Authors: Nora Roberts
‘‘I know I did.’’ The fresh and physical pain jolted through him, and joined the rest. ‘‘This isn’t your business, Seth. Go on in the house.’’
‘‘Fuck you. You hurt her. Go on, try to hurt me. It won’t be so easy.’’ Teeth bared, Seth swung again, and again, until Ethan picked him up by collar and seat and held him dangling over the end of the dock.
‘‘Cool off, you hear, or I’ll toss you in.’’ He added a hard, threatening shake, but his heart wasn’t in it. ‘‘You think I wanted to hurt her? You think I got any pleasure out of it?’’
‘‘Then why did you?’’ Seth shouted, struggling like a baited fish.
‘‘There wasn’t any choice.’’ Suddenly abominably
weary, Ethan dropped Seth to his feet on the dock. ‘‘Leave me alone,’’ he murmured and sat on the edge. Giving in, he put his head in his hands, pressed his fingers to his eyes. ‘‘Just leave me alone.’’
Seth shifted his feet. It wasn’t just Grace who was hurt. He hadn’t really understood that a grown man could be, not this way. But Ethan was. Tentatively, he stepped forward. He stuck his hands in his pockets, pulled them out. Shuffled. Sighed. Then sat.
‘‘Women,’’ Seth said in a level and considering voice, ‘‘make a man want to shoot himself in the head and be done with it.’’ It was something he’d heard Phillip say to Cam, and he thought it might be appropriate. He was rewarded when Ethan let out a short laugh, even if it wasn’t a happy one.
‘‘Yeah, I guess they can.’’ Ethan draped an arm around Seth’s shoulders, pulled the boy close to his side. And took a little comfort.
A
NNA WEIGHED HER PRI
orities —and took the day off. She couldn’t be sure what time Grace would be by to tend the house, and she couldn’t risk missing her.
She didn’t give a good damn what Ethan said—or didn’t say. There was a crisis.
If she’d believed they’d simply had a spat or misunderstanding, she would have been sympathetic or amused, whichever was most called for. It wasn’t amisunderstanding that had put misery into Ethan’s eyes. Oh, he had a way of hiding it, she mused as she slowly and ruthlessly tugged out weeds that threatened her begonias in thefrontyard bed. And he hid his more personal feelings very well. It just so happened she was a professional at filtering through to emotion.
Too bad for him that he’d inherited a social worker for a sister-in-law.
She’d poked at Seth a bit. There was no doubt in her mind the boy knew something. But she’d run straight into
unwavering male loyalty. All she got out of him was a Quinn shrug and a zipped lip.
She could have wheedled it out nonetheless. But she hadn’t had the heart to put a chip in that lovely bond. Seth could keep his loyalty to Ethan.
Anna would work on Grace.
She was positive they hadn’t seen each other for days. It was pathetically easy to keep tabs on Ethan. He was out on the water every morning, in the boatyard everyafternoon and through the evening. He poked at his dinner, then retreated to his room. Where she’d seen the light slanting under his door well into the night on several occasions.
Brooding, she thought with an impatient shake of her head. And if he wasn’t brooding, he was looking for a fight.
She had broken up what would certainly have been bloodshed over the weekend when she walked in on the three brothers going nose to nose in the boatyard, Seth looking on with avid interest.
Whatever had caused it remained a mystery as she’d bounced straight off that same united male wall. Shrugs and snarls were all she got for her trouble.
Well, it was going to stop, she decided, and attacked some chickweed with enthusiasm. Women knew how to share and discuss. And if she had to bang Grace Monroe over the head with her garden spade, Grace was damn well going to share and discuss.
It was with pleasure that she heard Grace’s car pull in. Anna tipped back her hat, rose, and offered a welcoming smile. ‘‘Hi, there.’’
‘‘Hello, Anna. I thought you’d be at work.’’
‘‘Took a mental health day.’’ Oh, yes, misery here as well, she mused. And not quite as well coated as Ethan’s. ‘‘You didn’t bring Aubrey with you.’’
‘‘No. My mother wanted her today.’’ Grace ran a hand up and down the strap of the oversized bag over her shoulder.
‘‘Well, I’ll get started and let you get back to your gardening.’’
‘‘I was just looking for an excuse to take a break. Why don’t we sit down on the porch a minute?’’
‘‘I really should get the first load of laundry in.’’
‘‘Grace.’’ Anna laid a gentle hand on her arm. ‘‘Sit down. Talk to me. I count you as one of my friends. I hope you count me as one of yours.’’
‘‘I do.’’ Grace’s voice wavered. She had to take three breaths to steady it. ‘‘I do, Anna.’’
‘‘Then let’s sit down. Tell me what’s happened to make you and Ethan so unhappy.’’
‘‘I don’t know if I can.’’ But she was tired, bone-tired, so she sat down on the steps. ‘‘I guess I made a mess of everything.’’
‘‘How?’’
She’d cried herself dry, Grace thought. Not that it had helped. Maybe it would help to talk things over with another woman, one she was beginning to feel close to. ‘‘I let myself assume,’’ she began. ‘‘I let myself plan. He picked me flowers,’’ she said with a helpless lift of her hands.
‘‘Picked you flowers?’’ Anna’s eyes narrowed fractionally. Rabbits, my butt, she thought, but filed it away for later retribution.
‘‘And he took me to dinner. Candles and wine. I thought he was going to ask me to marry him. Ethan does things stage by stage, and I thought he was leading up to proposing.’’
‘‘Of course you did. You’re in love with each other. He’s devoted to Aubrey and she adores him. You’re both nesters. Why wouldn’t you think it?’’
Grace stared for a moment, then let out a long breath. ‘‘I can’t tell you what it means to hear you say that. I felt like such a fool.’’
‘‘Well, stop. You’re not a fool. I’m not, and I certainly thought it.’’
‘‘We were both wrong. He didn’t ask me. But he loved me that night, Anna. So tenderly. I never believed anyone would feel so much for me. He had a nightmare later.’’
‘‘A nightmare.’’
‘‘Yes.’’ And she understood it now. ‘‘It was bad, very bad, but he pretended it wasn’t. He told me not to worry and brushed it off. So I didn’t think any more about it. Then.’’ Thoughtfully, she rubbed a faint bruise on her thigh that she’d given herself bumping into a table at Shiney’s.
‘‘The next day I decided if I sat around waiting for Ethan to do the asking, I’d have gray hair on my wedding day. Ethan doesn’t exactly rush through life.’’
‘‘No, he doesn’t. He gets things done in his own time, and gets them done well. But he could sure use a poke now and then.’’
‘‘He does, doesn’t he?’’ She couldn’t stop the warm, wistful smile. ‘‘Sometimes he just thinks things to death. And I thought this was going to be one of those times, so I made up my mind to do the asking myself.’’
‘‘You asked Ethan to marry you?’’ Anna chuckled, leaned back on the steps. ‘‘Atta girl, Grace.’’
‘‘I had it all worked out. Everything I wanted to say and how to say it. I thought, on the water where he’s most content, so I asked him to take me out for an evening sail. It was so lovely, with the sun setting and the sails bright and full of wind. And I asked him.’’
Anna slipped a hand over Grace’s. ‘‘I gather he turned you down. But—’’
‘‘It was more than that. If you’d seen his face . . . He went so cold. He said he’d explain things to me when we got back. And he did. I don’t feel right telling you, Anna, because it’s Ethan’s business. But he said he can’t marry me, won’t marry me or anyone. Ever.’’
Anna didn’t speak for a moment. She was Seth’s caseworker, which meant she’d had full access to the files on the three men who would stand as his guardians. She knew
their pasts nearly as well as they did. ‘‘Is it because of what happened to him as a child?’’
Grace’s gaze flickered, then she stared straight ahead. ‘‘He told you?’’
‘‘No, but I know about it, most of it. It’s part of my job.’’
‘‘You know . . . what his mother—that woman—did to him, let other people do to him? He was only a little boy.’’
‘‘I know that she forced him to have sex with clients for several years before she abandoned him. There are still copies of the medical reports in his file. I know that he was raped and beaten before Stella Quinn found him in the hospital. And I know what that kind of trauma, that kind of consistent abuse can do. Ethan could very well have become an abuser himself. It’s a miserably common cycle.’’
‘‘But he didn’t.’’
‘‘No, he became a thoughtful, considerate man with nearly unflappable control. The scars are there, under it. It’s likely that his relationship with you has brought some of them closer to the surface.’’
‘‘He won’t let me help. Anna, he’s got it into his head that he can’t risk having children because he’s got her blood in him. Bad blood that he would pass on. He won’t marry because marriage means family to him.’’
‘‘He’s wrong, and he has the best example of how wrong in his own mirror. He not only has her blood but he spent the first twelve years—the most impressionable years—with her in an environment that could warp any young mind. Instead, he’s Ethan Quinn. Why should his children—children that come from the two of you—be any less than he is?’’
‘‘I wish I had thought to say that,’’ Grace murmured. ‘‘I was so shocked and sad and shaken.’’ She closed her eyes. ‘‘I don’t think it would have mattered if I had. He wasn’t going to listen. Not to me,’’ she said slowly. ‘‘He
doesn’t think I’m strong enough to live with what he’s lived with.’’
‘‘He’s wrong.’’
‘‘Yes, he’s wrong. But his mind’s made up. He won’t want me now. He says the choice is mine, but I know him. If I say I can accept this and we go on as we are, it’ll eat at him until he pulls away.’’
‘‘Can you accept it?’’
‘‘I’ve asked myself that, thought about that for days now. I love him enough to want to, maybe to settle for it, at least for a while. But it would eat at me, too.’’ She shook her head. ‘‘No, I can’t accept it. I can’t accept only one part of him. And I won’t ask Aubrey to accept anything less than a father.’’
‘‘Good for you. Now, what are you going to do about it?’’
‘‘I don’t know that there’s anything I can do. Not when we both need different things.’’
Anna let out a huff of breath. ‘‘Grace, you’re the only one who can decide. But let me tell you, Cam and I didn’t just float to the altar on gossamer wings. We wanted different things—or thought we did. And to find out what we wanted together, we hurt each other, we got in each other’s faces and we dealt with it.’’
‘‘It’s hard to get in Ethan’s face about anything.’’
‘‘But it’s not impossible.’’
‘‘No, it’s not impossible, but . . . He wasn’t honest with me, Anna. Underneath it all, I can’t forget that. He let me spin my daydreams, all the time knowing he was going to cut the threads of them and let me fall. He’s sorry for it, I know, but still . . .’’
‘‘You’re angry.’’
‘‘Yes, I guess I am. I had another man do that to me. My father,’’ she added, coolly now. ‘‘I wanted to be a dancer, and he knew I was pinning my hopes on it. I can’t say he ever encouraged me, but he let me go on taking lessons and wishing. And when I needed him to stand up
and help me try for that dream . . . he cut the threads. I forgave him for it, or tried to, but things were never the same. Then I got pregnant and married Jack. I guess you could say that cut his threads, and he’s never forgiven me.’’
‘‘Have you tried to resolve things there?’’
‘‘No, I haven’t. He gave me a choice, too, just like Ethan did. Or what they seem to think of as a choice. Do this their way. Accept it, or do without them. So I’ll do without.’’
‘‘I understand that. But while it may buffer your pride, what does it do to your heart?’’
‘‘When people break your heart, pride’s all you’ve got left.’’
And pride, Anna thought, could turn cold and bitter without heart. ‘‘Let me talk to Ethan.’’
‘‘I’ll talk to him, as soon as I can work out what needs to be said.’’ She blew out a breath. ‘‘I feel better,’’ she realized. ‘‘It helps to say it all out loud. And there was no one else I could say it to.’’