My Father's Best Friend
img img My Father's Best Friend img Chapter 4 She's Not Her Mother
4
Chapter 6 She's a Spoiled Brat img
Chapter 7 You Need to Get Laid img
Chapter 8 A Cry for Help img
Chapter 9 Business or Family img
Chapter 10 Dad of the Year img
Chapter 11 That's Her Dad img
Chapter 12 What Is This Man Doing To Me img
Chapter 13 She Wants His Time img
Chapter 14 He's Super Hot img
Chapter 15 I Get to See Him Again img
Chapter 16 Tonight Is All About Her img
Chapter 17 Call Me Andrew img
Chapter 18 Pollinate Her Flower img
Chapter 19 It's a Date img
Chapter 20 It's Only Paint img
Chapter 21 The Sound of Her Voice img
Chapter 22 He's Practically Old Enough To Be Your Father img
Chapter 23 Mom Might Be Right img
Chapter 24 Dirty Thoughts img
Chapter 25 All Apologies img
Chapter 26 The First Date img
Chapter 27 Sparks Fly img
Chapter 28 Kiss Me img
Chapter 29 What I've Been Missing img
Chapter 30 Is It Serious img
Chapter 31 Phone Flirting img
Chapter 32 A Growing Hunger img
Chapter 33 Dinner Has To Go img
Chapter 34 Can't Get Enough img
Chapter 35 Trying Out the Bed img
Chapter 36 Waking Up Together img
Chapter 37 Raven Knows img
Chapter 38 The Rules img
Chapter 39 Interrupted img
Chapter 40 Everything Falls Apart img
Chapter 41 My Father Can't Find Out img
Chapter 42 Freaking Out img
Chapter 43 The Morning Air img
Chapter 44 On a Break img
Chapter 45 The Voice of Reason img
Chapter 46 If It's Meant To Be img
Chapter 47 Three Days In img
Chapter 48 You Can't Run From the Truth img
Chapter 49 Another Man img
Chapter 50 We Have to Tell Him the Truth img
Chapter 51 She'll Never Be My Mother img
Chapter 52 Heart Emojis img
Chapter 53 Telling Her Parents img
Chapter 54 Dad Loses It img
Chapter 55 He Knows Me img
Chapter 56 She's Touching Me img
Chapter 57 In His Arms Again img
Chapter 58 And He Cooks img
Chapter 59 Confronted By Her Father img
Chapter 60 This Is Serious img
Chapter 61 When Is It My Turn img
Chapter 62 A Proposition img
Chapter 63 Plans for the Future img
Chapter 64 A Step Back img
Chapter 65 Guys Can Be Idiots Sometimes img
Chapter 66 In Trouble Again img
Chapter 67 Jealous img
Chapter 68 Telling Mom img
Chapter 69 At Least He's Not Divorced img
Chapter 70 You Just Set the Table img
Chapter 71 Stolen Kisses img
Chapter 72 The Girlfriend img
Chapter 73 The Talk img
Chapter 74 Saxton Digs Himself a Hole img
Chapter 75 A Surprise img
Chapter 76 An Important Question img
Chapter 77 Should I Say Yes img
Chapter 78 A Tropical Getaway img
Chapter 79 Hot Tub in Paradise img
Chapter 80 Bikini Off img
Chapter 81 Take Me Andrew img
Chapter 82 The Worst News Imaginable img
Chapter 83 A Family Tragedy Unfolds img
Chapter 84 Waiting is Agony img
Chapter 85 A Coma img
Chapter 86 This is My Life img
Chapter 87 You Need To Go img
Chapter 88 He's Clean img
Chapter 89 The Nightmare Never Ends img
Chapter 90 On the Outside img
Chapter 91 The Punk Who Hurt My Daughter img
Chapter 92 All My Fault img
Chapter 93 Poor Choices img
Chapter 94 I'm Here img
Chapter 95 Back Together Again img
Chapter 96 Can't Stop img
Chapter 97 Stop Shutting Me Out img
Chapter 98 Is This Goodbye img
Chapter 99 A Miracle img
Chapter 100 What Did She Say img
img
  /  2
img

Chapter 4 She's Not Her Mother

Andrew

"Hey!" Raven cried as I turned out the lights.

Wet footsteps echoed in the space, coming closer to me.

I turned the light on, finding Raven standing just a few feet away, hair dripping and eyes flashing. Without any warning, I gasped. Those bright green eyes, wild with emotion, the long, honey waves and sharp chin.

With each day that passed, Raven looked more and more like her mother.

Maybe that was part of what had made our relationship so hard in the last year. But who the fuck knew?

"What do you want from me?" she demanded, attitude turned up to the max.

I shook my head, more to get ahold of myself than anything else. Raven was not her mother. They were two completely different people. I needed to remember that.

"I should be asking you that," I answered. "What do you want that you don't have? Why are you screwing up your life?"

Her arms folded and then quickly unfolded, showing her discomfort. Avoiding my eyes, she snatched her towel from the chair and began to dry her hair vigorously.

"This is your last chance, Raven. Either straighten up or face the consequences. No phone. No car."

The reaction didn't come. She just kept drying her hair, acting as if phones and cars weren't the lifeblood of any and every American teenager.

I fought the urge to pull at my hair. She'd already gotten enough of a rise out of me. Completely dropping my poker face wasn't an option.

Licking my lips, I closed my eyes. There was one more thing I hadn't tried, but it was time.

"Do you want to talk to someone? I'll set you up with a therapist."

Back turned, her shoulders tensed. "What, like a shrink?" she barked.

My mouth became even drier. "Just someone to talk to."

"I don't need meds. I'm not like her."

She couldn't have hit closer to my weak spot if she'd tried.

Swallowing hard, I looked for the right words and then realized I'd been doing that for the whole last year. The English language only contained so many options.

"Just... Can you just try to do better? Tomorrow is a new week, all right? It's a chance to get started off on a new foot."

Raven kept her back to me, her head hanging low.

"Sure," she finally said, taking her things and leaving the pool room.

The "sure" had been the most listless it could be. There was no way of telling whether she had absorbed anything I'd said or not.

Burying my face in my hands, I ran my fingers down my cheeks. "Fuck," I groaned out.

When enough time had passed for Raven to make it up to the second floor, I left the pool room and weaved my way back to my office. The downstairs was dark and silent, the perfect atmosphere for getting some work done.

Closing the door to my office, I settled into the leather chair once more. But try as hard as I might, the words on the computer screen didn't make any sense. The letters all ran together. All I could think about was Raven.

And Danica.

As much as I didn't want to admit it, there was a chance they were more alike than I had originally thought. Raven was the spitting image of her mother, but it could have been the similarities went beyond just physical.

Ten years. That's how long it had been since I'd put my wife in the ground. Not a day went by that I didn't think about her, but at least I didn't have any regrets. We'd had a good marriage. I'd loved her as much as any man could love a woman. Though I'd always worked hard, Danica had stayed home with Raven, and we always set aside a couple weekends a month for family time.

It was ironic, though. For years, I worried myself sick over Danica's mental illnesses. Anxiety. Depression. She took medication, went to therapy, meditated-did everything that was recommended.

But that hadn't stopped the dark bouts from popping up. Several times, I feared she might take her life. In the end, though, it had been a car crash that had done it, sudden and quick, while I was in New York for a meeting and Raven was working on a leaf collage at elementary school.

Those first few years after the accident had been the worst. But, eventually, ten years crept by. Now Raven was almost an adult, preparing to take on the world all on her own. The hardest times were behind us.

Or so I'd thought.

Mental illness ran in families. So why hadn't I thought to have Raven evaluated before?

I didn't want to face reality. That was it. Didn't want to admit that maybe she struggled as much as Danica had.

I shut my eyes and rubbed the lids, locking out the rest of the world. This office was supposed to be a place of focus and productivity. I'd set it up so I could be at home more often. I guess, in a way, it had been successful. Now I really saw how much Raven sought to avoid me.

But I didn't have time for this kind of bullshit. If Raven needed to see a specialist, then that was the way it was.

One more chance, I promised myself. I'll give her one more chance.

Another note or call from school and she was headed to see a professional. This wasn't something I could deal with on my own. I was busy. An entire company counted on me. Distractions, like always, could not be afforded.

Nose to the grindstone, eyes on the prize. Don't get distracted, don't let others sway you. That was my way of life, the one I'd taught to my daughter. I didn't need anyone to tell me it was the right way to live.

For me, there was no other option. There never would be.

            
            

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022