Wild Dreams: A Friends to Lovers romance (Wilder Irish Book 12) by Mari Carr (easy books to read txt) š
- Author: Mari Carr
Book online Ā«Wild Dreams: A Friends to Lovers romance (Wilder Irish Book 12) by Mari Carr (easy books to read txt) šĀ». Author Mari Carr
The main problem with confiding in Erin was that when the subject of him and Oliver being foster brothers had initially come up, heād made some comment about his mother being gone for goodāwhich Erin had misinterpreted as she was deadāand he hadnāt corrected her because it was still hard for him to talk aboutā¦fuckā¦anything personal.
Gavin had decided to let Erin continue to believe what she did because with his mother locked away, he could pretend heād always been a part of the Collins family and had something resembling a normal life.
What a joke.
Gavin had stopped trying to get his mom out of the hospital near the end of his first year with the Collins family. Prior to that, heād been determined to āsave her,ā convinced that it was his job to take care of her, that she couldnāt make it on her own without him. Primarily because his mother had always told him she couldnāt. And heād believed her.
While logically, he knew heād only been a kid when he suffered the worst of his motherās abuse, it was still hard for himāas a manāto admit to ever being so weak, so helpless, so manipulated.
The problem was, his mom hadnāt always been horrible. When she was lucid, she tried. Tried to hold down a job, to pay the bills, to be a good mother. Or, wellā¦maybe it was better to say she just tried to be a mother.
Yeah. The fact she was out was bad. Really bad.
His feelings for his mother wereāand always had beenāa jumble, something heād never managed to sort out in any way that made sense to him. If sheād just been a mean drunk, it would have been easier to explain away her abuse, but it wasnāt the alcoholāor just the alcoholāthat drove her actions. And then there were those days when sheād been nice to him.
Heād known this day was coming. Maybe he hadnāt wanted to admit it to himself, but heād known. Sheād always been there, in the back of his mind.
Unbeknownst to everyoneāOliver includedāwhen heād gotten his driverās license, Gavin had begun making two trips to the psychiatric hospital a year, once on his motherās birthday and again on Christmas Eve. He would drop off a package, usually containing nothing more than some snacks, magazines, books, stuff like that for her. He never included a card and he never gave it to her personally, unwilling to face her.
āYou okay, Gavin?ā Padraig asked when the silence lasted too long.
Over the years, Padraig had been slowly indoctrinated into Gavinās small group of confidantes. And Gavin now realized heād eschewed the trip upstairs because he wanted to talk to Padraig as much as he wanted the beer.
āIt was about my mother.ā
āOkay.ā Padraig frowned, looking concerned. His compassionāsomething the entire Collins family seemed to have in spadesāwent a long way toward soothing the burn of the scab Aaron had just ripped off. āWhat about her?ā
From Padraigās dark tone, it was apparent the bartender was ready to step in as the first line of defense if Gavin asked.
āSheās out.ā It was just two words, but damn if they didnāt cut through Gavin sharper than any knife could.
āFuck,ā Padraig muttered.
āYeah.ā
Gavin took another sip of beer and stretched his neck muscles, trying to loosen the knots in his shoulders that tightened the second Aaron had told him his mother had been released from the state mental hospital that morning.
Jesus.
Five minutes after getting the news and he was wound up tighter than a spring.
While Aaron didnāt know as much about Gavinās childhood as Oliver and Padraig, heād known the reason why Gavin had been placed with Sean, Lauren, and Chad. Cops tended to know all the details when one of their own was hurt.
āYou think sheāll try to contact you?ā
Gavin shrugged. āI have no idea what sheāll do. I havenāt seen or spoken to my mother since I was fifteen.ā
Not that he hadnāt tried to contact her during his first year with the Collins family. Heād escaped his bedroom countless times, sometimes hitching rides, sometimes stealing money from his foster family to pay cab fare to the hospital. He was turned away every single time, and then Sean, Lauren, or Chadāafter a call from the security guardāwould come pick him up and bring him back home.
The last time heād seen his mom, he had come home to find the shitty apartment he shared with her filled with cops and EMTs and, unsurprisingly, his social worker, Margie.
Heād run out of the house an hour or so earlierāchased out was probably more accurateāwhen he had come home from school to discover his mother in the midst of one of her rages.
Sheād pulled a knife on him, something she had never done before. Even now, Gavin could recall the guilt heād felt for month afterwards, blaming himself for her use of a weapon.
After all, heād been the one whoād thought the fact heād grown several inches taller and put on some serious muscle weight, thanks to his strength-training class at school, should serve as a deterrent to her beatings. So the last time sheād backhanded him, a few months prior to that night, heād gotten cocky and told her that was the last time she threw a punch that he didnāt return.
In her rage, sheād decided to prove to him she would always be top dogāhence the weapon. Heād walked in after school and sheād launched into one of her tirades, his attention drawn to the empty bottle of gin laying on the floor. Sheād screamed at him, called him a piece of shit and a bastard and a whole host of other things heād heard a million times before when she was deep in the grips of the alcohol or her depressed rages.
Then sheād picked up a knife he hadnāt noticed, from
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