PENNY
The driveway is long and ridiculous. Trees darken the path to the house that rises like a green cloud in the evening sunlight. I prefer my little apartment with the view of the sprawling city but I make the trip to the countryside every other weekend.
My car slows to a stop next to Maria’s and I step out into the warm air and make my way into the house.
“Penelope!” I hear the excited squeal of a woman in bed, pale and thin but with a bright smile that can light an entire room.
“Hey, Mom.” I return her smile, drop my bag, and give her a quick forehead kiss.
“So how are you doing? Tell me everything.” She pats the space beside her happily.
I laugh and sit down. “Where’s Maria?”
My mother waves a dismissive hand. “She’s off somewhere trying to prepare another atrocious food for me to eat. Honestly, if the cancer doesn’t kill me her food will.”
I laugh again. “I’m sure once you stop joking like that, not even cancer can kill you.”
“Remains to be seen,” she says wistfully and I search her face for any sign of distress. Apart from her fading auburn hair and watery blue eyes, she seems much better than the last time I visited.
“What did the doctors say?” my worry starts to climb regardless but she squeezes my arm and gives me a fearless smile.
“Don’t worry about that, Penny. I didn’t conquer half of Europe and most of the dickheads in this city to create a conglomerate just to allow a little cancer to take me down.”
“Ovarian cancer is not little, Mom,” I chided her softly.
“Don’t worry, I’m using money to aggressively fight it and I’ve lost a lot of hair there’s no way I’m dying now.”
Somehow being closer to death has made my mom morbid and more insufferable. That doesn’t mean I’ll love her any less. I scoot closer and gently put her head on my shoulder.
“So any progress on getting the place for your bakery?” she asks, her gaze flying all over my face.
“No, the price is too high,” I say sadly.
Her smile fades. “You don’t have to keep doing this, honey. I don’t care about this thing you’re trying to do. Join the company, take your place and you never have to worry about stupid things like price.”
I sigh already getting exasperated with the direction of the conversation. “Mom, please, not this again.”
“What? I get what you’re doing but it’s a waste of time, Penny. You can be a baker and still lead my life’s work.”
“I don’t want to, Mom! Baking is more than a hobby to me, it’s a passion and I love you but you have to let me do this.”
She sighs and throws her hands in surrender. “Why?”
“We’ve talked about this and—”
“It doesn’t stop me from not understanding it. I built a conglomerate from nothing. I fought tooth and nail—” she gestures around the lavish room “—for all this and my daughter doesn’t want any of it! Can’t you see how hard it is for me to understand?” Her voice breaks and tears fill her eyes.
“Mom please…”
“I don’t want to die without being sure the Castillo legacy will live on. That I fought for something.”
My lower lip quivers but I bite it down to stop my tears from forming. “Well, you’re not dying anytime soon. I need to try, Mom.”
I hug her tight and wipe the tears from her face. “If the baking doesn’t work, I’ll call Lucas and take my place, I promise.”
“Okay. I love you so much, Penny.”
“I love you too Mom. We’ll get through this and you can kick ass from here to the Seine River.”
She laughs heartily and relaxes further in my arms.
“But call Lucas either way. He keeps asking for you and I’m thinking of inviting him for dinner tomorrow so you guys can catch up.”
I roll my eyes.
“Don’t look at me like that. He’s a good boy and he still has a thing for you and I know you said you don’t like him like that but how long has it been? Two? Three years?”
“I’m fine. You and Jess need to stop.”
“You’re twenty-five and I get more action than you. Before you reach my age, you’ll have cobwebs down there.”
“Mom!” I snort and dissolve into laughter.
The door opens and Maria strolls in, smiling. “Hey, beautiful Castillo women.”
“Hey Maria,” we sing simultaneously and giggle like little kids.
“Everything good, Estela?”
“Yes,” Mom replies with a fond smile.
Maria drops the tray in her hands and heads over to the bed. After more than four months of being my mom’s caregiver, she’s easily family. She has a round face, a soft smile, and close-cut hair, with the sweetest attitude.
Terrible cooking though.
My mom points to the tray. “I guess that slop is for me.”
Maria chuckles, not taking offense. “Yes. But your meds are up first.”
I slide off the bed to give her space to insert the drugs into the IV line in my mom’s arm. It takes a minute and mom only winces for a bit.
I look at her worriedly but she gives me an all-clear smile. “I’m fine,” she mouths.
Maria nods. “You’re all set. Now eat.” She brings the tray over to the bed and turns to me. “Once she finishes everything, let her rest.”
“No. I want Penny to stay with me.” She takes my hand.
“I’m here for the whole weekend. You’ll see me first thing in the morning.” I smile reassuringly as I pat her hand.
I catch a tear slip from Maria’s eye before she turns away. “I just love seeing you two,” she says and hastily wipes her face. “See you in the morning.”
“Bye Maria.” She leaves quietly and I take my seat and stir whatever concoction Maria has made.
“She says it’s healthy,” my mom wears a similar disgusted expression and we both share a laugh.
It takes ten minutes to spoon-feed her and two more for her to drift into sleep with a content smile.
I kiss her head lightly and switch off the lights. As I shut the door, my phone rings.
“We got it!” Jess screams immediately I put the phone to my ear. “We got the space Pen! We can open our bakery!”
EPILOGUE — PENELOPEFour years laterThe smell of vanilla and buttercream filled the kitchen as I smoothed icing over the last layer of the boys’ birthday cake. There was flour in my hair, frosting on my cheek, and my heart was so full I thought it might burst.“Mommy!” one of the twins—Donovan—came barreling in with his brother right behind him, little feet slapping against the tiles. “We’re four today! Fourrr!” he squealed, throwing his chubby arms around my legs.“Yes, you are, my sweet boy,” I laughed, bending down to kiss his cheek before his brother, Damien, demanded his turn.“Donny! Damien! Stop attacking your mother while she’s working,” came Christian’s voice from the doorway, deep and amused.I glanced up at him, smiling despite myself. He leaned against the doorframe, arms folded, that same smug grin on his face even after all these years.He’d officially handed over his company to Liam a few weeks ago—much to Liam’s visible annoyance—and now spent most of his time running
PENELOPEIt had been months since the incident with Lucas, when he threatened my life and my family.Nine long months of rebuilding the bakery, starting all over again, in a bigger and brighter location.Later that month, Jess finally ended things with Liam. After he got out of the hospital, he tried. God, he’d tried—but Jess never looked back. I’d never seen her laugh as much as she did with the new guy she was dating now. Liam kept his distance, though I sometimes caught the look in his eyes when she walked into a room—bitterness and regret all tangled up.Christian stepped down from his father’s head of security, handing the reins to Alex, who had finally found his footing. Alex thrived in the role, and every so often he’d stop by the bakery, sketchbook in hand, and help me dream up designs for the next season. He even drew a new portrait of me for Christian, one that hung in our bedroom now.Sweet Delights stood even taller than the old one, with wide windows that let in the morni
CHRISTIANThe first thing I tasted was blood, stumbling to the ground when his fist collided with my jaw the moment I found him.I forced myself back onto my feet.The inner basement smelled like gasoline and sweat. Somewhere behind me, I could hear the faint echo of sirens and shouting, and that was enough fuel for me to stay and kill this bastard.He stood a few feet away, bleeding from where Liam had shot him, his shirt was torn, another knife glinting in his hand.That smug little grin still played on his lips, even now.“You’ve never been too soft on her,” he sneered, circling me like a wolf. “What changed, Christian? I actually liked you. But she made you soft, made you weak.”“That doesn’t concern you, Sawyer.” I spat blood onto the concrete floor, straightened as much as my body would let me, and met his eyes.“It does concern me, if she had felt anything back for me, I may have considered aborting this revenge plan. But she called me out, put me in my place, and picked you ov
PENELOPEI don’t even remember how I got out of that basement.One second Christian was telling me “I’ve got you” while he untied me, and the next Alex’s hand was gripping mine, pulling me up the stairs, his voice steady and calm as chaos raged around us.Liam limped behind us, refusing help even though the knife wound in his thigh was still bleeding.The building was swarming now. Red and blue lights painted the walls. Uniformed officers rushed past. Someone shouted into the radio. Another officer barked orders at someone else.But all I could hear was the echo of Lucas’s words in my head.“Break her. Not love her.”“My father rotted in prison because of your family.”“I vowed to destroy everything they loved. Even this child inside you.”My chest hurt so bad I thought I might actually be dying.I stumbled outside into the cool night air, but it didn’t help. Nothing helped. My heart was racing, my ears ringing. I couldn’t catch my breath.From somewhere above, a deep, furious voice c
CHRISTIANWe pulled up to the warehouse just as the last rays of light bled out of the sky.The place was quiet. Too quiet.Liam cut the engine and glanced at me, his knuckles flexing on the wheel.“You ready?”I didn’t answer. I was already getting out, slamming the door behind me, my gun in my hand as my shoes crunched over gravel.The doors weren’t locked. A single guard outside raised his head at the sound of us. He didn’t even get to speak before Liam barreled into him, dropping him with one solid punch. I didn’t stop to watch.Inside, more of Lucas’s men moved to intercept. Liam dove into them without hesitation, fists flying, the sound of bone and muscle cracking echoing through the empty space. I didn’t look back—I trusted him to handle it.My eyes were fixed on the hallway ahead.I followed the faint trail of light spilling from a room at the end, every step fueled by nothing but her name in my chest. Penelope. Penelope. Penelope.When I finally reached the doorway, I froze.
CHRISTIANAs we stepped off the plane, Liam fell into stride beside me and slid his phone into my hand without a word.“It’s your father,” he muttered.I blinked at him, my brow furrowing. My first instinct was to pull my own phone from my pocket—except there wasn’t one. There hadn’t been since the night I swung that bat at Maria’s hand and heard it shatter as it hit the floor. I hadn’t thought twice about it then. My entire focus had been on making her scream, and getting the truth out of her. I hadn’t had time to replace it.Now, holding Liam’s phone felt foreign. I pressed it to my ear. “Hello—”“We can’t find Penelope.”Those four words stopped everything.I froze in the middle of the jetway, my chest constricting as if someone had shoved a fist into it.“What do you mean you can’t find her?” My voice came out sharper than I intended.“I employed guards for her,” his voice came slowly through the receiver. “It was your brother’s idea ever since I announced her pregnancy at the par