SUPPLICANT
A sizzling novella, previously featured in the limited-time Naughty Brits anthology
Sneak peek!
by Sierra Simone
Prologue
Four Years Ago
Heās late.
(James Church Cason is never late.)
Heās stuck in traffic. Heās lost. Something happened.
(Nothing keeps Church from what he wants. Ever.)
He loves me. He wouldnāt do this to me.
(But do I know that? Beyond a shadow of a doubt? Do I really know him well enough to say?)
Heās not coming.
And on that point, Iām forced to finally face the truth.
Heās not coming.
āWould you like to try him again?ā the woman next to me asks kindly, nodding down at the phone in my hand. Sheās a strangerāsomeone employed by the church to facilitate wedding ceremoniesāand her warmth and concern are blistering. Iām blistered with it. My face is hot, my eyes are seared with unshed tears, my voice is burnt and dry when I speak.
āNo, thank you,ā I rasp. āI thinkāI think it wonāt do much good. Iām so sorry, but do you have any water?ā
I hate the tenderness in her eyes when she nods, because it brings me that much closer to breaking, and I canāt break. I wonāt. Not yet and not here. I look over at my little brother, twelve and fidgeting in his tuxedo, his blue eyes wide with worry. I offer him a wobbly smile.
āItās going to be okay,ā I say, reaching out to squeeze his hand. āAt least no boring ceremony to sit through, hey?ā
He looks like heās about to cry, and that also brings me closer to the brink, so I look away. Through the cracked door that separates the narthex from the nave.
Thereās only a smattering of people insideāfifteen, maybe, in a church that could seat five hundred. Theyāre all here for meāfellow volunteers at the museum and friends from college. No family other than Jax, because our mother died a few years back and our father is a piece of shit whoād rather get stoned than do anything else.
No one is here for Church. No one. Thereās no sight of his parents, his brother, the niece who was supposed to be the flower girl, the sister who was supposed to do a reading. No friends. No other sharply dressed professors or sun-drenched archaeologist types.
Stupid, Charley. Youāve been stupid.
The vicar clears his throat and begins making his way down the aisle to me, to the great interest of the worried guests, and when he slips in through the door, he takes my hand.
āMy dear,ā he starts, and he doesnāt have to finish. Heās been waiting up by the altar for almost an hour. I know what heās going to say.
āYes,ā I say. āI shouldāI need to go.ā
āOf course,ā he says, just as kindly as the event planner had. āIāll tell the guests. Something vague, naturally.ā
Well, he could hardly be specific, could he? Since even I donāt know why my wedding is missing its groom.
āThank you,ā I say. My eyes are burning something fierce, and I know I only have minutes before I disintegrate. āIs there a side door I canāā
The event planner returns with a cup of water and an expression of supreme discomfort. āMs. Tenpenny,ā she starts, using the water as an excuse not to meet my gaze, āthere is a driver out frontāyour fiancĆ©ās driver.ā
Thereās a collective wince as we all think the same thing. Is someone still your fiancĆ© after they leave you at the altar?
āEr, Mr. Casonās driver, I mean,ā she hurriedly revises. āHe says Mr. Cason sent him to give you a ride to your home.ā
Church sent his driver.
On our wedding day.
To take me back to my place.
āOh, did he?ā I say. Softly.
A blunt, iron ball of anger sinks through all the hurt, through all the embarrassment and vulnerability, sinks right into the pit of my stomach. My anger will anchor me to the earth, it will keep me from floating away, and so I hold on to it with eager hands. Because Church doesnāt get to have this. He doesnāt get to have helping me, he doesnāt get to have a gesture, no matter how pitifully small it is. He doesnāt get to feel good about a single damn part of today, he doesnāt get the satisfaction of looking back on the day he left a bride alone to be humiliated and heartbroken and think but at least I took care of her.
No.
He doesnāt get that. Especially when itās coupled with waving his familyās obscene wealth in my face at the same time.
I take a drink of the water the planner brought and then hand it back to her. I take Jaxās hand in mine and meet the vicarās concerned stare. āSo is there a side door?ā
***
It turns out that I used the last of my pride on turning down the driver. I gathered my things into a holdall and left the church without bothering to change, which meant shoving my fluffy white skirt and petticoats through the narrow turnstiles at the Tube station, and having my little brother hold the train of my gown on the escalator so it wouldnāt catch at the bottom. And then we rode the Tube home in silence, me trying not to cry and Jax practically vibrating with confused adolescent worry.
He was going to walk me down the aisle.
Now heās helping me jam my wedding dress in and out of Tube-car doors and turnstiles.
Of course heās worried.
What comes next? I have no idea. All my plans for the last few months started and ended with Church, with the dark-haired god in suits so crisp they made the rest of the world seem soft. Compared to those sapphire eyes and that hungry mouth, nothing else seemed to matter: not my terrible, barely there dad, not my little brother growing increasingly lost and uninterested in school, not the bills piling up on our kitchen table. With Church, Iād been able to pretend that everything would be okay, because how wouldnāt it be okay in the arms of a man like him?
Jesus. What a fool Iāve been.
Not for the first time, I wish I had friends. Real friends, not just a handful of people who know my name and vaguely wish me well.
Iād ask them if Iād been oblivious. Naive.
After all, in what world did Charley Tenpennyāa destitute college student with an American accentāhave to offer a man like him? Other than hours and hours of dark, delicious sex?
I blow out a long breath as Jax and I climb the stairs to our dank, tiny flat.
I wonāt think of the sex. I wonāt think of the way Churchās fingers felt wrapped around my hips or curling inside me.
I wonāt think of how wild those blue eyes would look when they lit on me, as if the mere sight of me turned him into an animal. My angry god, Iād whisper in his ear, leaning in close so he could feel my lips brush against his skin. My temple. My Church. And then Iād be seized and dragged to the nearest appropriate place for fucking. Sometimes even not that appropriate, because he could never wait.
You are my church, heād growl in response as he pinned me against the first convenient surface and took me. His voice would be smoky and carnal. You are all I see. All I pray.
Unholy obsession. Hard sex. When he proposed, it felt like a fairy tale.
How could I have been so stupid? Men like him donāt marry the girls they fuck in corners.
But then why did he buy me a ring? A dress? Why did he call me Charlotte Cason, as if I were already his wife?
The flatās door is hanging open when we reach it, and Iām jerked out of my thoughts so fast I nearly lose my breath. Dust swirls in the weak light coming in through the kitchen window, and from here I can detect the stale beer-and-cigarettes smell that suffuses our home. Our life. Our nasty, tattered life.
How did I ever think I could be Mrs. Cason?
āCharley?ā Jax asks uncertainly.
Jax. You have to focus for your brother.
āWait here, buddy,ā I tell him, handing him my phone. āCall 999 if Iām not back out in just a minute, okay?ā
He nods, scared, and itās for his sake, all for him, that I muster up a wobbly smile and then push through the opened door, my wedding dress brushing against the old, stained carpet as I do.
āDad?ā I call out, expecting to see him asleep on the sofa or perhaps stumbling out of the back bedroom, stoned and bleary.
Thereās only silence.
I check the kitchen and the bathroom, then mine and Jaxās room, and then his room. Thereās no one here. āItās okay, kiddo,ā I call out, and then turn back to look at Dadās room again, noticing for the first time whatās missing.
His clothes. His phone charger.
The keys to the only car we have.
Dread claws its way up to my spineādread just as terrible and carnivorous as standing in a church waiting for a groom who will never comeāand I go back into my room and lift up my mattress.
My meager savingsāscraped together from working at a cafe near my school and stuffed into a worn envelopeāare gone. I donāt need to look at my banking app to know that my accountāshared with my dadāis cleaned out too. The shared account was the very reason Iād needed to stuff money under the bed, in case there came a month when we needed extra to cover rent or food because Dad had spent everything else on booze or bets or worse. It happened regularly enough that I never could build up a healthy reserve, but still, Iād managed to put enough under the mattress to supplement my tuition fees for next semester.
And now there wonāt be enough. Not for school, and maybe not for rent either, and oh God. I havenāt just lost Church today, I think maybe . . .
Maybe Iāve lost everything.
Not just a future with him, but a future at all.
What am I going to do?
Focus. Focus for Jax.
āIs Dad gone?ā Jax asks, his voice too solemn for such a sweet boy. āHeā¦left?ā
Itās too much. I nod, my chin quavering and my throat aching, and then I sink onto my bed. The white skirts of my wedding dress rustle and fluff around me.
āDo you want a hug?ā Jax asks, looking like he needs it more than me.
Openly crying now, I open my arms and draw my little brother into the worldās longest, teariest hug, no longer able to stop the sobs from tearing through my body.
Tomorrow.
Tomorrow, I will be brave. Tomorrow, I will focus.
Iāll unenroll from UCL, Iāll quit volunteering at the British Museum because a resume for a career that needs a graduate degree to get started is now the least of my worries.
Iāll get a job, or two or three. Iāll find us a cheaper flat and buy us good food and make sure Jax is on time to school every day. Iāll be the sister and guardian Jax deserves.
And I will never, ever forgive Church Cason.
But all of that is tomorrow, and right now itās today, and so I weep. I clutch my brother close and I let every single moment of agony rip through my chest and out of my throat. I give in to every horrible, self-hating thought I have, I curse myself for being stupid and poor and plain, and I curse Church for being perfect and cruel and wealthy enough to send a driver when he couldnāt be bothered to show up himself. I cry until Iām lightheaded and swollen-eyed and exhausted. I cry a thousand tears for every second I stood alone waiting for Church and for every pound note my asshole father stole from me and for every class I wonāt get to take.
Tomorrow, Iāll be furious. Tomorrow, Iāll become the icy warrior Iāll need to survive.
But today, when I cry, I cry for a broken heart.
And for a man with dark, dark blue eyes and a voice like smoke and sin.