Eyes Wide Open: Chapter 6
Eyes Wide Open: The Blackstone Affair, Book 3
âWhy are fish so smart?â Zara asked me.
I shrugged exaggeratedly. âI have no idea why fish are so smart. Do you know why?â
She nodded seriously. âBecause they are always in schools.â
I laughed at her smug little face, smudged with strawberry ice cream, and tackling a new angle on her melting cone.
âWant some, Rags?â She offered her treat to the golden retriever sitting loyally beneath the outdoor table.
Rags took a couple of healthy licks with his long pink tongue and I scowled. Zara looked up at me to see what I would say, the little demon that she was. I shrugged at her. âI donât care if you want slobbery dog germs on your ice cream. Do what you want.â
She giggled at me and kicked her dangling legs in the chair. âBrynne talks funny.â
âI know. Iâve been telling her that for a long time, but she doesnât listen.â I shook my head sadly. âStill does it.â I pulled out my mobile to take some pictures of her and got canned poses the instant she understood what I was doing. Zara cracked me up something fierce. Her parents were in for it once she became a teenager. Good. God.
More giggling. âShe talks like the words on SpongeBob SquarePants.â
My mouth fell open in mock surprise. âYou know, youâre right! Will you tell her?â
She shrugged. âSheâs nice and I think she canât help it.â Zara gave me a look of censure and went back to her strawberry ice cream. Something along the lines of: Only a real dickhead would make fun of how someone talks, you idiot. She was so her motherâs daughter.
âNice one, E. Letting your niece share with the dog. I saw the whole thing from the window of the shop.â Hannah looked disgusted with us both as she joined us. âI step away for two minutesââ
âHe said he didnât care, Mummy,â Zara interrupted, selling me out with no trouble at all.
âOh, Raggsey is pretty disease-free, I think.â I gave the dog a nice pat on the head. âAnd you are a little traitor!â I pointed a finger at Zara. âSo sue me, Han. Iâm just the uncle here. Letting them run amuck in wild abandon is my role.â
âYeah, well, I havenât had the indulgent auntie role . . . yet.â
I shot her a look and discerned something in her expression. Not sure what, but I knew suspicious in my sister when I saw it. Her mind was busy.
âWhat does that cryptic comment mean?â
âYou and Brynne.â She shook her head a little. âThis is really serious isnât it? Iâve never seen you like this.â
I looked out at the sea with its millions of reflecting ripples and adjusted my sunglasses. âI want to marry her.â
âI thought so. . . . Well, I guessed you were heading there with her. Talking to her this morning pretty much confirmed it, and then today when she needed a nap I started putting it all together.â
What does Brynne having a nap have to do with anything? âSo you approve?â I asked.
Hannah looked at me curiously. âApprove of you and Brynne getting married? Of course we support you. I want you to be happy and if you love her and she loves you . . . well then, itâs meant to be.â She reached for my hand over the table. âIt happens that way sometimes. Nobodyâs perfect. Fred and I started out the same way, E, and I wouldnât change a thing about us or when the babies came. They are a blessing.â
I picked up her hand and kissed it. âThey really are, and someday maybe, but a family is not anywhere in the equation right now. Iâm just trying to get her used to the idea of getting shackled first.â
Hannah looked relieved. âOh, good. I like her even more now. I must admit I was worried you might be trapped into it and I hated to think of that for you, little brother. Iâm glad for you if itâs something you want.â
I snorted. âRight . . . sheâs the one that needs trapping. Brynneâs hard to pin down and having a relationship is scary for her. Iâll be lucky to get her to the altar in a year from now. Iâm trying to convince her that a long engagement will work best.â
Hannah nodded slowly like she was absorbing it. âSo youâll wait until after to have the wedding? Thatâs one option, but Dadâs going to hate it. Remember how he was when Freddy and I jumped the gun with Jordan. Dad had us married within a month.â She mocked my fatherâs words at the time, â âNo grandchild of mine will be born a bastard! Your poor mother would be heartbroken if she were here to seeââ â
âWhat?!â I gaped at her. âBrynneâs not . . . I mean, youâre greatly mistaken if thatâs what youâre suggesting.â I glared at Hannah, shocked at her speculations. âYou thought . . .â I shook my head vigorously. âNo, Han! My girl is not preggers. No way. Sheâs been very careful with her pills. I see her take them every morning. Hell, Iâm sure I heard her in the bathroom this morning getting her pills.â
Hannah shook her head slowly at me, her gray eyes looking sympathetic and strangely wise, but even so, I wasnât buying it.
âYou think sheâs pregnant? And thatâs why I want to marry her?â I was truly shocked and more than a little insulted that my sister would imagine us so irresponsible. âYou couldnât be more off the mark, Han. God! O ye of little faith,â I said scornfully, reaching for my coffee.
âMaybe you two should talk to Freddy, then,â she said, âbecause I would bet my house that Brynne is very preggers and that the two of you are going to be parents whether you like it or not.â
I choked on my coffee, startling the dog, who banged into the small table and made it rattle on the cobbled patio.
Hannah looked down at Zara, who for all intents and purposes appeared to be listening to every word of our conversation. âBe a love and take Rags over to the grass for a roll around, okay?â
Zara pondered for a moment before deciding that battling her mum was a no-win and left with Rags as requested, melting ice cream in hand.
My heart rate sped up instantly and I felt fear coupled with anxiety and excitement all at once. âWeâre not talking to Freddyâwait just one goddamn minute, Hannah! What the fucking hell?! I want to know just what makes you willing to bet your magnificent house that she is.â I was shouting now. âTell me!â I dragged my hand over my beard, feeling a sweat break out as I glared at my sister and waited for her to shake off her misguided attempt at a joke.
Hannah looked around the courtyard area of the sweets shop and smiled pleasantly at a few of the other patrons who were now staring rudely at us. âEase up, brother. How about we take a walk instead.â She gathered her shopping bags and stood up, offering me a patient look that spelled out clearly, Listen to your big sister, you enormous arsehole.
I thought about leaving my sister and niece, both of them right there in the village center, running back to the house to get Brynne, putting her in the Rover and driving back to London. We could get away from here and pretend this was all some weird, impossible dream or misunderstanding. I seriously did. For about five seconds.
I somehow got to my feet despite the sudden weakness in my knees, picked up my purchase from an earlier stop at an antiques shop, and followed my sister instead.
âHow late is she?â Hannah asked as we walked.
âLate? Fuck, I donât know about this stuff! She said the pills she takes makes her periods skip out sometimes.â
âAhh, so she wouldnât know if she was late. Makes sense. She told me all about being sick last night. Said you had to pull over on the side of the road. She also mentioned being lightheaded last night as well.â
âYeah, so?â I said defensively. âMaybe it was something she ate.â
Hannah bumped me in the shoulder. âStop being an arse. Iâve had three children, E, I know the symptoms of pregnancy, and my husband is a doctor. I know what Iâm talking about.â
I felt a line of sweat trickle down my back. âBut . . . this canât be possible.â
âOh, stop moaning and tell me facts. I assure you it can be very possible. What happened when Brynne felt lightheaded?â
âShe had to sit down and said she was thirsty.â
âThirst is a symptom,â Hannah said in singsong.
âFuck, and after that she had to puke. Oh, God.â
âSome women get morning sickness in the evenings,â she announced, âFred will even tell you itâs very common.â
âWhat else happens to you?â
âI got very moody and emotional. Itâs the massive amounts of hormones raging around.â
Check. My Medusa joke from a couple weeks ago suddenly didnât seem funny anymore.
âExtreme exhaustion, necessitating naps.â She tilted her head all the way to the side. âIâve never napped in my life except for the three times I was pregnant.â
Check. Brynne was sleeping right now at my sisterâs house. I wanted a smoke, and then another, and to just keep on going until the whole pack was gone.
âBreasts get very tender to the touch, a little painful. Again, itâs the hormones starting the process for milk to feed the baby.â
I just gaped at her, and Iâm sure my mouth was hanging open like the village idiotâs as she talked about hormones and breasts and milk production. This cannot be happening. It canât. Not now.
But my sister rambled on, scaring the absolute shit out of me with every subsequent sentence that came out of her mouth.
âThis last part is something that happens and trust me, I would rather not say, but I suppose I should tell you anyway since you asked.â She held up her hand to stop me from speaking. âI donât want to hear if itâs true or not. I really donât need to know.â
âWhat?!â I yelled at her. âStop fucking around and tell me!â
Hannah glared at me and then slowly changed it into a smirk. âPregnant women get very randy and want sex all the time. Their men are usually too stupid to realize why theyâre getting lucky with the extra shagging all of a sudden.â She got a kick out of telling me that one, I am sure. âItâs definitely the hormones.â Hannah folded her arms and waited.
âWe need to go back,â I said in a strange voice. Even to my ears I didnât sound normal. All I could see was Brynne begging me to fuck her in the shower before I came here. Oh my God. Petrified shock didnât even begin to cover the enormity of this bomb drop.
As I stood there beside my sister, gazing out over the Somerset coast, on a warm summery day in July, with my niece chasing the dog over the grass, I knew two things were an absolute certainty.
The first was that Brynne wouldnât take the news well at all.
The second part came to me quickly and with extreme clarity. The reaffirmation that I was a very, very, lucky man for reasons I could only admit to myself. I wouldnât even tell Brynne the reason. It was all for me to know and to keep private. Very simple logic, really. And the more I thought about it, the easier it was to accept the possibility.
If Brynne is truly carrying my child . . . then she can never leave me.