Читать книгу When Somebody Loves You Back - Mary B. Morrison - Страница 16
CHAPTER 7 Darius
Оглавление“Oh, wee! A brotha’s feelin’ kinda nice,” Darius said, holding his dick while waiting for the elevator. Mentally he’d willed himself back to health, focusing on the good stuff. “Come on, man before she wakes up.”
Press. Press. Press.
Ding!
“It’s about time.” Darius touched the L button, admiring his handsome smiling face in the mirror.
The doors opened. “Oh, shit!” Lowering his head, Darius turned his face away from the registration desk. “That nosy chick is still working.”
“Bye, Mr. Williams. It was my pleasure having you. Do come again,” she said, laughing, returning to her conversation with her coworker. All Darius heard was, “Girrlll, let me tell you about him.”
How in the fuck was she going to tell somebody about him when all she knew was what she’d read in the newspaper? Women like her were the reason Darius didn’t share his dick with groupies. Retrieving his car from the valet attendant, he proceeded to his original destination before he had been abruptly sidetracked by Ashlee. He’d watch the videos recorded by his hidden cameras of her roaming throughout his house later. No, on second thought, he wouldn’t. Ashlee wasn’t worth him spending that much time tracing her steps, but he’d have every single lock in his home changed immediately. Now that he had her keys to his house and her house, Ashlee would never trespass on his property again.
Darius drove along the freeway, lowered his window, tossed out Ashlee’s keys. She had no reason to see him again. None. Fucking Ashlee took a dead weight off his shoulders and his dick. Finally, Slugger was momentarily satisfied. In or out of the bedroom, Ashlee didn’t compare to Fancy. Ashlee was his best friend and stepsister since they were kids, so conceivably they might never stop loving one another, but Darius wouldn’t marry Ashlee if she were the only pussy on his jock. Yeah, he was spoiled but whose fault was that?
Reflecting on his upbringing, Darius thought his childhood was better than most kids’. His mom, Jada Diamond Tanner, was a self-made millionaire all of his life, making him a millionaire the second he was conceived. There was nothing that Darius wanted, didn’t have, couldn’t get, including women. But like most children, he’d taken his mother for granted. That she’d always be there for him no matter what he’d done. This time he’d committed the unthinkable, unimaginable, unbelievable. If God delivered him once, He shouldn’t have to deliver him again. He could. But would He?
Powering on his cell phone, Darius listened to his messages. “Darius, call me—” Darius deleted the call when he heard Fancy inhale. “Darius, you bastard! Where the fuck are my keys!” Ashlee yelled. Darius turned off his phone, tossing it into the passenger seat. Women. His passion. Their problem.
Darius’s time had come to grow up and become a man. A real man. This time was different because he actually wanted to do the right thing—things. If not now…when? Tired of hurting people, he questioned his purpose in life, rotating the ignition key counterclockwise, silencing his engine. The music continued playing.
“It’s so good, loving somebody, when that somebody loves you back.”
Who did he honestly love? Feeling his eyebrows draw into a uni-brow, Darius listened to the lyrics while staring at her front door. He did love her. But not more than she loved him. Love was never fifty, fifty. But ninety, ten? That was below friendship level. Well, he had to confront her at some point, so Darius slowly opened his car door.
Thump.
The tan leather sole of his left shoe greeted the dark asphalt. The cool California before sunrise breeze invaded his cheeks, numbing his spirit. Los Angeles could be a cold place any time of the day or night.
Thump.
Or was his numbness the result of his eternal internal pain?
Thump.
A woman could make a man both numb and cold. The black leather square-toed shoes resounded up the driveway, stopping side by side at their destination. Fearful, Darius stood facing her solid oak double doors. In his deepest moment of needing her, why did she have to need him?
The palm of his hand covered his nose, his not knowing which was colder, sliding to his lips, then over his chin, casually flopping along his side. His full lips disappeared into his mouth. Tears swelled; he clenched his bottom lip between his perfect teeth, preventing the outpouring of depression drowning his heart.
Good looks didn’t mean shit when he felt like shit on the inside. His chest tightened as he prayed the bad news he’d received from Ashlee wasn’t true. Why didn’t he demand more information from her at the hotel? His right foot crossed over his left. About-face, he pivoted. Today wasn’t a good day. For him. Maybe he’d come back to console her, tomorrow.
Thump. Thump. Thump…screech.
Halfway to his car, Darius stopped, closed his eyes, exhaling, knowing she stood in the doorway staring at his back. Rubbing his hand over his shoulder-length locks, he paused.
“Hi, sweetheart” resonated from behind. He’d recognized her soothing voice all of his life. But he wasn’t quite ready to face her.
Without turning around, Darius opened his eyes and answered, “I forgot something in my car, I’ll be right in.” He’d lied to her, hopefully for the last time.
Click. Her front door gently closed.
Bam…He shut his car door. Soft orange and red hues reached to the dark blue sky. The keys dangled from the ignition. He could leave before the break of dawn exposed him, but how long would he run away from his responsibility to her? Gripping the top of his steering wheel, he clung with his forearms to the cherry-wood circle. Both elbows indented his muscular thighs. Teddy Pendergrass’s vocals strummed to the beat of Darius’s heart…it was good loving someone…but how would she know? He’d never unconditionally loved her back.
“Why me, Lord? Why now? Why this? Just when I was trying to do the right thing and get married, why all the temptations?”
Sobbing not so sobering tears, Darius knew he hadn’t treated most of the women in his life right, especially his mother, but he was working on it. Didn’t he deserve some credit for trying? Instead he might be dying. What a fucked-up world to live in, when having an orgasm, something that felt so incredible, could mark the beginning of the end his life. Women were definitely more scandalous than men.
It wasn’t his fault his wife, Ciara, hadn’t signed the divorce papers so Darius had to cancel marrying Fancy; otherwise, he’d become a bigamist. Darius wasn’t going back to jail for nobody, including Fancy. It wasn’t his fault his mother caught her husband cheating again or that his mother’s husband was diagnosed with prostate cancer.
Karma was a muthafucka.
Wellington got what he deserved. Who gave a damn if Wellington’s dick didn’t work anymore? Wellington brought that bullshit upon himself fucking that good-for-nothing, got-nothin’-to-lose, trifling-ass ho, Melanie. Nor was it Darius’s fault his stepsister’s newborn baby had died of complications. But if Ashlee’s son was in fact his son, then perhaps he was to blame.
“Fuck!” Darius yelled, banging his head against his knuckles.
“Why does this shit always fuckin’ happen to me!”
Screech.
Sniffling, then holding his breath, he heard the door reopen. Shifting his eyes to the corners, he exhaled, seeing her slender silhouette through his passenger window. Oh my gosh, he thought, seeing how much weight she’d lost. Ten, maybe fifteen pounds.
Okay, man. Pull yourself together. She needs you. Lowering his head, leaning into the glove compartment, Darius retrieved a napkin, wiped his face, blew his nose, and then crumbled the tissue into his hand before dropping the white paper to the floor. Turning on his cell phone before slipping it into his pocket, he retraced his footsteps to her front door. Now would be a good time for Fancy to give him a reason to leave.
“Hi, Mom.” He paused, noticing the swelling barely exposing her hazel eyes. He wanted to say, “Ma, you look terrible,” but instead he whispered, “How are you?”
Silently, she hugged his waist, resting her head below his chest. Her hugs always comforted him. He towered six feet eleven inches in the air. She held him tight and didn’t let go. Her face clung to his already soaked white button-up shirt, drenching it more. He wrapped his arms around her shoulders, his long fingers sprawling about the back of her head in his desire to comfort her.
Pulling her closer, he whispered with sorrow, “It’s all right. Whateva it is, Ma, it’s gonna be all right. I’m here for you.” And for the first time, in his heart and soul, he meant it.
She muttered, “Wellington has to have surgery. Soon. Will you stay with me a few days and go with me to the hospital the day of his surgery? Please, baby. I need you.”
As much as Darius hated the way Wellington misused him and his mother, he said, “Yeah, Ma, sure. Anything for you. I’ll stay until it’s time for his surgery and I’ll go with you to the hospital.” Tears flowed down his face, splattering onto his mother’s head.
She didn’t care about him messing up her hair. Darius didn’t care either, about Wellington, that is. Darius had his own problems. So while his mother stood in the doorway crying about her husband, Darius cried too, praying the Lord would spare him once more from having HIV.