Letter #15 Ella, We lost someone today.
Youâd think Iâd be used to it after all this time, even callous toward it. A few years ago I was. I have no idea whatâs changed lately, but now it feels like every loss is exponentially harder than the last.
Or maybe theyâre the same, but Iâm different.
More angry.
Itâs hard to describe, but Iâm somehow more aware now of my disconnection, my inability to forge emotional bonds outside of a few close friends. That small list includes you.
How can I be so connected to someone Iâve never laid eyes on, yet not the majority of the guys around me? Is it that youâre safer through paper because youâre not standing in front of me? Less of a threat, maybe?
I wish I knew.
I wish I had the words for this guyâs wife, his kids. I wish I could take it away for them, take his place. Why does the world take the people who are loved, ripping holes in the fabric of other peopleâs souls, while Iâm allowed to skate by unscathed? Where is the justice in such a random system, and if thereâs no justice, then why are we here?
I feel that same restless urge taking over again, to accomplish the mission and move on. Check the box, pull up the stakes, and know we made a difference.
Iâm just not sure what that difference is anymore.
Tell me something real. Tell me what it feels like to live in the same place your whole life. Is it stifling to have such deep roots? Or does it let you sway instead of break when the winds come? Iâve gone with the wind for so long that I honestly canât imagine it.
Thank you for letting me unload on you. I promise I wonât be such a downer next time.
~ Chaos â¦
âIâm sorry?â I asked, staring at Beckett like he had two heads.
âWhat did you just say?â There was no way heâd said what I heard.
âMarry me.â
Or maybe he did say it.
âHave you lost your mind?â
âMaybe.â He leaned back against the porch railing but didnât cross his arms in front of his chest like he did when his stubborn switch was triggered. Instead he grasped either side of the railing, leaving his torso unprotected. Vulnerable. âBut it would work. On paper, at least.â
âI donât⦠I canât⦠Iâm speechless.â
âGood, that will give me a chance to convince you.â
Oh my God, he was serious.
âIf you marry me, the kids are my dependents. I can take care of them.â
âYou want to marry me to take care of my kids.â I said it slowly, certain I had somehow heard it wrong.
âYes.â
My mouth opened and closed a few times as I tried to get a wordâany wordâpast my lips. I just couldnât think of any.
âWhat do you think?â
âWeâre not even dating! And youâ¦you want to get married?â
Havoc came trotting up to the porch, but she didnât go to Beckett. She sat next to me, like sheâd sensed her handler had lost his fool mind.
âNot in the romantic sense!â He raked a hand over his face. âI suck at explaining this.â
âTry. Harder.â
âOkay. I was reading the MIBG papers in the hospital with Maisie, and I remembered what youâd said about your insurance not covering it. So I looked through the hospital website, and they take my insurance, and not at your coinsurance rate. The whole thing is covered.â
âGood for you. Now you can get treated for cancer.â How the hell could he just suggest that we get married?
âIâm not done explaining.â
I wanted to throw him back in his truck and off my property, but there was the tiniest spark in me that lit up at the thought that Maisie could get the treatment she needed. And that little spark was hope. Man, I hated hope.
Hope fooled you, gave you the warm fuzzy feelings just to yank them away again.
And right now, Beckett was a big slice of warm, fuzzy hope, and I hated him for it.
Taking my silence for acquiescence, Beckett continued.
âIf you marry me, the kids are covered. All of Maisieâs treatments are paid for. No more fighting with the insurance people. No more generics. She will get the best possible treatments.â
âYou want me to marry you, to become your wife, sleep in your bedâwhen you wonât so much as kiss meâall for insurance? Like Iâm some kind of prosââ
âWhoa!â He interrupted me, waving his hands. âWe wouldnât have to actuallyâ¦you know.â His eyebrows rose at least an inch.
âNo, I donât know.â I crossed my arms over my chest, knowing damn well what he meant. If he had the balls to suggest marriage, he could certainly lay out the terms.
He sighed in exasperation. âWeâd only have to be married in the legal sense. On paper. We could live separately and everything. Keep your name, whatever. It would just be to cover the kids.â
Oh my God, the man I loved was really standing in front of me, proposing marriage, not because he loved me back but because he thought it would save my daughter. Now I loved him even more, and hated both of us for it.
âOnly in the legal sense? So you donât actually want me? You only want to protect my kids?â Great, now I sounded pissed that he didnât want me in his bed. If my emotions could just pick a side, that would be great.
âI thought we covered this already. I want you. That just doesnât play into me asking you to marry me.â
âCan you actually hear yourself? You want me, but you donât want to marry me. But youâre willing to marry me to cover the kids for insurance, as long as we donât actually live like weâre married.â All of the legal entanglement, none of the love, or the commitment, or the sex.
Which left us with the only aspect of marriage I was really familiar with: the part where the husband walked away.
âExactly.â
âOkay, this conversation is over.â I turned, and then spun right back around to face him. âYou know what? Itâs not. Marriage means something to me, Beckett! Or at least it used to. Maybe itâs not the same for you, or you think because of the way I let Jeff divorce me that I think itâs just a piece of paper, but itâs not. Itâs supposed to be a lifetime of love, and commitment, and loyalty. Itâs supposed to be all those vows about sickness and health, and better and worse, and loving someone even on the days you donât like them. Itâs not, hey, letâs sign this piece of paper and join up while itâs convenient. Itâs supposed to be about building a life with the one person on earth who is meant to be yours. Itâsâ¦itâs not meant to be temporary. Itâs supposed to be forever.â
He stepped toward me and then stopped himself, tucking his thumbs in his pockets.
âItâs about love, Beckett.â
âAnd I love your kids. No supposed to be about it.â
The intensity in his voice, his eyes, hit me smack in the heart. âThey love you, too,â I admitted. So do I. Which was why I couldnât agree to this. It would destroy them when it ended. Signing myself up for the hurt was one thing, but my kids? That was where I drew the line.
His whole posture softened, like my words had taken some of the fight out of him.
âI donât want to do anything that would jeopardize them, or you. Iâm just saying that if they were mine, legally, or half mine, Maisie could get the treatment she needs. This could save her life.â
That spark of hope flared, shining too much light on everything the kids and I had been through. All the sleepless nights. All the medical bills that piled up on my desk, threatening to bankrupt us. The overwhelming knowledge that if she didnât have the MIBG treatment, she most likely wouldnât live.
But what happened to her once Beckett was done playing house?
âI donât know you nearly well enough for thisânot in the ways that matter.â
His eyes flared with pain, and those defenses went back up. âYou know me well enough to have given me decision-making rights for Maisie, right?â
âThat was for a few hours so I could go to Coltâs graduation, and only for the worst-case scenario!â
âReality check, Ella. Your entire life right now is a worst-case scenario.â
Ouch.
âYeah, well you said it yourself: youâve never been in a relationship that lasted more than a month. You werenât even willing to kiss me because you said youâd screw it up and that would hurt Colt and Maisie.â
The anger vanished from his face instantly and was replaced with an overwhelming sadness. âYou donât trust me.â
My heart wanted to. My heart screamed that he would do anything for the kids. My head, on the other hand, wasnât backing down from his own declaration that it wouldnât last.
âI thought I knew Jeff. I loved him. I gave him everything, and the minute that everything turned into the twins, he walked. I never dated again. Not once. I swore that Iâd never put my kids in a position to let someone walk out on them again.â
âI would never walk away from them, or you. I will always show up, Ella.â
âDonât you dare lie to me. The men in my life have a habit of promising with one hand and packing with the other.â
âIt wasnât a lie the first time I said it, and nothingâs changed. Itâs a vow.â
âThat was for soccer! Not marriage! You canât stand there and promise me always when two weeks ago you werenât even open to the possibility of a relationship.â
âItâs just on paper, Ella!â
âItâs not! The way youâre proposing that I depend on youâthat my kids depend on youâis not on paper. Thatâs very real. What if you walk away while sheâs mid-treatment? Theyâd stop it! How is that any better than me struggling right now to find the money? If anything it would be more damaging, because at least I know what Iâm up against right now. Do you know what a long haul this is? Even if she beats it, the relapse rate⦠You donât understand the long-term implications of what youâre offering, as well-intentioned as it may be.â And it was; it was the most heartfelt, genuine offer Iâd ever received. But life had taught me long ago that intentions were worth nothing.
âAll I can give you is my word, and the promise that no matter what happens to me, theyâd be covered. Maisie would live.â
âYou donât know that, either.â My biggest fear slipped out as if it were nothing, but I should be used to it by now with this man. He had a way of stripping away my defenses, leaving me open to the elements. But I didnât know how to trust the appearance of sunshine after living in a perpetual hurricane. Not when there was the overwhelming possibility that he was simply the eye of the storm.
âI donât,â he admitted. âBut when she asked if she was going to die, I promised her that it wasnât going to happen on my watch, and this is the only way I can think of to keep that promise.â
Ice ran through my veins, chilling me from the heart outward.
âMy daughter asked you if sheâs going to die?â
âYeah, when we were in Montroseââ
âAnd youâre just now telling me this?â I stalked forward until I was only a breath away from him, glaring up at his stupid, perfect face.
âYeah, I guess.â
âAnd you promised her that she wasnât going to die?â
âWhat else would you have wanted me to say, Ella? That she has a 10 percent chance of living until November? Thatâs only five months from now!â He had the nerve to look like I was the one who was nuts.
âIâm well aware!â My voice pitched breakingly high. âYou donât think I keep a mental countdown in my head? That Iâm not excruciatingly aware of every day with her? How dare you tell her that she wonât die. You have no right to make that kind of promise to her.â
âTo her, or to you?â he asked softly. âSheâs a child who needs to be reassured, told how strong she is, that this fight is far from over, and yes, I realize how long this will take. Iâm not about to tell her sheâs a few months away from defeat.â
âYou shouldnât have made that promise,â I reiterated. âI donât lie to my kids, and you canât, either. This war sheâs fighting is overwhelming. Itâs David versus Goliath.â
âRight, and youâve armed her with a slingshot and sent her against the giant. Iâm telling you that I have a damn tank, and you wonât use it! Are you really going to watch her die because you wonât gamble that Iâm a decent guy? What do you want? Character references? A lie detector? Put me through anything you want, just let me save her!â
He swore, and that alone pulled me out of my anger enough to listen to the rest of what he was saying.
âYou swore. I donât think Iâve ever heard you swear before.â
He walked past me, running his hands over his hair until they clasped behind his neck. Once half the porch was between us, he turned around. âYou have my most sincere apology for that. I havenât said a word like that aloud for over ten years. But the rest? I wonât apologize for that. You can think Iâm crazy all you want. I get it. Youâre scared of her dying and scared of what kind of guy sheâs chained to as a dad if she lives, even if itâs only on paper.â
âYes and no.â
âWhich one?â
âIâm not scared of her being chained to you,â I admitted softly. âI know youâd do anything for them. I see it in the way you take care of them, the way they trust you.â
âBut you wonât trust me to stay.â
How long could Ryanâs letter possibly keep him here? Was he so honor-driven by that letter that he would sacrifice himself with a marriage? Could I trust that honor to keep him around long enough to save Maisie? This was all such a screwed-up tangle of a mess.
âI donât trust anyone to stay, and youâve already warned me that I shouldnât. That youâll eventually walk out.â
âOh no. You donât get to use my words against me unless you get them right. I said you wouldnât let me stayâthat youâd push me out. But it looks like you donât even need me to mess things up before you start shoving. Do you do that to everyone who gets close to you? Or am I just lucky?â
I ignored the truth of his jab, refusing to look in the metaphorical mirror heâd held up to my face.
âYou know what? None of this matters. Not when itâs a giant lie. Weâd be committing fraud, Beckett. A fake piece of paper about a nonexistent relationship, and if we were caught⦠Iâm not putting the kids through that.â
His jaw set in a tense line, and he gave me a singular nod before turning and walking down the steps.
Havoc immediately abandoned me to follow him, tiny traitor that she was.
He turned at the bottom of the steps. âAre you really saying that youâre not willing to bend your morals in order to save your daughterâs life? To give me some of that precious trust that you keep locked up tighter than Fort Knox?â
I felt the verbal blow all the way to my toes. Was that really what I was doing? Choosing my own morals, my own trust issues over Maisieâs life? Was I so jaded that I couldnât believe? Couldnât hope when my own brother had vouched for him?
Ryan.
âYou want me to trust you?â My voice softened.
âI do.â
âOkay. Tell me how Ryan died.â
The color drained from his face. âThatâs not fair.â
A piece of that warm, fuzzy hope burned up in my chest.
âDonât make me lie to you,â he beggedâ¦or threatened. I couldnât tell.
I stood silently, waiting for him to say something differentâto give me some of the trust he was asking for. To put himself in a position of vulnerability. But the longer we stared at each other, the more rigid his posture became, until he was once again the hardened soldier I met on his first day at Solitude.
I felt a sorrowful sense of loss, as if something rare and precious had disappeared before its value could even be realized.
âHave a nice night, Ella. Iâll pick up Colt tomorrow for practice at ten.â
âWhat? Soccer practice?â Like the fight weâd had was something normal and could be glossed over. Like we hadnât just shoved a stick of dynamite between us and lit the fuse.
âYep. Soccer. Because I show up. Thatâs what I do. When I make someone a promise I follow through, and that goes double for your kids. And, since you apparently wonât take my word for it, Iâm just going to have to show you over and over again.â
He opened the door, and Havoc jumped into the truck. Then he climbed in and left me standing on the front porch with my mouth hanging open, trying to figure out what the hell had just happened.
â¦
âWell?â I asked Ada as I crammed another peanut butter cookie in my mouth. Colt and Maisie were asleep in our cabin, and Hailey was keeping watch while I reverted back to my childhood and spilled my guts to Ada.
âWhat do you want me to say?â she asked, taking another tray out of the commercial oven and setting it to cool.
âYour thoughts? Opinions, anything.â Because I needed someone else to tell me that I wasnât psycho.
âI think an extremely handsome man offered you a way to save your daughter.â She leaned back against the opposite counter, wiping her hands clean on her apron.
âWhat? So Iâm the one whoâs wrong here? He asked me to marry him, Ada. That gives a veritable stranger rights over my kids for the sake of insurance. Insurance that he can revoke anytime he feels like filing for divorce. Hell, rights over Solitude.â
âOnly if you let it. Youâre telling me you couldnât draft a prenup or something that limits his rights? The same as youâd do with Jeff if he walked back through those doors?â
âJeff isnât coming back.â
âExactly.â
âWhat if heâs a serial killer?â I asked, reaching for another cookie.
âHe was Ryanâs best friend.â
âSo he says,â I muttered with my mouth full. Well, so the letter said. Ryan had never shared personal details about the guys he served with. He barely told me anything about Chaos when he asked me to be his pen pal, just that a guy in his unit needed mail. I missed my brother. I wanted my brother. I needed to hear his opinion, why heâd never talked about Beckett if theyâd been best friends.
I missed Chaos, too.
Chaos. If heâd shown up at my door in January, everything would be different. I knew it in my soul. Maybe I was the psycho one. After all, Iâd fallen for two different men in the span of what? Eight months? Pregnancy lasted longer than that.
But Chaos was dead. Ryan was dead. Mom and Dad were dead. Grandma? Dead, too.
Was I really going to add my daughter to that list?
âDidnât he have Ryanâs letter?â
âYeah,â I begrudgingly admitted. âMaybe if there was a picture of them, or something. Anything.â
âDid you ask?â She tilted her head and stared at me like I was ten all over again.
âWell. No.â
âHuh. Seems like you already believed him, then, doesnât it?â
âUgh.â I let my head roll back and sighed my exasperation to whoever wanted to take my side. âYouâre on his side.â
âIâm on Maisieâs side. And that side looks a lot better when sheâs living.â
Well, when you put it like thatâ¦
âI donât know what to do. I canât marry him, Ada. Itâs only a matter of time before he gets bored. Guys like Beckett donât play house.â
âHeâs not your father. Heâs not Ryan. Heâs not Jeff. You have got to stop convicting him of their crimes.â
She was right, and yet my heart still wouldnât accept it, my head wouldnât surrender. âEven if he sticks around long enough to get Maisie through treatment, eventually heâs going to check the âsaved Ryanâs sisterâ box and move on.â
âAnd thatâs bad becauseâ¦â
âBecause it will break the kidsâ hearts.â
âFunny thing about broken heartsâonly the living have them.â
I shot her a glare. âYeah, I get it. At least sheâd be alive to have a broken heart, right? But what if he walks out midtreatment? What if the insurance cancels and the hospital ceases her therapy?â
âThen she will have had more treatments than sheâs getting now, and weâll cross that bridge if we ever get there. Sometimes you just have to show a little faith, even if he is a veritable stranger.â
âI donât know how to trust him with my kids.â I reached for another cookie and broke it in half.
âThatâs a load of crap.â She wagged her finger in my direction. âYou already trust him with the twins. He takes Colt to soccer, and heâs stayed with Maisie in the hospital with the privileges you gave him over her care.â
I shoved another piece of cookie in my mouth and chewed slowly. Ugh, she was right. Hadnât I already admitted to Beckett that I knew heâd do anything for the kids?
âYou know what I think?â Ada asked, taking advantage of my full mouth. âYouâre not scared to trust him with the kids. Youâre scared to trust him with you.â
The cookie scraped my throat as I forced a quick swallow.
âWhat? I donât even factor into this. He said the marriage would just be on paper.â Whichâokay, I could admitâhad actually hurt a little.
âBut you care about him.â
Too much.
âAny feelings I might or might not have donât matter. This isnât one of your Christmas romance movies where they fake-marriage themselves out of a conundrum, break into snowball fights, and fall in love. Thereâs no happy-ever-after here.â
Of course that knowledge hadnât stopped me from falling for him, anyway.
âElla, itâs June, there is no snow.â
âYou know what Iâm talking about.â
âAre you honestly going to sit there and tell me that youâre going to draw a line on what youâre willing to do to keep Maisie alive?â
And there was the kicker.
Shit. What wouldnât I do for Maisie? With a cool enough head to get some perspective, I knew there wasnât a line. Iâd risk hell and damnation for her. Iâd sell my very soul.
Beckett could potentially save Maisie. The only obstacle was my own stubbornness and fear.
But what if there was a way to leave my fear out of the equation? To directly link Beckett to the kids without my baggage getting in the way?
âI guess I have to talk to Beckett.â
â¦
Colt flew through the front door after practice, flushed and happy. âHi, Mom!â He was a blur, kissing me on the cheek and then racing up the stairs to his room.
Beckett stood in the doorway, his baseball hat in his hand. His shorts rode low on his hips, and that incredible expanse of abs and chest was covered up with a Pearl Jam concert tee. His eyes widened when he took in my sundress and the bare expanse of my legs, but he quickly looked elsewhere. âHe has a game tomorrow, but I know Maisie is supposed to go in for chemo.â
âWeâll leave after the game. She doesnât start until Monday, and theyâll need to see if her platelet levels are high enough to even do it. The infection screwed up a lot of stuff.â
âOkay, just let me know. I can take him, of course.â He started backing out of the house, and I nearly cursed.
âThank you. Look, Beckett, about yesterday?â
He stopped, slowly dragging his eyes to mine and keeping them there instead of on my bare shoulders or the sweetheart, strapless neckline Iâd chosen just to get his attention. Sure, the dress was old, but at least it still fit.
When it became apparent that he wasnât going to speak, I forged ahead.
âI trust you with my kids.â
His eyes widened slightly.
âI needed to say that first, for you to know that everything we fought about last nightâ¦most of that isnât about the kids. Itâs about me. Youâve done nothing but prove yourself since you got here, and it was wrong of me to ask you to tell me about Ryan when I know it would cost your integrity. Ironic really, right? I was asking you to prove your trustworthiness by breaking your word. Iâm sorry.â
âThank you,â he answered quietly.
âThereâs someone Iâd like to have dinner with tonight.â
His eyes narrowed.
âWith you,â I quickly corrected. âDinner with you and the someone.â
âYou want me to chaperone a date?â His voice dropped to that low, sandpaper-rough tone that woke up my body in parts that had been asleep since Jeff.
âNo. I want to meet with my lawyer, and Iâm hoping youâll go with me. AboutââI glanced over to where Maisie was napping on the couchââwhat you offered yesterday. Kind of.â
Surprise widened his eyes for a second, and I savored the reaction. I didnât have many opportunities to shock Beckett.
âKind of?â
Hope flashed in his eyes, catapulting my heart into my throat. âI want to ask some questions first before I say anything. I donât even know if what Iâm thinking about is possible, but Iâd be really grateful if you went with me to figure it out.â
âOf course. What time?â
I looked at the clock and then forced a smile. âIn about forty-five minutes?â
Instead of scoffing, or snipping that it was too short notice, he simply nodded, saying, âOkay,â and walked out.
I used the time to pack a little for our trip, force Colt into the bathtub, and throw dinner for the kids into the oven. I took Maisieâs temp when she woke up and sighed in relief at the beautiful 98.5 reading as Ada arrived. Then I generally puttered in nervousness before putting on what little makeup I had, which meant a swipe of mascara and a little lip gloss.
Not that this was a date or anything.
Beckett arrived exactly a half hour after heâd departed, his scruff shaved off, smelling like soap and leather, and him. Unh.
âReady?â he asked after hugging both the kids.
âYep,â I said, grabbing my purse and a white cardigan.
We walked down the steps, and he opened my door for me. At the moment, in his dress pants, open-collared shirt, and dark blue blazer, he looked more gentleman than special ops soldier, but I knew it was just icing. He might look all fluffy and frosted, but under the clothes he was devilâs food, period.
And I really, really, really liked chocolate.
I climbed up into the truck, and he shut the door, but not before he let his eyes linger on my legs for a moment longer than necessary. Good choice on the heels.
Our drive into Telluride was quiet, accompanied by only a little classic rock streaming through the speakers.
âThis was Ryanâs favorite,â he said quietly, catching me off guard. âUsed to drive me nuts with it.â
Thunderstruck.
âYeah, it was,â I agreed. âDid he still playââ
âA wicked air guitar?â Beckett asked with a smile. âOh yeah. Every chance he got. Between this and Poison, Iâve had my fill of watching him fingerpick at nothing. Did he ever tell you we got to meet Bret Michaels?â
âWhat? No way!â
âCheck the glove box.â He motioned with his head, and I eagerly fumbled with the latch until it opened. âUnder the manual.â
I pulled out a white envelope thick and distorted with pictures.
âI think itâs about halfway through.â
I flipped through the pictures, seeing Beckett all over the world, with other soldiers like him, like Ryan. Until I looked closer and saw that it was Ryan in a group photo. My breath caught, and I ran my thumb over his familiar face, an all too familiar ache settling in my chest.
âI miss him,â I said quietly.
âMe, too.â His knuckles whitened on the steering wheel. âItâs a good thing, though. Missing him. Grief means you had someone worth grieving.â
I found a picture where the soldiers were three rows deep, all camoâd and bearded. For just that second, I let myself wonder, and before I knew it, my mouth opened. âWhich one is Chaos?â
Beckettâs head snapped toward mine as we reached a red light, and I felt a split-second of guilt. Did Beckett know how Chaos had felt about me? Or the way Iâd felt about him?
His gaze dropped to the photo. âHeâs third from the left.â
I searched the picture, hungry for my first sight of Chaos as we pulled into a parking spot in front of the restaurant. There was Beckett, serious as always⦠âThere are two other soldiers three rows in.â Both had thick, short beards and sunglasses on.
The driverâs side door shut. Beckett had already killed the ignition and gotten out of the truck.
âI guess that subjectâs closed,â I muttered, examining the faces one last time before sliding them back in the envelope with a heavy heart. Would I ever get to look again? Ever get the chance to ask questions?
I put the pictures back into the glove box just before Beckett opened my door and helped me down. Heels and running boards werenât always the easiest combo. Then we walked into the restaurant, a little family-owned Italian place I loved.
When we reached our table, Mark was already waiting, and stood.
âWhoa. Gutierrez?â Beckett asked as Mark came around the table and kissed my cheek.
âNice to see you, Gentry. Shall we sit?â
Beckett held out my chair, and I took it, scooting in. It was an almost archaic gesture, but it made me feel protected, cared for, and a little off-balance.
âSo you donât just run the rescue crew,â Beckett said as the men took their seats.
âNope, Iâm just a volunteer. Keeps me on my toes, and itâs not like thereâs a ton of family law business here in Telluride.â He shrugged. âKind of like you, just doing it for fun, now.â
Beckett nodded slowly.
âSo I guess you two know each other,â I said lightly, even though the moment felt anything but. âThank you, Mark, for meeting us on a Saturday night. I know you and Tess have date night.â
âNo problem. Sheâs actually in Durango for the weekend with the kids. Trust me, Iâd much rather be here with you than having dinner with my mother-in-law. Now whatâs up?â
âWant to fill him in on your proposal?â I asked Beckett, and he took the reins.
It took a glass of wine and all of dinner, but he explained everything as thoroughly as possible, from the treatments, the bills, the insurance, to his idea of marriage.
Ella Gentry.
I mentally smacked that picture out of my mind. Iâd gotten married on a whim once, and a second time was definitely not in the cards. I didnât care how good his name sounded attached to mine.
âDo you want to marry Ella?â he asked Beckett as the waitress cleared our plates.
âWould you want to marry a woman who had no interest in marrying you?â Beckett answered.
My head snapped to look at him. No interest? It wasnât lack of interest in Beckett, it was an overwhelming interest in my sanity andâ¦logic.
âBut I would, if thatâs what she wanâneeded,â Beckett finished.
Great. Now I was the damsel. All I needed was a giant light-up sign above my head that flashed with the words âin distress,â and my life would be complete.
âOkay, then letâs not push that option,â Mark said, his gaze flickering between the two of us. âNo one wants an arranged marriage here. So, Ella. Now that I have a good idea of whatâs going on, itâs your turn. On the phone you mentioned an idea?â
âRight.â I pivoted in my chair to look at Beckett. âWhat youâre offering is to basically make Maisie your daughter? Right? Even if itâs only on paper?â
âYes. Colt, tooâ¦as my son, obviously. Legally.â
Just the words sent a spiraling warmth through my belly, or maybe that was the wine. Either way, it gave me the courage to continue.
âIâm a little damaged.â
He quirked an eyebrow as if to say tell me something I donât know.
âAnd sometimes that damage blinds me. It gets in my way and holds me back. And Iâm okay with that. But Iâm not okay with it hurting Maisie or Colt. So, if there was a way for you to be their legal father, giving them all the same protections that being my husband wouldâ¦without me being your wife, would you want that?â
âNot marrying you?â His brows drew inward.
âRemoving me, and my damage, from the equation,â I clarified before dropping my volume to a whisper only Beckett could hear. âAs someone wise once told me, itâs not about not wanting you.â
âI donât understand.â
âWould you want the kids if I wasnât part of the deal?â
âYes.â He answered without hesitation.
âForever?â
âAlways.â
That warmth in my stomach spread, combining with the love that burned so brightly in my chest. I half expected to light up like a Care Bear.
I forced my eyes away from Beckettâs to where Mark sat, his gaze darting between us, his mind already at work.
âCan he adopt them? Without marrying me?â
Beckett drew in a sharp breath.
âIs that something youâd be willing to do?â Mark asked Beckett.
âYes.â Again, the answer came instantly.
âHave you thought about what that would really mean?â Mark asked me.
âYes. I know it puts the kids at some risk.â
I felt Beckett tense next to me, like a crackle of energy in the air.
âIt could,â Mark agreed. âIt would be like having another parentâthere would be support to consider, visitation, custody rights, both physical and decision-making. Itâs basically sharing your kids with him. But it protects them more, too. The moment he adopts them, theyâll be covered by his insurance no matter the status of yourâ¦relationship. The military will always see them as his.â
âEven if heâs out?â
Beckettâs jaw tensed. âYep. You could even sue me for support if you wanted.â
âI would never sue you for support.â
âI wouldnât care if you did.â
âRight, but youâre still giving up a portion of your rights, Ella.â
My hackles bristled. The twins had always been mine, and only mine.
âCan we lessen the risk?â
He leaned back, continuing his appraisal of us both. âSure. Youâd just have to draw up a custody agreement to be signed immediately after. You could say that you have sole physical custody, he has zero rights to visitation, but you should share decision-making, or it looks pretty darn fraudulent. You wouldnât even have to file it unless thereâs an issue. Just in case someone comes looking.â
âIs it fraud?â I needed to know. Iâd probably still go through with itâMaisieâs life was worth some jail timeâbut I had to know. âI mean, the marriage would seem way more fraudulent to me. If neither of us want to marry the other, and weâre living in separate houses with separate names, then thatâs more fraud than Beckett wanting to be there for the kids, right?â
âDo you want to parent the kids?â Mark looked straight at Beckett.
âYes,â he answered without a second thought. âI love them. Nothing would make me happier than to protect them like this, to give them whatever I can.â
âYouâre going to have to do a little better than that with Judge Iverson. Heâs a softy for Ella, always has been, but youâre not a local. Heâs not going to trust you just because you showed up for some soccer practices.â
Beckett took a deep breath and toyed with his glass. âI didnât have a father growing up. A lot of guys who hit first, or just generally ignored me, but no one I considered a dad. When Colt and I were walking back across the field after a soccer game, he asked if that was what having a dad felt like, and I couldnât tell him yes, because I didnât knowâand he didnât know, either. I want Colt and Maisie to know what it feels like to have a dadâin whatever capacity Ella would let me be there for them. I just want to be the guy they can depend on.â
âThatâs pretty much the definition of fatherhood, and I think youâd hold up just fine in court. Itâs not fraud if you are adopting so that you can help raise them. The insurance is definitely a perk, thoughâone that Judge Iverson would see. But he lost his wife to cancer about ten years back, so I honestly think youâve got a good shot that heâd choose to see it as just that: a perk and not the reason. Would the lack of rights bother you?â
He shook his head. âMaisie dying bothers me. I would never take anything from Ella that she didnât want to give, and Iâd never do anything that would hurt the kids.â
I thought of the pictures the nurses had shown me of the little graduation ceremony that Beckett had given Maisie. She loved him. Colt loved him just as much, and I was right there with him. They already had so much to lose when it came to Beckett.
âWould they have to know? Right away, at least?â I blurted out. He could absolutely hurt the kids the minute he walked away. To give them a dad just to take him away was cruel. Once Maisie was in the clearâhoping Beckett was still content in Telluride that far in the futureâwe could tell themâ¦once her heart was strong enough to withstand the potential fallout of the opposite being true.
Beckett went stiff, but his gaze stayed steady and unwavering in Markâs direction.
âUhâ¦â Markâs eyes shifted between us. âI guess not? Kids donât have to be informed or give consent until theyâre twelve. Weâd just have to talk to Judge Iverson. Seeing how heâs always favored you, and his hatred of the Danburys, well, I think we could sway him to agree.â
âSo we could really do it?â I asked, that tiny flame of hope flaring up again. âEven though weâre not married?â
âMarriage might be the easier route,â Mark said with a shrug.
âI just canât. Not after what happened last time. Iâm in no rush to get a ring on it.â
âWhich is exactly what you should tell Judge Iverson if he asks. Our definition of family has changed a ton in the last couple of decades, and marriage isnât the determining factor anymore. And, since youâre the childrenâs mother, and theyâre not wards of the state or anything, the only complication would really be Judge Iversonâs opinion. A single man can absolutely adopt his partnerâs children without them being married. You guys just might have to play up the partner part a little.â
My cheeks warmed. I hadnât had a âpartnerâ since Jeff, and he wasnât really ever that, anyway.
âSo basically Iâd be trading my sole decision-making rights, and thatâs it?â
âBasically.â He fiddled with his wineglass as he watched us, his eyes seeing way too much.
âBut youâd be gaining Maisieâs life,â Beckett answered. âAnd you know Iâd never do anything that would cross you when it came to the kids. Iâm not some villain. Iâm just trying to help.â
âI know,â I said softly, and I did, but trust wasnât something I handed out like candy.
âThereâs one catch. Youâre going to have to get Jeff to sign over his parental rights.â
Pretty sure a nuclear bomb going off would have had less impact on my heart.
âWhy? Heâs not on the birth certificate, and the kids are MacKenzies, not Danburys.â
âElla, everyone knows Jeff is the father. Whether or not you admit it on the birth certificate doesnât eliminate his rights. One paternity test and the adoption would be voided. Iâm not saying heâd ever exercise his rights, but the judge is going to require the release. No release. No adoption.â
âRight,â I replied, my voice almost mouselike. I didnât want to see Jeff. Ever. That was like ripping open a fully healed scar just for fun.
We thanked Mark, Beckett paid for dinner, and we left, riding back to the house in a tense silence.
âWhat way are you leaning?â Beckett asked as we pulled through Solitudeâs gate.
âThe way that doesnât require me seeing Jeff.â I slammed my eyes shut. âThatâs a lie. I know what youâre offering is a godsend, not just for Maisie, but for Colt. For me. I just canât bear the idea of having to ask him for anything.â
âIâll handle Jeff,â Beckett promised. âBesides, heâd probably run screaming if you showed up. At least I can blindside him.â
âYouâd do that for me?â I asked as we reached my cabin, the truck coming to a soft stop.
âI would do anything for you.â His eyes locked onto mine in the dashboard lights, intense and a little hurt. âWhat is it going to take for you to believe me? To trust me? You want my background checked? Do it. You want my credit score? Awesome. My bank accounts? Iâll add you on. You have my word, my body, my time, and Iâm standing here offering my last name. What else can I give you?â
âBeckett,â I leaned toward him, but he backed away.
âNot that youâd ever give them my last name, not when they donât even get to know what weâre doing. Right? I can be their legal father, but Iâm not good enough to be their dad.â
âThatâsâ¦thatâs not what this is about.â
âOh, I know. Itâs that you donât trust me to stay. You think Iâll walk out just like Jeff did. You think it will hurt the kids even more.â
âI figured we could tell them once Maisie was healthy.â
âIf Iâm still around by then, right?â
I hated and loved that he knew me so well. I didnât even have to answer. He saw it in my eyes.
âYeah. Okay.â He killed the engine and removed the keys. âI donât even have the right to be upset. I know what Iâm offering, and the being dad part isnât in there, right? Just the legal protection. You need something, Iâm giving it to you, just like I promised I would. Simple as that.â
He opened the door and got out of the truck. I followed quickly after, watching his back retreat down my driveway, toward the lake.
âWhat are you doing?â
âLeaving my truck here. Iâll get it tomorrow before the game. The walk will do me good.â
âBeckett!â I called after him.
âDonât worry, Ella,â he called back. âI know my role. Iâve got it. And Iâll still show up. Thatâs how badly I wantâ¦â
He didnât finish, just threw up his hands and kept walking.
But I finished that sentence for him in my head about a dozen different ways.
How badly I want you.
How badly I want your kids.
How badly I want to be in your life.
How badly I want to show up for you.
How badly I want Maisie to live.
Every single one I came up with made me feel worse for not trusting him. But the guy was up against a lifetime of people making promises and leaving me.
And I was up against a lifetime of no one trusting him.
Werenât we just a pair?