Chapter 29
Chapter 29
Eight hours in a holding cell, and the cop finally swings the door open. “Bail’s posted, Ms. Sullivan–you’re free to go.”
Bail? From Charles or her family?
Teresa doesn’t ask who paid it. She just nods, thanks him, and steps into the lobby.
There, framed against the neon cop–shop lights, stood a figure.
It’s Charles.
– Suit sharp enough to slice bread, legs for miles–same man, same shell, zero warmth.
Yet for
sex,
he had neve
once given Teresa a truly satisfying experience.
No doubt his intimacy with Naomi was everything she had never had.
Charles had heard Teresa’s footsteps but noticed her hesitation. He turned, voice betraying nothing as he said simply, “Let’s go.”
His expression remained unreadable.
Teresa couldn’t care less what he thought. Yes, hitting George had been impulsive–but she didn’t regret it.
Gone were the days when she would have longed to walk beside him, to take his hand.
Gone were the days when she would have longed to walk beside him, to take his hand.
Now, they were two separate entities–him and her.
His Rolls–Royce waited at the curb, but Teresa made no move toward it.
Just as she raised her hand to hail a cab, Charles opened the passenger door. “Get in. We need to talk.”
Teresa lowered her arm–but instead of taking the front seat, she opened the rear door herself and slid in.
Charles blinked in surprise. He knew damn well Teresa would’ve killed for this kind of attention before.
But now that he was actually trying? She couldn’t seem to care less.
For a second Charles just stared, then slid into the back seat beside her.
Teresa’s brow furrowed slightly when he sat next to her.
Teresa felt the old closeness like a bruise–his cologne laced with smoke, the scent she once craved now catching in her throat.
The car filled with suffocating silence. As neither spoke, the air between them growing heavier by the minute.
Charles cracked the window and lit a cigarette. Smoke curled toward Teresa on the draft, sending her into a coughing fit.
Unable to bear it, she reached for the door–only for Charles to suddenly seize her wrist.
His grip was loose, yet Teresa didn’t resist. She settled back into the seat.
“Must you smoke? It’s disgusting? Her tone was sharp.
Even as she spoke, she knew–had it been Naomi beside him, the cigarette would never have appeared.
Especially not while supposedly trying for a second child
Charles said nothing. After a long pause, he flicked the cigarette out the window and waited for the smoke to clear before rolling it up.
Minutes passed before he imally spoke “Why did you do
Teresa offered no justification “I acted accesling to my conscience. I stand by what I dNİ
Charles’s expression darkened. Your rela
es Bu have przy considered Yolarla
1:05 PM P P
Chapter 29
A mark on Yolanda’s record could alter her entire future–no amount of Logan influence could erase certain stains.
Teresa had run that loop in the holding cell. Charles’s anger was justified, though thankfully the police hadn’t pursued charges.
The fear still tasted metallic. “It won’t happen again.”
Another long beat. Then the quiet axe fell, “Truth is, you’re not cut out to be Yolanda’s mom.”
One sentence, calm as weather, erased years of lullabies and fever watches.
Teresa laughed—until the laugh cracked into tears. “Tell me, then–what more do you want?”
She’s already handed over the villa, the child, the husband
Charles just stared at Teresa, cool as a cucumber while she was practically fuming.
They’d always been worlds apart. Even now, when they were butting heads, he stayed perfectly calm.
“You haven’t dropped Yolanda at school even once,” he pointed out.
Teresa clenched her jaw, determined not to let him see her sweat.
“Someone’s always there to take her.”
“But you’re her mom.”
Teresa almost did a double take. Was he serious? One look at his face said he was.
“Now you remember I’m her mother?” She let out a bitter laugh. “Do I even count as one to you?”
She locked eyes with him, waiting for an answer she knew wouldn’t come.
Sure enough, he dodged the question. “Whatever’s going on with you, you’re still Yolanda’s mother. Act like it.”
Money’s no issue for the Logans. Charles could raise Yolanda single–handed, but his kid also needs her mom’s love.
Lately Teresa had been acting downright unreasonable–couldn’t even bother showing up for some Kindergarten activities.
To his surprise, Teresa didn’t argue. “Yolanda’s my daughter,” she said calmly. “I know my duty.”
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