to doubt the spark we had. But … what if … it was love?
BOOBIE: Who are these ppl?
BOOBIE: Stop speaking in riddles! Answer my call.
ME: Lemme alone, Boobie. I’M HEARTbrOKEN! I deserve some dramatics that aren’t my own. And I know you want the go ahead to kick Lach’s ass.
BOOBIE: I AM VASSILIEVICH KARO RESNOV. NOT BOOBIE Now quit playing and say yes
Ugh, I couldn’t talk to my brother.
“Ms. Resnova, Dr. Vashone will see you now.”
I sat on a dark-green velvet chaise and felt more exposed. Across from me, a Black woman lifted her kind eyes from a clipboard.
Through a tangle of tears, I leaned back against the chaise and spoke. “Lachlan was there for me at night when nobody ever hears me cry.” His kiss drove the monsters away from my dreams. My throat tightened.
Tears blurred the room. I blinked fast, then gave up and let them fall.
“But this man—his profile is a photographer’s dream.
Clean, powerful lines. A master class in angles and depth.
His eyes …” I covered my face, shoulders convulsing as I sobbed into my hands.
“His eyes are light and shadow in perfect balance. I didn’t even understand how to maximize light depth until junior year at UCLA. ”
“Girl …” The professional in her broke for a moment, then Dr. Vashone schooled her features and straightened in her seat. “He’s handsome, I get it.”
“I don’t even need a SIM card to recall every memory. The way he held me when I cried. When I told him about … Adrian.” I cleared my throat because I still wasn’t ready to tell anyone else about the Russian. I’d just told Lach the truth, and now our relationship had gone up in flames.
A shaky breath escaped.
As I continued, only one person knew the full magnitude of my nightmares, and his arms should’ve been holding me tight.
Tonight, I sat in the basement. An old episode of Abbott Elementary on mute while I burrowed beneath a weighted blanket when a text came through.
Lorenzo. I hadn’t responded about meeting him at the hospital to volunteer today.
I chewed my lip. Did his cousin’s failed battle with cancer compel me not to press the Block button?
I couldn’t say he’d done anything wrong, but something inside me wanted nothing more to do with him.
The smallest of smiles formed on my mouth, and I swiped a tear, reminiscing on his argument with Lachlan. So messy. I responded via text.
ME: You’re part of the male species. So, it’s fair to ignore you now.
LORENZO: Ignore me at dinner? U sit on the opposite side of the candlelight? Neither of us says a word? How does that sound?
ME: I could block you?
LORENZO: Okay. Too much. Too soon. Got it. Please don’t block me. Let me be the supportive friend to a broken hearted girl.
The response echoed in my mind, spoken with that sexy Italian accent. Right words … wrong guy. I pitched the phone into the darkness.
The sound of it crashing onto the marble floor never came.
“Who’s there?” I called out. The television light of the muted sitcom reached the air hockey table.
“Me.” Pop’s reply held the usual Russian growl but lacked the strain from our arguments.
“You happy?” I asked.
With a huff, he strolled over, holding a carton of Cookie’s I respected your privacy.” He pulled out two spoons from his sweats pocket.
I plucked one from his hand. “Thanks.”
“For the ice cream or the privacy?”
“Both.”
He sat down on the couch beside me and roughed a hand over his face. “Am I turning into my father?”
“Don’t know. Only met Anatoly once. Yes—”
“Yes?” His eyes snapped in my direction, square jaw stiffening. Dang. Pop resembled a superhero even during a minor meltdown.
“Well, yes, if you considered him the world’s greatest father.” I played with the huge diamond chain Pop always handed to Vadim before the cutman prepped him for a match.
The tension in his shoulders drained, and I smiled, body jittering while another cry overcame me, my hand gripping the diamond cross that was now mine.
My dad wrapped me in his arms. Perhaps I didn’t crave Lachlan’s hug?
I just needed the love of a man whom I could trust. After a while, my parents surrounded me on both sides.
When cries turned to sniffles, Momma shooed Dad away. “Time for a girl chat.”
“Nyet, Zariah. Moya doch’ needs me.”
“Listen, I get it. You’re a Russian man in touch with your feminine side.” She cupped his jaw. “But you gotta go, baby.”
He relented and grumbled every step of the way to the wrought-iron stairs.
Mom cupped my face, her thumbs soothing my tears.
“It hurts, Momma.” The words wobbled out.
“I know, baby, I know.”
“H-how do you f-fall out of love with someone?”
“You don’t fall out of love, girl. You grieve the love. Mourn what it meant. Bury the expectations. The hope that you cannot re-orchestrate. You let yourself cry it out until the ache dulls into a memory, and you can breathe without feeling like salt water is bursting your lungs.”
The melody of her tone poured into my soul, soothing the aches and pain. Soothing the wounds so the scars wouldn’t run too deep within my heart.