Home>>read Ramsay free online

Ramsay(43)

By:Mia Sheridan

       
           



       

"And it helped," I said.

"Yeah," he said. "It helped knowin' that though I couldn't do anythin'  then, I could and would do somethin' later. I put the files in that  folder, and I took it out and looked at it whenever I didn't think I  could do it anymore. But . . . the job, it paid better than any of the  more menial jobs, and I was also grateful because Eileen was gettin'  some of the treatments she needed. I'd been savin' up for her  surgery-the plates she needed in her legs to straighten them  permanently. I got us out of the slum we were livin' in, moved us to a  nicer place in the Bronx-the building I work from now. His lips tipped  up slightly, and he took a deep breath. "And it meant I could quit the  thing I hated the most."

I tilted my head questioningly, a cold shiver moving through my body.  Brogan ran his tongue over his front tooth, once and then again, his  expression vulnerable and pained. I waited, completely still. "Earlier  on when I was still doin' low-level jobs, one of the other guys let me  in on a service a few of them were performin'. It was a sort of side  business and a lot of the guys seemed perfectly happy to be picked for  the job. I knew the mob dabbled in prostitution, but I didn't consider  that they hired out male prostitutes as well." He grimaced as he said  the word, and my heart squeezed, my stomach knotting. "One of the  women-mostly married women whose husbands were much older-would place an  order, and we'd be sent out."

"Brogan . . ."

He shook his head. "I know. I didn't want to do it. Just the idea of it  was . . . distasteful to me on so many levels. Fionn tried to talk me  out of it. But Fionn was only takin' care of himself, he didn't have  others dependin' on him. And I thought if I could just earn enough money  to get Eileen her surgery, and if I could just earn enough money to  start makin' some investments, I would stop, no real harm done."

"Only . . ." I whispered.

His eyes met mine, and he gave me the smallest hint of a smile, though  it didn't reach his eyes. Talking about this was hurting him, and part  of me wanted to tell him he didn't have to continue, but the other half  wanted desperately to understand his past, to understand him.

"Yes, only." The smile slipped from his face. "I pretended they were  you," he said, his voice gravelly all of a sudden. "Only  sometimes-mostly maybe-that made it worse instead of better."

My breath caught. "Brogan," I breathed.

He shook his head. "And they weren't you. You were right, I hated the  way they smelled, the way they'd grab at me, the way they'd rake their  fingernails over my skin. They liked all sorts of . . ." he trailed off.  "Anyway, I hated it. I hated them, and I hated you more, too, because  being with those women made me long for you twice as hard and you'd  betrayed me-or so I thought at the time. Still wantin' you like I did  didn't make sense. My mind couldn't justify it, though I still felt it  desperately, and I hated you even more for it."

My eyes filled with tears, but I didn't reach for him this time. I could  see he was struggling, and it seemed he needed space to get through the  telling of this part of his story.

"I started keepin' records on them, too. In my folder." He let out a  small, brittle laugh. "My feckin', ridiculous folder. But some days, I'd  look through it, and I'd imagine what I'd do to them when I was the one  with the power, and it was the only thing holdin' me up. The idea of  revenge took hold and became the thing that strengthened me when there  was nothin' else." He paused for a moment. "You were in there, too, you  and Stuart."

Yes, of course. Of course we were. And in some small, possibly twisted  way, I was glad because it meant we had helped him survive when he had  little else.

"But then I got the job doin' some of the mob's accountin' and I was  able to quit. Eventually, I moved up to launderin' money. That's when I  did make enough money to make some investments and I doubled some of it  by gamblin'. I paid for Eileen's surgery. My dad, he . . . drank himself  to death." Pain for him made my stomach clench and he paused for a  moment as if he was experiencing the same thing. He looked back down at  his hands. "But he watched her walk without her braces right before he  died." My heart squeezed, but Brogan's expression didn't change.

"My own wealth started growin' in leaps and bounds. And once I started  amassin' wealth, power, I used it to run the women and their husbands  out of New York in one way or another-bribes, job transfers, things of  that nature. I couldn't run into any of them, didn't ever want to be  reminded of how low I'd once been, didn't even want those women in the  same zip code, and I finally had the power to make that happen." He  shrugged and glanced at the folder. "I keep it now to remind me where I  once was and how far I've come."                       
       
           



       

Oh Brogan. He carried so much pain, so much bitterness, but I had to  wonder if the person he was having the hardest time forgiving was  himself. I had to wonder if the real reason he kept that folder was to  remind himself why he shouldn't be let off the hook for his own choices.  We were both quiet for a minute.

"Courtney was one of those women," I finally said softly.

"Yes. I'd seen her a few times. It was a little better with her than  with some of the others. Her husband was twenty-five years older than  her and not a nice man from what I knew, although I think she genuinely  loved him. I think, mostly, she was lookin' for someone who was gentle  with her, someone to pay her attention."

My fingers twisted in my lap, and I was ashamed of the jealousy that  overcame me in a moment when Brogan was revealing his pain to me. This  was not about me. This was about him. This was about the ways in which  he'd survived.

"One night, her husband came home unexpectedly from a business trip and  walked in on us." Oh God. "It was ugly. Courtney begged and pleaded with  her husband to let me leave, to just let me go. And he did." He paused,  looking down at his hands. "I could have refused to leave. I could have  begged for him not to hurt her, too. I could have. But I had vowed  never to beg anyone again. I had vowed never to give anyone that kind of  power over me, and so I didn't beg. I didn't even stay. I walked away. I  just . . . left her there. And he beat her to within an inch of her  life. She was in the hospital for months. I had no idea she was in that  kind of danger when I left, but I should have, I . . ."

I sucked in a breath and leaned toward him, putting my fingers under his  chin and turning his face toward me. Our eyes met, his filled with pain  and self-disgust. "Brogan, you can't believe you're responsible for  that. Even if you did beg, even if you tried to stay, he would have  thrown you out. He would have hurt her anyway. Then, or maybe later. You  were not responsible for him being a sick, violent man or for him  hurting her the way he did."

His smile was sad. "Maybe. I'll never know and it's another thing I have  to live with." He looked down again and I studied him for several  moments, recalling what Courtney had said when she burst into his house.

"He went to prison for what he did to her and now he's getting out?"

"Yes."

"And what does she expect you to do? You made your choices, but, Brogan,  she made hers, too. She bears responsibility for what happened to her  as well. Probably most of all."

He shook his head. "She wants me to protect her, keep her safe."

"You feel responsible for her? That's madness. You can't spend your entire life paying for something that wasn't your fault."

He shrugged. "It didn't seem like such a terrible price to pay before-"

"Before what?"

"Before you came back into my life. Before it became obvious she'd put a  wedge between us. And I don't want that. I just want you, and I wish I  had gone about this differently. I have so many regrets."

I swallowed, his words music to my ears. I wanted him to want me over her, but . . . "Does she think you want her?"

He shook his head adamantly. "No, no. It's not like that. I've been  honest with her. She uses situations like last night to get to me."

"And you let her."

"I have in the past, yes. I admit to givin' in to the guilt I feel when  it comes to Courtney. And things were completely different before two  weeks ago. I didn't think it would hurt anyone that I provide comfort to  her if she needed it, if I spent time with her at social events, things  like that. But last night when Courtney showed up, I just needed to  spell out the situation for her in private. Because in the past I've  been there for her, but I can't and I won't be anymore. I'm sorry,  Lydia. I'm sorry for what you thought, what I put you through. But I  couldn't talk to her in front of you. It wouldn't have been right to do  that-not to her, but mostly, not to you."