The Doctor’s Truth: Part 1: Chapter 8
The Doctor’s Truth: A MMF Ménage Secret Baby Romance (The Truth or Dare Series Book 2)
To tell him or not to tell him?
That is the question.
In the summer of 2005, I met two boys: Jason King and Adam Donovan. One, a cocky, king-of-the-world jock. The other, a loner with a bleeding heart. I fell in love with both of them, in my own way. An innocent loveâsomething not meant to last, maybe, but something meant to burn hot and bright for a summer so that when Iâm ninety and on my death bed, I can smile to myself and think, Well, at least Iâll always have the summer of 2005.
We became glued at the hip. We called ourselves âthe Three Muskrats,â after an incident with a furry beast at the back of a boat. And that summer, I lost my virginity with Jason buried inside me and Donovan petting my hair, coaxing me to previously unknown heights of pleasure with his words. Itâs a moment Iâll cherish foreverâand one Iâll never forget.
It was also the night I got pregnant with Otto.
I donât regret anything that happened that night. I do regret the way I handled it. Eighteen, naïve, and scared out of my mind, Iâd gone to Jasonâs father for help. Leonard King was (and still is) the most powerful man on Hannsett Island, plus the richest. I wasnât thinking about any of that at the time, though. I was just thinking, Jasonâs dad is a doctor. Heâll know what to do.
But bullies donât fall far from the tree. Mr. King proceeded to harass me and tried to bribe me into getting an abortion. So I did the only thing I could think of to do.
I ran. Far. All the way to England.
Iâve stayed hidden for over a decade, but now that Iâm back at Hannsett, I have some decisions to make.
I canât avoid Jason forever. So Iâm going to go to dinner. Iâm going to do this the way I do everything these days: logically, weighing the pros and cons. Itâs been forever ago since we saw each other. I have no idea what kind of man he is now. I have to see it for myself. Assess the situation. And then decide howâand whenâto tell him that he has a son.
A sick son. A son who needs his help.
And, all the while, try to do so while keeping my heart in check.
Because the real, honest truth is that seeing Donovan yesterday opened up a floodgate of emotions I didnât know I still had inside of me.
Nostalgia. Affection. Andâyesâdesire. The desire for someone living, pulsing between my legs, instead of my go-to silicone friends.
Which is probably why I spend way too long getting ready.
Otto and I packed minimally for our trip over. Depending on how my meeting with Mr. King went, we could either be staying for a few days or a few months. I change my clothes three times before I leave the house.
First option: a navy pantsuit, to show that Iâve grown up and Iâm a professional.
Second option: a purple dress with black thigh-highs to show Iâm still as fun as I ever was.
Seeing Donovan yesterday was a stark reminder of just how long it had been. Heâs changed so much. Have I changed?
I check a lot of the same boxes: black Irish with thick, dark hair, green eyes, a small nose, and a round face. My eyebrows are a little too intense, but Iâve always liked that about them. Iâve lost some of my baby face and replaced it with single-mom-faceâever prevalent dark edges underneath my eyes, worry marks at my forehead.
Not quite the devil-may-care, precocious teenager they once knew. I canât help but hope they like this grown-up version of Kenzi, too.
I go with my third and final option: the best of both worlds, a fitted pair of black pants with a tie around the middle, a loose button-up, and a faux leather jacket for warmth.
I tie my hair back into a ponytail, apply my makeup, and reapply deodorant because my pits are sweating.
Itâs just the muskrats, I try to tell myself. So why is my heart jumping rope in my chest?
âIâm heading out,â I announce as I descend the staircase, tossing my purse over my shoulder.
I donât get a response, so I glance around. âPearl? Otto?â
Sheâs left a note on the round kitchen table: Went out for pizza. Donât call! Xoxo.
I canât help but smile. I leave, locking the door quietly behind me.
The cold is bone-freezing and chaps my lips. I hug my jacket tighter and slip into the rental car.
Donovan lives on the northern end of the island, and I have to wind down Main Street to get to him. From one end of the island to the other takes less than fifteen minutes, and thatâs only because Iâm obeying the under-twenty-miles-an-hour speed limit. His house stands alone on top of a sand dune, overlooking the beach.
The sunset looks beautiful, streaking golden-amber hues across the sky and ocean.
I get out of the car and take a second to admire it, even as the cold nips at me.
You donât get views like this in London.
Thereâs a stone footpath that leads to Donovanâs house, a modern structure built with a sharp triangle slant and wooden slats across the sides. Tufts of dune grass sprout up from the sand. Iâm halfway up the path when the door flings open.
A man steps out and lifts his arms wide. âKenzi fucking Stratton!â he bellows.
He cuts the distance between us with his long-legged leaps and then swoops me up in a bone-crushing bear hug. He smells like chlorine, body spray, and minty aftershave. I close my eyes and inhale. He smells like Jason.
It hits me like a fucking curveball to the chest and knocks all the breath out of me. Probably doesnât help that his hugs are boa-constrictor tight.
âHey, big guy.â I gasp for air and pat his shoulder, like Iâm tapping out at a wrestling match.
He grabs my shoulders and yanks me back with no apparent awareness of his own strength so he can look at meâreally look at me. The biggest, cheesiest grin plasters across his face, and his blue eyes sparkle.
âChrist, youâre a sight for sore eyes,â he says. âYou look great.â
Jason is an eye-contact kind of guy. Not a lot of those leftâmen who arenât afraid to look a woman straight in the eyes when he speaks.
He makes it look natural. Iâd forgotten how good it feels to be seenâeveryone Iâd worked with had their eyes on their phones or their computers and only looked up when you said, âHey, take a look at this.â
Something else I wasnât prepared for, though I donât know whyâthose are Ottoâs eyes staring at me. It knocks me off my center of gravity.
I squeeze his arms to ground myself. âYouâre not so bad-looking yourself,â I tease.
âCome on inâDonovan! Look what I found!â
Jason ushers me in, and I hold up a bottle of wine. âHere. Couldnât come empty-handed.â
Jason takes it and reads the label. âCheck you out, classing this joint up. I love it. You wanna crack this baby open?â
âYeah, go ahead.â
I unwrap my scarf from my neck and shimmy out of my jacket. Jason takes those as well (a gentleman, whoâd have thought?), and as he hangs them up, I survey the place.
Itâsâ¦shockingly nice.
I donât know what I was expecting. A frat house? Something about two boys living together screams empty beer bottles, strange stains, and movie posters tacked into the walls.
This is a far cry.
White paint, a wooden designer coffee table, an entire wall of exposed brick. A shelf devoted to a record player and a wall of records. Post-modern art on the walls and an ivy plant in the corner.
Donovan always was a bit of an old soul.
I smell sizzling onions and garlic. Donovan is cooking, but he spares a second to glance up at me and gives me a nod. âHey.â
Weâve already had our heartfelt hellos, apparentlyâIâm old hat now. I take a seat on one of the barstools and lean onto my elbows. âThat smells delicious. Whatâre you making?â
âStir-fry. Hope youâre hungry.â
âI am now.â