She blinked in surprise. “Hey, Angie. What’s up?” She’d last spoken to her sister on the weekend and she hardly expected another call so soon.
A pensive sigh. “Nothing good.”
“Yeah?” Kerry wiped her hands off and walked into the living room, which was empty since Dar was in the study working on part of her inbox. “You feeling okay? It’s not the baby, is it?” She turned the volume down on the television and sat down on the loveseat, leaning back and propping one leg up against the side of the couch.
“No. It’s more about the hearings.”
Oh. Kerry leaned her head against her fist. “Yeah. I’m not looking forward to that.”
There was an awkward pause. “No. I…listen, Ker? You’re my sister and I love you. You know that, right?”
She took a breath. “Yeah. Same here.”
“Right. Well, Dad put the word out… He doesn’t want anyone talking to you during the whole thing.” Angie hesitated. “And Richard came down on me pretty hard about it. I—”
“So you’ll be going along with it,” Kerry finished quietly, swallowing a lump in her throat.
“Kerry, you don’t have to live here with him.” Her sister sighed unhappily. “It’s just…like for show. It’s not like I mean it. You know me better than that.”
“Yeah, sure.”
“Kerry...”
She rubbed her eyes. Too much stress tonight. “Sorry, Angie. It’s really all right. I understand.” She exhaled. “We just have a lot going on here.
I’m a little strung.”
A short silence. “Are you okay?”
“Yeah, yeah. I’m fine. We just…um...” Kerry shifted the phone a little and patted Chino, who had jumped up next to her and laid down. “You remember I told you about Dar’s parents?”
“Mmm. Yeah, yeah. I do. That was really sad and kind of awful.”
“Uh huh. Well, we got them back together tonight.”
“Really?” Angie’s voice perked up. “My god, Ker. That’s wonderful.
152 Melissa Good Wow.” A muffled sound came through the receiver and Angie sighed.
“Gotta go. I just wanted to give you some warning. Don’t hold it against me, okay?”
“I won’t,” Kerry responded quietly. “How’s Mike?”
“Dad pulled him out of school. He’s got him working in his office.
I…he’s been really quiet lately.”
“Tell him I said hi, if you see him, okay?”
A pause. “Okay.” Angie cleared her throat. “Goodbye.”
Kerry thumbed the button and let the phone fall to her lap. She looked up as soft footfalls sounded from the study and Dar appeared, scrubbing her fingers through disheveled dark hair. The taller woman ambled over and perched on the back of the couch. “Trouble?” Dar gauged her expression.
“Sort of.” Kerry let her head rest against the cool leather, and stroked Chino’s soft fur. “That was my sister.”
“Yeah?”
The green eyes took on an almost gray hue. “She was just giving me fair warning. I’m…being shunned during the hearings.” Kerry was surprised at how much that hurt. “Even by her.”
Dar snorted in surprise, making Chino jump. “And here I liked her.”
“I don’t blame her, Dar. She’s…I mean, she’s got to deal with them all the time. I don’t.” Long fingers scratched her neck comfortingly and she closed her tired eyes. “It stings, though.”
The phone rang again, startling both of them, and this time Dar slipped the receiver out of Kerry’s hands and answered it. “Hello?”
“Hey, Dardar.”
Her father sounded exhausted, but peaceful. A wave of relief crashed over her. “Hi.”
“Damn plane made it,” Andrew rasped.
“So I gathered. Mom there?”
A long silence. “Yeah.”
Dar nodded to herself. “You okay?” She found fingers laced with hers and she turned to see Kerry’s anxious gaze on her.
Even longer silence. “I’m all right,” Andrew finally muttered. “We’re gonna…” He stopped speaking for a few heartbeats.
Must be the “we.” Dar tensed her lips.
“Get going. I um…listen, is Kerry there?”
“Sure. She’s right here.” Dar gave her puzzled lover a faint shrug.
“Wouldya…just tell her I said thanks,” her father muttered. “I owe her one.”
Dar’s brows knit. “All right. I’ll tell her. Listen, if you need anything, you call, okay? Thanks for letting us know you got there in one piece.”
“Wouldn’t say that,” Andrew muttered. “’Night.”
Dar put the phone down slowly and smiled at her lover. “He said to say thank you.”
“To me?” Kerry looked confused, then her expression cleared. “Oh.”
“Oh?” Dar stretched out along the back of the loveseat, jungle cat Eye of the Storm 153
style.
“I um…arranged for some ice cream. I figured he wouldn’t like a vinaigrette pasta salad just going on what I know about his daughter.”
Dar smiled. “He said he owes you one.” She curled a hand over Kerry’s shoulder. “Thanks. That was incredibly thoughtful of you, Ker.”
Kerry glanced down, then back up, and squared her shoulders.
“Hey. You guys are the only family I’ve got. Gotta make sure you’re taken care of.” She managed to hold her composure until Dar’s lips tensed and she lifted a hand to touch Kerry’s cheek. Then she turned and rested her head against her lover’s chest. “Oh god, Dar. I never even talk to them. Why does this hurt so much?”
“’Cause you love them,” was the quiet, truthful response. “And having that turned away does hurt.”
They rested quietly together, with only the soft whisper of the television behind them. Then Kerry shifted slightly. “Dar?”
“Mmm?”
“I think I understand why your dad was afraid to go home.” Kerry rubbed her thumb against the short, fine hairs on Dar’s arm. Her eyes slowly lifted to meet the serious blue ones above her. “It’s a very scary, very vulnerable feeling.”
“I know.” Dar leaned forward and touched foreheads with her. “But I knew my father was going to be all right.”
Kerry could almost taste her, she was that close. “You did?”
“Yeah.” Dar’s voice dropped to a whisper. “Because my mother feels about him the way I feel about you.”
“Oh.” Kerry smiled as the ache in her guts eased. She closed her eyes as Dar tilted her head and they kissed.
Guess that’s all right, then.
THERE WAS A faint rumble of thunder overhead as they left the airport, moving from the bland fluorescent glare out into a stark landscape outlined briefly in periodic lightning. Andrew shifted his overnight bag and blinked, feeling unsure and awkward, not really convinced he was here or that the whole thing was happening.
A hand slipped into his, warm and unexpected, and curled around his fingers in a strong grip. “This way,” Ceci murmured as she led him towards the car.
“All right.” Andrew altered his steps to match hers, slowing down and trying to concentrate on just how damn nice holding someone’s hand was.
She unlocked the doors remotely, and hesitantly let go of him before walking around to the driver’s side and getting in. Ceci settled into place and closed the door, then paused and turned her head. She felt like closing her eyes, then opening them, closing, then opening…just to prove to herself this was no dream. He looked back quietly, the lamplight sending glints of reflection off his pale eyes. “I’m…not really sure I can drive.”
154 Melissa Good He looked down, then back up. “Slept in worse places.” The voice was huskier than she remembered, but still held that faint, wry tone. The scars were vivid and cruel, but did nothing to remove the rugged nobility that was as much a part of him as the drawl, and the strength, and the character.
And the eyes hadn’t changed at all. Ceci very gently touched his jaw, running her fingers along the side of his face as he stayed absolutely still, the dark lashes dropping to cover his eyes. Her hand touched the still dark hair, lightly frosted with silver and she tugged, just a tiny bit of it.
“Have to get you a haircut.”
The eyes opened and his soul looked out at her timidly, the fear of rejection so obvious to her it made the tears well up in her eyes yet again.
His jaw tensed and she cupped it, all the things needing to be said piling up and leaving her mute.
Maybe she didn’t need to say them. Maybe he knew like he had always seemed to with her. His body relaxed a bit and he exhaled, warming her arm and sending goose bumps traveling up it. “Want me t’drive?”
Memories long buried stirred. “Have you gotten any better at it?”
Ceci asked, with shy humor.
“Nope,” Andrew admitted.
“I guess I’d better get on with it then.” She took a deep breath, then straightened and started the car, turning on the wiper blades against the newly started rain. The light obligingly turned green as she exited, and she entered the highway, resting her arm on the center console as she watched the road.
After a moment, fingers tangled with hers and the world seemed to float peacefully by, enclosing them in a bubble of timeless wonder.
ANDREW SAT QUIETLY on the couch, only his head swiveling back and forth as he regarded the painfully neat apartment surrounding him.
Kid was right. He let a breath out slowly, running his fingers over the oatmeal colored cloth that covered the sofa. Place looks like a damn hospital, only the chairs aren’t half as nice to sit in.
His eyes lifted to the picture on the wall, whose form and shape he recognized as Ceci’s work, one he’d never seen before. It seemed to add color to the room, but to his knowing gaze, the somber shades and bleak lines painted an entirely different scene.
Well. He wished this part were over. This was the part where they both had to pony up the truth, and maybe go past it, and maybe not.
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