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Dr. Perfect: A Contemporary Romance Bundle

Page 29

by Oliver, J. P.


  “What?” he asked, then shook his head. “No, not now. I know that look."

  He crossed his arms tighter. “I’m not about to sit here and talk about feelings with you, Arthur. I’m fine. That tattling brat is the problem, not me.”

  I didn’t let him deter me. “Who are your friends at school? I mean, besides the girl you like? Do you have anyone you hang out with at lunch?”

  He scoffed. “Like I have time to hang out with those losers. But no, I don’t have any friends, Arthur." He turned his head and looked away, then looked back at me, defiant. “I’m a lone wolf. I don’t need friends.”

  “Everyone needs a support system,” I insisted. “And not just family. You need friends you can talk to, about things you wouldn’t tell your parents. You need people who get you, and laugh at your jokes, and see you for the amazing, wonderful, empowered human being you are and not this facade you throw up to protect yourself from being hurt.”

  Leo snorted. “Are you serious right now? Why would I want friends? So they can leave me like everyone else does?”

  “I’ve never left you.”

  He threw his hands up, his voice louder. “Well, congratu-freaking-lations, Arthur, for sticking it out nearly seven years. You made it as long as my own mother did.

  “Only two and a half more years to go until you can wash your hands of me and say you did your best. That’s what she did. If you ditch me now, you can let me bounce around the system for two years, and then you’ll be just like my real mother! Wouldn’t that be an accomplishment?”

  “I’m not trying to replace your mother,” I said, my voice soft as I struggled not to let him drag me into his rage. “Your feelings about your mother are valid, and I want to honor them. But you need to understand that I’m not her, and I will never leave you.”

  “Sure, you won’t. What’s your limit, Arthur? How bad do I have to screw up before you’ll decide you can’t take it anymore, and take me to some group home or something?”

  “I know you’re just trying to get a reaction out of me, and I’m not going for it. It looks like we both need to regroup and come back to this conversation from a calmer and more communicative place. I just need you to know that I love you, and that’s never going to change.”

  I waited for him to say something, but he just glared at me. The pain was etched all over his face, but more than anything, I could see that in that moment, he wasn’t ready to explore such big feelings.

  Maybe Jonas can help me, I thought, wondering if he’d be able to offer any insight. The expensive therapist wasn’t helping, and it was obvious that Leo was crying out for help. But I needed help to make sure I did this right. Leo deserved that much.

  “I’ll wake you up when it’s time to volunteer,” I said. “Sweet dreams.”

  “Whatever,” he said, and I turned and left the room.

  Leo

  I watched Arthur walk away; I almost laughed, but he was gone that fast. I rolled my eyes and picked up the video game controller, my novel right where I’d left it. “He’s an idiot,” I muttered under my breath.

  He was always trying to feel me out and get me to tell him all my feelings. News flash, loser, I thought. I don’t have feelings. If I did, wouldn’t I be crying about my mother still?

  I threw the controller across the room and stood up. I paced the living room, angrily kicking the couch pillows that had tumbled to the floor in my wake. One went straight across the room, knocking into a picture of Arthur standing beside me as I proudly displayed the fish I’d caught in the pond.

  I was such a loser when I was ten, I thought. I stood there, frozen as I watched the pillow fly across the room in slow-motion. When it hit the picture, the glass cracked and the frame slid down the wall and hit the floor.

  I waited, holding my breath to listen for the sound of Arthur, running down the stairs and coming to rescue the picture from the floor. But my heavy heartbeat was the only sound I could hear. I let out the air I’d been holding, my chest pained and heaving, hands shaking in rage.

  The entire room was filled with little glimpses into the happy life I’d been given when Arthur picked me out of all the kids in the group home. My ninth birthday, riding a horse at the state fair. My failed attempt at karate.

  I groaned, putting my hands in my hair and pulling as I wrapped my fingers around the strands, trying to feel anything but the rage that filled me. No one loves you, I heard one voice sneer in my head.

  No wonder your mom left you, another said.

  Must suck to be raised by a fairy, the last voice said.

  The last voice was my own. What if Arthur loves the new man and his son, and stops loving you?

  I threw myself onto the couch and screamed into one of the cushions until I couldn’t think anymore. Arthur was making friends, and for the first time since I could remember, he had a life. He’d even hired someone to watch the store so he could hang out with Mr. Right.

  I yelled again, hot tears on the pillow, my own thoughts screaming back at me. Arthur was going to find the love he’d always wanted, and then he wouldn’t need me anymore. Why would he, when he could join a new family, complete with a perfect father and his perfect son?

  Arthur was going to find out that I was worthless, and he was going to move on. I would be alone. And no one would understand me.

  Nobody had ever understood me. Sure, Arthur had talked about growing up an only child, but that wasn’t the same. At least his parents had loved him enough to raise him. My dad had left, then one day, my mom hadn’t come home.

  He acts like growing up an only child is even close to what happened to me, I thought, still trying to suffocate myself in the couch cushion. He was an idiot, and he would never get it.

  I collapsed onto my knees and slid down to the floor, grabbing a throw pillow as I went, holding it against my face so Arthur wouldn’t hear me sobbing from his room. I didn’t want him to come running down to save me. I wanted to be alone.

  That was what I deserved.

  11

  Jonas

  I was nearly done making breakfast when Eddie stumbled down the stairs, dressed, his hair sprayed into submission, his eyes groggy. When he plopped down at the table, I quietly slid his plate in front of him and handed him an orange juice. He devoured the bagel in record time, then picked each fruit out one at a time, eating all the grapes, then the strawberries, and so on.

  “You know, you’ve always picked through your fruit like that, even when you were a toddler,” I said.

  “You’ve told me before,” Eddie said.

  “Do you like the new cream cheese? It’s French.”

  “It tastes like a bagel.”

  I laughed. “You should probably shake off that funk before we get going. Today is going to be hard enough; starting the day off with grumpy will only exacerbate things.”

  “Can you use normal words? Please, Dad. It’s a weekend. I don’t want to think this hard on a weekend. It’s bad enough I have to spend the day with him.”

  “That reminds me. You’ll need a spiral notebook and something to write with.”

  Eddie looked at me, eyes a little wide. “What for?”

  “Don’t talk with your mouth full." I sighed. “Look, I don’t like this any more than you do, but the quickest way to end this is to do it right the first time. Principal Moss insisted that you both journal your experience and thoughts. She wants to make sure that you’re getting out of it what you should be.”

  “That a bully can push me until my breaking point, then we both get punished because the school didn’t handle him sooner." Eddie rolled his eyes. “Yeah, that’s a great lesson for both of us. He gets away with everything, and I get caught under the zero-tolerance rule. I was defending myself.”

  “I am not thrilled with how they’re handling this, either, but maybe this will be good for you.”

  He was taking his dish to the sink when I said it. As soon as the words left my mouth, he spun and glared at me. “Good for me? Whose
side are you on?”

  “Yours, Eddie. But this isn’t going to be the only bully you know in your life. If you don’t learn solid conflict resolution now—”

  “You’re victim blaming!” he accused.

  “You’re twisting my words. And I’m not saying this is your fault. What I am saying is that in your adult life, you’re going to run into a lot of people just like this kid. If you know how to handle things, life will be easier.”

  Eddie shook his head, grabbing his backpack and throwing it over his shoulder with more force than he needed. “I’ll be in the car.”

  I followed him out, and we rode silently to Hopeway House.

  Eddie got out of the car before I’d put it in park, his shoulders still stiff with anger at what I’d said. I groaned inwardly and prepared myself for the day ahead. If he thinks he’s mad, he should be me, I thought.

  I counted to ten, then let out a breath, then repeated the process. When I opened the door, I wasn’t any calmer, but I’d resigned myself to the day ahead. I was going to do what I could to make this as easy for Eddie as possible. Even if he didn’t think I was.

  I signed in and hurried to catch up with Eddie, who had already signed his name in the book and was heading toward a double door that led to a small conference room. He pulled the door open, and I caught it just as it started to swing shut. Then I heard a sound that made my blood run cold, and suddenly, I wasn’t so interested in conflict resolution.

  “‘Sup, loser?” a teen voice sneered when Eddie walked over the threshold.

  The hair on my arms stood, and I fought the rage. Then I froze as another voice spoke.

  “Leo, please! We’re supposed to be resolving our issues, not creating new ones. You promised you would try.”

  I shook my head, dazed. “There’s no way.”

  But when I entered the room, my eyes landed on the familiar face I’d watched, the shoulder-length luscious hair I’d run my fingers through just the night before. “Arthur,” I said, shocked, my voice breathless.

  He looked from me to Eddie, then to the teen who sat near him, glaring at Eddie, then back at me again. When he hung his head and stared at his fingers, I knew it was real.

  A kind-looking woman with a low ponytail and plain blonde hair smiled from the head of the table. “I see that everyone is here,” she said. “I’m Mrs. Granger. I’ll be your facilitator today.”

  “I thought we were feeding the homeless or something,” the teen sitting with Arthur said with a laugh. “What are you going to ‘facilitate’?" He used his hands to make dramatic air quotes, and my ire rose.

  Arthur looked mortified, but the woman was unruffled. “You must be Leo,” she said warmly. “I look forward to helping you through this difficult time in your life. I hope you’ll find working with military vets an enjoyable and rewarding experience.”

  “Whatever,” Leo said.

  “Leo, please,” Arthur hissed.

  Arthur hadn’t looked at me since that initial moment when everything had fallen into place. I wasn’t sure I could make eye contact right then, anyway. I was so angry, I was having a hard time keeping my breathing calm and even.

  Keep it together. You can’t let Eddie see you lose your temper, I thought, but it was doing nothing to calm me.

  How could Arthur raise a bully? Bad kids came from bad homes. I’d seen it time and time again. If Leo was acting out, there was a reason.

  What had I gotten myself into?

  Mrs. Granger was still talking, her singsong voice grating on my nerves as I fought to keep myself under control. It was a losing battle.

  “So, Leo,” Mrs. Granger said. “Tell me what led to this moment. Why are you here?”

  “Principal Moss sent me here,” Leo said with a derisive snort.

  “Of course, she did, Leo,” came Mrs. Granger’s placid response. “But what actions led her to make that decision?”

  Leo shrugged. “I guess you could say that Eddie’s a giant pu—”

  “Leo!” Arthur said.

  Leo feigned a look of genuine surprise. “Father,” he mocked. “Are we not having an authentic conversation here? Are you policing my truth?”

  “Knock it off, Leo,” Arthur said.

  Leo leaned back in his chair and crossed his arms. “Whatever. I was just saying what I was thinking. Eddie can act like a victim all he wants, but if he hadn’t called my father a fairy, I wouldn’t have had to pound him.”

  Before I could say anything, Eddie was on his feet, leaning across the table toward Leo. I grabbed him around the waist and held him back as he shrieked in rage. “I never said anything about your father being gay. I didn’t know your father was gay.”

  “Sure you didn’t,” Leo shot back, clearly amused that he’d gotten under Eddie’s skin.

  I pulled Eddie back into his seat, but Eddie wasn’t done. “My father is gay, too, you moron.”

  The smile slid off Leo’s face. He looked from Eddie to me, then back again, his jaw slack as he worked through everything. “But you look like him,” he said at last.

  Eddie scowled and gave his head a little shake of confusion. “He’s my dad. Of course I look like him.”

  “Now who’s the moron?” Leo said. “Two dudes can’t have a baby.”

  “No,” Eddie said, his voice calmer now. “But my dad can use science and a surrogate." Eddie shrugged. “There’s more than one way to become a parent.”

  I almost missed the moment that emotion covered Leo’s face, then was buried almost as quickly. He hid the pain behind blue eyes that were gorgeous and nearly gray, his sandy hair hanging in his eyes, in desperate need of a trim. He made the connections quickly, with mental leaps and bounds, and when he stopped taunting Eddie, I knew he’d figured it out.

  I’d gone to great lengths and expense to become a father, and Eddie’s entire life, he’d never questioned whether he was wanted or not. Leo hadn’t been afforded that luxury, and I could see that pain colored how he viewed the world around him. I hadn’t gotten too far into Leo’s story with Arthur, but I had been working with kids like Leo for far too long not to see the writing on the wall.

  Abandonment. I knew Leo was adopted; I just hadn’t known why until that moment. It was all starting to make sense, and that deep pain, coupled with Arthur’s obviously permissive parenting, was a volatile combination.

  “Stop staring at me,” Leo said angrily.

  I shook my head. “You know, you don’t have to lash out. You can talk to your teachers and your dad about how you feel. You don’t need to take it out on Eddie.”

  “What do you know?” Leo asked, anger flashing in his eyes. “You don’t know nothing.”

  “I know that you’ve been through a lot, and with a little guidance, you can turn that anger into something constructive.”

  Arthur stiffened. “I’m doing my best,” he grumbled.

  I turned to look at him. “It wasn’t a comment on your parenting, though trying to be his friend isn’t doing him any favors. Troubled kids need direction and structure.”

  “He’s not troubled,” Arthur said, indignant. “He had a rough start, but he is loved, and he is empowered to be everything he can be.”

  I sighed. “Arthur, do you hear yourself? This isn’t a personal growth seminar for adults. He’s a kid.

  “He doesn’t need you to honor his truth, or any of that new age mumbo-jumbo. He needs you to be the adult. You need to set rules and boundaries, and when he crosses them, there need to be consequences.”

  “Your way can’t be working too well if your son is here, too,” Arthur challenged.

  “He was defending himself against your son’s physical attack. His being here has more to do with a poorly-written zero-tolerance policy than parenting.”

  “Both boys have things they need to work on,” Mrs. Granger said. “No one is innocent here. But this is a very good start, and we’ve made a lot of progress today.”

  Arthur and I turned to glare at her simultaneously, but she ha
d already directed her attention to the boys.

  “Gentlemen, if you’ll put today’s date on the top of the page, your parents will step out of the room so you can journal quietly.”

  “Yippee,” Leo said sarcastically.

  I stood, walking out the door behind me without waiting for Arthur. I heard him call out to me, but I kept going.

  The air was crisp and smelled heavily of the dew that still clung to the air when I stepped outside. Arthur came through the door a few seconds later and stopped several feet behind me. “What the hell was that, Jonas?”

  “What was what?” I asked calmly, without turning to look at him.

  “My parenting isn’t permissive. Just because I don’t run my house like a drill sergeant doesn’t mean that I’m permissive.”

  “I don’t want to talk about this right now,” I said.

  “When are we going to talk about it?”

  “Maybe when I get over the shock of learning that it’s your child that’s been harassing my boy?” I turned. “Or maybe when I can look at you again without the image of you spinelessly asking your son to stop acting like a holy terror in that mediation room.

  “Jeez, Arthur. He’s out of control, and you just beg him to behave. You’ve handed him the reins, and he’s running amok. How can you expect to parent if you cower when his temper flares?”

  “That’s not fair. You don’t know what he’s been through.”

  “No more than a lot of kids, yet he chooses to act out and lash out. He’s hurting, Arthur. And you enabling his behavior is only making it worse.”

  “What are you saying, that this is my fault?" He looked crushed, but I wasn’t about to pull any punches when it came to my kid’s safety.

  “No, Arthur. I’m saying to grow some balls and control your damn kid.”

  I left him standing there, heading back into the building in time to see Mrs. Granger emerge with a big smile on her face.

  “How is everything going?” I asked. Any excuse not to talk to Arthur when he appeared beside me a few moments later.

 

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