Letter #21 Ella, Yes, I can believe the guy at the library asked you out. No, I donât think itâs odd, or a prank. Why would you? Itâs not like I havenât seen your picture, which yes, I know, puts me at an advantage between us. Not sure if you noticed, but youâre definitely not hurting in the looks department.
Go ahead, give me your excuses. Yes, you have two kids, and yes, one of them is facing incredible odds. You own a very time-consuming business, and from what I know about you, you also tend to put yourself last when factoring anything into your life.
But listen to meâscratch thatâ¦read meânone of that makes you âundatable,â as you called it. Do you know whatâs undatable? Someone whoâs selfish, or consumed with the tiny things in life that donât mean anything. To me, the most attractive quality in a woman is her ability to give of herself, and Ella, you do that in spades.
I get that you havenât gotten out there since Jeff walked out. I understand that for the last five years youâve been consumed with raising your kids, building your business, and generally being everything to everyone. But that doesnât mean that you canât let someone in. Especially now.
Iâm not going to say you need someone to lean on, because I know youâve become the expert on standing on your own. But with what youâre facing, I know it would help to have someone there to support you in the moments when you feel like itâs impossible. Go out to dinner with the guy, Ella. Even if nothing comes of it, youâll know you gave the universe the shout-out. You canât turn away every good thing that comes to you because youâre scared of what might happen, or not happen. Thatâs the cowardâs way out, and you are no coward.
And honestly, who wouldnât fall for you? Weâre three months into this, and Iâm half in love with you without ever having been in the same room. Just give the guyâgive yourselfâa shot at some happiness, because you deserve it.
Or you could wait until January, when I get to randomly show up at your door.
Just food for thought.
~ Chaos â¦
âNeed anything else?â I asked Maisie, handing her the iPad. She was all set up in the living room of the main houseâs residence, within shouting distance of Hailey and Ada.
âNope,â she replied, popping the P as she opened one of the apps her teacher had recommended.
âYour belly feel okay?â It had been two weeks since her surgery and, while the incision site looked to me like a monstrous, pink snake slithering across my daughterâs belly, she swore the pain was nearly gone.
Maybe it was the way sheâd slept the first few days after, or her sore throat from the twelve hours of intubation, or the feeding tube that had stayed with her for days, but I had a hard time believing her. Or perhaps it was that my pain tolerance on her behalf was so much lower than hers had grown to be.
âMom, Iâm fine. No puking or anything. Itâs okay. Go.â She looked up at me. âBesides, as soon as you leave, Ada will give me the sugar-free ice cream.â
âI donât think you were supposed to tell me that.â I laughed and pressed a kiss to her scalp, still shiny and smooth. Overhauling her diet had been a challenge, that was for sure. âYou know why it has to be sugar-free, right?â
âYou said sugar feeds the monster inside me. And even though the big part of the monster is out, the rest of him is in my blood. So we canât feed the monster.â
âRight. Iâm so sorry, Maisie.â
She looked up at me with eyes that felt decades older. âItâs okay, the monster doesnât like this kind.â
I kissed her again before I left, grabbing her binder on the way out the door after letting Ada know I was headed out.
Stopping at the entryway mirror for a moment, I tried to smooth back the frizz that had developed in the braid Iâd put into my hair this morning.
âStop. No matter what you do, youâre still gorgeous,â Hailey remarked as she came up behind me.
âHa. I canât even remember the last time I went to the gym or put on some makeup. Iâm batting for doesnât-look-psycho. Gorgeous is way out of my league.â
She propped her head on my shoulder, and our eyes met in the mirror. âYou have the kind of gorgeous that shines through no matter what.â
âLooking for a raise?â I teased.
âNope. Just telling the truth. Now get out of here before you miss that meeting. Ada and I have Maisie. Donât you worry.â
âWorrying has become my default emotion.â
She searched my face for a second before her eyes lit up, which meant she was about to suggest something ludicrous. âI know just the thing.â
âHaileyâ¦â I groaned. We were friends, but her idea of fun didnât exactly fit with my life.
âLetâs double date. Iâll grab Luke, and you bring Beckett. We can go out to a movie, or dinner, or try out that new karaoke bar in the Mountain Village.â
âA bar?â I let my tone tell her exactly what I thought about that one. That was the life of carefree people who didnât have responsibilities like kids. Or cancer. Or a kid with cancer. You know, normal twenty-five-year-olds.
âYes. A bar. Because if anyone could use a drink, itâs you, Ella. And I know Beckett would be up for taking you out.â
My spine stiffened. âWeâre notâ¦itâs not like that.â Just the thought of Beckett had a blush rising to my cheeks.
âThat man has his eyes on you whenever youâre in the same room. Come on, how many times did he drive back to Denver after Maisieâs surgery?â
I turned away from the mirror to face Hailey. âThree times.â
âIn two weeks.â
And every time heâd shown up, my heart had done this stupid, crazy leaping move. Something had changed the day of Maisieâs surgery. Not just because heâd been there, but because Iâd wanted him to be. It had been the first time during Maisieâs treatment that Iâd allowed myself to not just lean on someone, but let them hold me up.
The morning heâd shown up with Colt as a surpriseâabout three days after the surgeryâIâd just about melted into a puddle of goo. He seemed to know exactly what I neededâwhat Maisie neededâand provided it before I could even ask for it.
âYes, in two weeks, but itâs not romantic.â
âUh-huh.â
âItâs not! Heâs here because Ryan asked him to be. Thatâs it. Nothing more.â At least thatâs what I told myself whenever I found those green eyes watching me or me watching him.
âAnd you donât find him attractive or anything, right?â
âIâ¦â Dark green eyes the color of pine, thick hair and thicker arms, washboard abs that trailed down toâget a grip. âOf course I do. Iâve seen the man.â And felt him.
Iâd felt the protective way heâd held meâtight, but not oppressive, as if heâd simply known that I needed to be held together in that moment. Felt the gentleness of his hands when heâd wiped away my tears after sobbing out everything Iâd held in. Felt the joy he was capable of when Colt had climbed into bed next to Maisie and held his sister. Felt the overwhelming capacity for love that he had even if he didnât want to acknowledge it.
Yeah, I felt entirely too much when it came to Beckett.
âWell, yeah. Youâd have to be dead not to notice. Because heâs hot, Ella. And not in a passingly nice kind of way. Heâs hot in a take-me-on-the-kitchen-counter-and-let-me-bear-your-children kind of way. Plus, heâs starting to speak in more than one-word answers, which shows definite potential in the moving-past-broody department.â
A flash of something hot and ugly hit my stomach and was gone as quickly as it came. Jealousy. There was no reason to be jealous of Hailey. Sure, she was beautiful, and available, and didnât have so much baggage attached to her that there was a giant Samsonite tag on her forehead, but the minute weâd come home from Denver, sheâd completely stopped seeking out Beckett. And it wasnât because she wouldnât be interested. Iâd heard the gossip getting coffee yesterdayâhalf of Telluride was interested in the newest Search and Rescue member.
It was because Hailey thought maybe I was interested.
âHe has always spoken in more than one-word answers, and I already have children, remember? Besides, speaking of children, if I donât walk out right now, Iâm going to be late for this meeting.â
âOkay. Go. Run. But that man lives next door, and from what Iâve seen, youâre going to have to deal with all thatââshe motioned to my red faceââpent-up frustration somehow.â
A guest walked in, the bell ringing with the light tinkling sound that had taken me hours to decide on.
âSaved by the bell,â Hailey whispered before turning to our new guest. âWelcome to Solitude! You must be Mr. Henderson. Your cabin is all ready for you and your wife.â Her smile was wide and mirrored by the hipster-looking twentysomething.
Summer hiking season was almost upon us.
I took my opportunity, and the binder, and escaped out the front door.
It was 10:31 when I pulled in, but I parked in the elementary schoolâs designated spots like a good parent and took the extra minute hit to my already tardy arrival.
âElla!â Jennifer smiled out at me through the glass. âTheyâre all set up for you.â
âHey, Jennifer.â I signed in on the clipboard and opened the door when the buzzer sounded.
âHow is Maisie feeling?â she asked as she walked me into the offices that sat just behind the reception desk.
âSheâs good, thank you. Surgery went well, and sheâs ready to return to school on Monday.â
âReally? Already? Thatâs amazing!â
âYouâd be shocked to see how quickly kids bounce back, and as long as her levels are good, sheâs safe here.â
âI just canât believe she beat it that quickly!â
Oh, no. I saw that look in her eyes, and I hated to be the one to dash it. âNo, Jen. She had the tumor removed, and they got it all, but sheâs Stage Four. Her bone marrow is still overwhelmingly cancerous. She just made it through the first step.â
Her face fell. âOh. Iâm sorry. I guess I didnât understand.â
I offered her a smile. âDonât worry. Not many people do, and I hope you never have to. Sheâs fighting.â
Her lips pressed together in a flat line before she nodded her head. âOf course.â She opened the door to the conference room, and I squeezed her hand as I passed, reassuring her that she hadnât said anything worthy of embarrassment.
âAh, Ms. MacKenzie, Iâm so glad you could make it,â Principal Halsen said from the head of the table. His tie was as straight as his face.
Apparently we were all business today.
âMs. May.â I smiled at Maisie and Coltâs teacher. She was in her late twenties, and Colt had only the best things to say about her. A pang of guilt smacked me square in the chest at how absent Iâd been from school activities this year.
Yeah, I definitely wasnât winning PTA Mom of the Year over here. Not even Okayest Mom. I was pretty much the Nonexistent Mom.
âAnd this is Mr. Jonas, who is our district superintendent and will be joining us today.â Principal Halsen motioned toward the older gentleman at his left. The man nodded at me with pursed lips that morphed into a forced smile.
âMr. Jonas.â
I took the seat at the end of the conference table, leaving two empty seats between me and what felt like the army that had gathered against me, or rather Maisie. The loud sound of the binderâs zipper opening was almost obscene in the silence.
âSo, Ms. MacKenzieââ
âElla,â I reminded him.
âElla,â he agreed with a nod. âWe needed to meet today because of Maisieâs attendance record. As you know, she needs to be present for a minimum of nine hundred hours to complete kindergarten. Right now, between her absences and times sheâs needed to leave early, or come late, sheâs at about seven hundred and ten.â
âOkay?â I flipped through the binder to her school section, where I kept record of her days, hours, and documentation.
âWe feel at this point, we need to discuss her options,â Principal Halsen said, pushing his glasses up his nose and opening the manila folder in front of him.
âOptions,â I repeated, trying to understand.
âShe hasnât met the legal requirement,â Mr. Jonas said, his voice soft, but his eyes telling me that the issue was cut and dried in his opinion.
âRight.â I flipped to the letter Iâd kept in a page protector and took it out of the binder. âI absolutely agree that she hasnât met the requirement, but the district assured us in this letter dated in November that you wouldnât hold her to it. That rule is waivable in the regulations by the district due to catastrophic illness, and thatâs what you agreed to.â
I slid the letter down the table. Ms. May caught it and passed it along, sending me a sympathetic smile.
âWe did. And weâre not here to throw ultimatums at you, Ella,â Principal Halsen assured me. âWeâre here to discuss whatâs best for Maisie. We made this agreement without looking at her long-term future.â
Because they hadnât thought sheâd make it this long.
âWhatâs best for Maisieâ¦â I repeated softly. âYou mean, like not having Stage Four neuroblastoma? Because I definitely agreeâthatâs not in her best interest.â
Mr. Jonas cleared his throat and leaned forward, resting his wrinkled, folded hands on the table. âWe absolutely sympathize, Ms. MacKenzie. What your daughter has been through is tragic.â
And there went my hackles, rising as my spine straightened. âItâs not tragic, Mr. Jonas. Sheâs not dead.â
âOf course not, my dear. Weâre not saying that any of this is fair, but the truth is that Maisie might not be ready for first grade.â
My dear. Like I was a little girl in bloomers asking for a pretty new doll. To hell with that.
âWeâve done everything youâve asked. Ms. May has been quite accommodating, and I assure you that sheâs ready.â
âShe is.â Ms. May nodded.
Principal Halsen sighed, taking off his glasses and cleaning an imaginary spot. âLetâs look at this from a different angle. Can you tell us where sheâs at in her treatments? What we can expect in the coming months?â
I flipped back to the sheet where I kept the estimated treatment plan, realizing weâd gotten to a point where I wasnât sure. We were at a crossroads.
âShe just completed a major surgery two weeks ago. Sheâs healing wonderfully and is ready to come back to school on Monday. Then the week after, weâll be in for another round of chemo, which as you know means sheâs gone a solid school week. Weâre hoping her levels will remain stable enough to come back for the end of school, but thereâs no telling. Then weâre into summer. Iâll know more when we go in for chemo and I can meet with her oncologist.â
The administrators shared a look that made me feel like I wasnât on the other side of the table but the other side of the battlefield. I felt that change come over meâthe one that had appeared the moment theyâd placed the twins in my armsâlike pieces of armor clicking into place as I prepared to defend my child.
âHave you thought about having her repeat kindergarten? If sheâs in a better situation to be fully present next school year, then it wouldnât harm her. We wouldnât force it, of course, but itâs worth a thought. In fact, a lot of our parents hold back their children at the kindergarten stage for various reasons. Certainly this procedure qualifiesââ
I snapped.
âWith all due respect, it wasnât a procedure. It was a twelve-hour, life-threatening surgery in which they removed a tumor the size of a softball from my daughterâs adrenal gland. This isnât an inconvenience; this is cancer. And no, next year wonât be better. Sheâs fighting for her life, so excuse me if I donât share your worries that she may have missed the critical day of kindergarten when you covered the life cycle of the butterfly. Statistically she might not evenâ¦â My throat closed, my body rebelling against the words I hadnât spoken since the day theyâd given me her odds. âNext year will not be better.â
âAnd you donât wish for her to repeat her kindergarten year.â Principal Halsen wrote down a note in the folder.
âItâs kindergarten. Do you seriously feel like she needs to?â A repeat wouldnât just be hard for Maisie to swallow, but for Colt as well. Theyâd be a year apart in school, which would mean that even ifâwhenâshe beat the cancer, sheâd have to look the consequences in the eye every day.
âShe doesnât,â Ms. May spoke up. âSheâs quite bright, and sheâll do just fine in first grade,â she told the administrators.
The two men conferred quietly for a moment before turning back to me. âWeâd like to offer you a solution. Transfer her to an at-home program. Kindergarten isnât as academically challenging as first grade, and next year, sheâll need the flexibility.â
âPull her out of school.â
âSchool her at home,â Mr. Jonas corrected. âWeâre not against you, Ms. MacKenzie, or Maisie. Weâre genuinely trying to figure out the best solution. Sheâs not in school for the required hours, and next year her workload will increase exponentially. Couple that with the liability of having her here with her weakened immune system, the worry placed on the staff, and the other children, and we all might be more comfortableâincluding Maisie. She could keep the best schedule for her health if she were schooled at home.â
Other cancer moms did that. Iâd spoken with a few of them, but it always seemed like they pulled them out as a last resortâ¦when they were dying. It wasnât so much the physical act of removing her from the school as it was the emotional acknowledgment that she couldnât go.
And that was equally devastating to us allâMaisie, Colt, and especially me.
But it would relieve stress on her, on her levels, on the days she couldnât get out of bed. On the mornings she spent lurched over the toilet, crying, only to look at me and swear she could make it.
âWhat would it entail?â
âI could teach her,â Ms. May offered. âIâd come by in the afternoons whenever she felt well enough. Sheâd stay on track, sheâd be exempt from district hour requirements, and weâd be able to personally tailor the program.â
âCan I think about it?â
âOf course,â Mr. Jonas said, passing back the letter from early in her diagnosis.
We adjourned the meeting, and Ms. May walked out with me. I felt numb, or maybe it was simply that Iâd been hit so hard and so often in the last six months that I no longer registered pain.
âColt is just heading to lunch if youâd like to see him,â she offered.
Colt. He was exactly what I needed right now.
âIâd very much like that,â I told her.
She reached for my hand and squeezed it lightly. âHeâs a phenomenal kid. He is kind, and compassionate, and defensive of the smaller kids.â
My smile was instant. âI lucked out with that guy.â
âNo. Heâs phenomenal because he has an exceptional mother. Please donât forget that in the midst of everything. Youâre a great mom, Ella.â
I couldnât think of anything to say that wasnât a rebuttal of that statement, so I simply gave her hand a squeeze back.
Then I stood with a dozen other moms who were lined up outside the cafeteria, all waiting for their kids. Most were the normal PTA moms, the ones who had impeccable minivans, color-coded day planners, and stylish but sensible fashion. Some I knew, some I didnât.
I looked down at my Vans, worn jeans, and long-sleeved tee, and feltâ¦unkempt. Iâd never really understood the phrase âlet yourself go,â but this moment? Yeah, I got it. I couldnât remember the last time Iâd cut my hair, or taken the time to actually put on more makeup than concealer for under my eyes and mascara. None of it mattered in the scheme of thingsâof saving Maisieâbut right now, I felt the separation between me and these women as certainly as if they were in ball gowns.
âOh, Ella! Itâs so nice to see you!â Maggie Cooper said with a hand over her heart, flashing a diamond bigger than her knuckle. She was a year older than Ryan and had married one of the corporate guys from up in the ski village. Iâd half expected their engagement announcement to read âlocal girl makes good.â
âYou, too, Maggie. How isâ¦â Crap. What was her kidâs name? The obnoxious one whoâd colored on Maisieâs backpack with permanent marker and thought it was cute to force kisses on her? Doug? Deacon? âDrake?â Phew.
âHeâs great! Really soaring at piano right now and looking forward to soccer. It starts next week in case Colt wants to play. Look, I meant to ask, have you thought about treating Maisie holistically? I mean, those medicines are really poisonous. I was reading this blog that talked about eating just cassava root or something? It was really intriguing. I can absolutely send it to you.â
Yeeeeeah. Thank God Iâd gotten good at plastering a smile on my face and nodding. âSure, Maggie. That would be great.â Iâd learned over the last six months that the easiest way to deal with the well-meaning advice-givers was just to say thank you and noncommittally agree to read whatever research theyâd found about snake venom or whatever.
Lucky for me, the class rounded the corner, carrying lunch boxes or lunch cards.
âGreat! And I found a bunch on organics! Theyâre supposed to be great for kids with leukemia and everything.â
âNeuroblastoma,â I said over the kidsâ heads as they came between us in the hall. âShe has neuroblastoma.â
âOh, right. I get confused with all those cancers.â She waved it off like there was no difference.
âOh my God. Who is that?â the mom next to her asked, looking pointedly down the hall.
I turned to see Colt walking just behind the class with a million-watt grin and Havoc in between him and Beckett.
Beckett, who was sporting cargo pants like he wore to work, and a navy-blue Telluride Mountain Rescue T-shirt that stretched perfectly across his chest and around the swells of his biceps.
âI have no clue, but sign me up,â Maggie said, her eyes locked on Beckett as her son found her.
Beckett nodded at something Colt said and took off his baseball hat, placing it backward on Coltâs head. Ugh, my stupid freaking heart flipped right over and got that teenage, glowy feeling that I most definitely didnât have time for.
âSeriously.â The other mom sighed. âFresh blood?â
âSeasonal. Has to be,â Maggie answered.
Beckett looked up and immediately saw me, a smile transforming him from gorgeous and broody to just flat sexy. When was the last time Iâd even thought about a guy in that way? Jeff? As if acknowledging it gave it life, I felt a low hum in my belly, like my sex drive had just kicked on after almost seven years of lying dormant.
âMom!â Colt saw me and ran, bypassing the line to jump at me.
I caught him easily, lifting him against my chest. For a split second, I worried that Iâd just crossed the big-boy line, but as intuitive as he was, he put his head down and squeezed me tight.
âIâm so glad youâre here,â he said, and I let him down, having gotten my Colt fix.
âI am, too.â Beckettâs voice slid over me like raw sugar, gravelly and sweet at the same time.
From the corner of my eye, I saw Maggieâs jaw drop, and then she disappeared, hopefully to the lunchroom, even though I knew those few words would set the gossip tongues wagging.
âWhat are you three doing?â I leaned down and rubbed Havoc behind her soft ears. âHiya, girl.â
âBeckett was here for show-and-tell!â Colt exclaimed.
Oh God, Iâd forgotten.
âOh, buddy. I totally spaced that you needed something to share today. Iâm so sorry.â At what point was I going to stop screwing up and get my shit together?
âNo, Mom, itâs okay! Beckett told me last week heâd bring Havoc in, so I took it off your kitchen calendar. It was so cool! She chased her toy, and then Beckett hid me in a tree and told her to find me, and she did! Definitely the coolest show-and-tell of the year.â
âIâm so glad!â And I actually was. My guilt slid away for a precious second, and I looked up at Beckett in gratitude. âThank you,â I said softly.
The slight tilt to his lips wasnât quite a smile. It was something softer, more intimate, and infinitely more dangerous. âI was happy to do it.â
âI was here for a Maisie meeting and just needed a little Colt fix,â I told him.
His brows lowered. âEverything okay?â
Before I could answer, Maggie was there with freshly applied lip gloss and a flyer, standing so close she was almost between us.
Beckettâs posture stiffened.
âOoh, Ella,â she said, âbefore I forget, hereâs the information for the soccer team. I know Colt had wanted to play in the spring league, but we all understood with what Maisieâs going through, well, you have a lot on your plate. But just in case you can fit in the time, weâd love to have him.â
âSoccer? Really?â Colt lit up like a Christmas tree, and I wanted to smack Maggie and every other mom on the planet who had the ability to say yes without checking schedules for doctorsâ appointments and chemo sessions.
âColt, weâre really busyââ
Beckett gently cupped my elbow, turning away from Maggie. âLet me help.â
âBeckettâ¦â Letting him help meant depending on him, and letting Colt depend on him, too. And while I knew he had the best of intentions, I was also aware that his soul had the same restless demons Ryanâs had.
âPlease.â
I was certainly glad he wasnât asking me to strip out of my clothes, because between that voice and the plea in his eyes, I was helpless. My head nodded before my brain got the better of itâand me.
âYou want to play soccer, Colt?â
âYes!â
âOkay, weâll make it happen.â
Amid Coltâs celebration, Maggie thrust the flyer in my face and turned her smile on Beckett. âAnd who might you be? One of Tellurideâs finest?â
His eyes lost their warmth, his expression turning distant, almost cold, and unlike any expression Iâd seen from him. Was Maggie the exception, or was I?
âNo, thatâs the sheriffâs department.â
His tone was curt, almost unrecognizable from the way he spoke to me and the kids.
âPrivate sector, huh?â
âYes.â
One-word answer. Maybe Hailey was rightâsheâd simply seen something I hadnât, because he hadnât shown it around me.
âOoh, the special kind of search and rescue,â she said, taking the step that did put her between us. âThe ones who get contracted out for the dangerous calls.â Her voice lowered, and I stepped back to avoid asphyxiating on her perfume.
âI guess,â Beckett answered.
âYou know that company is actually funded by a conglomerate of the owners of the ski resort and the hotels in the village, right? They wanted something immediately available, knowing how busy the sheriffâs office gets.â
âIs that so?â Beckett stepped back, but Maggie followed. His jaw flexed and the save-me look he shot my way was anything but funny. He really was that uncomfortable.
It was definitely time to intervene.
âSheâs right,â I said as Colt took my hand. âHer husband owns one of the hotels, right, Maggie?â
She openly glared at me, but her face turned sweet when she looked back at Beckett, well, appraised was a better word. Openly ogled was another way to say it. âHe does, which I guess means, in a way, you work for me.â
His eyes turned glacial. âIâm an independent contractor, which means I work for myself.â
I moved to stand next to Beckett, and he relaxed just enough for the change to be visible. âItâs always good to see you, Maggie, but I think these guys are getting hungry, right?â I asked Beckett.
He nodded. âItâs always nice to meet other parents in Colt and Maisieâs class.â
The words were the right ones, but they were forced, like heâd practiced them in his head before saying them aloud.
Maggieâs shoulders fell, but she quickly recovered. âOf course. I guess Iâd better get back to Drake. Are you joining us?â
I looked down at Colt, who was luckily occupied with Havoc. He had to be getting hungry, and we were wasting lunch time out here.
âActually, I was going to ask my Ella here if she wanted to grab some lunch with me.â The words came out of him just like every other time weâd talked by ourselves. Easy. Natural.
Maggie noticed.
Point. Set. Match.
Whether or not it was true, I could have kissed him in gratitude. Not that I was going to kiss him, or touch him in any way that indicated anything more than friendship, if thatâs even what we had. What were we, anyway? Guilt-contracted neighbors?
Maggie nodded and spun on her heel, nearly taking me out. Beckett reached around, steadying my shoulder as she passed. Who cared about the truth? Not me!
After todayâs meeting and Maggie attack, I felt a sense of rebellion well in my stomach and spread outward. âColton MacKenzie.â
âMom?â
âWanna ditch the rest of the day with me? With us?â I glanced up at Beckett.
âYes!â
âWhat do you want to do?â Beckett asked, crouching down.
Coltâs mouth and nose wiggled back and forth as he thought. âI want to picnic with Maisie. If she feels well enough.â
Iâd so lucked out getting this kid.
âPicnic it is.â
As we walked out to our cars, I brushed Beckettâs arm, stopping him as Colt and Havoc walked ahead a few feet.
âYouâre not a big people person, are you?â
âThat obvious?â
âAbsolutely.â But oddly endearing, too, realizing that he was different with me. âI just didnât see it until now.â
âYeah, wellâ¦I guess Iâm just comfortable around you.â
That simple admission felt like the best compliment, and I felt my cheeks warm.
âYou realize what you did, right?â I needed him to understand the commitment heâd made, how precious the trust of a child was.
âWith lunch?â
âSoccer, Beckett. Thatâs three practices a week and games on the weekend. That means on the days Iâm at the doctor with Maisieââ
âIâm at the field with Colt. Iâm not going to let you down, Ella. Or him.â
My teeth sank into my lower lip as I fought the urge to believe him, to trust that heâd be where he said he would be.
âTrust me, please.â
âI know you have the best of intentions, but in my experience, guysâ¦donât always show up.â I spoke the last bit at the concrete between my feet. To be exact, they lied and said they would, then never did. Maybe their reasons varied, but the end result never did.
He tipped my chin up gently with his finger, and I found the courage bit by bit to meet his gaze.
âI will show up for you. For Colt. For Maisie. I will not walk away. I will not abandon you. I will not die.â His words hit me smack in my heart with the force of a ton of bricks. âI will show up, and if you donât believe me now, thatâs okay. Iâll earn it.â
âI have no right to expect that of you.â We werenât together, or anything else that would even imply he had any such obligation. I had to trust that his sense of duty to my brother was strong enough to hold him here, and trust wasnât one of my strong points.
âYou have the right because I give it to you.â
We stood like that, locked on each other, his hand beneath my chin, warring silently until I sighed and let my eyes close. âOkay. But donât let him down.â
âIâm not going to. The sooner you believe that, the sooner I can pick up a little of that burden youâre so hell-bent on carrying solo. Have a little faith in me.â
I sucked in an unsteady breath and tried it out, the faith thing. âSoccer.â
He grinned. âSoccer.â