Cade was quiet and distant for the remainder of their visit. He barely exchanged one word with Fern, and when they got home, Fern tentatively broached the subject after putting the foil wrapped leftovers in the fridge.
He was standing at the kitchen counter, phone in hand, thumb flicking as he scrolled through whatever ultra-important Sunday evening correspondence heâd received while enjoying an afternoon off with his family.
âYouâre angry,â she said, biting the bullet and just wading right to the crux of the matter. His thumb stopped moving but he didnât lift his head and she wondered if that was because he was reading an email or text.
His jaw was tight, muscles leaping and bunching as he clearly gritted his teeth and she immediately recognized that he was biting back whatever he really wanted to say in response to her words.
âCade?â
He lifted his eyesâjust his eyesâwhich, with his head still bowed, gave him a sinister mien that sent a shudder of unease skittering down her spine.
âYouâre a guest in this family, Fern,â he said with studied indifference, his voice arctic. âAnd as such Iâd prefer you didnât go stirring up unnecessary drama.â
Fern folded her arms over her chest, remembering Bethâs words not to let him bully her, and lifted her chin as she met that baleful glare head on, despite the fact that every instinct she had told her to run and hide and not come out again until she was certain she could remain unseen and unnoticed by the predatory alpha sheâd married.
âAnd what drama would that be?â she asked, hoping to get some sort of rise out him. Because at least there was honesty in anger. âWhat exactly has your knickers in such a twist?â
His lips tightened and his nostrils flared, he clearly didnât like being questioned. He probably preferred to sulk in silence, leaving Fern uncomfortable and uncertain and too afraid to even sneeze for fear of upsetting him.
Well, Fern had spent too many years in that same miserable state of existence. This was supposed to be the ânew leafâ phase of her life, damn it.
âYou shouldnât have asked about my name.â
Aah, there it was.
On a related note: What the hell?
She took a moment to gather herself and pursed her lips, as well as, tilted her head as she stared at him, pretending to think it over before snapping her fingers in a dramatic I got it way.
âThen perhaps you should give me a list of taboo talking points next time? A nice neat list of doâs and donâts and Iâll stick to the script like a good little girl.â She delivered the suggestion in her most reasonable tone of voice. âJust text them to me before we head out and we can go over them on the drive to wherever. Thatâs how Granger would do it.â
âIâm nothing like fucking Granger Abernathy,â he spat out in disgust and she raised her eyebrows and stood her ground despite the fact that she was quaking inside.
âNo? Then maybe stop acting like him? Because intimidation and coercion are very much his favorite methods of control.â
âYouâre deliberately subverting the point.â His voice was tight with frustration.
âAm I?â
âYou knew even as you asked it that it wasnât something Iâd be comfortable discussing with my siblings.â
âI knew no such thing! I had no idea I was stepping into forbidden territory. How was I supposed to know you had some weird hang up about your name? I wanted to change the subject since you decided it was okay to say those horrible things about me. The comments about my emotional growth and possible choice in clothing were offensive. And spoken with such authority. As if you know any damned thing about me. Iâm not a teenager, I donât think like a teenager, I wouldnât want to dress like one either.â
âYouâve spent the last decade and a half around adolescents, itâs not an unreasonable assumption that youâd have the emotional depth and taste of one.â
Her jaw dropped and she gasped.
âAnd you say youâre nothing like Granger? Maybe take a good hard look in the mirror, Cade, because thatâs eerily similar to the things heâs been saying to me for the last fifteen years.â She felt a moment of lonely, echoing sorrow, before she continued, âHe always made me feel like Iâd messed up and said the wrong things. Thatâs the excuse he used to send me away. And keep me away. And I didnât even mind it, because it was so much better than living in that house. Stifled, silenced, afraid of saying or doing the wrong thing.
âSo, why donât you tell me what you expect from me when we go out in public together, Cade⦠and while weâre at it, Iâll compile a list of things Iâd prefer you not say to me in public too. That way weâll both know where we stand.â
She swallowed, the previously undiscovered well of courage sheâd been drawing from abruptly running dry.
Heâd lifted his head, his expression no longer filled with anger and malice. Instead, he looked exhausted and strained.
âLook, Fern, I donât give a fuck if you mess up or put your foot in your mouth, or say whatever cringey shit at any given moment. But weâre strangers. And some things areâ¦â His voice was quieter now, but roughened with emotion. âSome things are private. Okay? Yes, weâre married and I want you to feel at home in my space, but there has to be boundaries. Youâre not entitled to my every goddamned secret just because weâre temporarily sharing a last name. We donât have that kind of relationship. We donât have any kind of relationship. Donât pry into my private life and weâll get along fine. The thing with my name itâsâfuckâitâs sensitive. Aye? And stirs up some shit that Iâd prefer stay buried. My brothers, Kenny, they donât even know how badly I⦠how it affectedâ¦â
He ran out of words, seeming unable to continue in any coherent way. And Fern recognized that if he had difficulty even speaking to his siblings about it, as that rambling, incoherent response implied, heâd find it near impossible to discuss it with the stranger masquerading as his wife.
âYouâre right, Cade, some things are private. And if Iâd known this was one of those things, I would never have brought it up. So a heads up would have been nice.â she said after a momentâs pause. She could understand why he felt sheâd overstepped. But she couldnât agree with it. Not when sheâd had no clue that something as simple as a name would trigger all these complicated emotions in him.
âLook, Iâm sorry. I shouldnât have compared you to Granger. But you were also wrong, Cade. Yes, I lived with and taught adolescents for a large chunk of my life, and I may not have had the opportunity to do my own shopping, but I do have a brain and eyes. And opinions. But my emotional intelligence is well-developed enough to know better than to insult someone for no good reason. You had no right to humiliate me in front of your family like that. I did nothing to deserve it.â
Cade sighed, a long, tired exhalation of air.
âFor what itâs worth, they all liked you.â
She nodded, not sure how to respond to that. Because whether they liked her or she liked them, it didnât matter. As heâd so kindly reminded her, she was just a guest in this family, and getting too attached to them would be dangerous. There was no place for her here.
She wrapped her arms around her slender frame, trying to fight back a shiver, but he saw it, and his eyes darkened with concern.
âAre you cold?â
âNo⦠Iâm okay. Justââ Her voice trailed off. She didnât know what she was. Sad maybe. Depressed, for sure.
âJust what?â
âTired. I think Iâll head to bed.â
He nodded, but continued to watch her uncertainly. His teeth raked over his bottom lip a couple of times and he looked as if he was about to say something, which left her suspended in limbo just as she was about to turn away and head to her room.
She waited for a beat⦠then two. But he remained silent and she swallowed down her disappointment as she swiveled on her heel and with a swift goodnight thrown over her shoulder, retreated to her room.
The Iâm sorry that hovered on the tip of his tongue remained unspoken as Cade watched Fern flee from the living room. Heâd overreacted. He knew that. Heâd overreacted because sheâd broached a subject that heâd never once brought up himself. Because he was the fucking coward whoâd simply allowed the unacceptable to slide when he should have stood up for himself twenty years ago.
She was right, heâd made her feel small, insignificant, voicelessâtactics straight out of her asshole stepfatherâs playbookâand then heâd stood back and allowed her to apologize to him for it.
Heâd noticed that she had a tendency to back down, to take the blame and apologize rather than stand her ground or push back. So seeing her stand up for herself had been unexpected and somewhat gratifying. Despite the fact that sheâd compared him to Abernathyâwhich had pissed him the fuck offâhe knew that she would never have defended herself so vehemently to her stepfather. Which made Cade believe that even though it had only been a couple of days, she felt comfortable enough with him, safe enough to speak her mind.
She shouldnât have had to. He could have been less⦠defensive. He hadnât even realized that he still carried all of that baggage about his name until sheâd brought it up.
It didnât help that hearing her call him Cade these last few days had felt so familiar. He felt lighter, unburdened, almostâshit, the only word he could think of wasâhappy whenever the name fell with such ease from her lips. While having his own family call him Niall this afternoon, after heâd spent the last few days responding only to Cade, had felt suffocating. And none of those complex emotions had even properly registered until Fern had asked about it.
Fuck.
He grimaced and squeezed the back of his neck, as another tension headache began to form at the base of his skull. Heâd been on edge all afternoon, at first nervous about seeing Nox again after so long, then irrationally annoyed with his long-lost brother for making that fucking off-color comment about him being Fernâs husband if things had been different.
It didnât help that it was likely true. And it definitely didnât help that Cade believed that it wouldâve been better for Fern if that was how it had worked out. And Cade was confused about why he gave a fuck in the first place.
It hadnât happened. He was the one saddled with the wife. That couldnât change. But for some unfathomable reason it had still pissed him the hell off when Fern had so tartly suggested a straight swap between him and Nox.
Even now the mere thought of itâ¦
He clenched his teeth and shook his head, annoyed with himself for going there. Perhaps his irritation stemmed from the fact that it couldnât happen. That it was too late for that. That once again Cade was the one making the big sacrifices for the family and the company. If Nox had pitched up a week earlier maybe Fern would be his wife⦠his problem.
But that wouldnât make the baby in her womb Noxâs. That was one thing his brother couldnât take responsibility for. Ownership of. That was Cade and Cadeâs alone.
He wasnât sure why that sent a mad, adrenaline thumping wave of fierce satisfaction careening through his system. It made no sense at all.
But nothing in Cadeâs usually well-ordered life currently did.
The following morning Fern found a handwritten list of local OBGYNs waiting for her on the kitchen counter.
Scrawled in an aggressive slashing masculine hand, the list consisted of five names and corresponding contact numbers, below which heâd demanded:
Pick one. Make an appointment for today.
The today had been underlined three times.
As if it would be that easy to get a same day appointment from a busy OBGYN. Fern rolled her eyes at his unrealistic expectations and slid onto one of the high barstools.
It was just before nine and even though she doubted sheâd get an appointment today, she still decided to do a bit of research into the doctors on the list. A quick check on her phone confirmed that heâd recommended the five top-rated doctors in the area.
Naturally.
Which would only make getting an appointment with any of them even less likely.
She snorted softly and put her phone down on the countertop.
The apartment was eerily quiet, the silence broken only by the ominous ticking of the massive clock in the living room. She knew Cade wasnât home. Sheâd been up for at least two hours and had remained in her room, fully dressed, hoping to hear him leave. About ten minutes ago, sheâd heard the biometrics pad at the front door beep followed by the quiet snick of the door opening.
She wasnât on the system yet, but yesterdayâjust before theyâd left for Beth and Gideonâsâheâd handed her a keycard to bypass the biometrics system in case she needed to go anywhere without him. Upon presentation of said card, heâd given her a meaningful glower before warning in a dire tone: âIt would, however, be best if you did not go wandering off on your own. Who knows what the fuck trouble you could get yourself into.â
As if she were a puppy who wasnât quite trained enough to heel when recalled.
She shook her head and slid off the chair and looked around the living room. She hadnât had much time to explore the place since arriving. She was pretty familiar with this part of the apartment and was curious about the other rooms.
Rooms sheâd considered off-limits, because they were clearly Cadeâs domain. His office, his bedroom, the other room with the always closed door.
Maybe it was snooping, but he had told her this was her home too, right? So just taking a quick peek surely wouldnât do any harm. Especially since this was essentially a holiday home for him and wouldnât contain too many personal effects.
The study was pretty spartan. A large desk, and ergonomic desk chair. His laptop was shut, the desktop monitor dark. There was nothing in here to reflect his tastes. It was a beige and white, basic, boring, perfectly serviceable space.
She didnât bother to step into the room, just had a quick glance around before shutting the door firmly and heading to his bedroom.
It smelled like him. Fresh and spicy and appealing. It was neat as a pin. Bed made, not a single item of clothing lying about to indicate that this was a lived-in space. A bit more color in hereâbrown and white with pops of blue. In another room the king-sized bed would dominate the space, but it was massive and airy in here and any other bed wouldâve been too small and out of place in here.
She liked this room, with its huge picture windows that showcased the magnificent views. And wondered if Cade appreciated the stunning beauty of this panoramic view as much as she did.
She retreated back into the hallway. Neither room had given her much insight into her husbandâs personality. And as she tentatively approached the closed door at the far end of the hallway, she felt like a bride in Bluebirdâs castle. While he hadnât explicitly told her that it was off-limits, it still felt like she was about to do something taboo.
She half expected it to be locked, but it swung open smoothly and she blinked in confusion at the sight of the empty craft table with a tall stool that had been placed next to the window. There was also a neatly organized craft storage cabinet running all along the left wall of the room.
She wandered over to the table, trying to get some understanding of what it was he likely worked on it here. There was a round magnifying lamp on one side of the table, along with a plethora of mysterious tools, in pristine condition, all precisely laid out on a felt cloth. Even though he didnât appear to be currently working on a projectâprobably because he hadnât expected to be in Cape Town for very longâFern found it telling that whatever his hobby was, he enjoyed it so much heâd gone to the trouble to set up a hobby room in an apartment he rarely frequented. Which meant, he likely had a similar room set up in some of his other properties as well.
Her curiosity was well and truly fired now and, keeping her hands folded behind her back to prevent herself from touching, she peered into the assorted transparent plastic containers, which were displayed on the open shelving in the storage cabinet. Little gears and tiny screws and⦠well those looked like watch hands.
From what she gather from the contents of those containers, she guessed he restored and repaired watches or clocks maybe.
How fascinating.
That had to take a great deal of time and patience and very steady hands⦠but with what she knew about Cadeâs temperament, a hobby like that would suit him perfectly.
She curbed the impulse to snoop even further and retreated back to the kitchen intent on finding something to eat. His fridge was fully stocked, of courseâCade was nothing if not exceptionally well organizedâbut Fern felt nauseous as usual and settled on dry toast and black tea as her breakfast of choice.
She carried her plate and mug out onto the patioâher favorite place in the whole apartmentâand curled up on the comfortable sofa. It was a pretty day, sunny and pleasantly warm, the sky was a beautiful shade of azure that melted seamlessly into the deeper cobalt of the ocean on the horizon.
Even though it was Monday morning, there were plenty of people already on the beach and Fern wondered about their lives. Were they on vacation? Did they work from home? Or were they like her? Aimless and without any real purpose?
The thought depressed her and her hand went to her abdomen as she contemplated her future as a mother. For the first time she wondered if she so desperately wanted this baby only because it would give her life some meaning. It wasnât the best reason to have a baby. Her life couldnât revolve around another person, even if it was her child. It wouldnât be healthy for her or for the baby.
Fern needed to figure out what she wanted from life before she had this child.
As she nibbled on her dry toast, her mind wandered, going back to the dreams sheâd once had. She put her empty plate on the coffee table and reached for her phone, impulsively doing a search on pediatric occupational therapy. Sheâd always wanted to help children with cognitive and developmental disabilities. Ever since one of her classmatesâlater diagnosed with a form of autismâhad struggled, and ultimately failed, to adapt to a so-called ânormalâ classroom environment.
The girl had often been punished, labeled as obstructive and stubborn, and had become more and more closed off until her parents had been forced to homeschool her.
Years later, when Fern had âassistedâ the teachers at her old school, sheâd been the one to take the girls with learning disabilities under her wing. It had felt like a calling that was forever out of reach.
Granger had always insisted that Fern was too âstupidâ for further education. But after doing the bare minimum research, she now recognized that her high school grades had been above and beyond the requirements.
Why had she ever believed a word that man said?
Fern had, in fact, excelled in all subjects in the vain hope of persuading Granger that she was good enough for university, but he hadnât cared. She now knew that he would never have agreed, even if sheâd scored perfect grades.
Allowing her the freedom to attend university would have meant relinquishing too much control over her.
Now, as she stared at the list of requirements the years of studying and community service a career in occupational therapy would demand, Fern wondered what ifâ¦
Could she do this? As a single mother, with a small child, and no support system? Was it even possible?
As she stared sightlessly out at the horizon, she contemplated her life and where she was at this very moment. And for the first time in years Fern felt like she could do anything. No matter how difficult. With the almost limitless resources she would soon have at her disposal, nothing was beyond her reach.
Her lips stretched into a smile, and excitement began to fizz through her veins. She could do this. She would do this. She couldnât quite contain a tiny, burbling squee of excitement.
âWhatâs wrong?â Cadeâs alarmed voice coming from behind her made Fern physically jump in fright and her head whipped around to find him in the doorway, dressed in a loose black tank top, a pair of mid-thigh length black shorts, and running shoes. Her eyes skittered up and down his big frame as she tried to take in as much as she could in a few brief seconds. Heavily muscled shoulders, arms, thighs, calves⦠oh my.
God, the man was magnificent. His tanned skin was gleaming with sweat, his hair wet and slicked back. His tank top had slipped to reveal a flat, brown nipple nestled in among a silky smattering of chest hair.
Fern squeaked, hand flying to her mouth as she gaped at her gorgeous husband, who was staring at her with a heavy frown on his face.
âFern? Are you okay?â
âErm, Iâm fine thanks. How are you?â Oh, come on. She nearly curled up in embarrassment at her inane response.
His beautiful lips tilted upwards at the corners.
âIâm good. You seemed in distress earlier. I was worried that it may have been theââ A vague wave toward her midsection. âThat.â
âNo, it had nothing to do with the that,â Fern said. âI was excited about something.â
âAye?â he asked. âWhat?â
âYou were out running?â
âHmm.â
âI thought you went to work or something. Your company has offices here, right?â
âIâm on my honeymoon,â he told her with a nonchalant shrug.
âOh, yes, of course. I forgot.â
âWhat were you excited about?â
âYouâll think itâs stupid.â And abruptly she thought it was stupid too. Doubt immediately swamped her as she wondered what on earth had made her think she could pursue a four-to-five-year degree at this stage in her life. She was too old. She didnât have the strength of character to see it through.
Oh God, she⦠was doing it again. Doubting herself.
Crap.
âWhy not let me be the judge of that?â Cade suggested, looking mildly annoyed that sheâd presumed to know what heâd think.
âIâve decided to pursue a career in occupational therapy,â she told him, her voice firm, chin tilted upward defiantly as she braced for his ridicule.
âWhy would you assume Iâd think thatâs stupid?â He sounded affronted. He stepped onto the patio and took the seat across from her, legs spread, forearms braced on his thickly muscled thighs, with his hands dangling between his knees as he glowered at her.
âIâm too old,â she whispered.
âThat sounds like an excuse not to do something. Not a reason. What else have you got?â
âIâm not strong enough?â
âIt takes strength? I mean you could always build some muscle. We can start you on an exercise regime tomâ ââ
âI mean mentally strong,â she interrupted quickly, more than a little touched that heâd immediately sought a solution to the perceived problem.
He stared at her for a long moment before actually laughing in her face. It was a short, sharp, clearly mocking sound that seemed to surprise even him.
âFern, you just managed to stymie a deal months in the making between two massive global corporations, pretty much fucking over one of them in the process. It takes mental and emotional fortitude to go against everything youâve ever known and leap into the unknown like that. I donât think you need to worry about being mentally strong.â
Her heart swelled to about three times its normal size as his words filled her with pride. She had done that, hadnât she? His praise made her preen a little⦠and she shamelessly wanted more.
âAnd, I mean, Iâm pregnant. Sure, Iâll have access to the best childcare and all of that, but⦠Iâd still have to take time off to have the baby, then maternity leave, and then find the right person to take care of my baby when Iâm studying. Itâs just that the timing isnât great,â she said, only to see what his response to that would be. She was gratified when he exhaled noisily, his impatience clear.
âWill it ever be?â
She considered his words, chewing on her lip thoughtfully. He was right. If she used the pregnancy as an excuse not to move forward, sheâd later use the baby, then heâd be a toddler, then heâd be at school, then onto high school⦠there would always be an excuse not to do this.
The only reason she had to go ahead with it was because she wanted it. And that would never feel like a good enough reason. What Fern wanted had never been considered valid or important enough by anyone in her life before.
âIâve never really done anything because I wanted to do it,â she admitted.
âBullshit,â he scoffed. âI seem to recall you going off with a strange man at a party not so long ago, just for the hell of it.â
âAnd look how that turned out,â she reminded him.
âGranted, winding up pregnant after a below average quickie, wasnât quite ideal, but at least you went for it, right?â
âYes. And at least I now know what itâs like to have sex.â
âWhoa now, lass,â he said, holding up a hand. âLetâs not get carried away. Iâm honor bound to point out that you do not, in fact, know what itâs like to have sex. Not really. Sure you know the ins and outs of itââHe allowed himself a juvenile little snort at that, which, in turn, made Fern laugh.ââBut real sex? What that encounter should have been? Itâs nothing close to what happened between us that night.â
âWell, thenâ¦â she murmured, sounding breathless and a little daring, as she held his stare, her eyes running over that chiseled face, those long, spiky lashes, that beautiful mouth with its pillowy, sensuous bottom lip. âHow should it have been, Cade?â
He hesitated, a deep red flush staining the line of his cheekbones, as his own gaze raked over her face, then over her body, clad in another awful shapeless blouse and skirt combination. That same piercing gaze lifted to her long, loose hair, and took on a smoky intensity that stole her breath away.
âHot. Wet. Messy. Wild. Intense. It should have left you wrung out and desperate for more.â