âHello, Cyrus,â Fern greeted her attorney cheerfully, on a Monday morning, three weeks later. She stayed in regular email contact with him but hadnât really had a conversation with him in weeks. So, sheâd been surprised when his name came up in her caller ID. âHowâre you doing?â
âHello, Fern. Iâm good, thanks. How are you and Casper?â
âIâm fine and the babyâs growing like a weed.â She laughed, her hand going to her now-unmistakable baby bump.
To Fernâs chagrin, everybody had started referring to the baby as Casper too, thanks to Cade. Even she had started thinking of him as Casper. And sheâd already privately acknowledged that it was probably going to have to go onto the list of potential names.
âThatâs wonderful to hear,â Cyrus said warmly. âUhm, so listen, I have to run something by you.â
Fern braced herself, pretty sure this call was about Granger. Cyrusâs voice always took on that particularly reserved tone when it came to her stepfather.
âWhatâs going on?â
âAbernathy has been relentlessly demanding to speak with you. Heâs been bleating on about needing to see for himself that youâre okay. Saying that you left his house under cover of darkness, with two strange men, and since then thereâs been zero contact except what heâs read in newspapers and seen on television.â
Fern chewed on her lip as she considered the manâs words. From a normal, caring stepfather, it would seem like a reasonable request, but Granger didnât care about her well-being at all. He never had. She knew he was up to something. But she also felt maybe she should see him again. To prove to herself that she no longer had anything to fear from him.
âWhat do you suggest we do?â she asked.
âWe could arrange a meeting, at my office, with yourâand hisâattorneys present. Strictly supervised, of course. You neednât be alone with him.â
Cade wasnât going to like it. Heâd worry about Granger upsetting her. But suddenly she really wanted to do it. She wanted Granger to see that she was thriving despite what heâd done to her. And she wanted him to know that it was she who had instigated the Lambecrete deal behind his back and that sheâd happily co-authored his downfall.
And most of all she wanted him to see that she was happy and unrepentant about the decisions sheâd made to lead to this moment.
âOkay. I donât mind doing that. But Iâd prefer to keep Cade out of the loop on this one.â
âHeâs not going to be happy to learn about it after the fact, Fern,â Cyrus said, sounding uncomfortable.
âHeâll be even less happy being in the same room with Granger. Trust me, you wouldnât want that either. He hates Granger.â
âOh, Iâm quite aware of that.â There was a wry tone to Cyrusâs voice that she didnât understand. âYouâre my client and if you donât want your very overprotective husband to know, I wonât be telling him. But, Fern⦠I really think you should tell him.â
âIâll think about it.â
âOkay, so Iâll go ahead and facilitate this meeting, Iâll contact you with the details later this week.â
âThanks, Cyrus.â
She disconnected the call and met Bethâs curious gaze across the restaurant table.
Beth, and her friend Lucy Reevesâwell Fernâs friend too nowâhad taken time out of their busy schedules today, to meet Fern after her first day of orientation week. A late lunch to celebrate the rite of passage.
To Fernâs shock, her late admission had been accepted by all three local tertiary institutions sheâd applied to. Although, she knew she probably shouldnât be shocked. With the kind of money she now had, as well as the publicity sheâd been receiving lately, it wouldâve been more shocking not to be accepted. Yes, her academic record was stellar and she could easily have been accepted on merit alone, but she was realistic enough to know that this had probably not been the only factor theyâd considered when accepting her application.
Still, she recognized her position of privilege and was already in talks with Cyrus about anonymously establishing a couple of bursaries to sponsor those less privileged than her.
âWhat was that about?â Beth asked.
âGranger wants a meeting,â she said with a roll of her eyes, speaking around the fry sheâd just shoved into her mouth. She was constantly hungry lately.
âYouâre not going to do it though,â Lucy said. âRight?â
Fern really liked Lucy. She liked all of Bethâs friends, even though she sometimes felt like a gatecrasher into their long-standing friend group. They called themselves a framily and were very close-knit. Fern and Cade had met most of them at the chaotic Christmas lunch at Gideon and Bethâs place.
Fernâwhoâd been a little overwhelmed by the sheer volume of people that dayâhad escaped to the spare room, only to find Lucy already there, wearing a pair of bright green leggings and a pink T-shirt with a sequined unicorn pooping a rainbow on the front of it. Sheâd been reading a graphic novel and eating popcorn. When sheâd glanced up and spotted Fern, sheâd merely said âOh hey, youâre just in time. The dragon slayer is about to murder the fairy goblin. Wanna read with me?â
Sheâd patted the bed, and Fern had happily joined her. By the time a frantic Cade had found her half an hour later, theyâd finished the entire bowl of popcorn and had gawked their way through a few intense, dragon slayer/fairy goblin sex scenes. Which Lucy had deemed âpretty hot for human adjacent hetero sex.â
Theyâd been firm friends since then.
Now, both Lucy and Beth were staring at Fern with equally concerned expressions on their faces.
âI think itâs a good idea to just meet him, get it over with and move on with my life. Call it closure,â Fern said in response to Lucyâs question.
Beth pressed her lips together in clear disapproval. âAnd youâre not going to tell Cade?â
âOnly if I want him to shit a brick,â Fern snorted. Her friends didnât laugh and she rolled her eyes again. âHe doesnât have to know. Heâll just make a bad situation worse. My attorneys will be there. Iâll be perfectly fine.â
âFern,â Beth began, looking seriously unhappily.
âBeth, I have to do this. I want Granger to know that Iâm happy despite him. That Iâm stronger than he ever knew. I want him to realize that he lost to me. And Iâd really, really appreciate it, if neither of you told Gideon or Cade about it. Iâll tell Cade afterward.â
Lucy mimed turning a lock at the corner of her mouth and throwing away the key and Beth sighed in resignation. She reached across the table to squeeze her hand.
âI wonât say a word. I promise. But I think you have to trust Cade and tell him.â
âIâll consider it,â Fern promised.
âNow tell us more about your orientation. On a scale of one-to-smoking⦠how hot were the boys?â
âAnd girls,â Lucy added.
âThey were all a good ten years younger than me.â Fern laughed. âBabies compared to my fifteen out of ten, smoking-hot husband.â
âUgh, newlyweds always gross me out. Youâre always perpetually horny for each other. Itâs disgusting. Spare a thought to those of us getting none, thank you very much,â Lucy intoned.
âPlay your cards right with that new girl, Zoe, and that could be you,â Beth said.
âNah, Iâm a rolling stone and all that.â
Fern smiled, allowing their banter to fade into the background while she contemplated her upcoming meeting with Granger. She didnât like keeping the news from Cade. But she knew him well enough by now to realize that heâd insist on being present. And the meeting would turn into a testosterone fueled, dick measuring contest. Fern didnât want that.
She needed this to be her moment.
Then again, maybe she should do as Beth had suggested and trust him to have her back and be the support she needed. She wasnât entirely sure what to do.
These last three weeks with Cade had been truly amazing. He was attentive, sweet, considerate, and their lovemaking just got more and more off-the-charts explosive. They couldnât get enough of each other.
They hadnât yet revisited their discussion about the future, but Cade hadâjust two days agoâtalked about finding a house on a beach with the perfect beach view room for Casper.
Life would be perfect if Fern wasnât so riddled with uncertainty. She hated that she couldnât simply enjoy what they had. But it wasnât enough. Because it didnât feel real.
And Fern knew, she couldnât delay making that decision about herâtheirâfuture for much longer. She just couldnât continue to live in limbo.
Cadeâs conversations with his father had been strained ever since the night Fern had refused to acquiesce to the old manâs demands that she call him Niall.
His father was in the country again for the first time since the beginning of January, ostensibly to discuss the next phase of what theyâd unofficially dubbed their Going Green project. They had their next potential acquisitions already lined up. An innovative fairly new rainwater harvesting and irrigation company as well as a provider of energy efficient smart home systems.
Cade already had his acquisition strategy worked out, he also had alternative options lined up, in case their first choices didnât work out. His father knew that and Cade wasnât sure why the old man hadnât simply called.
âHowâs Fern?â his father asked, after only most cursory of business conversations.
âFern?â Cade watched his father carefully, not sure what the old man was up to but positive he wasnât going to like it. âSheâs fine. She and Casper are both doing well.â
âSheâs a good lass.â
âI know.â
âYou seem happy now. With her.â
âI⦠am.â Cade confirmed warily, not sure where his dad was going with this.
âI can tell. You smile whenever you talk about her. And the bairn.â
He did?
Cade froze as he realized that heâd been smiling just a moment ago, and that it was only fading now as he considered his fatherâs words. He hadnât known that that was something heâd been doing.
âAye, I noticed it whenever we have the video calls. Youâve been doing it for a while. You only recently started grinning like a Cheshire cat over the bairn. A few weeks ago.â
He didnât know where his father was going with this.
âOkay?â
âSo, sheâs sticking around then? For longer than three years?â
âThatâs my hope.â Cadeâs response was stilted.
âGood. She makes yâhappy. I havenât seen yâsmile so freely and genuinely in decades. And she stands up for you. I like that she does that, especially when you wonât do it for yâself.â
âWhat the fuck are yâtalkinâ about?â Cade snapped, offended.
âOch, donât gimme this outraged face, lad. Yeâd take on a pub full oâ brawlers if yâhad tae, I know that. But you canât confront me and tell me that you donât like your name.â
âI like my name fine.â
âI lost you somewhere along the way,â James Hawthorne said, the thick burr that usually only surfaced when he was angry or emotional fading as he got his temper back under control. He steepled his fingers and rested his elbows on Cadeâs desk as he stared across the mahogany expanse at his oldest son. âYou withdrew. Grew quiet. Didnât have the usual adolescent rebellions like your brothers and sisters. Always so good and obedient and willing to fall on your sword for the family.â
âWhat and thatâs a bad thing now?â Cade seethed, holding onto his temper by the slimmest of threads. âAfter all these years of being your fucking ruthless enforcer, your well-trained, emotionless machine. So adept at getting you everything you want in the most bloodless way possible, my loyalty is somehow not good enough anymore?â
âYour fire. Your spark. Your passion. All of that disappeared when your mother died. I always thought that your grief had somehow fundamentally altered who you were. But that wasnât it.â The old man shook his head, and for the first time Cade saw the sadness and regret in his fatherâs eyes. âIt took that wee mad wife of yours to make me understand. Your mother was the last one who still called you that⦠Cade.â
âCade began to disappear years before Mum died. You made sure of that.â
âFuck, Niall.â His fatherâs face twisted, and he shook his head. âIt was between your mother and me. She liked the name, it was her fatherâs name. I didnât want to give her the satisfaction of calling you that after sheâd walked out on us. On me.â
âI was ten. I was confused. I no longer knew who I was, or where I belonged. You stripped me of my very identity. And then you made sure my brothers and sister did the same. I felt betrayed by them. And it drove a wedge between us that we never quite recovered from. I love them. I forgave them, but I felt like Iâd lost them⦠no like theyâd lost me. Like theyâd somehow forgotten me. When Mum died, it felt like the last vestiges of Cade died with her. I lost my mother and I lost myself. I became who you wanted me to be.â
âItâs just a name fâgodâs sake.â
âIf itâs just a name, why was it so fucking important to you that I go by Niall instead of Cade?â
His fatherâs mouth opened and closed as he tried to formulate a reply. But he had none. Because there was no acceptable response.
âYou wanted to win the divorce and I was the casualty of your petty fucking war with Mum. Thatâs the long and short of it, right?â Cade didnât usually speak his mind so freely. He kept things bottled up. He repressed emotions, swallowed down anger, and moved through life with a wall ten feet thick between him and the rest of the people in his life.
Well, he used to do all of those things.
Until Fern had come along with her little hammer and chisel and started chipping away at that wall.
Heâd been more open and honest about his emotions with her these last few weeks than he had with anyone else in decades. And that honesty was spilling through right now.
And it felt fucking fantastic.
Until he met his fatherâs eyes and saw how truly distraught the old man was.
âIâm sorry,â his father shocked him by saying. âI really am. I was a terrible father. I know that. I still am. Gideon is my only truly happy child. And he found that happiness because he left the family for years. Now Nox has done the same and Kenny is a mess. And you⦠son, you were gone too. You rarely smiled, never spoke about anything personal, it was like your life revolved around work and nothing else. You stayed behind, stayed with me⦠but you were never truly there. But nowâwith Fern and the bairnâyouâre smiling again. You talk about herâthemâall the time. And I can see you again. And Iâm so grateful to her for making you happy.â
Cade swallowed past the massive lump in his throat, not sure how to respond to that.
âI⦠I can try to call yâCade again. If thatâs what you prefer.â
Cade stared at his father, his eyes burning as he fought back the wave of overwhelming emotion the unexpected offer sent crashing through his system.
He shook his head and smiled.
âIâm truly grateful for that offer, Dad, but you donât have to do that. The name Niall is as much a part of my identity as Cade. For the longest timeâuntil Fern, reallyâI felt like Cade was lost forever. But I finally feel whole again, like the person I was when mum was still alive. At ease in my skin and wholly comfortable with who I am. And Iâm happy for you to use whichever name youâre comfortable with. Just stop trying to bully my wife into using the name you prefer.â
âI doubt Iâd be able to bully that lass into doing anything. Did you see how she stood up to me? Sheâs got some guts that one. I like her. Iâm glad sheâs decided to keep you.â
Only she hadnât. Not yet. And the uncertainty was killing Cade. This conversation with his father was yet another way in which Fern had positively impacted his life. He wasnât sure what heâd do with himself if she decided that she wanted to leave him. He didnât know if heâd survive the devastation of losing her.