Cadeâs hand wrapped around her ankle and squeezed. She wasnât sure if it was in warning or affectionâprobably the former since heâd outright cautioned her not to bring up this subject with his father. But he couldnât blame her for this. Not when James Hawthorne was the one whoâd gone there first.
And since heâd broached the subject, she wasnât about to back off.
âCall him what you will in private, but in publicâ ââ
âIâll call my husband by the name he prefers. In public and in private.â
âNow see here, youngâ ââ
âDad.â Cadeâs quiet voice was filled with dark menace. âLeave her be. I wonât let you intimidate her.â
âIâm not trying to intimidate the lass,â his father protested, sounding like a chastised little boy. âJust educating her as to how this family works.â
âMaybe this family doesnât work as well as you think it does,â Fern interjected softly. âI may be the new addition and I may not know much about anything, but itâs pretty clear to me that Cade has some hang ups about this name business. No matter how much he might deny it. Our marriage may be a sham, but I do know that much about him. And I have no idea why the rest of you are so hellbent on ignoring that.â
She cast a quick, apologetic glance Gideon and Kenny, both of whom were staring at her in slack-jawed shock. She hadnât meant to drag them into it, but it was true that all of them were ignoring a fact that had been obvious to her from the very beginning. Cadeâs hand was still firmly encircled around her ankle, but he was applying no pressure
âI⦠well thatâsâ¦â James Hawthorne appeared staggered by Fernâs words and seeing the usually cocky and self-assured man flounder immediately flooded her with remorse.
This wasnât her business. Once again, sheâd forgotten that she was the guest and that after she left, they would still have to deal with the fallout of her thoughtless words and actions.
âIâm sorry,â she apologized. She should really learn to mind her business. âI was out of line. I had no right to speak out of turn like that.â
Cade gave her ankle a gentle squeeze that she wasnât sure how to interpret.
He had to be angry. She knew that much. Knew that he was likely livid. And she couldnât blame him. Sheâd once again, ruined a perfectly good family gathering by bringing this up again.
âDonât be,â Beth told her with a gentle smile. âItâs nice to be reminded that not everybody can be bullied and railroaded.â
The words were clearly aimed at James Hawthorne who was still watching Fern in open-mouthed shock.
âAnybody want some dessert?â Gideon asked, looking completely unperturbed by the eveningâs events. Although his eyes were troubled as they dropped to Cadeâs face. He pushed to his feet and went from person to person to collect their empty plates. âBeth made a strawberry chiffon cake.â
Fern wasnât sure she could stay. She felt awful and on the verge of tears. But at the same time, she knew that leaving now would completely ruin the evening, which would be unfair when Beth and Gideon had gone to such lengths.
âIâd love a slice,â Cade shocked her by saying. He tilted his head up to look at her, a slight smile on his face. âYou should try it, Fern. Beth is an amazing baker.â
âAnd no nuts of any kind, of course,â Beth told her.
âYes, please, Iâd like that.â
âWe have a long drive, so I think weâll give it a miss,â Kenny said, slanting a glance at her husband who, by now, appeared to have mentally checked out.
âWhat is going on with you two?â James Hawthorne asked with brutal bluntness and Kenny winced, as she snuck a look at her husbandâs grim expression. âWhat did you do to my daughter, you bastard?â
âDad, itâs fine. We had an argument thatâs all. Isnât that right, Smith?â The last was tacked on a little desperately as she implored the husband whoâd ignored her and her family for the better part of the evening, to back her up.
âMassive fight, yeah.â He nodded, looking completely disinterested in even attempting to be convincing.
âSee?â Kenny said with an unconvincing smile. âWeâre fine. Itâs all good.â
âAre you scared of him?â her father asked in a menacing voice, and Cade pushed slowly to his feet at the question. Gideon came up to join him and the two men stood shoulder to shoulder as they eyed Smith in blatant hostility.
âHas he hurt you?â Cade asked, his hands closing into tight fists.
Kenny looked so genuinely shocked and horrified by the question that it was immediately obvious that they were barking up the wrong tree.
âWhat? Oh my God, no. Of course not. Smith would neverâ¦â
Smith just watched them with a snide little half smile on his lip, almost taunting, as if he wanted them to pummel him. As if he would relish the opportunity to take his black mood out on someone.
âOh, for Godâs sake, everybody just calm down, okay?â Kenny pleaded. âSmith and I are going home. We had an argument. Thatâs it. End of story.â
Fern wasnât convinced that was true, andâjudging by the grim expressions on everybody elseâs facesâneither did the rest of the family. Whatever was happening between the couple was catastrophic but until Kenny chose to confide in someone, forcing the issue might wind up alienating her.
Smith waited impatiently at the front door while Kenny hugged and kissed everybody, her smile reassuring, her eyes miserable.
When she hugged Cade, she whispered something in his ear and he reared his head back to stare at her in obvious dazed astonishment. She gave him a bittersweet smile and kissed his cheek.
The couple left soon afterward. Kenny clutching the car keys because Smithâd had too much to drink.
âFern and I will get the cake, you guys go and have a manly chat or whatever it is you do when weâre not around,â Beth said, linking her arm with Fernâs and dragging her into the kitchen.
It was an open plan room and space was limited, but they were still far enough from the men to have a private conversation.
âThat was intense, right?â Beth breathed. âI grew up in this house with only my Granny June and her parrot, Spock. So, Iâve never really experienced such soap opera level family drama before marrying into this clan.â
Fern, equally wide-eyed was instantly relieved that she wasnât the only one whoâd felt overwhelmed and little shaken by the entire exchange. This little side bar only reinforced to her how much she enjoyed Bethâs company and once again she felt a pang of remorse that sheâd kept the woman at a distance. Which was a shame because they felt like allies in a strange and foreign land.
âI know. I mean, Iâve seen my fair share of drama at my boarding school, living with a bunch of troubled adolescent girls is always going to yield some pretty intense I saw him first, you rabid bitch type of showdowns⦠but there was nothing like this.â She sighed and then said, âI feel responsible for this. I shouldnât have started on the name business again. Iâm so sorry for ruining your party.â
âPuh-please⦠you started nothing, girlâthat was all daddy-in-law-dearest. But make no m-mistake⦠you finished the hell out of it. Iâm happy you proved to him that youâre not a pushover. He sometimes needs to be reminded that the world doesnât revolve around him.â
âThank you for saying that, I feel a little better.â
Beth smiled at her and gave her a little wink.
âYou grab some plates out of that cupboard while I slice the cake,â the woman instructed.
Fern did as she was told and as she watched Beth work, she sighed quietly.
âIâm so sorry for ghosting you after our shopping date.â
âAre you ready to tell me why you did that?â Beth asked, not even pretending not to know what Fern was talking about. âIt canât be because you donât like me, Iâm clearly awesome.â
Fern laughed, appreciating the other woman immensely for lightening the moment.
âYou definitely are and I do like you. Iâm worried that, when my marriage with Cade eventually ends, youâll be forced to pick sides and youâd naturally pick him. Heâs family. Iâm just⦠temporary.â
Beth nodded, and lifted her thumb to suck some cream off it.
âI thought it m-might be something like that,â she mused. âGlad itâs out in the open. Now, for the record, whatever happens or doesnât happen between you and Cade in the futureââthe name slipped from Bethâs mouth so naturally, that for a second Fern didnât realize that sheâd used itââit wonât ever affect my friendship with you. Weâll make it work, okay? Because when I make friends, theyâre stuck with me for life. Now can we put this behind us and carry on where we left off?â
âIâd like that very much,â Fern whispered and discreetly thumbed away a couple of sneaky tears before her friend could see them.
They managed to make it through the rest of the evening, thanks to Beth and Gideonâs gracious, easygoing hosting. There was the inevitable concern and conversation centering around Kenny and her marriage. And there was also still some residual tension between the three men. James Hawthorne kept watching Cade with a troubled frown on his face, as did Gideon. Their concerned expressions were almost identical.
Her father-in-lawâhaving seemingly forgiven her for her clap back on his earlier bossinessâpeppered Fern with questions about her pregnancy. The man appeared genuinely excited at the prospect of a grandchild and while it had been Fernâs intention from the very beginning to sever all ties with this family once she and Cade went their separate ways, it was becoming clear that doing so would be almost impossible.
For one, there was Beth⦠and through Beth, Gideon. And now this man, who clearly had every intention of being an integral part of his grandchildâs life. How could she deprive him or her child of such a relationship? Fern wanted a real family for her baby. The family life sheâd never had. She couldnât very well deny her child a grandfather who already seemed to love him unconditionally. As well as uncles and aunts who would spoil him rotten and love him unconditionally.
She wasnât sure how Cade would feel about the childâs continued presence in his life, but right now, but after his tentative offer to âbabysitâ while she studied, maybe he wouldnât be entirely averse to the prospect of being a part of the babyâs life. Even when he and Fern were no longer trapped in this awkward, loveless arrangement.
And while it might mean that Fern would still be on the outside looking in, it wouldnât matter if it meant that her child would enjoy all the love and acceptance growing up, that she hadnât had.
Cade was quiet as usual, but she couldnât read his silence tonight. She couldnât tell if he was angry. Usually, he projected his fury pretty clearly. But there was none of that seething frustration in his silence this time. In fact, he seemed more relaxed than anyone else in the room.
âReady to leave?â he asked Fern, when she stifled a second yawn in as many minutes.
She wasnât, not really, dreading being alone with him after her catastrophic decision-making tonight. She wasnât looking forward to hearing about her temporary place in his family again. Nor another diatribe about how she should keep her nose out of his business. And yes, she knew that if she didnât want to hear the same lecture, she should probably stop repeating the same destructive behavior over and over again.
After all, wasnât that the very definition of madness?
The silent ride home ratcheted up her tension. And by the time they entered the apartment she was a wreck. She turned toward him while he locked the door.
âIâm so sorry, Cade, I shouldnât have said anything. I completely messed up the oomphâ ââ
She was unable to complete her apology due to the fact that he was currently siphoning the air from her lungs through her mouth. Also, difficult? Forming words with someone elseâs assertive tongue in your mouth.
Fern stood in stunned surprise as her husband enfolded her in his arms and quite simply ate her mouth, apology and all.
She wasnât sure why this was happening and had a fleeting momentâs misgiving before she sighed in contentment and flowed into his arms like silk, her arms winding around his neck.
When the hot, sensual kiss finally wound down, Fern found herself snugly ensconced on his lap, cuddled to his hard chest. He had one hand fisted in her hair and the other palmed in her neck.
They were both a panting mess afterward, lips swollen, eyes wild, hair mussed, and clothes in disarray. He was hard, she was wet, and even though Fern was happy for the breather, happy to have a moment to simply think⦠she wasnât entirely certain why they werenât in bed, slaking this desperate need.
âDonât get me wrongâ¦â Fernâs voice was a throaty purr, when she finally managed to get her breathing under some semblance of control. âThat was amazing. But⦠why?â
âWhy what?â God, she loved his raspy post-sex voice. It always sent delicious frissons of sensation arrowing down her spine straight to her clit.
âWhy did you just kiss me like that? And why did you stop? Why didnât weâ¦â she floundered and the palm on her neck, moved up to her cheek. His long thumb, swept tenderly over her lip
âWhy didnât we make love?â Oh, were they calling it that? Sheâd been so certain he was about to say have sex, or something far more crude. His choice of words surprised her.
âYes.â She nodded, her index finger idly tracing swirling patterns on his chest.
âBecause we need to talk.â
Fair enough. They did need to talk. About what had happened between them before the dinner, as well as everything that had occurred after that.
âI thought you were angry with me,â she admitted. âFor what happened at Beth and Gideonâs place. I was unforgivably rude to your father. I upset everybody and ruined Beth and Gideonâs dinner party.â
âRuined is a strong word. I wouldnât say that at all.â
âWhat would you say then?â
He dropped an unexpected kiss onto her forehead.
When he spoke again, his gravelly voice was almost self-conscious. The hand in her hair was now lazily toying with the wavy strands. âMy mother was the one who always called me Cade.â
His words startled her into lifting her head, but he used the palm on her cheek to gently coax her head back down to his chest.
âDonât, please⦠Iâd prefer to talk about this withoutâuhâeye contact, if possible.â
âCade if you donât want to tell me this, youâ ââ
âI want to,â he interrupted her quickly. âBut itâsâ¦â A gust of air ruffled her hair as he sighed. âI havenât really spoken about it to anyone before. Iâm not a big sharer. I listen, I offer advice when my brothers or Kenny need it, but I donât like to burden them with my shit.â
âBut they love you, theyâd probably be happy if you confided in them sometimes.â
âIâm not someone who wears my emotions on my sleeve,â he confessed, sounding uncomfortable at the mere thought of it.
âSo, your mother was the one who called you Cade?â Fern repeated, refocusing the conversation.
âYes. Well, not just her. Everyone did. I was named after both grandfathers. My motherâs fatherâCadenâdied just a few months after I was born and even though my first name is Niall, both of my parents decided to use my second name to honor his memory. From what I gather, my father was smitten with my mother at the time and would have done anything to make her happy. They separated when I was ten and officially divorced a few years later. After their split, my father started calling me Niall. I think it was more about scoring points against my mother than about me. My mother still called me Cade, as did my brothers and Kenny.
âButâyou have to understandâwhen we were younger, we all vied for our fatherâs attention. He was always busy so we did what we could to win his approval. It took a couple of years but eventually Nox started emulating Dad. I understood why he did it, my father had started saying shit about how Niall is a good strong name, his own fatherâs name. How I should wear it with pride. And Noxâthe consummate middle childâwouldâve done anything to gain his notice. He was only about eleven at the time, but he was already so damned competitive when it came to winning the old manâs affection.
âGideon and Kenny only started calling me Niall because they were imitating Nox. They were just babies really. I donât blame any of them for it. My mother died when I was twenty-three. At that point she was the only one still calling me Cade. And once she was gone, I stopped thinking ofâor referring toâmyself as Cade. But it never sat well with me. It felt like a betrayal of my motherâs memory and wishes. Very few people call me Cade anymore. One or two childhood school friends andâwellâyouâ¦â
âWhy did you tell me to call you Cade?â
âBecause itâs been years since anyone has called me by that name, and Niall Hawthorne is someone else, someone harsh and uncompromising. A coldhearted bastard. I donât really understand what impulse compelled me to invite you to call me Cade that night. I thought it would be a one-time thing. And as a result, I felt free to be⦠myself. All I knew was that I didnât want to be that bastard with you. And thatâ¦â He paused and his chest moved beneath her head as he sighed deeply. When he spoke again, his voice had the slightest of wobbles to it. âAnd that I wanted to hear my name on your lips.â
She lifted her head again and this time he made no attempt to hide from her. He met her eyes with a directness that stole the breath from her lungs.
âI was quite taken with them, you see?â he whispered, the blue striations in his irises in vivid contrast to the dark, stormy gray.
âWith what?â she asked, almost absently as she found herself completely mesmerized by his hypnotic gaze.
âYour lips.â He finally broke eye contact and diverted his attention to her mouth.
She wet her lips self-consciously with her tongue and was startled by his almost primitive groan in response, the ragged sound that of a man in agony. His cock lengthened and hardened beneath her thigh, sending a flutter of anticipatory excitement zinging through her stomach.
âYouâre trying to drive me insane, arenât you?â he accused. âYouâve somehow recognized how gorgeous I think your mouth is. Which is why youâre constantly worrying at that top lip with your teeth, or your tongue⦠or sucking it into your mouth to plump it up so fucking irresistibly. You must know that I have a hard time thinking straight when you do any of that shit.â
âI didnât know you felt that way,â she denied weakly and he shuddered, before tilting his head back to stare at the ceiling.
âI feel a lot of ways, Fern,â he admitted, his voice raw with need.
Her hand crept down over his abs toward the hard, twitching length of flesh.
âHmm, I can tell,â she whispered, taking him in her palm.
He hissed and shifted his own hand from her hair to stay the movement of her hand on his cock.
âNot what I meant,â he asserted in a strained voice. âI mean aye, I fucking want you, pretty much every waking moment of the day⦠not that thereâs much respite from this relentless driving need while I sleep mind youâI often wake up hard and in pain after dreaming about you. My point is, this is not all I feel. Not by a long shot.â
Startled by that revelation, Fern released her grip on his shaft, ignoring the frustrated sound he made in the back of his throat when she did so.
She sat up, pushing her hair out of her face and looked down at him. He peered up at her and groaned when he saw her expression.
âElaborate.â
He tilted his head back to rest on the sofa and covered his eyes with his forearm.
âIâm not sure I know how to do that,â he admitted.
She didnât reply, all that was visible of his face was his wickedly curved mouth and lean jaw. Her gaze swept over the rest of his big, rangy body. By now sheâd acquainted herself with every inch of his perfection, but there was so much more to him that remained undiscovered.
How could she know so much and so little about someone at the same time? Yet, every reluctantly conceded insight into what made him tick only made him more fascinating to her. The more she learned the more she wantedâno neededâto know about him.
âWhat the fuck is going on in that complex mind of yours right now, Fern?â he asked, after the silence had stretched into minutes.
âIâm thinking I want to know everything there is to know about you,â she admitted, seeing no reason to hide the truth from him.
He smiled and lowered his arm.
âYouâd be bored to tears in no time, Iâm not that interesting.â
âI find you utterly fascinating,â she told him. He snorted but his gaze was affectionate, tender.
âNo, seriously, Cade,â she insisted earnestly. âIn the university of life, Iâd want my PhD in Niall Caden Hawthorne-onomics.â
His chest heaved, and for a second his lips pressed together as he fought against what was happening to him. But he was helpless to stop it and she watched in delight as her oh-so-serious husband succumbed to gales of laughter for the first time since sheâd met him.
Elated that sheâd been the one to unlock this latest achievement, Fern stared at the beautiful sight of her laughing husband with tears in her eyes. He was gorgeous, eyes crinkled at the corners, dimples deepened into grooves, mouth stretched into a dazzling smile.
Sheâd never seen him so unguarded and she loved that he trusted her enough to reveal a side of him that he showed so few.
As his laughter faded, he hooked an arm around her waist and held her close.
âThat was the corniest damned thing Iâve ever heard in my life,â he told her, voice still alive with amusement.
âI said what I said,â she told him. âAnd I have no regrets.â
âFucking adorable, thatâs what you are.â
He was quiet for a moment, serious now that the laughter had faded completely.
âJust before she left, when she was hugging me goodbye?â he confided, his voice vulnerable and filled with no small amount of wonder. âKenny said that Iâve always been Cade to her. And I⦠I justâfuck, Fern, you donât know how much it meant to me to hear that from my sister. I didnât even know how much it would mean to me. I canât explain it but it felt like Iâd regained a piece of myself that I hadnât even known Iâd lost. So how could I be angry with you about that? When Iâm so fucking grateful?â
âOh, Cade, thatâs wonderful news. Iâm so happy to hear it.â
âNobody has ever really stood up in defense of me like that before,â he suddenly admitted, voice gruff and self-conscious. âWhy would they? I was born into privilege, I didnât need a champion. I always stood up for my brothers, Kenny, did the right thing by my family.⦠The thing with my name seemed small in comparison to what so many others suffer daily. I didnât feel like I had a right to feel wronged by it. Not really. Not when it was such a petty concern. Until you came along, I thought I was okay with it. Resigned to it. And I just want⦠I just need⦠fuck. Thank you, Fern. It means a lot that you cared.â
âEven if I was excavating all those family skeletons?â she half-teased.
âHardly a whole skeleton,â he muttered, still a little awkward. âMore like a severed foot. A toe even.â
She chuckled and his arms tightened.
âDo you think we could, possibly, try the whole married for real thing?â he floored her by asking and she pushed herself upâhis arms reluctantly fell away from herâto stare into his face.
âWhat?â
âWe get along, we care about each other. We have fantastic chemistry. And then thereâs the baby. Since weâre already married, it feels right. Logical.â
Fern pushed her hair from her face and shifted off his lap completely, not taking her eyes off his face.
âDonât you think youâIâ¦we bothâdeserve better than to settle for a logical and convenient arrangement? All Iâve ever wanted was for someone to love me, Cade. And what youâre proposing right now feels like settling. Youâre grateful to me for offering you a bit of kindness, consideration⦠for putting you first. Iâve been equally grateful to you for caring about me, showing concern for my well-being, for protecting me from Granger. But Iâm not the wife you want, Cade.â
âWhat do you mean? How could you possibly know what I want, Fern?â he asked, sounding affronted.
âBecause I heard you, Cade,â she whispered. âIâm sorry, I didnât mean to eavesdrop, it just happened. But I heard you.â
He looked confused, stricken, uncertain andâmore familiarlyâoutraged.
âHeard me? What do you mean? How could you have overheard me say that youâre not what I want? Iâve never once uttered thoseâ ââ
âOn the phone,â she interrupted. âA few weeks ago. After we first slept togetherâuh for the second timeâyou were speaking to someone. Talking about the night we met. About how pale and drab I was. A moth.â She swallowed painfully before continuing, ignoring how pale heâd gone, how utterly appalled he looked. âHow grateful you were that the baby and I wouldnât be a permanent part of your life. And how I wasnât the type of woman youâd ever imagined settling down with.â
âOh Christ,â he finally muttered, voice shaky. âFernâfuckânone of that⦠all of that⦠You werenât meant to hear any of that.â
âI know. And itâs okay, really. It helped keep me grounded. Helped manage my expectations. We each deserve someone who loves the other, Cade. We shouldnât settle.â
âNo,â his voice was urgent, and he reached for her hand, but aborted the attempt when she flinched at the movement. âFern, I said those things before I knew you. We could be good together. I think we deserve the chance toâ¦â
âCade.â Her interruption stilled the desperate babble of words tumbling from his lips. This time she was the one who reached out, tentatively covering one strong hand with her own. âItâs okay. I want us to be friends. And if you want to be a part of this babyâs life, we can work something out. But I want us to be happy.â
âWe can be happy together,â he maintained.
âI donât think so.â The words were filled with quiet dignity. âI think we can be content. But I donât think weâd ever be truly happy together.â
âI donât agree.â
She cupped his jaw in her hands and gave him a sweet, lingering kiss.
âThank you. For wanting to try. It means a lot. But please, letâs not talk about this again. Itâs too tempting, too easy to agree, and I truly believe it would be a mistake for us to go down this path. Weâd be content. But years from now, weâd realize that contentment isnât enough. And it shouldnât be.â
âFern.â Her name was a ragged whisper and he dropped his forehead to hers, but he said nothing further.
âWeâre going to be okay, Cade.â
He folded her into his arms again and held her like she was precious to him and in that moment everything was perfect in Fernâs world.