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Authors: Darcy Burke

BOOK: When Love Happens
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Tori walked toward the wide wall of windows that looked out over the backyard and forest area beyond. The bright fall morning bathed the room in gold, giving it a warm, cozy feeling, though Tori felt anything but warm or cozy. She turned to face the man she was quickly beginning to think of as a troll. “What’s up?” Her shoulders tensed as she awaited
his response.

“Your family needs to get on board with the tone of this show. We need in-depth conversation about your brother, preferably with some tears. I know that sounds mercenary, but it will make good TV.”

All of her tension hardened into anger. “We’re not a TV show, we’re a family.”

He looked at her as if she’d spouted utter nonsense. “You are a TV show, actually. It was called
Seven
Is Enough
. You have a brand as a family of sextuplets with a seventh ‘oops’ kid. Now you’re missing one, and you aren’t seven anymore. Why is this so hard to understand?”

Tori crossed her arms and moved toward him, her muscles tight and her ire brimming just beneath the surface of the calm exterior she was trying to maintain. “It’s not that we don’t understand. We get it, and we’re giving you
what we feel comfortable with. I’m sorry if you don’t think it’s enough, but you can’t force us to ‘go deeper.’ Our contracts aren’t that specific.”

“While that’s true, I’m sure you’d rather your husband keep his job and the ability to find other jobs in the future.”

Was he threatening Sean? A horrible feeling sank into Tori, chilling her to the very bones. Had he always been threatening Sean?
This put an altogether different spin on his commitment to his work. It was one thing to want to excel at your job and another to be fighting tooth and nail to keep it.

“Let me get this straight,” she said, working to keep her voice from quivering as she started to shake from a combination of anger and frustration. “If we give you what you want for the show, Sean gets to keep his job?”

“That’s
about right, yes.”

“Has anyone ever told you that you’re a complete prick?”

He laughed. “Of course. I work in Hollywood. Glad to see you’re on board. Just make sure everyone else is, too.” He winked at her, either oblivious to her inner turmoil or absolutely indifferent. She wasn’t sure which was worse.

After he left, Tori turned and looked out over the picturesque view. The trees were in full
color—leaves of red, gold, and orange blanketed the ground, while others clung stubbornly to their branches. They’d get a good windstorm in the next few weeks that would strip the trees bare. That’s rather how she felt inside right now—stripped bare.

“Tori?” Sara’s gentle voice startled her.

Tori turned to see Sara and Chloe watching her compassionately. They’d heard what Dale had said.

“You
were listening?”

“Sorry,” Chloe said a bit sheepishly. “We wanted to jump in and defend you if necessary.”

“Thanks.”

Sara pulled her sleeves up over her palms. “I’m confused; does Sean support this obnoxious version of the show?”

“I don’t think so. I think he needs his job and is doing what he has to in order to keep it.”

“Why doesn’t he just quit?” Chloe asked. “He’s a good producer, right?
There have to be other opportunities. Or is it a tough job market right now? I really have no idea, obviously.”

“I don’t know either.” And that pissed her off. She
should
know—she was his wife. She and Sean had done a pretty lousy job of sharing important information. No wonder they were headed for divorce court. That needed to change—and fast. “I do know that he needs a job.” She thought of
his parents and what his mother said, that they couldn’t make do without Sean, that he took care of them. “Even if there are other jobs, you heard what Dale said. It certainly sounded like he was going to make it hard for Sean to move on.”

“He really is a prick,” Sara said.

Chloe folded her arms over her chest. “I can think of a few more choice descriptions.”

Tori closed her eyes briefly, hating
what she had to ask of them but knowing it was necessary. “Listen, guys, can you just do what you can to give Dale what he wants? Sean really needs this job, and he told me he’ll make sure this turns out right—that we’ll be proud of the finished product.” He’d asked her to trust him, but rather than allowing herself to be vulnerable, she’d allowed grief and despair to retain their unholy grip
on her. It was time to push through the pain and find happiness again. It was time to live. “I trust him to do that.”

Sara ran her fingertips along the edges of her sleeves. “I trust him, too, but with Dale pulling the strings, aren’t you worried?”

Yes, but she wouldn’t tell them that. Sean would take care of it. “No, it’ll be fine. Can you do it?” She looked at both of them earnestly.

Chloe
closed the gap between them and put her arm around Tori. “Of course we can. And we’ll make sure everyone else does, too.”

Sara smiled and went to Tori’s other side. She took Tori’s hand and gave it a squeeze. “I’ll talk to Kyle. Chances are he has to redo his interview, too.” She rolled her eyes. “But good luck getting emotion out of Evan when he gets here later.”

Tori looked at Sara. “He’s
coming today?” Anticipation at seeing him banished some of the shadows clouding her mood.

Sara nodded. “He should be here this afternoon, I think. He’s staying for the weekend.”

“I’m so glad.” Tori couldn’t wait to see him. Not having him here was the one thing that kept being home from feeling absolutely perfect.

Wait,
perfect
? Being back in Ribbon Ridge, living in her childhood home, was
perfect? With Sean here, it had actually seemed that way. God, everything she thought she wanted was suddenly unimportant—her high-profile job, her spectacular condo in San Francisco, showing everyone that she was accomplished and successful. And what she did want . . . she wasn’t sure was still available to her.

She hoped it wasn’t too late.

Chapter Twenty

S
EAN STOOD IN
the garage talking with the director about the day’s shooting schedule. They’d start with Tori this morning, then move on to Rob and Emily and finally Evan later in the day. He would’ve looked forward to meeting Evan, but now that he was planning to leave the Archers behind, he almost wished he could avoid it. Moving on would be much easier without meeting and
liking one more member of this family. And since Evan and Tori were close, he expected to like Evan quite a bit. Hell, he liked them all.

Dale came into the garage muttering under his breath. He didn’t look pleased. “There you are,” he said to Sean and Peter.

“What do you need?” Peter asked.

“You need to start with another pass at Sara. I want more on her sensory processing thing and more on
Alex.” He put his hands on his hips and stared at both of them. “Is it too much to ask for a few tears? Their brother committed suicide, for Christ’s sake. I want emotion! I want to feel the sadness! I want blubbering viewers!”

“I thought you might want another shot,” Peter said with a touch of resignation. “I’m on it.” He took off, likely in search of the cameraman.

Sean resisted the urge to
punch Dale in the face. He wouldn’t be satisfied until he plunged the family back into a pit of despair. “They’ve spent a lot of time working through their grief, and you want to open that all back up again. You’re a real nice guy, Dale.”

“I’m a television producer, Sean. Which is more than I can say for you if you can’t get these people to let it all hang out. You want to keep your job, don’t
you?”

“Maybe I really don’t.” Anxiety raced up his spine, but he quelled the sensation.

“I haven’t let Hollis go yet. I’m sure she’d be happy to take your place on this. Then your wife’s family won’t have anyone here who’s on their side.”

The douche bag had just admitted he didn’t give a shagging shit about the Archers. Sean couldn’t leave them to his mercy. He narrowed his eyes at Dale, wishing
he could tell him to go fuck himself. “I’ll figure it out.” He turned on his heel and stalked upstairs to the apartment. Once inside, he went to his laptop at the table and sat down to adjust the schedule to allow for reshoots with Sara and Kyle. He’d have to see when Kyle was available.

Feeling hot and frustrated, he opened the window to let in the unseasonably warm air as he worked. Gradually,
he cooled down and convinced himself he could make this work. At the end of the day, Dale wasn’t going to be able to force them to do anything. Sean would do his best to get something that was close enough to at least pacify him. He expected to lose his job when all was said and done, but at least he wouldn’t leave the Archers entirely to Dale’s devices.

Voices from the garage below carried up
to him.

“What did you get?” That was Dale’s voice.

“Not much.” That was one of the production assistants—a young, squirrely guy named Brady. “We found some pictures but not much else. There wasn’t a laptop, so finding anything about the gal who sold him the drugs is a total bust.”

“Well, we’ll just have to get Kyle to talk about this Natalie person. How are we with getting an interview with
her?” Dale asked.

“Still working some angles with the prison system, but it’s not looking good.”

“Damn,” Dale said, sounding disappointed. “That was going to be pretty sweet.”

Sean felt sick. Natalie Frobish was the former Archer employee who’d sold Alex the drugs he’d overdosed on. She’d agreed to a plea deal and was currently serving a ninety-day sentence, since it had been her first offense.
Putting her in the show was just about the most offensive thing Sean could think of. He was only glad it sounded like it wasn’t going to work out. That wouldn’t stop Dale from including the information or grilling Kyle, who’d uncovered her involvement, about it.

Sean clenched his fists on the table and strained to hear more.

“What about the office?”

“I got interrupted,” Brady said. “It was
a close call. I did get into the computer there, though. Should be easy enough to comb through the e-mails and mine some good stuff, particularly between the mom and dad. They’ve been going through a rough patch, but it seems like they’re working through it.”

“Too bad,” Dale said. “Strife is so much better for ratings.”

The son of a bitch. Sean’s fingers itched to wrap themselves around Dale’s
throat. They’d been going through Rob’s e-mails? And planned to do it again? The hell they were.

He stood up so forcefully, he nearly overturned the chair. With long steps, he made his way downstairs from the apartment and into the garage.

Dale and Brody turned to look at him as he approached. “Ready?” Dale asked.

“Ready to kick your ass, yeah. But I won’t. You need all of your arms and legs
working so you can pack everything up and get out of here.” Sean allowed his lip to curl with derision.

Dale had the gall to look amused. “Is that right? How about you go first. I’m done with your pissing and moaning. You’re fired.”

“Brilliant.” Sean moved toward his former boss, the wrath of righteousness warming him from deep within. “But you’re leaving, too. I heard everything you said. Snooping
through their house, going through Rob Archer’s e-mails—that’s illegal and sure as hell isn’t in their contracts. I can either tell them what you’ve done and call the police to come fingerprint Rob’s office and Alex’s room to prove it, or you can
politely
tell them the show just isn’t going the way you wanted. They’ll be relieved, and you won’t be prosecuted or embarrassed.”

“You’ll still be
fired.”

“I can live with that.” Even if his guts were churning with uncertainty. He knew he was doing the right thing, but that didn’t mean he wasn’t going to have a challenging road ahead of him.

“You’re not going to find it easy to land another job.”

“I get that. But I like to think the universe likes me more than you.”

Brady turned his alarmed expression to Dale. “I don’t want to get arrested.”

“I’m guessing Brady here will flip on you faster than a short-order cook. Better cut and run.”

Dale’s lips twisted as he seemed to finally understand his goose was cooked. “You really aren’t going to work again, you know that?”

“We’ll see.” Sean looked at the kid and said, “Brady, go on and start packing. Dale, you have a meeting with the family.”

“I suppose you want to join me?”

No, Sean
wanted to get as far away from Ribbon Ridge as possible. With every tie now severed, he could put Tori behind him—as soon as he filed for divorce. He shook his head at Dale. “As it turns out, the wife and I are splitting up, so I’ll let you face the wolves alone. Hope they rip you to shreds.”

He strode back up to the apartment and texted Kyle.

Sean:
Come home ASAP. Show’s off. Need you to make
sure the crew leaves.

Kyle:
WTF dude? Everything okay?

Sean:
Brilliant.
See you later.
In another life, maybe.

Next, he texted Tori. He took a deep breath before typing.
Keep Dale and the others out of Alex’s room and your dad’s office. They’re going to be leaving—the project’s been canceled. I’m sorry to have put all of you through this. I wish you all the best.

It was a few minutes before
he got a response:
Hang on. Dale talking. I don’t understand.

He spoke to the empty room. “It’s okay. You don’t need to understand. Just accept it and move on. I am.”

Picking up his bags, he gave the apartment a final look. He would always remember the time he’d spent with the Archers as among the best in his life. But now it was time to return to reality. To his own family. And figure out what
in the bloody hell came next.

T
ORI BLINKED AT
Dale. “You spend the morning telling us you want more and threatening Sean’s job, and now the show is just
off
?” She exchanged glances with Sara and Chloe, who were also in the living room.

A couple members of the crew worked to dismantle the lighting they’d set up.

“I have to come clean.” He wrung his hands together. “Sean and I were doing a good-cop,
bad-cop sort of scenario. And I just couldn’t do it anymore. I thought he was doing the right thing, getting a beautiful, complex show with great emotional connection, but now I can see how upsetting it might be to all of you.”

“Wait.” Sara shook her head. “You expect us to believe that Sean was behind all the garbage you wanted to get on film?”

“I’m afraid so. I just can’t support the direction
he wanted to take.”

“I’m calling bullshit,” Tori said, not believing Dale’s story for a moment. “Where’s Sean?”

“He left.”

Tori’s gut clenched. “Left the premises, or left your employment?”

“Both. I had to let him go, of course. Believe what you like, but he really didn’t have your best interests at heart.”

Chloe rolled her eyes. “Unlike you, I suppose.”

Tori advanced on the troll. “I don’t
believe you for a second. Furthermore, if you do anything to prevent Sean from getting another job, if you slander him in any way, we’ll slap you with a defamation lawsuit so fast your head will explode.”

“That sounds pretty cool, actually,” Sara said. “Maybe we should hope for that outcome.”

“You’re a cutthroat family,” Dale said, doing his best sad-sack imitation. “Good luck with that lawsuit.
Slander like the kind you’re talking about is awfully hard to prove. But I wish you all the best.”

He turned and walked out, leaving his crew to finish cleaning up.

Tori pulled her phone back out of her pocket, where she’d stashed it after getting Sean’s text and quickly tapping out a reply. He’d also wished them all the best, but she was pretty sure he actually meant it.

“What a dick,” Sara
said.

Chloe smiled at them both. “I’m glad that’s over. And that was kind of fun. Tori, what’s wrong?”

“Hold on.” Tori dialed Sean and held the phone to her ear. She paced to the windows as it rang, but it just went to voicemail. She tried again. And again. He wasn’t going to answer her call.

“Damn it!” She resisted the urge to throw her phone through the window.

“Hey, what’s going on?” Kyle
strode into the living room, looking a bit winded. He eyed the crew members carting the equipment out.

Tori turned and looked at the three of them. “Can one of you go lock Dad’s office and, I don’t know, stand guard at Alex’s door until these yahoos leave?”

“Why?” Kyle asked.

“I don’t know. Sean asked me to make sure they didn’t gain access to either of those rooms.”

“He texted me to come
home and make sure the crew leaves.” Kyle looked between the three of them. “You have no idea what’s going on?”

“Dale gave us some BS story about not agreeing with Sean’s direction for the show,” Chloe said. “All we really know is that the show is off and Sean’s gone.”

“Gone?”

Tori felt like she was going to explode. “What about the rooms? Sean wanted you to guard the rooms!” She sounded a
bit crazed, but for some reason he had thought that was important enough to tell her. More important than saying good-bye or I love you or anything else that might have given her hope.

It started in her shoulders and worked its way down to her chest, her body quivering as the emotion crested. It spiked up her throat and burned her eyes as tears began to fall. She wanted to hold it in, to hide
it from everyone like she’d taught herself to do since Alex died but she just couldn’t. Not anymore.

“Oh, Tori.” Sara put her arms around her and held her tight. “Sean didn’t just leave the show or his job or whatever, did he? He left you.”

Tori nodded, unable to speak.

“I think I might kick his ass,” Kyle said, moving closer.

Tori sucked in a breath and wiped at her face. “Don’t.”

“It’s
okay to let it out,” Sara said softly, holding her close.

Tori did just that. She laid her head on Sara’s shoulder and cried, uncaring how she looked or sounded. When she finally lifted her head to wipe her eyes, she saw that everyone else was there now too—Mom, Dad, Derek, Maggie.

“What happened?” Mom asked, looking pale as she made her way to Tori.

“Sean asked for a divorce,” Tori said, sniffling.
“And before you all defend him—well, except maybe Kyle, who’s already offered to kick his ass—it’s my fault. I pushed him away for so long. He finally got smart.” She smiled sadly, wiping her cheeks dry but feeling as though the waterworks could start again at any moment.

Dad came over and waved everyone away so he could take Tori’s hand. “Don’t beat yourself up. I understand. I did the same
thing after Alex died. I pushed you all away.” He gave Mom a loving look and added, “Especially you.” He turned back to Tori and touched her face. “It’s better to feel the pain than to feel nothing at all. Trust me, I know.”

Tears threatened again. Tori nodded, not trusting herself to speak. This hurt like crazy, but it
was
better than feeling nothing. She loved Sean, and now she knew that love
was worth any compromise, any sacrifice.

“What the hell is going on here?” Evan’s voice boomed through the room. He always had trouble modulating his tone, but in some cases it was for the best. And in this case, it was quite effective, as Tori was ecstatic to see him.

“Not much, I’m just having a total emotional breakdown.”

“So I can see.” He frowned as he came into the room, passing a crew
member carrying the last of the equipment out. “What’s going on with all that?”

“Show’s off,” Kyle said. “Consider yourself lucky to have missed it. The producer was the world’s biggest asshole.”

Evan’s brow creased with confusion. “Isn’t that Tori’s husband?”

“Different producer, his boss. Never mind, we’ll explain later. Let Tori have her breakdown—she needs to get it all out,” Sara said,
patting Tori’s back.

Evan came toward her, and Dad moved aside. “I’m sorry, sis. I didn’t realize things were so bad. I guess I should come home more often.”

“None of us realized,” Kyle said. “We suck.”

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