Ethan left to catch his flight before Faith arrived at his house the following morning. Faith admitted to herself that sheâd stalled on purpose, not wanting to add to the overwhelming idea of staying in his house by seeing him too.
Rosalita let her in and Tess was waiting for her in the family room. To Faithâs surprise, the teen had lightened her makeup (which was still too dark), but sheâd made the effort at change. She also wore a pair of normal jeans, a black T-shirt, and flip-flops. No cargo pants or jacket to be found.
Interesting.
âGood morning!â Faith greeted the teen.
âHey.â Tess looked at Faith and narrowed her gaze. âWhereâs your suitcase? Did you change your mind?â
Faithâs heart squeezed at the distrust that came so naturally to the girl. âRosalita took my bag upstairs for me.â
A flash of relief crossed Tessâs face. âDo I have to go to the community center today?â
âWhat would you rather do?â Faith asked. Ethan hadnât left a specific schedule so Faith figured it was up to her.
The teenager glanced up from beneath her lashes. âHang out with you,â she said softly, as if unsure of how her request would be received.
Faith smiled in reassurance. âIâd like that. But I have to be in the shop this morning. My motherâs stopping by. After that, we can figure out what you want to do. Sound good?â
Tess shrugged. âYeah. That sounds okay.â
âAre you ready?â Faith asked.
The teen nodded.
A few minutes later, they were in Faithâs car, on the way to town. âIt smells new.â Tess wrinkled her nose.
âItâs my baby,â Faith said proudly, patting the steering wheel.
âSo whatâs your mother like?â Tess asked, more curious and chatty than Faith had ever seen her.
Clearly something had changed between last night and this morning, but Tess was watching her and waiting for an answer. Her own questions would have to wait.
âMy mother.â How to describe Lanie Harrington, Faith wondered. But she knew sheâd better come up with something that would prepare Tess for the difficult woman she was about to meet. âSheâs spoiled and a lot selfish. She wants what she thinks sheâs entitled to and who cares what the rest of the world thinks.â
Faith wanted to wince at the awful description, but the problem was, every ounce of it was true.
âSounds like my mom.â
Stunned by Tessâs sudden willingness to open up, Faithâs hand jerked on the wheel. âI didnât know that.â
âYeah. Well, Ethan got me talking last night. Now I canât seem to stop,â Tess said, curling one leg beneath her.
He was full of surprises, Faith thought. But he was also clearly good for his sister, and for that Faith was glad.
Faith forced herself to focus on the morning ahead. âTess, my mother can be . . . rude,â Faith said as she pulled into a parking space behind the store. âIn other words, donât take anything she says personally.â
Faith put the car in park and shut off the engine before turning to face her passenger. âThe thing is, my mother doesnât like many people. Mostly because sheâs bitter and angry. Iâm not excusing her, but Iâd appreciate it if you didnât let her . . . bait you.â
âSo watch my mouth?â Tess asked, a devilish grin on her face.
Faith had never seen this side of the girl, and warm protective instincts flooded through her. She wouldnât let her mother hurt this child whoâd obviously had enough pain for one lifetime.
âThat would help. And let me handle her, okay?â
Tess blew out a long breath of air. âYouâre no fun.â
Faith laughed. âSpeaking of fun, what do you want to do this afternoon?â She deliberately changed the subject.
Tess stared out the window, suddenly silent.
âWhat is it?â Faith asked.
âYouâll laugh.â Tess folded her arms across her chest, in a familiar gesture.
Unwilling to let her withdraw, Faith decided to take a page from Ethanâs playbook. âYou tell me what you want to do and Iâll tell you how Iâd like to spend the afternoon. Seems like a fair trade to me.â
Tess turned her head and met Faithâs gaze. âI want you to show me how to do makeup,â the teen rattled off, at close to one hundred miles an hour. Sheâd obviously wanted to get the words out before she could change her mind.
At the simple yet endearing request, Faith practically melted. âWell, that goes along with what I was going to say. How about we have lunch, do some clothes shopping for you, and then head home for a makeup lesson?â
Tess blinked. âYou really want to do all that with me?â The insecurity spoke to the girl whoâd been left on Ethanâs doorstep.
And Faith, who felt betrayed by her father and used by her ex-husband, understood that insecurity very well. âOf course I want do all that with you!â
They just had to survive Faithâs mother first.
Faith settled Tess at the corner of her desk. Tess seemed happy to stick her iPod ear buds on, sketch pad in front of her, and tune out the world, so Faith let her. She made a few calls to vendors and discovered sheâd been able to push up shipment of both Tessâs and Ethanâs bedroom furniture, along with the family room sofa, recliner, and other pieces. Although sheâd have preferred to do a full installation, giving him completed rooms at one time, the way she planned to do for Caroline Bretton, Ethan needed the items as they came in. She was pulling in every string she and Joel had to make sure the two people she cared about had what they needed.
She was deep in thought, planning Carolineâs room, when the chimes sheâd put on the door rang out. Faith glanced up to see her mother stride through the doors. A quick glance told her Tess hadnât yet noticed.
Faith rose to her feet and headed to greet Lanie in the center of the room. âMom! Welcome to my place of business,â she said with a grin, hoping to start this meeting off on the right foot.
âThis is . . . interesting,â her mother said, taking in the pieces Faith had started to accumulate.
There were show items like floral centerpieces, an antique desk, and a marble pedestal, all meant to lure pedestrians into the shop. She would sell them or use them as part of a decorating project, replacing them as she came across unique items online, in catalogs, and courtesy of Joel.
âThank you. That large leopard reminds me of something we used to have when I was growing up.â Faith pointed to a large ceramic cat in the corner.
âYour fatherâs favorite,â Lanie murmured, her voice soft and unguarded.
âHave you spoken to him?â Faith managed to ask.
âNo. He asked that I keep my distance. He thought it would protect me, you know?â
Faith shook her head. âAnd you think that makes him admirable?â
âHeâs looking out for me.â
Faith swallowed hard, determined not to argue with her. âWell, come in and have a seat.â
Her mother started toward the desk and came to a halt. âWho is that?â She pointed her long, painted nails toward Tess, who sat, head back, iPod on, pretending to play the drums with her hands. âOr should I say, what is that? She has purple in her hair.â Lanie shuddered.
Faith straightened her shoulders, an overwhelming feeling of protectiveness sweeping through her. âThat is Ethanâs sister, Tess. Iâm watching her for a few days. And let me be clear, Mother. If you canât be nice to Tess, turn around and walk out that door right now. We have nothing further to discuss.â
Nobody would hurt Tess on her watch. Not even the one person whoâd managed to damage her own self-esteem, Faith thought, the realization stunning and painful. She hadnât been a rebel like Ethan, but maybe if her own mother had loved her, protected her, been proud of who she was and who she wanted to be, she never would have married a self-serving bastard like Carter Moreland.
âWell?â Faith asked her shell-shocked mother. âWhatâs it going to be?â
âHey, is this your mother?â Tess let her feet hit the floor with a thud.
Faith closed her eyes and said a silent prayer. Then she faced the two people in the room. âYes, this is my mother, Lanie Harrington. Mom, this is Tess Moss.â
âMaâam.â Tess nodded her head, on her best behavior, as if she were meeting the queen of England.
Faith shot her a warning glare and hoped the kid didnât take it too far and curtsy.
âMoss,â Lanie repeated. âI thought you said she was a Barron.â She said the name with all the disdain she could muster.
âHalf Barron,â Faith said through gritted teeth.
âAhh. Why didnât you say so? Thatâs much better,â Lanie said.
Most people might take Lanieâs words for sarcasm. Faith knew her mother merely spoke her own truth. Better half than all Barron blood.
âHello, Tess. And what is Tess short for, may I ask?â Lanie continued.
The teenager shrugged. âJust Tess.â
âInteresting hair color, Tess.â
âMother . . .â
Tess reached a hand to her purple strands. âYeah, well, thatâs another thing I thought we could talk about?â She looked up at Faith hopefully.
Faith couldnât stand it another minute. She walked up to the girl and placed her arm around her shoulders, pulling her close in a way her own mother had never done for her. Instead of pulling away as Faith expected, Tess stiffened in surprise but remained in Faithâs protective grasp.
Suddenly Faithâs cell chimed at the same time the phone rang on her desk. She reached for her cell and did the only other thing she could. âMother, could you possibly get that?â Faith asked.
Faith took a call from Ethan. He was rushed and in between meetings, but he needed to talk to her about Tess and a potential art class opportunity, so she headed to a private corner for the conversation.
When she returned, her mother was sitting at her desk, Tess in her chair across the way.
âHow old are you, Tess?â Lanie asked.
âFourteen.â
âAnd how are you related to Ethan Barron?â
âI think thatâs enough of that!â Faith inserted herself back into the conversation. âSo, who called earlier?â she asked her mother.
âAhh. That was Caroline Brennan. She changed your appointment by a day.â Lanie scowled at the mention of her friend. âSince your calendar was open on your desk, I took the liberty of scheduling her.â
âThank you.â Faith had no idea why her mother seemed to be behaving, but she was grateful.
âA trucking company called too. I scheduled them also. Here.â Her mother pointed to the same day next week she had other deliveries at Ethanâs. âMake no mistake. I donât approve of this venture.â
Here we go, Faith thought. The long-awaited conversation. âWhy not? Donât I need to make a living?â
âI thought you received a nice settlement from Carter?â her mother asked pointedly.
From the corner of her eye, Faith saw Tess listening to them, her eyes wide in fascination.
Faith bit the inside of her cheek. âI received enough to start the business and to know I have a cushion,â she said carefully.
Lanie shook her head. âYou should have invested well and lived off the interest. Working like a common person is so . . . beneath you.â
Faith drew herself up straighter. âIâm proud of this place and I like what Iâm doing. Of course Iâd like it better if I could get more clients, but thanks to Dadâs illegal dealings, no one wants to do business with me.â Faith met her motherâs gaze.
Lanie opened her mouth to reply, and Faith jumped back in before she could. âAnd donât give me that nonsense about him being misunderstood. He pleaded guilty. The feds took everything and sold it at auction. He knew what he was doing.â
Her mother pursed her lips together. Lanieâs version of I donât like this conversation; therefore, Iâm not having it.
Everything in Faith wanted to reach out and touch her mother on the shoulder. She didnât, unsure of what she was more afraid ofâLanie shattering or rejecting her daughterâs offer of comfort.
âLook, Mom, canât you understand that our lives have changed?â she asked, her tone more gentle. âThat times have changed? And we need to change with it. Both of us.â
When her mother didnât reply, Faith backed off. âWell, I appreciate you answering the phones and figuring out when the delivery would work.â
Her motherâs posture relaxed at the change of subject. âYes, well, you might not remember, but I held quite a few dinner parties in my day and I became a pro at scheduling.â
Faith smiled. âI remember.â
Lanie rose from her seat and walked around the store, her fingers trailing over things as she moved, her walk graceful, serene. Still very much the lady of the nonexistent manor, but Faith knew now there were chinks in her armor. Lanie Harrington was more fragile than she wanted to admit. She was holding on to the illusion of grandeur so tightly that with only a little push sheâd fall apart.
âWould you mind if I rearranged some things?â Her mother surprised Faith by asking.
âSuit yourself.â
Tess, noting the fun conversation was over, had plugged back into her iPod.
Faith settled back into her desk while her mother seemed content to shift things around. âMom, Caroline tells me sheâs tried to reach out to you, but youâre shutting yourself up in your own house.â
âShh.â Lanie pointed to Tess. âLittle ears,â she said.
âIâm not little. And I donât know anyone in town to repeat shitââ Her mouth opened in horror and she said a silent Iâm sorry to Faith. âI mean . . . I donât know anyone in town to repeat stuff to. You can talk in front of me.â
Faith laughed. Apparently the kid had turned down the volume just in case.
âYes, you can speak in front of Tess,â Faith agreed. âEveryone in this small town knows what Dad did. You didnât know while it was happening. Thereâs no shame in starting over.â
Lanie kept her back to Faith.
âAnd thereâs no reason to turn your back on the one person who has been a real friend to you, or tried to,â Faith said.
Just like there was no reason to turn her back on her own daughter. But that wasnât a conversation Faith wanted to have in front of Tess . . . Maybe not ever. It was too painful to think about how her mother had treated her with disdain over the years, angry with her for the sole reason that her father paid attention to his daughter.
Sheâd told Tess that Lanie was selfish. Narcissistic was probably a better word.
âDid you know that Carolineâs husband lost his job?â her mother finally asked with an exaggerated shudder. âTrue, they have her familyâs money, but how humiliating!â
âAnd this affects you or your friendship how?â Faith asked. âYour husband bilked people for millions. Caroline could probably use a friend who understands what itâs like to have problems. Iâd think you could use the same thing,â Faith pointed out.
âI donât need anyone!â Lanieâs voice was shrill.
âWell, then thatâs your loss.â Faith turned to a now wide-eyed Tess. âCome on. Itâs time to go shopping.â
She glanced at her mother, hoping to see a flicker of emotion in her expression. Anger, frustration, sadness, something.
Her face was a frozen mask.
But Faith knew enough had been said here today to make an impactâshould her mother choose to listen.
âIâll see myself out,â Lanie said frostily. She rose and headed for the door and walked out without another word.
âChilly!â Tess said. âLike, brrr.â
âYeah. Try growing up with that.â Needing a minute, Faith lowered herself into the chair her mother had just occupied.
She glanced down and noticed her mother had rearranged her desk, making it more organized. A glance out at her shop told her Lanieâs touches had actually improved the display and appearance. Her mother had the ability to do more with her life than judge others, Faith thought. It was a pity she lacked the desire.
Faith spent the entire day with Tess, who was on her best behavior. Faith thought she might actually be seeing who the teenager really was. Faith wondered if her own life might have turned out differently if sheâd had a sister, someone to share her thoughts and feelings with instead of always feeling as if she were treading water alone. Sheâd definitely enjoyed the day, and Tess had made out like a bandit. Faith had bought her an entire new end-of-summerâinto-fall wardrobe, knowing Ethan wouldnât care one bit.
After a delicious dinner cooked by Rosalita, they sat together on Tessâs bed, exhausted from a girl day of shopping and makeup. Using her own makeup, Faith had taught Tess the fine points of using a light touch when applying eye shadow and liner. She promised to take the teen to buy her own supplies one day soon.
Right now, theyâd both collapsed on Tessâs mattress, full and tired.
âHave you heard from Ethan?â Tess asked.
âAs a matter of fact, I have.â And sheâd been waiting for the right time to talk to Tess. âHe was busy in and out of meetings all day, but he called to tell me something.â
âYeah, whatâs that?â
âHeâs been looking into special art classes for you.â She eyed the teenager, gauging her reaction.
âAlready? I just showed him my stuff last night!â She sounded pleased, not pissed off.
âHe liked what he saw.â Enough that he had already called Kate and asked her about classes.
Kate had done some research and made a few phone calls. There was an opportunity for Tess at the Birchwood Academy private school, but Ethan would have to move fast because the deadline for admission had passed. Kate had also heard whispers of financial troubles, so maybe a hefty donation would help get Tess into the school. But before they moved forward with their plan, they needed Tess on board.
âSo youâd be interested?â Faith asked.
Twenty-four hours ago, she would have laid odds Tess would have made light of the idea, using a few choice words to boot. But now . . .
âYeah, Iâd like that.â She scooted back against the pillows, eyes wide. âI canât believe he looked into that for me. So fast and everything.â
âHeâs a great guy.â Faith smiled.
âWho knew?â Tess asked, grinning.
Faith propped herself up on her elbow. âYou miss him, donât you?â
âNah. Heâs a pain in the butt.â But the young girlâs widening grin belied her words.
There was no doubt sheâd hit the jackpot in brothers, Faith thought. She was even determined to find some good in Nash, the brother she found the most difficult.
The ringing doorbell interrupted her thoughts. âWho could that be?â
Tess shrugged.
âRosalita left, so Iâll go see.â Faith rose to her feet and headed downstairs.
Tess padded along behind her.
Faith glanced out the side window and saw Nash standing at the door. Not the brother sheâd choose to deal with, Faith drew a deep breath and swung the front door wide.
âHi,â she said in greeting.
He seemed surprised to see her and didnât reply right away. Nothing like Ethan in appearance, Nash, with his lighter hair and carefully matched khaki pants and polo shirt, reminded her too much of her ex-husband.
âWould you like to come in?â she invited.
He stepped inside. âHi, Tess.â
Faith wasnât sure if he was ignoring her on purpose or just focused on his new sister and reserved judgment.
âHey,â Tess said, in a stiff, wary tone Faith hadnât heard her use all day. But she sure recognized it now.
âYou ready to go?â Nash asked the teen.
Faithâs guard went up. âGo where?â
Nash met her gaze with a cool one of his own. âTess and I have plans to go to the sidewalk fair in town tonight.â Not that itâs your business.
Faith heard the words Nash didnât say. His expression made it clear what he thought of her interference.
âThe hell we do,â Tess said, her angry belligerence back.
Apparently the thaw didnât extend to Nash just yet. And though Faith didnât blame the teenager for her distrust of a man she didnât yet know, he was the girlâs brother.
âTess, do me a favor? Go upstairs and start putting away the clothes you bought today, okay?â
She narrowed her gaze. âRosalita said sheâd do it tomorrow.â
âWell, it wonât hurt you to do it yourself. That way you know where your own things are.â Faith caught Tessâs gaze. âGo. Your brother and I need to talk.â
âWhereâs Ethan?â Nash asked.
âHe had to go to Washington, D.C., on business,â Tess said.
âUpstairs!â Faith pointed to the long circular staircase.
Tess let out a put-upon sigh. âIâm going,â she muttered, and stomped to the stairs, proceeding to take the steps slowly, one at a time, a loud thud accompanying each one.
Faith waited until she was alone with Nash, though she was sure Tess was doing her best to listen.
âWhat the hell did she mean, he went to D.C.?â Nash asked.
âI think itâs self-explanatory. He had a business emergency.â
âAnd of course it was more important than Tess, so he up and abandoned her. Itâs what he does best.â Nash came to his own biased conclusion.
âThatâs not how it was.â Faith set her jaw.
He folded his arms across his chest. âNo? Whoâs watching Tess?â
Faith straightened her shoulders, and though the answer was obvious, she replied anyway. âThat would be me.â
The other man let out a harsh laugh. âHe left her with a stranger instead of calling me or Dare? Why am I not surprised?â
Faith placed a hand on the wall beside her for support. âExcuse me for pointing this out, but Iâm less of a stranger to her than you are.â
He narrowed his gaze. âLet me guess. Ethan didnât remember to tell you Tess and I had plans.â
Faith shook her head. âLike I said, he had a business emergency and left in a hurry.â
âWell, itâs only seven and the fair goes until ten, so Iâll take her into town.â
That will be Tessâs choice, Faith thought, though sheâd try to encourage the teenager to go with her brother. But before she could voice her thoughts, Tessâs voice rang from the top of the stairs. âIâm not going with him!â
Faith met Nashâs frustrated glare. âIâm going to give you some unsolicited advice. That girl upstairs is sensitive. She knows exactly how you feel about your brother.â
âYour point?â
âLike it or not, sheâs bonded with Ethan. Unless you soften up a bit, you wonât make any headway with her.â
Nash bristled at her words, his posture becoming impossibly straighter, his glare more angry. âNot only is this none of your business, but you canât possibly understand what he did to our family.â
Faith walked up to Nash, standing toe-to-toe with him. âIt must be nice.â
âWhat is?â
She tipped her head to one side, appraising him and definitely finding him lacking. âBeing such a perfect human being that you never need anyone elseâs forgiveness or understanding.â She clenched and unclenched her fists at her side.
A muscle ticked in his jaw. âAre you telling me youâve forgiven your old man?â
Bullâs-eye, Faith thought, but she refused to let him get to her. âAre you telling me youâre finally separating me from what my father did? Because if so, thereâs no reason for you to be so damned hostile!â she yelled at him, losing her temper for the first time.
âI think the lady has a point.â Ethan appeared out of nowhere, walking into the house and joining them in the entryway.
His entrance surprised everyone. He placed his suitcase down on the marble floor and folded his arms across his chest, looking from Nash to Faith. It didnât matter that his brother thought he was dirt, Ethan looked like the imposing, impressive man Faith knew him to be.
And she was, despite herself, so happy to see him. âWhat are you doing back?â
âI wrapped things up as quickly as I could.â And from the looks of things, not a minute too soon. âWhatâs going on?â he asked.
âYou took off, left Tess with her instead of one of her brothers, and oh yeahâyou forgot to tell her I was supposed to take Tess into town tonight.â Nash pointed a finger at Faith.
Ethan winced. âYeah, I forgot. And Iâm sorry. Tess!â he called out.
âIâm right here!â
He looked up at the top of the steps, where Tess sat watching the adults below her. âI screwed up, but youâre supposed to go with Nash overnight,â he said to her.
âNo!â
Ethan rolled his eyes. âYes. Heâs your brother and you two need to get to know each other. Go get ready,â he directed her. âUnless you donât want to go to the beach when I pick you up tomorrow!â
Tess paused and Faith wondered if Ethan was in for an argument. Even Nash seemed to hold his breath.
âFine,â she said, not hiding her displeasure, but she ran for her room anyway.
âSheâll warm up to you,â Ethan said to his brother.
Nash narrowed his gaze. âI appreciate you pushing her.â
Faith blinked, surprised Nash had conceded even that much.
âTess needs family. Just go slow with her.â
Nash nodded. âWeâll go to dinner and the festival first.â
âShe already ate,â Faith said.
âFantastic,â Nash muttered.
âIâm ready!â Tess bounded down the stairs, dressed in a pair of denim shorts Faith had bought her, a black T-shirt with a huge sunglass decal on the front, flip-flops, and very little makeup. She also had a large bag sheâd obviously put her overnight things in.
She looked like the quintessential teenager, and pride blossomed in Faithâs chest.
Ethan stared at her. âWho are you?â he asked, grinning.
Nash merely blinked.
âThank Faith!â Tess said, and headed for the door.
Ethan stared at the woman he had come to care so much about, the woman he couldnât wait to come back home to. âI donât know what to say.â
She treated him to a soft, private smile.
âIâm holding you to the beach,â Tess yelled at Ethan.
âIâll pick her up early tomorrow morning. Eight thirty, okay?â Ethan asked.
âYeah. Iâll go to work right after.â Nash pulled his car keys from his pocket and started for the door.
âRemember my advice,â Faith called out to him just before he slammed the door shut behind him.
âWhat advice?â Ethan asked.
Faith rocked back on her heels. âOh, I just told him Tess had bonded with you and he wouldnât make headway with her unless he learned not to be such a condescending, pompous ass. Not in those exact words. I was much nicer.â She grinned.
And Ethan pulled her into a kiss.