: Chapter 29
Delilah Green Doesn’t Care
CLAIREâS HEARTBEAT WAS everywhere, fingertips fizzing with too much oxygen. For a second, nothing felt realâher plea for Delilah to stay, her decision to tell her best friend that she was maybe, possibly, most likely in love with her estranged stepsister, and now this.
Astrid, gaping at her, hurt and anger radiating through her body. Iris stood behind her, an oh shit sort of expression on her face.
âAstrid,â Claire said. âIââ
âDonât,â Astrid said, holding up a shaking hand.
Claire sighed and stood up. Her shirt was twisted, but she definitely didnât want to call attention to her rumpled clothing in the moment. âHoney, let me explain.â
âExplain what?â Astrid said. She didnât shriek or scream. Claire almost wished she would. Instead, her tone was quiet, exhausted. Sad. âThat youâre, what? Screwing my sister and didnât even bother to tell me?â
âNo, Astrid, Iââ
âSo youâre not screwing her?â
Claire blinked at her best friend, shame warming her face.
Astrid nodded. âThatâs what I thought.â
âSweetie, maybe let her talk,â Iris said, squeezing Astridâs shoulder.
Astrid whirled around. âYou knew about this?â
âNo, she didnât,â Claire said, but Iris just shrugged and said, âI suspected.â
âWhat the hell is happening?â Astrid said. âWhat else are you two keeping from me? Oh, wait, I already know you hate Spencer.â
âWe donât hate him,â Iris said. âWe just donât like him for you. You deserve better than him. Weâve been wanting to talk to you about it all, but we didnât know how. And through the week, Claire and Delilah and I thought if we could just get you to think about whatââ
âHold on,â Astrid said, lifting a trembling finger into the air. âYou and Claire and Delilah?â
Irisâs mouth hung open, then she closed her eyes. This was a disaster. Nothing was going right. Claire didnât know how to explain anything, her words a tangle on her tongue.
âShe was with us all the time,â Claire finally managed to say. âAnd she . . . well . . . she was . . .â
âI was good at making a mess of things,â Delilah said quietly.
Astrid looked like she was going to throw up. She stared at all three of them in turn, but her gaze finally settled on Delilah. âI canât believe this. Twenty-two years weâve been sisters. Twenty-two years of your distance and your I donât give a shit about anyone but myself attitude.â
âAstrid,â Claire said, alarm spreading through her as Delilahâs face paled. âHang on a sec.â
But Astrid ignored her. âTwenty-two years of wondering what the hell was wrong with me, what I did, why you wouldnât give me a chance, whyââ
âWhy I wouldnât give you a chance?â Delilah said, standing up. âFrom the second my father died, your mother made it very clear what I was in this family. A ward. A girl without a home. An orphan. Someone she would feed and clothe and that was it. Not a family member. Not a daughter.â
âThatâs Mother,â Astrid said, then slapped her own chest so hard Claire flinched. âWhat about me?â
Delilah lifted her chin, almost defiant, but Claire noticed a slight tremble of her lower lip, the way she clenched her jaw to steady it.
Astrid shook her head. âI shouldâve never invited you here.â
âWhy did you?â
âBecause youâre my goddamn sister! And I wanted you at my wedding. I thought . . . I donât know what I thought, but I certainly didnât expect this. Mom was right; you donât care about us. You donât care about me, you donâtââ
âYou never gave me a chance to,â Delilah said.
âI gave you a chance the second I hired you for this wedding! I gave you a chance every holiday you never came home and every time I stopped by your room growing up, every time we had dinner, every timeââ
âSo now Iâm supposed to be a mind reader? You ignored me for the entirety of high school. Middle school. You ignored me every time Claire and Iris came over to the house, making sure I felt like an outsider every step of the way.â
Astrid blinked at her, tears falling silently onto her cheeks. When she spoke, her voice was fragile, shattered. âYou ignored me first.â
Delilah pursed her lips, turned her head away, her eyes glistening just a little. Claire wanted to curl her into her arms. She wanted to take Astridâs hand, get them to calm down and talk, but she didnât move. She didnât dare. This barbed-wire connection between Astrid and Delilah was so much sharper than sheâd ever imagined. There was so much hurt here, so much anger, and she didnât know how to help either one of them.
âI didnât know I was ignoring you,â Delilah finally said, her voice so soft, Claire almost didnât hear it. âI thought . . . I thought thatâs what you wanted.â
Astrid shook her head, lifting her hands and letting them flop back to her sides. âSo you come back to town, conspire behind my back with the only people in my life I really love, steal my best friend, just to what? Get back at me?â
Delilah rubbed her forehead, but she stayed silent.
âOh,â Astrid said. âI forgot. Thatâs exactly what you did. You even told me you were going to do it. Didnât you?â
Delilahâs hand dropped. âWhat? Astrid, Claire and Iââ
âLet me guess. It just happened.â
âYeah. It did.â
âIâm sure. She came after you, right? She wanted you. Youâre irresistible. You had nothing to do with it.â
âI didnât say that.â
Astrid sniffed. âSo you didnât bet me you could get into Claireâs pants before the wedding?â
It took Claire a few seconds to realize what Astrid had said, the words settling around the room like a sudden snow shower in Aprilâquiet and cold and shocking.
Claire turned to look at Delilah. âYou . . . you did what?â
Delilah pressed her eyes closed. âThatâs not what happened.â
âHang on, hang on,â Iris said. âDelilah bet you she could sleep with Claire?â
âThe morning of the brunch,â Astrid said, gesturing at Claire. âShe said you were looking well, and I told her to stay the hell away from you and she just grinned. Like it was a joke. Then she bet me she could get you in her bed in two weeksâ time.â
âAnd you took it?â Iris said, her mouth gaping.
âNo! I told her to go fuck herself.â
âThatâs not what happened,â Delilah said again, but her voice sounded frail, unsure.
âSo you didnât try to sleep with Claire just to get under my skin?â Astrid asked.
âYouâre twisting it around,â Delilah said.
âAm I?â
âWait,â Iris said, stepping farther into the room. âThis canât be right. What are we missing?â She frowned at Delilah, hurt furrowing her brow.
And still, Delilah said nothing. Nothing in defense. No explanation. She just stood there, her arms crossed, her eyes on the floor, teeth worrying at her bottom lip like she was trying to think of what to say. But if she even had to think, had to worry, then . . .
Claire couldnât process this. She turned to look at the woman sheâd just begged to be more with her. The woman she couldnât stop thinking about, couldnât imagine letting go back to New York without a plan to be in each otherâs lives. She knew Delilah was rough around the edges. She knew Delilah was brash and brazen, and she actually loved all that about her. Plus, underneath all that, Delilah was . . . She was soft. And gentle and considerate and brave. She was real. It had all felt so real.
It was real.
Wasnât it?
But now, the truth of how unfeasible their whole relationship was settled on Claireâs shoulders.
Claire had asked Delilah to stay. To try. To figure it out together.
And Delilah . . . hadnât said yes. Sheâd kissed Claire, touched her so gently and tenderly it made Claireâs throat tighten just remembering it, but she hadnât said yes. Because she couldnât. Moreover, she didnât want to. Delilah was always going to leave, just like Josh, just like Claireâs father. Regardless of how this started, no matter what she felt for Delilah or what she had hoped might happen, she couldnât give her heart to someone else just to have them disappear on her again.
Whatever this was between themâsex, more, nothingâit was over.
Because Delilah Green would never stay in Bright Falls for Claire Sutherland.
âClaire,â Delilah said. âPlease, can weââ
But Claire held up her hand, cutting Delilah off. Delilah flinched like sheâd been slapped, and thatâs what it felt like to Claire tooâher palm smarting, fingers shaking, adrenaline rushing through her veins.
Finally, Delilah nodded once, her jaw tight, and walked toward the hallway.
âGo ahead and walk away,â Astrid said quietly. âItâs what you do best.â
Delilah paused in the doorway, her shoulders up around her ears. Claire wanted to scream, no, no, no, this wasnât right, but it was. It was, because Delilah didnât turn around, she didnât stay, she didnât push.
She just left.