A BABY.
Pierce had a son.
It took about ten minutes after heâd left for that fact to sink in. Then the pieces began to click together like a brick of Legos. I replayed our days at the cabin. Our phone conversations, especially his last when heâd called to say goodbye.
He had a baby.
Once the shock wore off, blood-boiling anger took its place.
Oh, I wasnât just mad. I was enraged.
He could have told me. He could have explained it all when weâd been baring our souls to one another.
He have told me.
After everything Iâd confided in him, my broken engagement, my own miscarriage, how could he have stayed quiet on this? Iâd split myself open for that man and heâd kept his childâ
âa secret.
Pierce hadnât trusted me with the truth.
Then heâd had the nerve to kiss me.
âOh, that son of a bitch.â I paced the living room, furious that I could still feel his lips on mine. Once again, Iâd kissed him back when I should have smacked him across the jaw.
Damn him and that sexy beard. Damn him and that talented tongue.
Damn him for coming back.
All this time, Iâd thought heâd forgotten about me, but heâd come back.
âHow dare he?â I threw up my hands. âHow he?â
Pierce had come into my home and dropped his confession like a gallon of paint, leaving me to clean it up. âNo. Nope.â
Heâd had his chance to speak and now I had a few things to say too.
I flew into action, grabbing my coat and pulling it on. I yanked the front door open, only to run into a visitor on my stoop.
âWhoa.â Larke held up her hands, shying away before I could slam into her. âIn a rush?â
âWhat are you doing here?â
Zachâs car was on the street. He sat behind the wheel, his focus on his phone.
âWeâre helping Mom decorate, remember? Seven thirty?â
âOh, shit,â I groaned. âNo. I forgot.â
âGood thing we came to pick you up.â She turned and walked down the sidewalk.
I closed the door behind me and sighed, following her and getting into the back of my brotherâs car. It reeked of cigarettes. The same cigarettes he swore he didnât smoke in the car, just at home.
âHi,â I muttered.
âHi.â Zach didnât offer a smile or glance.
âI guess I just missed you at the White Oak earlier.â
âYeah, I stopped down to get dinner. Now we get to .â He popped open the console and pulled out a cigarette, placing it between his lips.
âSeriously?â Larke said. âYouâre not smoking that in here.â
Zach found a lighter. âWhy? The windowâs down.â
âBecause some of us donât feel like smelling like an ashtray,â I snapped. âIf youâre going to smoke, Iâll drive myself.â
If Zach wanted to smoke, fine. But he needed to stop telling everyone he quit and subjecting us to his bad habit.
He glared at me through the rearview but put the cigarette and lighter away. Then he grumbled something under his breath before driving down the street.
The community center was the last place I wanted to be tonightâthere was a billionaire at the motel I needed to strangleâbut this birthday party was a big deal to Mom. Iâd be there decorating until she dismissed us, and since weâd agreed to ride together, I was at the mercy of my familyâs schedule.
My trip to the motel would have to wait until tomorrow. Then, Iâd give him a piece of my mind. If he was still here.
Would he really stick around? Or would he leave again without an explanation?
âEarth to Kerrigan,â Zach said.
I tore my eyes away from my lap. âHuh?â
âWeâve been talking this whole time.â He came to a stop outside the community center. âWant to grab a drink at Janeâs after this?â
âOh, um . . . maybe.â Maybe not. If Zach and I had been getting along, then yes. But suffering through party prep and the party tomorrow would be enough time with my brother for the week.
The three of us walked inside the community center. Our mother and aunts all rushed around in a flurry of crepe paper and plastic tablecloths and balloons.
âI want you to hang up the banner between those two posts in front of the stage,â Mom ordered the moment she spotted us.
âHello to you too,â Larke muttered as she went to search for the banner in the bags of party supplies in the middle of the room.
The center wasnât much more than a wide, open room. There was an industrial kitchen because most of the time, this hall was used for birthday parties and funerals. At the far side of the space, a stage ran nearly the length of the building. When I was in third grade, the gym at the high school had been getting its floors refinished so weâd had our Christmas program here instead.
The beige walls were sterile and dull. The linoleum floor had been freshly waxed and the reflection from the florescent lights hanging from the tall ceiling was glaring.
The storage room door opened, and my dad emerged with two plastic folding tables, one in each hand. âZach, help me get these hauled out.â
âIâll do it,â I said, bypassing him for the storage room.
âLet your brother. These are heavy.â
âI can do it.â Christ. I worked out more than my brother. I didnât smoke a pack of cigarettes a day. Oh, and I owned a freaking gym.
Dadâs hands were too full for him to stop me from marching into the storage room and hefting a table.
For the next hour, I ran circles around my dad and brother. Each time they tried to take a chair or table from me, I wrenched it free. Each time they told me to help my sister, aunts and mom with the decorations, I simply returned to the storage room for another armful of folding chairs.
It took nearly the entire time to get the room staged, even with three of my cousins showing up to help. Iâd shed my coat and sweat beaded at my temples when Dad and I escaped to the kitchen for a glass of water.
âAre you all right?â he asked. âYou seem upset.â
âIâm great,â I lied.
âYour momâs worried we wonât have enough seats.â
âWe have two hundred seats. Thatâs the centerâs occupancy.â
The room had grown smaller as weâd filled it up, cramming tables and chairs in every available corner. Weâd even shortened the buffet line because Mom had wanted for seating.
âSheâs a bit stressed.â Dad chuckled. âThanks for coming to help.â
âSure.â
âCome on.â He threw an arm around my shoulders and steered me to the room. âLetâs make your mother sit down for a few minutes.â
It wasnât easy, but when every other person sat down, Mom finally huffed and joined us.
âWhat do you need for tomorrow?â I asked.
Because Mom was the oldest of her sisters, sheâd been deemed chief organizer for this party. Or rather, sheâd claimed the title before anyone could object.
âI think once we finish with the decorations, weâll be set,â she said. âThe food and drinks are in the fridge. The cake is being delivered at noon.â
âZach is picking up Grandma from the home at twelve thirty and the party starts at one,â Dad said. âIf youâd like to come around noon to help with last-minute prep, that would be great.â
âYou invited Jacob, didnât you?â Mom asked. She was overjoyed that Iâd been dating him. Iâd wait until after this party before announcing that his ass was getting dumped.
âYes.â The invitation had already been extended. But there would be enough people here tomorrow that heâd be easy enough to avoid.
A silence settled over the room, all of us ready to escape. I made the move to stand, thinking it was my chance to disappear, but then my brother shot me a smirk.
âAre you going to take pictures of the party for your little Instagram?â
. There was that word again.
How had I not noticed that word until now? It wasnât the first time any of my ideas had been deemed little, but now it grated on me like sandpaper on smooth skin.
âI wasnât planning on it,â I said with a fake smile.
âThereâs probably no point.â Dad chuckled. âEveryone who sees those pictures will be here themselves.â
That wasnât true. I had followers outside of Calamity. Not many, but some. And if I did take pictures and post them, it would be to showcase small-town life. It would be to share my grandmotherâs ninetieth birthday and a part of what made me, me.
Defending myself would only lead to an argument, so I clamped my mouth shut.
âI ran into Jessa Nickels at the coffee shop earlier,â Larke said.
My stomach dropped and I widened my eyes at my sister, hoping sheâd get the hint that this was not something I wanted to discuss. But she wasnât looking at me. She was toying with a piece of confetti.
âShe said you met with her on Tuesday to look at a place across from the park.â
All eyes at the table swung my direction.
. âYes, I did.â
So much for keeping this to myself for a while. I was going to have to find a new realtor. One who hadnât graduated from high school with my sister and one who would remember to keep my private business private.
âYouâre buying another place?â Dad asked.
âOh, not this again,â Mom groaned.
âYouâve done such an amazing job with your house,â Dad said. âIt turned out beautiful. Why not live in it for a while?â
âBecause I like having a project.â
âAn expensive project.â Zach scoffed. âYou just went broke. Didnât you learn anything from that experience? Iâm sure they taught you in that you have to spend less than you make.â
The tether on my tongue snapped. âIs there a reason why you throw that in my face all the time? Itâs my money. What I do with it is my choice.â
âUntil it becomes Momâs problem.â He swung a hand out to our mother. âSheâs got to sit at the gym and cover for you while you take her car and disappear.â
That was months ago. Months. But that was Zach. He loved to store up my indiscretions and save them as ammunition for later arguments.
âWhy does my business bother you so much?â
âIt doesnât.â
âBullshit,â I clipped.
âHey.â Dad held up his hands. âLetâs take it down a notch. I think what your brother is trying to say is that we donât want you to fall into the same situation where youâre overextended.â
âI donât plan to get overextended.â
âWell . . .â Dad sighed. âIf you do decide to buy it, just take a loan out from a bank this time. At least theyâre local and we can trust them, unlike that other guy.â
âI trusted Gabriel. He was a good man.â
âWe know you trusted him,â Larke said, her eyes wide as she mouthed .
âDo you really need another house?â Zach asked.
âIt wonât be another house. It will be my house.â Now that my current place was finished, I wanted to buy a fixer-upper and start over again. Both for content and because without anything else to do, I needed the distraction.
âYouâre selling your house?â Dadâs forehead furrowed. âBut you just finished it.â
âAnd Iâll finish the next one.â
âWhile youâre living in a construction zone.â Zach pursed his lips. âWhat does Jacob say about all of this?â
âI didnât realize I needed to run this by the guy Iâd been dating .â I stood from my chair so fast its legs scraped against the floor. âI need to go.â
Without another word, I turned and strode from the center, picking up my coat before I walked through the door. Once outside, I blew out a frustrated huff, then aimed my feet down the sidewalk toward home. The blocks disappeared in fast, angry strides and when I walked through my front door, I was no less irritated than when Iâd left the community center.
What was it going to take for them to support me?
âA miracle,â I barked to the empty house.
The air in the living room held the faintest scent of Pierceâs cologne. I drew in a long breath as I sat where heâd been on the couch.
My mood was his fault. And Jacobâs. And Zachâs. And Dadâs.
Damn these men. Damn Pierce.
Heâd come back just when Iâd given up on him. Heâd come back and kissed me.
He didnât get to kiss me.
A rush of déjà vu hit hard as I leapt from the couch and sprinted for the door. This time, my sister wasnât on the other side to stop me. I jogged to my car, climbing behind the wheel, and zoomed down my street to a quiet house six blocks over.
The home was dark except for the blueish light of a television coming from the front bay window. I parked, marched to the porch, raised my fist and knocked.
Jacob answered seconds later, the surprise on his face morphing to an arrogant grinâone I was about to wipe clean. âHey, come on in.â
âOh, I canât stay. I just wanted to stop by and do this in person.â
His eyes narrowed. âDo what?â
âItâs been great hanging out with you this month. But I donât see us continuing this relationship.â
He blinked, quickly covering up his shock with a neutral frown. âYeah. I was thinking the same thing at dinner.â
Sure, he was. âHave a good night, Jacob.â
He didnât say a word as he stepped back and slammed the door. I was already retreating down the sidewalk to my car.
The motelâs parking lot was nearly empty when I pulled in. The lights underneath the second floorâs exterior hallway illuminated the walkway and the red-painted doors.
This place had been in Calamity for so many years that it had gone out of style and was now on the cusp of returning. The dark wooden exterior fit with the vibe of the town. Western. Rustic. There was an old wagon wheel beside the door to the lobby. Soon, the flower planters would come out and the owners would dazzle the rest of town.
Marcy, the owner of the motel, had the greenest thumb in Calamity. Each year, she hung overflowing baskets of flowers outside each room for the tourists visiting the area.
Pierceâs green Mercedes stood out amongst the midsize sedans and half-ton trucks. It was parked outside room seven. The same room heâd been in last time. Probably because it was the room Marcy and her husband, Dave, had most recently renovated.
Parking beside his SUV, I marched to his door and knocked, squaring my shoulders to deal with Pierce like Iâd dealt with Jacob. Efficiently. There was a bottle of wine waiting for me at home.
A shuffling noise came from the room, then the chain slid free and there he was, filling the threshold exactly the way he had his first night in Calamity.
âHi.â He looked so handsome. So . . . relieved.
âYou should have told me.â
âI should have told you.â
I narrowed my eyes.
I didnât want him to agree with me. I wanted him to fight back, to give me an outlet to get out all of this frustration. With him. With my family. With myself. âI trusted you with everything. All of it. And you left this out.â
âIâm sorry.â
âThatâs not good enough.â
âI know.â He sighed. âWill you come in? Please.â
Against my better judgment, I stepped inside.
Pierce closed the door behind us, then walked toward the bed. He dragged a hand through his disheveled hair. His eyes were heavy like heâd been asleep.
While he stared at me, I was stuck staring around his room.
A portable crib had been set up in the corner. There was a small bouncy chair at its side. Next to his suitcase was a diaper bag. The TV was on but muted.
Because there was a sleeping baby on the bed.
I took one step, then another, until I was hovering at the foot of the mattress, staring down at the most precious face Iâd ever seen.
The babyâs eyes were closed. The long swoops of his eyelashes formed sooty, crescent moons above his rounded cheeks. His arms were raised above his head, his hands in loose fists. His lips formed a little pink bow. A tuft of dark hair rested on his forehead and my fingers itched to smooth it away.
The picture Pierce had shown me hadnât conveyed the perfection that was this baby boy.
âHeâs beautiful.â
âThank you.â Pierce came to stand by my side and the love on his face twisted my heart. âI didnât love him. Before he was born. I hate even saying that out loud, but part of me . . . I didnât want to be a father.â
âYou needed to fall in love with him.â
He nodded. âI was scared that if I was too busy falling in love with you, I wouldnât fall in love with my son.â
The world tilted. The anger vanished.
Heâd been falling in love with me.
I hadnât been alone in this. Somehow that was the realization that soothed the most.
Pierce had been my first real gamble on a man since my ex-fiancé. Heâd been the one Iâd given a chance. Maybe because heâd told me there was no chance. Heâd been safe because Iâd known he would walk away. Thereâd been no fear of commitment because Pierce had promised the opposite.
What I hadnât counted on was hurting so much when he delivered on that promise.
But heâd come back. Heâd come back to me, just like Iâd wished. And brought this little boy along too.
Elias rested on a white fleece blanket printed with safari animals. He was dressed in solid-blue footed pajamas.
It was impossible to blame Pierce for his choice. This tiny life had deserved his fatherâs attention.
As if he could feel my stare, the baby stirred, squirming and screwing up his mouth in a pucker.
âHeâs probably hungry.â Pierce flew into action, rushing to the bathroom, where a drying rack was full of bottles and plastic nipples. He mixed some formula with water, shaking it furiously. Then he came back and picked up his son, whose eyes and mouth flew open, ready for a snack.
Pierce rounded the side of the bed, sitting where some pillows had already been propped up. Then he shifted his son to cradle him in a strong arm.
âStay, Kerr.â
Goddamn it. The picture of them was irresistible.
I walked to the other side of the bed. âFor a little while.â