Uncle Walter strolls into the hallway, drifting to the front door as though heâs not quite sure about leaving me behind but has already dedicated enough time to me today. Iâm really grateful, but this whole situation feels crazy. How can I sleep in a house with eleven strange men? How the hell have I gotten here?
âYouâve got my number,â Walter says. âIf you need anythingâ¦Â I mean, anythingâ¦Â give me a call.â
He glances over my shoulder at Harley, who is waiting to show me upstairs. âLook after her.â
Thereâs an exchange of serious manly nods, and Walterâs shoulders lower a touch as though heâs been reassured by Harleyâs response.
âThanks,â I say. âFor everything.â
âItâs nothing.â Walter waves his hand. âIâm just sorry itâs taken this to bring you back.â
I smile tightly. It feels as though there is a slice of underhanded criticism in that comment, but I canât respond. I have to keep my mouth shut because opening it will just cause problems.
âWill I see you tomorrow?â
âMaybe. Iâll call you.â
Walterâs hand is on the door handle, and I take a step forward instinctively. Harley is a large and looming presence behind me. Two hundred and fifty pounds of muscle, oozing masculinity. I can practically feel the heat radiating from him and the strength. If he wanted to, he could toss me over his shoulder and carry me anywhere in this house without breaking a sweat. He could hold me down and do whatever he wanted to me, and I wouldnât be able to do a thing to stop him. I know thereâs something wrong with me when these wild thoughts make me hot between my legs. What kind of girl am I to be pregnant at nineteen and thinking about sex with a huge stranger? Not a good one, thatâs for sure.
I watch Walter make his way down the steps and amble over to his vehicle. His shape and gait from the back remind me of my dad. I swallow against the prickle of a lump in my throat. I have to be strong and deal with all of this. I donât have another choice.
âReady?â Harley asks, his deep voice low and sexy enough to make the hairs stand on the back of my neck.
âSure.â
I wait for Harley to make his way up the stairs first, partly because Iâm not the one who knows where everything is and partly because I want to check him out. Damn. I am not disappointed. His ass moves like a well-oiled machine. Iâm pretty certain that heâs a monster on the field and in the bedroom. A man with power like that behind him could wreck a woman. I thought Justin was big, but Harley could pummel him into the ground.
At the top, Harley pauses. âThereâs the main bathroom.â He points to a door thatâs open. Behind I can see a clean white tub and polished blue and white tiles. Not what I expected a house filled with men to look like. I guess my dad must have gotten them doing chores from a young age.
âThis is my room, where you can stay,â Harley walks to a door on the left and opens it, striding inside. I follow him. Itâs a big room with two beds, a door in the corner that Iâm assuming is the closet, a large double desk completed with shelves of folders and two computers.
On the nightstands, there are matching lamps and photos in frames that Iâm not close enough to make out. The floorboards have been painted black, and a large gray rug makes it homely. Most of all, itâs clean and tidy and smells good. Thatâs a total surprise.
âThis is my bed,â Harley says. âIâll get you a change of sheets.â
âThanks,â I say. âAre you sure you donât mind?â
âThe alternative is that you sleep in the den. You wonât get much privacy in there.â
âIt wonât be for long,â I say.
âYou arenât staying?â
âI donât know what Iâm doing. This⦠well, itâs all out of the blue.â
âAre you at college?â Harley stuffs his hands into his pockets and leans back against the desk. His soft brown eyes framed with long lashes and strong brows seem to take in more than just what Iâm telling him. âI amâ¦Â but I donât know if Iâm going to go back.â
âHow come?â
âThatâs a story for another time,â I say.
He nods slowly three times. âThis must be difficult for youâ¦Â coming back like this whenâ¦â He pauses, stumbling over the words, âyour dad had died.â No one ever seems comfortable talking about death.
âItâs definitely not easy. I didnât know anything about you guys.â
âWe knew about you.â He smiles as though heâs remembering. âDad was always mentioning you. I think he did it to keep his memories alive. He always wanted us to know that we had a sister out there somewhere. A sister we would need to take care of one day.â
I bristle as Harley refers to my Dad as his. This situation is so messed up, I really donât know how to feel. âA sister you didnât know. Why would you need to take care of me?â I raise my eyebrows and cock my head to the side.
âBecause thatâs what family does, Maggie.â
Harley straightens up and heads to the closet. He disappears momentarily and returns with a stack of linens. âHere, let me help you change this.â
He places the sheets on the desk and starts tugging at his bed, pulling the pillowcases off, the under sheet, and the comforter. He quickly remakes the bed while I stand with my arms hanging uselessly at my sides. When he flaps the comforter across the bed, my hair flies around me in the wind.
âThanks,â I say. âI really do appreciate all this.â
âItâs okay.â Harley shrugs. âIf the situation were reversed, Iâm sure youâd do the same. Iâll show you Dadâs room now.â
I know that Iâm going to need to face this, but just the thought of stepping across that threshold sends a wave of hollowness through my chest. Harley strides out of the room with as much purpose as he entered, and I shuffle reluctantly behind him. When he reaches a door further up the hallway, he pauses outside. I can tell this moment is as hard for him as it is for me, maybe even harder. My dad had been a parent to this man when he had no other â a rock in his life, not a virtual stranger for so many years. He was here when Dad died, and maybe he saw him before he was taken away.
âWe havenât touched anything. Itâs all as it was. Figured it was up to you to go through everything in there.â
âI donât know if I can,â I say softly. Harley turns, and his eyes that meet mine are filled with empathy.
âItâs going to be hard,â he says. âIâm not going to lie and tell you otherwise. Itâll be hard, but youâll be okay. All of thisâ¦Â itâs part of life. Weâre born, we live, and we pass on.â He nods once and then twists the handle and opens the door.
For a moment, I stand frozen, then a smell so familiar reaches me that I have to clutch onto the door jamb for support. I can smell my dad, the linger of his cologne still in the air. Itâs so unexpected that Iâm frozen.
âIt still smells of him,â Harley says, shaking his head. Then heâs walking into the room.
I canât follow. Itâs just too overwhelming. I close my eyes, inhaling deeply, but that only makes it worse. Then I feel a hand on my arm. âItâs okay,â Harley says. When I open my eyes, I find him close. Close enough that I can see the flecks of gold in his eyes and a scar on his cheek that I imagine is a sports injury. He doesnât strike me as a brawler. I blink slowly and breathe out the breath Iâve been holding. âI should have been here,â I say. âIâm here too late.â
âMaybe,â Harley says cryptically. âWe canât do anything about what happened in the past. Weâve already stepped over that threshold. All we can do is deal with the present. I want you to come into this room with me today. You donât need to do anything, although thereâs plenty to do. I want you to come in with me so that you get over this hurdle. Another small step tomorrow, and nothing will seem so hard, okay?â
I nod, and Harley does something Iâm not expecting at all. He takes hold of my hand in his huge, warm grasp and leads me inside. Itâs difficult to look around and see all the small material things that made up my dadâs life. Thereâs still a sweater slung over the chair and a pile of paperwork that hasnât been sorted. The bed has been stripped, and the mattress is standing against the wall. âWeâll dispose of the mattress tomorrow and order a new one. If you decide to stay, this will be your space. We can help you decorateâ¦Â Dad taught us how to do pretty much everything around the house.â
âIâm not going to stay,â I say.
âWhatever you decide.â Harleyâs still holding my hand, and itâs so reassuring that it makes me crave more. I know that Harleyâs arms would be a safe place to cry. Theyâre rounded with muscle, his chest broad and strong.
But heâs my foster brother and a stranger to me, and I donât trust myself at all. Iâve already gotten into a mess by fantasizing about one relationship that could never have been real. I canât do it again, not in my condition.
I have to learn to stand on my own two feet. I canât let myself think of this man as anything other than someone Iâm going to know in passing.
I feel his hand squeeze mine, and I catch him gazing down at me with a quizzical look in his eyes. Men certainly arenât my area of expertise, but I feel his interest in me is more than just straight-up curiosity.
There are eleven men in this house, eleven men who could get ideas into their heads. For the duration of my stay, weâre going to be living in close proximity, and who knows where peopleâs imaginations might go. I need to make sure that nothing happens. I need surety that theyâll leave me alone because I donât trust myself to be strong enough to do the right thing.
âI might not go back to college because Iâm pregnant,â I say.
Harleyâs eyebrows rise, but he doesnât let go of my hand. âHow many weeks?â
âSix,â I say. âI just found out. Itâs the reason my mom called my dad. The reason we found out what happened.â
Harley nods. âIâm sorry that he didnât get to hear your news,â he says. âHe would have been happy.â
âIâm nineteen,â I say. âNobodyâs happy.â
âWhat about the father?â
âEspecially the father. Itâs a long story.â
Harley shakes his head, squeezing my hand. âWell, heâs an idiot.â
âI think I want to go and get my bags now. Itâs been a long day.â
âSure. Iâll help you.â
Itâs me who releases my grasp on Harleyâs hand first to make my way out of my dadâs room and down the wide staircase. Harley helps me with my bags, and we take everything back to his room. His twin is there when we get back, gathering the things that heâll need to sleep downstairs. âIâm sorry,â I say.
âDonât be. Itâs really no problem.â When theyâve both descended the staircase, I take a seat on the edge of the bed and rest my head in my hands.
This has been a tough day, thatâs for sure, but tomorrow I will have more strength. I have to get through it all because there isnât an alternative. I open my purse to find my phone so that I can message Mom to let her know Iâm safe. The letter my dad wrote still rests inside, but I have no idea when Iâll feel ready to open it and read whatâs inside.
Step by step.
One day at a time.
I have thirty-four weeks to get ready.