During the many philanderous years of my life, Iâve become an expert in sneaking out undetected.
A new challenge for me, though?
Sneaking out of my own apartment.
I had no intention of falling asleep while Jackson was still here. Definitely not with him beside me on the couch. And I certainly didnât intend on waking up with soft, steady breaths tickling the top of my head, my face buried in his chest and his in my hair.
It wouldnât have been so bad, really, if he didnât have a hand shoved down my pajama shorts. It couldâve almost passed for a friendly nap, like one I would take with Amelia or Kate or Ben, if his other hand wasnât curled around my back and copping a handful of sideboob. Everything would be fine if I wasnât wrapped around him like a monkey, hands creeping under his t-shirt to press flat against his bare chest and steal some of his warmth, my face buried so deep in his neck, Iâm surprised my face isnât imprinted there.
I swear, Iâve never moved faster than I did scrambling the hell off him.
By some miracle, Jackson didnât stir. He pouted and he frowned and he wriggled around a bit but he remained blessedly asleep, oblivious to my absence.
Turns out, that wasnât the triumph I took it for.
Because now, Iâm standing at my front door, staring at the unconscious boy on my sofa, wondering what the fuck to do with him.
I canât just⦠leave, can I? That feels like a step too far, even for me.
Iâm pondering my limited options when my phone rings. Swearing, I wrestle it from my pocket. Averting my gaze from Jackson as he finally awakens, I frown at his sisterâs name lighting up my screen and hit the answer button. âHello?â
The panicked voice that greets me is most definitely not Luxâs. âCaroline?â
In my peripheral, I watch Jackson jerk upright. Waving until I reluctantly swing my gaze his way, he mouths Mimicking his look of bewilderment, I shrug.
âThis is weird,â Caroline voices my sentiments exactly, âbut Lux told me to call you.â
If alarm bells werenât already ringing, they sure as hell are now. âWhat happened?â
Carolineâs deep, shaky breath scares the ever-loving shit out of me. âShe was in the shop picking out flowers for the guestroom and I told her to let me help but she refused and she fell. Kind of bad.â
âIs she okay?â Three words have Jacksonâs confusion shifting to alarm, and I hold up a hand in the universal silent command for âIâm driving her to the hospital now.â Muffled sounds of protest break out in the background that Caroline ignores. âShe, uh, says you know.â
Oh, fuck. âIs the baby okay?â
âI think so. Sheâs acting like sheâs fine but I think sheâs in real pain.â
âOkay.â Fuck. I rake a hand through my hair, grimacing at the tangles I find. Guess thatâs what I get for sleeping on it wet. âOkay. Tell her weâre on our way.â
âWe?â Three voices echo.
âYes, ,â I reply with a sigh. âIâm with Jackson now, we can be there in a few hours. What hospital are we going to?â
A slight kink in her voice, Caroline relays the name as I snatch my keys off the counter, and Iâve barely hung up before Jacksonâs on me. âWhoâs in the hospital?â he demands, stealing my keys, holding the front door open for me, and ushering me outside in one smooth second.
I wait until weâre a safe distance away from any stairs that shock could possibly send him tumbling down before replying. âLux.â
Jackson stops in the middle of my buildingâs parking lot. âWhat happened?â
âShe fell or something, I donât know the details.â
I watch as panic settles into every facet of Jacksonâs being. He pales. His eyes become unseeing. His chest rises and falls unevenly, breaths ragged, and God, if it was possible for your heart to break more than once, mine would.
âHey.â I loop my fingers around his wrist and shake gently. âSheâs fine. And weâre gonna go make sure, okay?â
Jackson doesnât protest when I wrestle my keys from his clenched fist, nor when I guide him to the passenger side of my car. He remains silent, staring at my dashboard with a listless frown, as I stab Serenity Ranchâs address into the GPS.
Itâs not until weâre on the road that his head jerks toward me. âWait, did you say baby?â
â
â
Jacksonâs enraged voice bounces off the hospital walls, steam practically pouring from his ears as he barges into Luxâs hospital room.
I mouth at her as I scurry in behind him.
âYouâre ?â
Lux and I wince simultaneously.
âIâm sorry,â I repeat. âSo sorry.â
I didnât mean to tell him. The baby thing just slipped out and then, when he pushed, I couldnât exactly lie. Just like he couldnât exactly help himself from making me pull over, swap seats, and attempt the world record of ânumber of speed limits broken in one trip.â
âDonât apologize.â Jackson shoots me a withering yet weirdly hot look that very much contradicts his claims of not being mad at me for withholding vital information.
His expression softens momentarily when he turns back to his sister, reclined in a hospital bed, some kind of monitor strapped to her stomach, ankle wrapped up in a bandage and propped on a pillow. âAre you okay?â
She waves him off. âIâm fine. Just a sprained ankle.â A hand goes to her stomach, smoothing over the round bump thatâs significantly more prominent than the last time I saw her.
, she seems to say.
âGood.â Jackson nods stiffly, crossing his arms over his chest. âBecause Iâm gonna kill you.â
âOscar, relax.â
He ignores her. âActually, no. Iâm gonna kill him.â
â
.â
âI swear to fucking God, Alexandra, heâs dead. Is this why you guys broke up? Did he get you pregnant and then break up with you? Fucking asshole.â Heâs pacing now, creating a draft in the room as he storms from one side to the other, wild-eyed and red-faced, hands braced on his hips.
He pauses at the foot of the bed, grasping the footboard with white-knuckled hands. âHow long?â
Lux shifts, her eyes almost apologetic as they flutter towards me for a moment. âAlmost five months.â
âFive?â Jackson gapes at his sister before side-eyeing me. âAnd you knew?â
âNot for five months.â
Jackson kisses his teeth. âOh, well, thatâs okay then.â
âI told her at the funeral,â Lux chimes in. âShe took me to an appointment the day after.â
âI fucking you two were being weird.â
Cautiously, I sidle up behind Jackson, resting a hand on his shoulder. âCalm down. Youâre gonna pop a blood vessel.â
I get another one of those looks but beneath my palm, his shoulder slackens. Breathing deep, steadying breaths, he perches cautiously on the edge of the bed, gaze straying to the stomach swollen with his niece or nephew. âYouâre pregnant, Lux.â
âIâm aware.â
âA baby. Youâre gonna have a .â
Lux hums, absentmindedly rubbing her stomach, the faintest of smiles curling her lips up. A smile thatâs wiped the moment Jackson asks, âMark knows?â
Her mouth flattens in a straight line. âMark knows.â
âAnd?â
âAnd nothing.â
âIâll kill him.â
Lux rolls her eyes. âYour girl already offered to slash his tires.â
That earns me an appraising look from Jackson, one big hand wrapping around my thigh and squeezing. I bump him with my hip, my hand returning to his shoulder, briefly swiping through his hair before I can stop myself. Lux watches us with a knowing smirk that I choose to ignore. âYou hungry? I can run out and get you something.â
She straightens up, her face brightening. âWould you mind?â
âNot at all.â I hold my hand palm up towards Jackson. He rummages around in his hoodie pocket for a moment before he drops my car keys in my waiting hand. âMcDonaldâs?â
Lux presses a hand over her heart, bottom lip jutting out in a pout. âYou might be my new favorite sister.â
Red stains my cheeks as I bark out a nervous laugh.
I donât let myself overthink her words, even when Jackson squeezes my thigh again with a smile on his face. I also donât overthink it when he grips me by the chin and drags my face down to his so he can kiss me. Definitely no overthinking happens when his lips brush over my cheek too, his thumb swiping over the warm, tingling spot they leave as he murmurs a âthank you.â
Iâm barely out the door before I hear Lux explode into giddy laughter. I donât stick around to eavesdrop on what she saysâI have a good enough imagination to figure it out on my ownâI just hightail it to the parking lot and, again, definitely do not overthink a thing.
Every person I pass shoots me a weird look when I re-enter the hospital almost an hour later, balancing at least half of McDonaldâs menu in my arms.
Lux didnât specify what she wanted, so I got a bit of everything, purposely not using the credit card Jackson snuck into my back pocket at some point before I left. I may not be loaded, but I can swing a takeout.
Iâve almost made it to Luxâs room sans any food-related casualties when a quiet voice calling my name stops me in my tracks.
Dithering at the end of the hall, fingers playing with the hem of her pretty sundress, Caroline smiles nervously. âNeed help?â
âHi.â No matter how exceptionally hard I try to keep surprise from my tone, I donât quite manage it. âI didnât know you were still here.â
She shrugs as she tucks a lock of dirty blonde hair behind her ear. âI didnât wanna leave until I knew she was okay.â
Huh.
Thatâs⦠nice.
âSheâs good.â
âThank God.â Genuine relief washes over Carolineâs features. It surprises me; the last time we met, concern was not something she showed readily.
Not as surprising, though, as what comes out of her mouth next.
âMy mom died when I was a kid,â she blurts out of nowhere, catching me so off guard I almost drop one of the bags clutched in my hands. She saves it before it slips from my grasp, tucking it beneath her arms as she chews on her bottom lip and shifts awkwardly. âI donât remember a lot about her but I remember the funeral. My dad wasâ¦â Something dark crosses her expression before she shakes it off. âHe wasnât fully there, you know, so it was kind of just me handling everything.â
âIâm sorry,â I say quietly, and I mean it. I canât imagine a kid dealing with all of that alone.
âI remember wishing that I had someone there to help me. So at Jacksonâs momâs funeralâ¦â She trails off, shrugging as a sad smile pulls at her lips. âI know I came on too strong but I was trying to help.â
The animosity I feel towards her fades a bit at the genuine concern splashed across her face.
âIâm not a fool, okay? I know he doesnâtâ¦â She swallows. âI know he doesnât love me.â Something about the look on her face, or maybe the crack in her voice, squeezes my heart. Her head drops, hair acting like a shield, probably to hide the way her fingers come up and quickly swipe beneath her eyes. âI just saw the way he was looking at you and I got jealous and mad so I was rude to you.â She shakes her head, a little hiccuped laugh leaving her as she brushes her hair back and says, almost to herself, âWe were together for four years and he never looked at me like that.â
Well, fuck.
How am I supposed to blame a girl for that when, honestly, if the roles were reversed, I canât say that I wouldnât have reacted the same?
âYou know, I thought I was gonna marry him. When I was eighteen, I truly believed he was it for me. And Serenity Ranch⦠Itâs the only place thatâs ever felt like home to me. I just have a hard time letting that go.â
That, I can understand. Six months without the place felt like a lifetime.
âIâm not tryna excuse my behavior, Iâm just tryna explain it. And apologize for how I acted. I swear Iâm not some mean girl, I just donât think before I speak sometimes and everything comes out wrong.â
Something else I canât really have against her because, shit, do we have that in common.
Nodding towards the door, I ask, âYou wanna come in?â
âIâve gotta get back to the store.â At my questioning glance, she adds, âI work at the florist in town.â
Of course she does. She looks exactly like the kind of girl who spends her days surrounded by bright, pretty flowers. I can just picture her in some kind of greenhouse, elbow deep in dirt yet somehow completely clean, flowers just sprouting to life wherever she looks.
Fucking living sunshine.
Waving goodbye, Caroline starts towards the exit. Before she can disappear from sight, I call after her. âFor the record,â she glances over her shoulder questioningly, âI think if you told Jackson all that, heâd understand.â
A laugh shakes her shoulders. âI know. Thatâs exactly why I havenât.â She cocks her head at me, a genuine smile playing across her lips, and God, when sheâs not being all bitchy or fake, the girl is so pretty it almost hurts my eyes. âItâs infuriating, how nice he is, right?â
I laugh too, my smile matching hers. âThe worst.â