Jagged
Page 41
This, they didn’t need. Reece had just got her back. They had shit to talk about, shit to do, and he wanted his girl to have it easy for a while. It’d been bad for her for too long. He’d guided her out. She was in a good place, close to happy.
They didn’t need this, but more, Zara didn’t.
Reece clenched his teeth, felt a muscle move in his cheek, and released his jaw to say, “Least they got that boy in a good home.”
“Sorry, son?” Mick asked.
Reece locked eyes with the man. “”Spect you know, maybe you don’t, but Xavier Cinders had no problem takin’ his hand to his wife or his girls. Didn’t do it often, used words most the time to make them feel shit, but he did it. Xenia got the worst of it but that didn’t mean he didn’t call Zara down to watch when her sister caught it. So it’s good that when they finally got that baby out of Xenia, Cinders put him up for adoption.”
Shaughnessy looked confused. “Zander Cinders is in a private school not too far from here, Reece. Xavier didn’t put that child up for adoption. His sister, Wilona, just in the next county, has raised him since birth.”
What the f**k?
“Are you f**kin’ shittin’ me?” Reece growled and he heard his voice. He suspected he knew what his face looked like and he suspected both were why Mick Shaughnessy straightened to alert in his chair.
“Son—”
“That motherfucker promised Zara he would put Xenia’s boy up for adoption, make sure he got a good home.”
“Reece—”
“I stood there when they came to the only agreement they came to durin’ that mess. When he flat refused to let Zara raise him, he promised he wouldn’t raise the boy. He promised he’d put that boy in a good home.”
“It would appear he didn’t lie, since he didn’t raise him, but he did lie since he took custody of the child and placed him with his sister,” Mick replied carefully.
“So you’re tellin’ me Zara’s nephew has been growin’ up in the next goddamned county for the last nine f**kin’ years without him knowin’ his aunt exists and without her knowin’ her sister’s boy is that close?” Reece ground out.
“I’m afraid that’s what I’m tellin’ you,” Mick answered.
“All right, so now you wanna tell me why Zara doesn’t know this?” Reece asked.
“I thought she did.”
“Well, she doesn’t,” Reece pointed out the obvious. “This town is small and the people close. How does she not know this?”
“The Cinders aren’t exactly social,” Mick stated the God’s honest truth. “The town rallied around Zara when all that happened, Reece. Not sure I know of anyone who gave their condolences to her folks, not that they wouldn’t want to, just that they knew it wouldn’t be welcomed so they didn’t bother. What I’m sayin’ is, not sure anyone knows where Zander is.”
“Can I ask why you didn’t tell her?” Reece pushed.
Emotion flashed in Mick’s eyes before he answered, “Like I said, I thought she knew. Didn’t bring it up because she essentially lost her sister and her parents through that and that’s not somethin’ you wanna bring up as a reminder for a sweet girl who kept her chin up and kept on keepin’ on.”
Fucking shit. That made sense.
“Shit, f**k,” Reece clipped.
“Think you need to take a calming breath, son,” Mick advised and Reece did exactly that before he looked out the window again.
However, the calming breath didn’t work.
Therefore, he bit off, “I do not believe this shit.”
Mick made no reply and the room lapsed into an uneasy silence before Mick broke it.
“Xavier took his hands to those girls?”
Reece sliced his eyes to the cop. “Repeatedly.”
Mick closed his eyes, whispering, “Dear Lord.”
“No marks, he wasn’t stupid. But that didn’t mean they didn’t get their asses kicked,” Reece shared and Mick opened his eyes. “I’m surprised you didn’t know that,” he finished.
“Didn’t ’spect Xavier was a warm and loving father, way those girls cleared out when they hit majority and just knowin’ the man, but didn’t suspect that.”
“Well, you were right. He was neither warm nor loving and he took that to extremes,” Reece confirmed.
“Sins of the fathers,” he muttered.
“Explain that,” Reece demanded.
“Went to school with Xavier Cinders and his sisters, Dahlia and Wilona. Can’t tell you how many times I saw one, the other, or all ’a them come to school with black eyes, fat lips, arms in slings. Back then, before school officials would report that to authorities and CPS would get called in, there was no help for them. Val Cinders was a hard man and the whole town knew it, just no one had the power to do anything about it. Reckon he taught his son to be just as hard. Sometimes the cycle breaks. Sometimes it doesn’t.”
“With Xavier, it didn’t,” Reece told him.
“I see that,” Mick replied.
“And now that boy’s livin’ in that.”
“We don’t know that,” Mick said quickly. “Maybe, by givin’ him to Wilona, he was breakin’ the cycle.”
Reece felt his eyes narrow. “He lied to his daughter while his other daughter was near on nine months pregnant, brain dead, hooked up to machines, and lyin’ in a hospital bed. He wasn’t breaking any cycle.”
“I remember that situation, Reece,” Mick said quietly and Reece knew he did. By the look on his face, he knew he remembered it like it was yesterday.
Then again, f**ked-up shit like that wasn’t easy to forget.
“This can’t stand,” Reece declared.
“Son,” Mick started. “As Xenia’s parents with no other legal arrangements in place, custody fell to them. I knew there was no love lost between Zara and her family and since not a lot of folks around here like anyone who lives in that den of vipers and give them a wide berth, I just suspected that he was an ass to her like he is to everyone. It’s sorry news he took his hand to his girls and you gotta know I don’t like hearin’ it. But, I’ll remind you, it’s beyond the pale where Xenia took that. She got high and drunk when she was nearly full-term pregnant.”
“She’d been clean for two years,” Reece reminded him.
They didn’t need this, but more, Zara didn’t.
Reece clenched his teeth, felt a muscle move in his cheek, and released his jaw to say, “Least they got that boy in a good home.”
“Sorry, son?” Mick asked.
Reece locked eyes with the man. “”Spect you know, maybe you don’t, but Xavier Cinders had no problem takin’ his hand to his wife or his girls. Didn’t do it often, used words most the time to make them feel shit, but he did it. Xenia got the worst of it but that didn’t mean he didn’t call Zara down to watch when her sister caught it. So it’s good that when they finally got that baby out of Xenia, Cinders put him up for adoption.”
Shaughnessy looked confused. “Zander Cinders is in a private school not too far from here, Reece. Xavier didn’t put that child up for adoption. His sister, Wilona, just in the next county, has raised him since birth.”
What the f**k?
“Are you f**kin’ shittin’ me?” Reece growled and he heard his voice. He suspected he knew what his face looked like and he suspected both were why Mick Shaughnessy straightened to alert in his chair.
“Son—”
“That motherfucker promised Zara he would put Xenia’s boy up for adoption, make sure he got a good home.”
“Reece—”
“I stood there when they came to the only agreement they came to durin’ that mess. When he flat refused to let Zara raise him, he promised he wouldn’t raise the boy. He promised he’d put that boy in a good home.”
“It would appear he didn’t lie, since he didn’t raise him, but he did lie since he took custody of the child and placed him with his sister,” Mick replied carefully.
“So you’re tellin’ me Zara’s nephew has been growin’ up in the next goddamned county for the last nine f**kin’ years without him knowin’ his aunt exists and without her knowin’ her sister’s boy is that close?” Reece ground out.
“I’m afraid that’s what I’m tellin’ you,” Mick answered.
“All right, so now you wanna tell me why Zara doesn’t know this?” Reece asked.
“I thought she did.”
“Well, she doesn’t,” Reece pointed out the obvious. “This town is small and the people close. How does she not know this?”
“The Cinders aren’t exactly social,” Mick stated the God’s honest truth. “The town rallied around Zara when all that happened, Reece. Not sure I know of anyone who gave their condolences to her folks, not that they wouldn’t want to, just that they knew it wouldn’t be welcomed so they didn’t bother. What I’m sayin’ is, not sure anyone knows where Zander is.”
“Can I ask why you didn’t tell her?” Reece pushed.
Emotion flashed in Mick’s eyes before he answered, “Like I said, I thought she knew. Didn’t bring it up because she essentially lost her sister and her parents through that and that’s not somethin’ you wanna bring up as a reminder for a sweet girl who kept her chin up and kept on keepin’ on.”
Fucking shit. That made sense.
“Shit, f**k,” Reece clipped.
“Think you need to take a calming breath, son,” Mick advised and Reece did exactly that before he looked out the window again.
However, the calming breath didn’t work.
Therefore, he bit off, “I do not believe this shit.”
Mick made no reply and the room lapsed into an uneasy silence before Mick broke it.
“Xavier took his hands to those girls?”
Reece sliced his eyes to the cop. “Repeatedly.”
Mick closed his eyes, whispering, “Dear Lord.”
“No marks, he wasn’t stupid. But that didn’t mean they didn’t get their asses kicked,” Reece shared and Mick opened his eyes. “I’m surprised you didn’t know that,” he finished.
“Didn’t ’spect Xavier was a warm and loving father, way those girls cleared out when they hit majority and just knowin’ the man, but didn’t suspect that.”
“Well, you were right. He was neither warm nor loving and he took that to extremes,” Reece confirmed.
“Sins of the fathers,” he muttered.
“Explain that,” Reece demanded.
“Went to school with Xavier Cinders and his sisters, Dahlia and Wilona. Can’t tell you how many times I saw one, the other, or all ’a them come to school with black eyes, fat lips, arms in slings. Back then, before school officials would report that to authorities and CPS would get called in, there was no help for them. Val Cinders was a hard man and the whole town knew it, just no one had the power to do anything about it. Reckon he taught his son to be just as hard. Sometimes the cycle breaks. Sometimes it doesn’t.”
“With Xavier, it didn’t,” Reece told him.
“I see that,” Mick replied.
“And now that boy’s livin’ in that.”
“We don’t know that,” Mick said quickly. “Maybe, by givin’ him to Wilona, he was breakin’ the cycle.”
Reece felt his eyes narrow. “He lied to his daughter while his other daughter was near on nine months pregnant, brain dead, hooked up to machines, and lyin’ in a hospital bed. He wasn’t breaking any cycle.”
“I remember that situation, Reece,” Mick said quietly and Reece knew he did. By the look on his face, he knew he remembered it like it was yesterday.
Then again, f**ked-up shit like that wasn’t easy to forget.
“This can’t stand,” Reece declared.
“Son,” Mick started. “As Xenia’s parents with no other legal arrangements in place, custody fell to them. I knew there was no love lost between Zara and her family and since not a lot of folks around here like anyone who lives in that den of vipers and give them a wide berth, I just suspected that he was an ass to her like he is to everyone. It’s sorry news he took his hand to his girls and you gotta know I don’t like hearin’ it. But, I’ll remind you, it’s beyond the pale where Xenia took that. She got high and drunk when she was nearly full-term pregnant.”
“She’d been clean for two years,” Reece reminded him.