Unsuitable Obsession - Part One
Unsuitable Obsession - Part One
Title Page
Part one
Prologue
Unsuitable
Obsession
Part one
Trisha Fuentes
Unsuitable Obsession - Part one
TRISHA FUENTES
Smashwords Edition
Copyright © 2013 Trisha Fuentes
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This book is a work of fiction. All names, characters and places are used fictitiously. Celebrity names, trademarks, songs, brand names, street names and likenesses are the sole property and copyright of their respective authors. All written material is copyright of Trisha Fuentes. Cover image by BigStockPhoto and Diego Cervo; Reuse and/or reproduction of any material are strictly prohibited.
ISBN 978-0-9825797-2-5
To my Father Figure, Larraine; never have I known a woman like you, you are a true emotional survivor. I hope I’ve made you proud; and to my Dad, Fred…I understand now, I truly do.
I love you both.
To the Rico, Lugo, Cruz, Fuentes and Nava Families: Thank you for allowing me to step into your world of deep adoration, family conviction, high regards and utter respect for your kin. Thank you for all the amazing childhood memories!
To my sister’s Tamara and Monica: May you always feel complete and loved to the fullest extent with the men in your lives.
To my daughter, Erika: Oh how I envy you! You have your whole life ahead of you and know exactly what you want; study hard and keep chasing your dreams for they can come true!
To my own green-eyed monster, Lou: Thank you for the thrills of sharing your exciting life, the ups and downs and everything in between. Thank you for the boys and the passion you show me daily, te amo mucho!
To my three brother-in-laws: This is only fiction.
Prologue
“It started out innocent enough, playful glances, a gentle pat on his arm, we were cordial with each other, cracked a joke now and then—”
Dr. Hayward stopped her at that point. “No—no Amber, I want you to explain how it happened.”
“Explain? How it happened?” She repeated.
“Yes dear, can you do that for me now?” He asked, hopeful.
Amber closed her eyes. Can she do that? How could she not? The images in her mind practically strangled her to death she couldn’t help but think of anything else. “...I found myself undeniably attracted to him, and that’s not an excuse for what I’ve done, it’s the truth.”
“I don’t want you to create an excuse Amber, I want you to tell me the truth; a truth statement,” Dr. Hayward explained, restarting his dictating machine.
Amber felt her throat close up. She choked back tears and tried to focus on the ceiling tiles above her. “When he was in the same room, I couldn’t think of anything else but how to get him to touch me.”
“That’s good Amber, keep going,” Dr. Hayward stated, optimistic.
“...He was one of those men whose smile alone could build up a woman’s appetite to gratify her. He was so incredibly gorgeous; no woman was able to deny his charms, any woman who was around him was instantly mesmerized, and not just me, he had that deep affect on the opposite sex. He was charming, affectionate and considerate...conceited, spoiled, intelligent, fashionable—Good Lord—he was perfect. He was my...he was my...” Amber could hardly mouth out the word, bent over in anguish as tears bit against her eyes again.
“Amber, you need to say it now, he was what? You can you know, you’re safe here; no one else is going to hear you. We’re not in front of a group like you’ve requested, you’re with me,” he calmly noted, clicking off his dictating machine once again. “Now, tell me how it happened, let’s go back to the day when you felt you needed to end the relationship.” He then restarted the device.
Amber stared up at the wall and wiped away the moisture from her face. End it? Yes, to put it quite bluntly, she did end her despair. Cut it so severely she would have a scar for the rest of her life.
One
A Scar for the Rest of Her Life
Amber’s life was intertwined with her husband’s family. Rather, her husband’s family ruled her entire existence. It was what she always wanted, a real family with lots of relatives unlike her own. The tight knot that was the Sanchez Family was a far cry from the Fitzgerald’s.
“The Family”, was what she called it, with all its deep-rooted Latin-American traditions. The drama a clan that size would unfold! She always craved relatives like them and relished in the fact that she was part of their exclusive unit.
Her father, Sam Fitzgerald was a mere teenager when he had Amber. He didn’t know how or want to know how to be a father; he’d rather explore the world on his motorcycle than learn to be a parent of any kind. Giving up the challenge to Amber’s mother, Sheila, Sam walked away from Amber and her sister when they were very young and Amber never truly understood why her father thought it was so effortless to just leave like that, and, after the divorce, Amber never understood why her Daddy never picked them up on scheduled days to see him. How can a parent just do that? What on earth would possess a parent to just ride away from that kind of responsibility? That deep horrific consideration was now hers to swallow. She would leave her husband and kids for the man she now loved, if only he’d do the same. Good Lord, could this be the same exact reason why her own father left her mother?
“...Are you going to calm down now?” He asked exasperated, arms still around her body in a tight grasp. He wasn’t going to let her take off yet, not until he gained his way.
Amber was breathing heavily, she wanted to compose herself, she did, but relaxing would only mean to continue the misery. “Please leave her,” she asked, one last time.
He was worn out with the subject and closed his eyes in disappointment.
His silence only fed her decision. She could either go on through life the way she was living, or she could end it, no longer feel the pain.
With all her might she pulled away from him and pushed his unreceptive body into the wall. Amber ran out of the doorway and hiked down the narrow hallway—ignoring his calls for her return from the staircase above.
Don’t look back Amber, don’t look back!
She ignored his demands. In the corner of her eye, she caught a glimpse of the pool nearby. Kids splashed in the water—a big, fleshy man did a belly flop off the diving board. She hid her face from their view, her failed attempt at being decent. Yah decent…I don’t feel decent, I feel like trash…Sprinted down the staircase, reached her car, pressed the keyless entry and unlocked the door, flung her body into the driver’s seat and pulled down the vanity mirror. Why do they call it a vanity mirror anyhow? All she saw lately when she looked in the mirror was a cheater—an adulterer—a woman deceiving her husband with another man, excessive rather, a woman cheating on her husband with her brother-in-law.
She screeched away from the motel and tears flowed down her face, warm, frightening tears. How could she continue on with this charade? It was so hard and tiresome to keep up with all the lies. But he was so magnetic, so elusive, the man she always wanted, but didn’t settle for. He wa
s the opposite of Victor Sanchez, contrary in every way. Oh she knew it was vile, immoral and insincere, every wicked word you could think of and heck, she even liked her sister-in-law! Leticia Sanchez (her sister-in-law) was everything her in-laws cherished. That dedicated Latin woman with strong Catholic beliefs, amazing morals with similar family history (salt of the Earth) who cooked a fantastic Mexican meal; from the top of her enchiladas right down to her perfect pinto beans. Amber couldn’t cook, nope, not one little bit. All she was skillful at was getting the timing just right on a Lean Cuisine. Damn, she had that down to a science! Amber was just the opposite of Leticia. Leticia was a long leggy brunette; with gorgeous green eyes she inherited from her mother and grandmother. That respected trait that The Family always spoke about, like she was some patron saint that no one else could tarnish. Amber was always fighting her feeling of being envious of Leticia—even though she shouldn’t be, Leticia was allowed to build a life with the man that Amber now loved. Leticia got to eat breakfast with him, watch him shower, go away with him, and create a daughter.
Amber drove herself to the nearest drug store, bought what she required and then drove to another motel. Once in the parking lot, she sat in her car sobbing. Oh how could they do it? All those years of lying, deceiving the people that they truly loved, swallowing her pride, hiding their secret affair, face to face with the family that she admired, loved.
He doesn’t want me enough to leave her…I can never leave my husband…If nobody can leave…then no one will win…
Amber got out of the car and stumbled to the front office and checked herself in. She reached the motel room, fudged with the keys for a moment then opened up the door. So, so despondent, she tossed her purse onto a chair next to the window and plopped herself onto the bed with a thud. Amber then rolled over on the mattress and spread her arms out wide, feeling the length of it and cried.
She would teach him a lesson. Send him a message that he would never forget. All she wanted from him now was to show her how much he cared, that’s all...just show her. Prove it to her. He said he would never leave Leticia, yelled at her when she asked him to. Said he would never put his family through that sort of shame. Said, “It would be a scandal” and that the Family would never allow him to go anywhere without the humiliation, it would be far worse for him than it would be for her. So why continue on with the affair? Why be such a willing participant? WHY?!
Amber continued to cry in anguish on top of the sheets. It was the bed they used to make love on, the one she prayed to forget. She wished there was still some scent of him, but all she smelled was starch and bleach.
Amber started when her cell phone rang and believed it was her mother calling and pulled herself up from the bed, “Hello?”
“Amber you OK? Where the hell are you?”
It was Eduardo. She didn’t want to speak to him and never wanted to hear or see him again! She hung up the phone and threw the cell clear across the room in defeat. The bell continued to ring…That relentless Van Halen “Jamie’s Cryin” cell phone jingle, over and over and over again.
Amber continued to bawl, her heart ached for some sort of relief. Screaming off the top of her lungs, she went to the cell phone and yelled, “You son-of-a-bitch! Who the hell do you think I am? I’m not some bimbo of yours! I’m your fuckin’ sister-in-law for crissakes! You need to show some respect!” She then twirled herself around and threw herself on the bed and the phone still continued to ring. She couldn’t take it anymore and ran over to it this time and answered the damn thing. “What? What!”
“Amber where are you? Come back, let’s talk—”
Amber cleared her throat. “No Eduardo, its over, done.”
“NO! Wait!”
“No Eduardo, you’ve said all you had to say, all I care to hear...I wanted you to leave Leticia but you can’t...It’s over! I’m done with this...someone has to teach you a lesson!”
“What? Amber please—”
Amber was distraught, desperate and beside herself; she wanted to distance herself from all her sorrow and ripped open the back of the cell phone this time and removed the battery. No more rings, no more calls, no more interruptions!
Amber dragged herself over to the writing desk. Opened up the drawer and pulled out the writing paper and pen the motel had provided and eyed the Bible sitting neatly in the corner. It doesn’t faze her…not one little bit.
She began the first letter, one to her husband, Victor. Oh how she believed she had loved him! He was her rock, her sponge and her confidant. She would thank him for allowing her to feel so at ease with his family. Thank him for introducing her to relatives so full of love and passion for one another. Thank him for Adrian and Valentina (her son and little girl) and apologize to him about his brother.
The next letter was a combination, one for her mother and her sister, asking them to take care of her children. To make sure that Valentina—her four year-old—knew what it was like to become a lady, a woman in this world. To show her pictures now and then so that she wouldn’t forget her mother and to make sure that Victor still remembered he had a son, Adrian, who was in junior high and would need a strong male influence after she was gone and then finally, to Eduardo, a farewell to him, a finale of sorts. A heart-felt love-letter to the man who stole her heart the day she had met him.
It was a complex relationship, their clandestine affair. Watching him from afar, holding back from not wanting to wrap her arms around him and never letting go. It had been a constant battle at family gatherings, keeping up the charade. Sister-in-law slash brother-in-law first and foremost. Pretending to be attracted to her husband, continuing to have intercourse with him while fantasizing he was really Eduardo. Trying to figure out what lacked in her marriage, trying to figure out what went wrong and what happed to them when Victor was such a great guy! It had all been so fatiguing—strenuous to extreme—having to continue to be the guiltless girl, the deserving girl of incomparable love. Fifteen years of rationalizing; give and take and bending over backwards, it was all so laborious, she wanted to be unrestricted, no longer thinking of how to attack her feelings; she wanted to surrender to them.
Good Lord, what did she do? How did she let it go on for so long? Her dutiful husband never having a clue, and her kids...oh God...it was so difficult to have them, her daughter, Valentina, with her face so round and pudgy and beautiful, and her son, Adrian, all grown up, such a young man! Would they miss their Mommy? Oh God, they would…and Eduardo…Oh God, Eduardo...would he miss her as well? Would he? Good Lord, she...loved...him...so much!
Amber slowly submerged herself in a tub of hot water; it was soothing on the contrary—but not gratifying enough. She eyed the sharp razor, so shiny, small and quick. All she had to do now was to slash her wrist, it would be immediate, quick, and then it will be all over—done with. No scandal in the family and nothing to verify, no more having to watch Leticia and Eduardo hug, no more Christmas’ with The Family, or Thanksgiving dinners, birthdays, weddings. No more family gatherings and no more hurting and deceiving Victor.
Amber reached for the razor blade. Shiny, small and quick.
Through her weeping, she grasped the razor and raised her left wrist.
Quick...Quick...I can never leave Victor...Eduardo doesn’t love me enough to leave her...Doesn’t want me enough to show me…I don’t wanna do anything but go away…run away…Please God, oh please let it be fast, Oh God, I don’t even wanna breathe!…Eduardo doesn’t want me…Oh God, why doesn’t he want me? Why doesn’t he love me enough to show me? Oh God, Eduardo doesn’t want me…Daddy never wanted me either...Oh God…
AMBER
Fifteen Years Earlier
As long as I could remember, I always knew something special was going to happen to me. When I was ten, I would cling onto that small hope that no matter how bad a day I was having, there was still something gigantic to expect just around the corner.
I’m still waiting...
Where do I begin? I’ll be eightee
n in a couple of months having just started my senior year in high school. I’m one of those kids who started school late. No, not because my Mom was some kind of idiot, but because my birthday happened to fall late in the year (born in December and you had to be born before November) my bad luck in order to start kindergarten. I was tossed in with other kids much younger than me, but since I was so shy, I always wondered who would be my friend for the day. I was oftentimes intimidated and became a good artist by the age of seven. I’d rather hide in a corner with my crayons and drawing pencils than conjure up any effort to find someone to play with.
I grew up in the San Fernando Valley, a small humble neighborhood in Southern California. I have an older sister, Molly, and I love her to death. Molly graduated last year and I miss her companionship. Molly was a song leader and I thought since being associated with her friends, all her popular connections would befriend me, but not true. I’m oftentimes alone, walking around with my head down, anticipating a friendly hello and I suddenly find myself grouped among the other Caucasian kids who aren’t considered fashionable because we can’t afford trendy clothes. Recently, I’ve heard that word “stoner” whispered behind me in the hallways, but I’m not a stoner, I’m just insecure and I’ve never even tried drugs, well, OK, yes, I have tried marijuana, once in fact, and got really sick afterwards. But just because I’m not some stylish chic-chick, I’m considered a stoner? I’m more like someone who is stuck in the 1970’s, but I’m labeled a nobody in the mass hysteria of this New Wave.