The Mountain Man’s Babies: Books 1-5
Page 46
I try to imagine Cherish leaving her children and I can't. Those babies are everything to her, and the fact that she had to leave them here breaks my fucking heart. I swing the ax again. Harder and harder until sweat is pouring down my face until the trunk of the tree is decimated.
Until my body is exhausted, and a cop comes up behind me.
"Hey, son, you okay?" he asks.
I spin around, looking him in the eye.
Am I fucking okay? I just lost my woman. She's gone.
Which is the story of our relationship.
But I can't just accept that anymore. Now I need her here. Now I need her with me.
I’m sure I look like a murderer to this police officer. Sweat pours down my face, my shirt sleeves are rolled up. I've been screaming my lungs out, shouting at the tree I’ve hacked to bits. I'm angry goddammit. But I'm not going to let anyone talk me down right now unless they can tell me where Cherish is.
"Do you know where she is?" I asked the cop. I step up right close to his face, needing to be heard, to be seen. “Do you know where my… Where my Cherish is?"
"I'm here because I’m responding to your call. I don't understand what's going on exactly."
"You don't know what's going on—exactly?" I ask, trying not to let my anger boil over, but that pot is just about done. "I told the dispatcher that the mother of my children has been kidnapped. And I need someone—someone to go look for her. Now. The men who have her, they're going to make her pay for what she's done."
Cop holds up his hands, frowning. "How about you put down that ax, son, and we can start at the beginning. What exactly has this woman done?"
"She hasn't done a thing. She is a prisoner. In a fucking cult. And she escaped, but they came back for her and—"
The officer cuts me off. "Listen… James, is it? Let’s walk back to the police vehicle. We need to get the facts straight, all right?"
I drop the ax, willing to do anything he asks if it brings Cherish closer to me.
I follow him to his car, where another officer is speaking with Harper.
After I say my piece to both of them, they tell me, in no uncertain terms, that I am to come with them to the station to file a missing person’s report.
"I can't leave my children," I tell them, angry they are suggesting I leave any member of my family after what just happened to their mother.
"James," Harper says, "maybe it's best to just go with them, make sure all the facts are in order. I'll call Jaxon, he can go and sit with you until this is sorted." She touches my arm, urging me to calm down.
"Fine," I tell her. "But you need to go in that cabin and not let those babies out of your sight until I return, understood?"
Harper nods solemnly. "I'll take them to my house, all right? I have formula there, and disposable diapers. Is that all right with you?"
I nod, understanding her plan is better than mine—which is to grab these officers by their collars and demand they turn on their sirens and scour the mountain for my woman.
Then I walk inside the cabin to kiss my babies goodbye.
Swearing to be the father they need. A man who will get their mama back.
Chapter Sixteen
James
When I get down to the station, they start questioning me. As if I might be involved, and the reason Cherish is missing. As they survey the crime scene, the babies need to stay at Harper and Jax’s for a few nights, and I crash there too. The whole time I can’t sleep. I’m all torn up. Having the woman I want given to me and then taken from me more than once is more than I can fucking take.
And now I have our children. I look at our three babies, crying all the time because all they want their mama, but she isn't here. I try to rock them to sleep, but I don't have that touch that Cherish does.
I hate to say it, but I feel slightly better knowing that Harper and her cronies, like Rosie and Honor and Stella, can't do anything to calm the babies either. It's not just me. It's anyone who isn't mom.
But a few days later, I’m cleared by the police. My alibi was airtight, the footage at the hardware store proves I was there when Harper showed up at the house to find her gone. It doesn't change anything, though, Cherish is gone and there are no leads. I explain to the officers that Cherish told me the cult was headed to Montana to restart the compound. But Montana is a big fucking state. And it's not like I have anything else to go by. Of course, they promise to investigate, to follow any leads they may have. But I'm not holding my breath.
If I want to see my woman again then I have to find her myself.
Jaxon tries to talk me out of it: "You can’t go looking for her when you have her babies," he says.
But they aren’t just Cherish’s children. “They are my children too, and they need their mother.”
“They also need their father. And what are you going to do?” Jaxon asks. "Load those babies up in a van, driving up and down the interstate? It's a wild goose chase and you don’t know where you're going."
"Isn't that what love is?" I shake my head, furious. I'm sitting out on Jaxon's porch—the last place I want be. I want to be in my cabin, with my children and my woman. Not here. I'm ready for my life to begin, but one thing after another keeps happening. I'm tired of not having what I've wanted forever.
What I’m so fucking close to having.
"You can't load the babies up in a van," Jaxon says, softer now. “I know you know that, but sometimes it sounds like you're getting some harebrained idea in your mind."
“She is half of my heart."
"Are you sure you're not following your cock?" Jaxon asks.
I push Jax back because he doesn’t seem to understand what Cherish means to me. “No, I'm not following my fucking cock. How dare you to insinuate that?"
Jaxon raises his hands in the air. “Brother, I got your back, but you've only been here three days and already the mountain has lost its fucking cool.”
"You're missing the point," I tell Jaxon. “It's not about what drama has been happening, it's that injustice has been happening. It's about where Cherish actually went and finding her. She's the mother of my children, what don't you understand?"
"I understand perfectly," Jaxon steps back. "But I also know that the cult is dangerous. If you find them, it doesn’t mean you’ll come out of it alive. Maybe you should—"
"Hell, no," I tell him. "No way in hell do I think you'd leave Harper for dead."
"The last thing your children need is both of their parents gone," Jaxon says, his voice low and gravelly.
Those are some words that hit fucking close to home. "I don't want that either," I tell him. "But I love her, Jaxon. And I have to find her."
Jaxon doesn’t answer because he knows if he were in my position he’d do the exact same fucking thing. Anything to get her back.
“So, what's your plan?" he asks.
"I don't fucking know that yet," I tell him. “But I need to figure it out pretty damn fast."
—
Turns out my plan is one dead end after another.
The cops try to convince me that Cherish left of her own free will. They fucking suggest that maybe since she’s already married to someone else, perhaps she needed to leave me with the babies to let go of those choices.
"But she isn't actually married to anyone," I tell him. "The cult is practicing polygamy."
"I understand you keep saying that, but there's no documented polygamy in the state of Idaho. So, if she's practicing, it's under the radar, and we can’t do anything to prove it."
“But she isn't practicing," I yell. "She's forced into it."
"If we had a lead we could help you. The best thing you can do right now is move on. You know, sometimes, people don't want to be found."
His words sting, and I pray to God they aren't true. The idea of Cherish not wanting me hurts more than I expected, even knowing it simply isn't true.
The first chance I get, I load up the van, drive as far as I can toward Montana, about a nine-ho
ur drive. I want to believe that maybe love will lead me to her like it had before when we both arrived at the cabin.
But it isn't fair to the babies to keep them in a car like that, and after one night at a hotel with three infants and one exhausted daddy, I know it isn't realistic to drive aimlessly looking for her with the babies.
Harper and her friends tell me the babies will be fine with them, that they will be well looked after and that I don't need to worry.
As I kiss the heads of those three perfect babies, I swear on my life I will find their mother. Leaving them for the first time hurts like hell... but what choice do I have? Finding Cherish is the only thing that matters.
Jaxon and his buddies Hawk, Buck, and Wilder are all pissed as fuck too. The goddamn cops aren't doing anything besides filing paperwork. But we don't need that—we need vengeance.
We take turns, two at a time, leaving the mountain and the other women and children, and fly to Montana. When we get there, we drive for fucking hours.
We search, city by city, as many towns as we can fucking find, and look for her.
It's hard for everyone. I can't keep asking them to leave their families so I can find mine—but they refuse to stop looking.
The men on this mountain are nothing like the men back in the cult. They understand what it means to love deeply, to love well. To love your woman forever.
I won't stop searching until I have her in my arms.
But as the weeks turn to months, as the summer becomes fall, the leaves on the trees turning all sorts of brilliant colors—we find ourselves exhausted by a chase that is nothing but a dead end. It's hard to keep my head clear. I feel powerless to find Cherish—and I know she needs me.
I try to hold on to hope, but I know it's too much to keep asking my friends who have been here for me throughout all of this to continue at this pace. The rest of the men have growing children back home as well.
It's been five fucking months.
And the babies, they aren't just babies anymore. They are crawling and pulling themselves up. They're big enough to sleep through the night and we've come to understand one another. The four of us have been through it all together. First fevers and first teeth. First foods and first steps—for Jamie at least. Eight months old and that girl is moving—force of nature, that's what she is.
And dammit, it feels like it's all fucking slipping away. A life with Cherish. Five months is a long ass time. And winter is gonna roll in before we know it. Soon as it does, we'll be snowed in for months.
I call Jonah, filling him in. He's been here for me the best he can be, considering the distance between us, and as much as I’m grateful to all of Jaxon's crew for having my back—Jonah understands me better than they do—he's had my back and been with me through thick and thin.
"I'm just so goddamn restless," I explain. "I need to do something besides drive around, leaving the babies all the time. It's been months... and yet nothing. I'm no closer than I was before."
"You need to go find her yourself," Jonah urges. For some reason, his words ring most true—maybe because he is the one who has been through hell and back with me. He understands the power of these old bastards. How scared I am for Cherish's fate. He knows that the men at the compound will beat you with a shovel if they decide they don't like you—those fuckers don't need a gun.
Jonah tells me how he's dating some girl he met at a tattoo parlor—apparently, he's gotten all kinds of badass since I left. I feel like I need to be a little more badass myself.
"That's good, man," I tell him, trying to be happy for him.
"Enough about me," he says. "What's your plan? You can't live without knowing where she is."
"I'm gonna pack the van, just like Cherish did when she came out to the cabin. The babies are older now and can handle traveling with me. And there's no way I can stay put any longer."
The line is quiet for a minute. Then Jonah clears his throat. "I know you love her, James. But you can't pack those kids up and hit the road with winter coming soon. It's not like here in Miami. You aren't thinking straight."
"Fuck that, I have to go, Jonah. Don't you understand? I'm all alone. Trying to keep my shit together, but how the hell am I gonna do this?"
"Let me come and stay for the winter. You need someone to shoot the shit with, and hanging out with all those big, happy families is probably depressing as hell, considering."
"Considering Cherish is gone?"
I can hear Jonah sigh through the phone. "Exactly, man. Exactly right."
"No way, you have a life out there." I shake my head, though he can't see me. I'm mixing formula in a bottle, have Andrew in a carrier on my hip, and throwing animal crackers on the highchair tray for Jamie. Jonah doesn't need to be here for this. This is my life. Not his.
"I know you are done asking the other men on the mountain for help, and I know you'll never ask me for any—but I'm not asking. I'm telling. Let me come meet those babies of yours, and pour you some whiskey for getting through these last five months, all right?"
He doesn’t let me talk him out of it, and he tells me he'll be on the next flight coming to Idaho.
I look around the tiny cabin, shaking the bottle for Andrew, and thank God I'm not in this alone.
Chapter Seventeen
Cherish
For so long I held onto regret. Regretting the choices I made—mostly that I wasn't braver, sooner. Knowing that one night with James might have to be enough for a lifetime.
After driving in a van for what seems like an entire day, we end up the middle of nowhere, at a compound very like the one we just left. Except this one is much more permanent. There were maybe a hundred of us before, not counting children.
But this place is much larger than that. There are hundreds of people here, and not just people from the Lord's Will Bible Church, we have now merged with a sister church of so-called believers. Apparently, our doctrine matched up enough that we can join forces without causing unrest.
They'd been here less than a month when I arrived, and everyone is still getting settled. At first, I hoped I would get lost in the shuffle. I don't know our exact location, of course, no one will tell the women. The people from Lord's Will were raised in the real world, homeschooled, and churchgoers, but for the most part, they are people like me. We haven't been living this lifestyle for very long.
The people here, though, have been living this lifestyle forever. How they've been going unnoticed for so long is beyond me. I catch on pretty quick that if this has been their way of life for a decade, no police officer is coming after them.
And certainly, no one is going to be coming after me.
The moment I'm pulled from of the van, George drags me to the church elders. Luke is here, still. And how that man is still holding his head high, after his three wives left him, is beyond me. But he's here, wearing his suit and tie, next to some men I've never seen before. Apparently, they are the pastors here, the heads of the church. And when I stand before them, I'm told to get on my knees.
I brace myself, terrified of what they are going to ask me next, already gritting my teeth, refusing to be the woman they want me to be.
Theirs.
But to my surprise, they don't ask me to sleep with them. They don't take off my clothes. Now I'm not saying they are good people, but they truly believe I am a sinner and I need to repent. They also believe that I wasn't holy enough to be returned to my husband. Yet.
I try to explain that I had been forced away from my children.
They told me losing my babies was a part of God's plan for me. Of course, this idea is ludicrous, but I know better than to talk back. So, I stop talking about my children at all, and I bow my head, and I pray to a God I've never understood, asking for salvation from this hell.
Somehow, somewhere, something hears my still, small voice.
They send me to the kitchen, where I am to work back-breaking labor, washing dishes and making food. I work 12 hours a day, no freedom, no privilege
s. And then, and only then, if I prove myself as a woman will I be allowed back into my husband's home.
Apparently, once I am at George's home I'll be allowed my own bedroom, have the honor of carrying his children, and the privilege of shopping trips in town. These men must think that will appeal to me.
That's the last thing I want.
I lived with George before, and his wives, and I know that even though I would be given more 'freedom', the cost is just too great. They're fools to think I would want more than a cot in the pantry. More than my hands in soapy water, washing dishes for the compound, day in and day out. This punishment is a privilege and they don't know it.
I'm certainly not going to tell them.
"What do you have to say for yourself?" Elder Luke asks.
"Forgive me," I beg, feigning sorrow.
A month passes this way.
I don't hear from James.
A month passes this way.
My milk has dried up, my babies will soon forget my face.
A month passes this way.
I miss my period.
A month passes this way.
My breasts are tender once more.
I throw up every morning like clockwork.
Another sinner, a woman who just started working in the kitchen a few days ago, presses her hand to my back when she finds me in the bathroom.
"Are you okay?" she asks. "Are you with child?" Her name is Grace, and she offers it to me.
I nod, hoping I can trust her. Hoping she won't betray me with this truth. I haven't lain with George since I've returned. And I already know my time is running out.
"I'm four months along. If I weren't wearing such a large dress and apron, everyone would already know."
Grace nods, understanding." You're not the first one this has happened to. I can help."
"You? How?" I look around the empty bathroom. "They are going to kill me when they find out I'm pregnant."