CHAPTER65
In the morning light, I tidy up and make breakfast for us both, scrambled eggs, toast, and coffee. I smile as Sophie wanders through already dressed in a hoody, jeans, and sneakers, her hair in a boyish ponytail. She’s an early riser like me.
She sits awkwardly at the table as though she feels like she should be helping, but I brush it away with a warm, beaming smile and put her plate and mug in front of her. I genuinely like the girl, even after such a brief time; there’s something about her. I sit down to face her and let her eat for a few minutes as I only pick at mine. My appetite is gone knowing we’re going to see my mother this morning, teenage anxiety in full force.
“So, Sophie, tell me about you. How did you end up here in West Englewood?” I keep my tone bright and easy, knowing if she’s as guarded a person as I am, then she will never open up if I don’t tread carefully. She hesitates.
“I ran away from home. I had enough money to get on a bus, and I just chose the first one. It brought me here, and I found the homeless shelter.” She avoids looking at me while she speaks, the telltale tinge of color high on her cheeks. She’s trying to sound nonchalant, but her body language gives her away. Her fork rattles lightly showing her hands are trembling.
“Who, or what, were you running from?” I coax gently, lifting my mug and sipping slowly, trying not to stare, trying to act like I’m engrossed in my mug instead. I used to hate coffee but somehow Jake, like he does with everything else, got me used to it. It reminds me of him.
“My dad.” She flushes, fully red in the face, and shifts in her chair. I bite my lip, holding back the feeling that rises inside of me, a deep heavy pit of sadness for this girl as I click on why that might be. Showing too much emotion will make her clam up, and showing any form of sympathy will only bring her walls up fast.
“Physical or sexual?” I can almost see into her soul instantly, and I can’t tear my gaze from her. I can sense that she doesn’t want to shut me out even though it’s hard for her to say the words. She’s offering me a slight insight, although she shudders. I’d hit the nail on the head.
“Both.” A single tear edges its way out from her eye, and she brushes it away, tightening her face, reigning in the pain and replacing it with a defiant look. She’s like a mirror image to my teen Emma. Seeing it on someone else for the first time causes me so much conflict. My heart breaks for her.
Is this what Jake sees when I let him in, only for me to close that door? Do I do that? Look hopeless and vulnerable, then shut it down with fire and aggression.
I swallow hard, pushing the thought away, and focus on her face.
“They haven’t tried to find you?” I probe gently, trying to feel out the situation, and not dwelling on what she wouldn’t want me to pick at. My throat tightens with feeling.
“My mother told me to go. She gave me what money she had so I could get far away from him.” She still can’t make eye contact and the rage inside of me swells on her behalf. A mother just like mine, yet Sophie had the misfortune to fall into the lap of another who would never protect her.
“What are your plans, now that you’re here?” I push on, wanting to know if she has tied herself to my mother for the long-term.
“Jocelyn enrolled me in school, but we never really decided on how long I would stay; indefinitely, I guess. I don’t have anywhere else to go, so until I finish school, I’ll be here.” She sips her coffee and glances back at me with full-on, wide-eyed mistrust. A deep weight hits low in my stomach knowing that, for the foreseeable future, she will be in my mother’s life, under her care. I just can’t.
“My mother is no good for you, Sophie. She’s not the protector and carer that she pretends to be. This … incident; it’s not a one-off.” I want her to understand that staying here will not benefit her in any way. Her eyes flick to me quickly, and I see her hesitation and fear; she thinks I’m telling her she needs to go.
“Sophie, I would like to take you back to New York with me when I leave. I have friends who work with abused children, who can find you a better life than this.” I lock eyes sincerely, knowing I can’t let the circle of abuse continue. I can’t let this girl have the life I had.
Jake’s mother helps run a charity for damaged children; she will know what to do, find her a shelter or foster home and protect her. Jake would do that for me; I know, without hesitation, that he would do that for Sophie if I asked him.
“I can’t just leave her; she needs me to help look after her. She was so kind to me and gave me a room here instead of at the shelter,” she protests with wide eyes, dropping her fork in alarm. Her panic is evident.
And there in her determined response, I see it, teen Emma shining through. That need to protect her, make excuses for her, guilt at leaving her, my mother really has woven her pathetic spell over this girl, just as she had done to me for all those years. I sigh dejectedly; I love my mother because she’s my mother, but I don’t love who she can be. I shake my head apologetically.
“Sophie, my mother will always be a victim in her own life because it’s the path she chooses over everyone else. She’ll do it to you too, no matter how much you do for her.” I reach out and cover her small, smooth hand with mine, relieved that she doesn’t pull away. “She won’t be the one who hits you, calls you names, and abuses you, but she will stand by and let them, and do nothing to protect you. She’ll look at you like you’re to blame when she loses another precious man who can’t keep his hands to himself.” I realize, as my eyes fill with emotion, that this girl is probably the first person in the world that I’ve opened up to in this way, without coercion. Mini Emma. I’ll not leave her here when I go; I’ll make her life something I’d always dreamed of. I can’t explain why the feeling is so powerful, but I know I have to save her. “I can promise you, Sophie, I’m not her. I’m nothing like her. I’ll do everything in my power to change your life and protect you.”
I swear, I will.
Sophie finally looks up at me, and a silent message passes between us, a bond between kindred souls who recognize each other’s pain, the recognition of a fellow sufferer who understands. She nods as a tear silently slides down her adorable face. There is dampness on my own cheek as quenched emotions slide out, and it surprises me. She tightens her fingers into mine, a small gesture, an instant bond with both young teen Emma and mature adult Emma. I can see myself in her eyes, and she believes my genuine concern and conviction. She’ll let me take her away from all of this, and I’ll save at least one soul from the all-consuming energy that is my mother and her train wreck of a life."