Fifteen Years Later
Rain drummed steadily against the windows. In Greenvale, the weather always turned rainy and unbearably muggy when spring bled into summer.
Gwh sat at her desk, carefully sketching a new design, when a shrill voice suddenly pierced the air above her. She barely had time to look up before scalding tea sshed toward her face. She jerked back just in time, narrowly avoiding a nasty burn.
"Bill Crawford is my boyfriend. We''re getting married next month. Do you have no shame, trying to steal him from me?"
Gwh met the woman''s rather unremarkable face. She and Bill Crawford had broken up three months ago, and yet here was another one of his so-called "girlfriends" causing a scene.
In the six months she had dated Bill, Gwh had been ambushed by his "girlfriends" no less than fifty times, each one different from thest. This one was the most dramatic-already talking about marriage.
Calmly, Gwh dabbed away a few stray drops of tea from her sleeve, her expression cool and unruffled. "Sorry to disappoint you, but Bill and I broke up ages ago."
"You''re lying. That can''t be true. He told me you''re the woman he loves most!" Pansy clung to her story, tears glinting in the corners of her eyes.
Really?
Gwh nearlyughed out loud. The love of his life? If Bill Crawford could even remember her name after three months, she''d eat her hat.
With no other choice, Gwh scrolled through her blocked contacts, found his number, and unblocked it for the sake of evidence.
"Gwyn, have you finallye around?" Bill''s voice oozed through the phone, making Gwh want to gag.
She shoved the phone into Pansy''s hand. "Here, see for yourself."
"Bill Crawford-? Pansy started, her voice syrupy enough to make Gwh
nauseous.
"Who is this?" Bill cut in, leaving Pansy momentarily speechless. What followed was a babbling stream of excuses Bill directed at Gwh.
She didn''t listen to a single word. With one impatient swipe, she blocked his number again.
A minuteter, Bill called from a new number, but Gwh didn''t bother to answer. Her boss was calling her into the office.
"Gwh, you''re the most promising designer we have," her manager said, "but Quinn is the owner''s daughter."
Gwh understood perfectly. She smiled faintly. "I quit."
Her manager hesitated, guilt flickering across his features. "I''ll see to it you get an extra month''s pay."
A sly smile yed on Gwh''s lips, the beauty mark beneath her eye adding a touch of mischief. "Whatever you think is fair."
A few thousand more or less-it didn''t matter to her.
During her years studying abroad, her darling mother had deposited thirty thousand into her ount every month without fail. At this
point, Gwh had lost track of how much money was sitting in her bank ount.
After graduation, her mother asked if she wanted to join the family business. Gwh refused.
As a child, she hadn''t understood much. But as she grew up and watched her father lie unconscious year after year, her heart had never once known peace.
She didn''t stay in Starfall City, nor did her dating uncles convince her to remain in Evermore. Instead, she moved to a small southern town and took a job as lead designer at a modest firm.
The climate was pleasant, the scenery beautiful. She liked it here, and decided, for now, to stay.
Call it running away, or refusing to face reality for over a decade, she hadn''t been able to face her father-or her mother, or Chris and Celia. The twins grew up never knowing their father''s embrace, and she couldn''t help but feel responsible.
BUM
If not for her, Chris and Celia would have had a father.
Of course, these were things she would never admit to her mother. She didn''t want her to worry.
As Gwh left the office, the gentle rain outside had turned to a steady drizzle.
Her phone vibrated in her hand. She nced at the screen.
"I know where you are. I''ll find you, Gwyn. I know you love me. Please, stop fighting it, okay?"