Green eyes blinked up at him, hazy with shock. âBlake?â
Cleo Bowden.
His ex-girlfriend. Ex-fiancée. Ex-mother of his child.
It had been four years since Blake had last spoken to her. Their last conversation had been stilted and awkward to the point of physical pain. Itâd been right before Cleo transferred schools and moved to Atlanta. Her grandparents lived there, and her parents thought it would be good for her to get away from the bad memories. Cleo had been a shell of herself, withdrawn and in pain. Blake had been spiraling, consumed by guilt and self-hatred.
Two broken people who shouldâve never been together, united by tragedy.
âI didnât know you were in Austin,â Blake managed to say.
Did his family know she was back in town? No. If they did, they wouldâve told him. Plus, theyâd lost touch with Cleo a long time ago. Itâd been too painful for the Ryans and the Bowdens to be around each other, knowing there was one less person in their family.
Because of me.
âI moved back a few months ago.â Cleo looked good. Glowing, even. Her face and figure had filled out since their college days, but the catlike eyes and dark ringlets remained the same. âAfter, well.â She gestured at herself with a blush.
It took Blake a minute to figure out what she was pointing to. When he did, his heart stopped.
Cleo wore a long, flowy dress that camouflaged it well, but now that he looked closer, it was unmistakable. A baby bump.
âIâm sorry.â A hint of sympathy crept into the doctorâs eyes as Cleo gripped Blakeâs hand so hard he flinched. âIâm afraid youâll no longer be able to have children.â
âH-how?â Blake didnât believe in miracles, but heâd heard the doctor with his own ears. The car accident had rendered Cleo infertile. Too much damage to her fallopian tubes. Yet here she was, basking in the glow only expecting mothers had.
The whole situation was surreal.
âIVF. In vitro fertilization. The first time didnât work. Second time did, against all odds.â Cleoâs eyes swam. âKind of a miracle, huh?â
âYeah.â He squeezed the word past the lump in his throat. âCongratulations. Iâm happy for you.â Blake meant it. One of the things thatâd haunted him most from that night was knowing heâd fucked up Cleoâs future and dreams of starting a family.
Some of the guilt in his stomach eased. There was a shit ton left, but he felt just the tiniest bit lighter. âWhoâs the father?â
Cleoâs ears pinked. âMy accountant. I know what youâre thinking,â she rushed to add. âBut heâs sweet. Stable. I could use stability in my life.â She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear, and the diamond on her finger flashed beneath the lights. âWe got married last summer,â Cleo explained when she saw Blakeâs questioning glance. âWe moved to Austin after I got pregnant because my parents wanted me close, and they couldnât move to Georgia because of my dadâs job, so here I am.â
âThatâs great.â
There was a beat of silence before they both issued awkward laughs.
âMan, this is crazy.â Blake rubbed a hand over his face. âIâm glad to see youâre doing well. Iâveâ¦well, Iâve always wondered how you were doing.â
Blood. Metal. Screams.
His ears rang with faded memories.
âI was in a dark place for a while,â Cleo admitted. âI took some time off school, too. Thereâll always be a part of me thatââ She swallowed. âAnyway, losing a child is not something you ever get over, but Iâve found my peace.â She searched his face. âAnd you? How are you?â
âIâm okay.â
âHeard youâre the king of the sports club world now.â Her mouth tilted up in a small smile.
âHardly,â Blake said, even though he kind of was.
âDonât be humble. You never were good at it,â she teased. Cleo fiddled with her shopping basket. âListen, Blake. Iâve had a lot of time to think over these past few years, and thereâs something I need to tell you. Something I shouldâve told you a long time ago.â
Guilt flitted through her eyes, which didnât make sense. What did she have to be guilty about?
Blake had been the one behind the wheel. Heâd been the one whoâd insisted they drive to Cleoâs place after he and his father had some ridiculous argument, even though itâd been storming so hard you couldnât hear yourself over the rain. Heâd swerved to avoid a deer, smashed into a tree, and killed both their son and relationship in one go.
He hadnât done it on purpose, but the guilt had weighed on his conscience every night since, especially when Blake remembered his prayer. Heâd woken up at three a.m. one night before the accident, drenched with sweat at the thought of becoming an unexpected father at age twenty-two, and sent a silent missive to the heavens.
Please make this all go away.
A week later, the accident happened.
Blake hadnât been thinking miscarriage. He hadnât been thinking at all. Heâd just been panicked and exhausted, and even though he wasnât a super religious person, he couldnât help but wonder if the accident had been Godâs way of punishing him for his shitty, selfish, off-the-cuff prayer.
âCan you meet me at our old place tonight?â Cleo glanced around. âI donât want to talk about it here.â
Their old placeâthe playground theyâd frequented as teenagers, back in the good old days when they were nothing more than friends. They used to stay up through the night, swinging on the swings and staring at the sky, musing about what their futures would look like.
Neither had expected things to turn out the way they did.
âOf course.â Curiosity burned a hole in Blakeâs stomach. Before he could ask her for more information, the scent of Old Spice assaulted his senses.
Blake winced. He only knew one person who wore Old Spice.
âBlake Ryan.â Daniel Bowdenâs scowl couldâve melted stone. âDidnât know youâd crawled back into town.â
âDad,â Cleo hissed.
âCleo, go meet your mother at the checkout counter.â
âDad, leave Blake alone. We just ran into each other.â
âNow, Cleo!â
She grit her teeth but did as he bid. Playground, eight oâclock, she mouthed behind Danielâs back.
Blake blinked his agreement.
Once Cleo was out of earshot, Daniel jabbed a finger at Blakeâs chest. To most people, he was an intimidating man. Six feet four inches of corded muscle and fiery energy, all of which he aimed at his daughterâs ex.
Heâd liked Blake well enough when heâd dated Cleo. Hated him when he broke Cleoâs heart. Fucking loathed him after the accident.
Itâd been a rapid and ugly fall for the relationship between Blake and his ex-future-father-in-law, and if there was one thing Daniel Bowden was good at, it was holding grudges.
âMr. Bowdenââ
âShut up,â Daniel growled. âAnd stay away from my daughter. I donât want you talking to her. I donât want you even looking at her. Youâve hurt her enough. Sheâs finally found someone who treats her right, and I will not let you screw that up.â
âI wasnât planââ
Daniel continued like Blake wasnât speaking, and his next words turned Blakeâs blood to ice.
âYouâve been toying with her emotions since you were old enough to vote, and I wonât let you mess things up for her again. Because thatâs what you do. You screw up peopleâs lives. The world sees a golden pretty boy, but I see you for what you really are: a black star, a heartbreaker, and a selfish bastard. You hurt everyone around you and, whatâs worse, you canât help yourself. Itâs just what you do.â
The full moon hung round and heavy in the sky; in the distance, a dog howled, and the swings creaked in the quiet night, adding to the horror movie atmosphere draped over the empty playground.
Empty except for Blake and Cleo, who sat side by side on the swings.
Their old teenage stomping grounds.
How simple life had been back then, when all theyâd had to worry about was where to apply to college and who they were going to prom with.
âForgive my dad,â Cleo said. âI donât know what he said to you, but I can imagine. Heâs a little overprotective.â
âI donât blame him.â Blake threw her a lopsided smile, like Daniel Bowdenâs words hadnât carved themselves into his heart with a sharp, poison-tipped pen.
It was never the lies that were lethal. No matter how scandalous or widespread, lies fell short of piercing the armor of righteousness, because you knewâeven if no one else didâthat what your enemy was saying rang false. No, it was the dark truths that were most dangerous, the ones you couldnât admit to yourself until someone said them out loud for you. They forced you to face your demons, the ones youâd hoped would stay locked up forever. But once they were out, there was no putting them back.
They were there to haunt you for the rest of your life.
âHeâs gone overboard sinceâ¦you know.â Cleoâs lashes swept down. âThank God Peter âmy husbandâand I have our own place, or Iâd go nuts. Anyway.â She laughed nervously. âEnough about my dad. Thatâs not why weâre here.â Guilt crept back into her eyes, along with a healthy dose of nerves. âLike I said, I have something I want to tell you.â
âMe too.â
She blinked. âWhat?â
âBefore you say anything, I have something I need to tell you.â Blake sucked in a breath. Oxygen filled his lungs, and he forced the words out before the air left his body. âWhat happened the night of the stormââ
Pain slashed across Cleoâs face. âBlake, donât.â
He pushed on. He had to say it and get it off his chest. Otherwise, his guilt would crush him, inch by inch, until there was nothing left. âIt was my fault. All of it. I know you said you donât blame me, but I prayed for something like that to happen. I mean, not a car accident, and certainly not for you to get hurt. But I asked for God to make it all go away andââ His throat constricted. âIâm sorry. Iâve been running all these years, avoiding you, because I couldnât face you. I couldnât face what I did. Iâm the reason you miscarried. I killed our son.â
A sob escaped Cleoâs throat. She pressed her fist to her mouth and shook her head. âThatâs what I shouldâve told you,â she said, her voice wretched with agony. âHe wasnât your son.â