Reparation of Sin: A Sovereign Sons Novel by Zavarelli, A. (a book to read .txt) ๐
Read free book ยซReparation of Sin: A Sovereign Sons Novel by Zavarelli, A. (a book to read .txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
Read book online ยซReparation of Sin: A Sovereign Sons Novel by Zavarelli, A. (a book to read .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Zavarelli, A.
The third drawer is locked as are all three on the other side. If thereโs anything here, I wonโt find it unless I break into them.
Standing, I go to the antique armoire against the far wall and open it. I donโt expect to find files, and I donโt. Instead, I see two unopened bottles of the scotch he likes to drink, some crystal tumblers, and, on the shelf beside those, a glass box that looks a lot like the one he keeps that mask in in my room. The one he hasnโt made me wear since the night I passed out.
My heart races, and my brain tries to tell me that what Iโm seeing canโt be. Because it would be too humiliating. Too horrible.
I open the lid. Itโs not locked. Maybe itโs my imagination, but I swear I smell the coppery scent of blood as I take out the neatly folded, unwashed sheets. The bloody sheets from our wedding night.
I try to make sense of this. Why would he have this? Why would he keep it? But then I remember. After heโd taken me and Iโd had that awful mask on my head, I remember what heโd muttered that my mind hadnโt quite processed, not then.
โI wonder if Eli will be pleased to see how I bled his daughter.โ
Is he planning on giving this to my father if or when he wakes? Still? After everything?
I drop the sheet and push my hands into my hair. God. I am a fool! I wonder if heโs laughing at me now wherever he is. This fool that is his wife.
โFuck you, Santiago!โ I pull the sheet out of the glass box so violently that the box drops to the floor when a corner of the cloth catches. Iโm glad for the carpet, or it would have shattered, Iโm sure, but as I bend to pull the sheet free, I see a single long crack across the bottom of the box.
I donโt care. Iโm not hiding from him. Iโll tell him I burned the damned thing. Because that is exactly what I plan to do with it.
So, I leave the glass box where it is and make my way back through the dark house. Iโm fully aware as I head to the back door that he has cameras everywhere and will see what Iโve done, but again, I remind myself that I donโt care because he obviously doesnโt. Colette was wrong. What she thinks she saw in the way he looks at me isnโt anything but ownership. Possession. Hate.
I slip on the pair of shoes Iโd left at the door earlier when Iโd gone for a walk, unlock and open the back door, pausing when I do, wincing as I wait for an alarm. But nothing comes. Iโm not actually sure if the house has an alarm, but if so, itโs not on.
The night is black, moonless, and cloudless, and itโs cold. My sweater will have to be enough, though, and before I know it, I find myself at the doors of the small chapel. When I push one open, I see the red of the Tabernacle lamp and step inside.
The door closes behind me, and Iโm alone inside the old stone church. The place has an eerie feel to it now, and itโs no less cold than it was outside.
I walk to the front of the church and drop the sheet on the stone altar. I pick up the box of matches to light more of the altar candles feeling less sure of what Iโm about to do now than I had just a few minutes ago.
Once more candles are lit, I see the photographs on the altar, and although Leandro is an adult in the framed photo, I can still see the child he was in that photo in Santiagoโs book. I shift my gaze to his father and meet his cold eyes. They stare at me from inside the frame, accusing me from beyond the grave.
Itโs his fault Santiago is the way he is.
And I wonder if we do have a baby together, what kind of father will Santiago be if the only role model he had was this cold, brutal man?
What kind of father could he be if he can do to the mother of his child what he plans to do with this soiled sheet?
โYou are a fool,โ I tell myself and light one more match. I set it to the bloody sheet and watch the flame take and spread.
30 Santiago
Exhaustion is settling heavily into my bones by the time I pull through the gates of The Manor. The fresh sting of my sister's betrayal has left me empty. Vacant. I need sleep and a moment of peace.
Ivy will be upstairs. Soft and warm and available as a balm to the chaos in my wretched soul. The thought of being inside her, close to her, is the only solace I can find in the current landscape of reality.
Those thoughts drive me forward, sustaining my last shred of sanity as I park the car and drag my rigid body from the metal frame. The scars on my torso are aching tonight. A pain that surges again during the most inconvenient times, threatening to incapacitate me. My limbs are weighted down like lead, causing my feet to drag as I turn toward the front steps. In my desperation to get inside my sanctuary and collapse, I almost miss the sight of Marco darting across the garden on the east
Comments (0)