All for This (8 page)

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Authors: Lexi Ryan

Tags: #romance

BOOK: All for This
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I turn away, silently dismissing her.

“We have mutual friends.” She parks the stroller and sinks onto the bench beside me, but not before giving me an obvious once-over. “Congratulations on the whole avoiding-a-fiery-death thing.”

“Thanks,” I reply dryly. I keep my eye on Collin.

“So you’re in New Hope for a while, probably hoping to win Hanna back, huh?”

My jaw tightens. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” Then I stand because I’m not in the mood.

“Oh,” she calls to my back. “Because the rest of the town seems to think those are your babies she’s carrying.”

I stop and slowly turn to her, and I can tell by her face that she expected this to be news to me. “I don’t know who you think you are or why you think I care about your opinions about my private business, but you’re mistaken. You can leave now.”

She attempts to look innocent and adjusts her baby’s blanket. “Twins—can you believe it? Surely you’re going to want to be in those babies’ lives, though, right? I mean, it won’t be easy now that they’re moving in together, but I bet you and Hanna have worked something out.”

My stomach clenches, and surprise must show on my face because she smiles—slow and wide. It reminds me of the hyenas in the Disney movie Collin loves to watch. She finally hit her mark.

“Who are you?” I ask.

“I’m a friend who wants to see everyone get what they deserve. Nothing less. Nothing more.”

 

 

 

H
ANNA’S MOTHER
beams as she opens the door for me. “So glad you could make it for brunch.”

“Thanks for inviting me, Gretchen.”

“We missed you at church.” She turns to the living room. “Hanna, Max is here.”

Hanna pushes off the couch to greet me with a kiss on my cheek.

“Hi,” she says. “How was your morning? Post-crazy-baby-mama drama?”

“Good.” I spent it in my office at the club, trying to work magic with numbers and not succeeding. “How was church?”

She shrugs. “Mom is worried for the souls of her sinner daughters. We like to throw her a bone once in a while.”

“Food is ready!” her mom calls. “Everyone in the dining room, please!”

We file into the dining room behind Gretchen—Granny, Liz, Abby, Hanna, Maggie, Asher, me, and a couple of Gretchen’s friends—and line up at the buffet to fill our plates.

Gretchen takes Hanna’s plate from her before she can fill it. “I want you to try this new recipe.”

Liz and Hanna gape as their mother heaps hash brown casserole onto Hanna’s plate. The potatoes are bubbling with cheese and butter.

“The baby needs the calcium,” Gretchen says.

“I think hell just froze over,” Liz mumbles, and her mom shoots her a stern glare.

When our plates are full, we find our seats around the table.

“Liz,” Gretchen says, “I thought you might bring that nice gentleman you danced with at Will and Cally’s wedding. That friend of yours… Max, what’s his name? Sam something or other.”

“You don’t want me bringing Sam Bradshaw to a family brunch,” Liz says next to me, scowling at her food.

“Why not?” her mother objects.

Hanna bites back a smile.

“He really likes you, Liz,” I tell her, not for the first time.

“You’re blushing!” their little sister Abby says. “You never blush!”

“It’s hot in here,” Liz grumbles.

Across from me, Maggie moans softly. “These potatoes. Oh my God! Mom, I had no idea you had it in you.”

“She let me cook today,” Granny says. “That’s how food is supposed to taste.”

My phone vibrates in my pocket and I pull it out to see a message from Meredith.
Can you come get Claire? A client has an emergency.

“A haircut emergency?” Liz says, shamelessly reading from my phone. “Whatever.”

Who knows if it’s true or if Meredith just knows that this is my time with Hanna’s family.

“My apologies, Gretchen.” I stand and slide my phone back into my pocket. “I need to get my daughter. Her mother has to work.”

Hanna stands. “I’ll give you a call later.”

I’ll give you a call.
Not,
I’ll see you.

She kisses me on the cheek, and I stop her before she can pull away. I press my mouth to hers. It’s not a long kiss or a passionate one—her family is right here—but it’s firm and sure and right. It’s everything my love for her is.

 

 

 

I
SCRATCH
out the last four lines on the page, pushing the pen so deep it cuts through the paper. I’m working on this collaboration with Asher and I’m stuck on the ballad.

All week, all I’ve been able to think about is Hanna moving in with Max, Hanna waking up next to Max, Hanna raising my babies
with Max.

It’s a good thing Collin is here. Otherwise, I probably would have already left Asher’s in favor of getting trashed in a hotel room somewhere.

I stare at the marked-out lyrics and then throw the notebook across the room.

“What did that notebook ever do to you?”

I’m probably scowling when I look up at Maggie, but scowling is pretty tame considering how I’m feeling right now. How I’ve felt all week.

“She’s having my babies and she’s marrying him.” I can tell by her face that this isn’t news to her. Fuck. Of course not. “What am I supposed to do with that?”

She plops into a chair across from me and folds her legs under herself. “Asher told me that he warned you to stay away from her.”

“I don’t need a lecture tonight, Maggie.”

“Asher also told me that ignoring a friend’s wishes for a girl wasn’t like you. But something about Hanna made you do it anyway.”

I lean my head back and look at the ceiling, remembering that night, remembering her body moving against mine as we danced, the pitch in her voice when she asked me to kiss her. “She’s my kryptonite.”

“You’re such a dork.”

“Are they really moving in together?”

Maggie frowns. “Isn’t that what people do when they get married?”

But Hanna said she wasn’t moving forward until after the babies were born, and I hoped that meant… “Does she really love him?”

She picks at the seam of her jeans, and just when I think she’s going to avoid answering the question altogether, she says, “I don’t know Hanna as well as Liz does, so maybe I’m not the one to ask, but she’s going through a really hard time right now. She spent her whole life believing she was undesirable because no one noticed her, and no one noticed her because she hid in the shadows, and she hid in the shadows because she didn’t think anyone would want her.” She lifts her eyes to mine. She’s trying to read me. To decide if I’m worth her interpretation of the truth. To decide if I’m worthy of Hanna.

“What does all of that have to do with Max? With me?”

Maggie shakes her head and gives a sardonic smile. “Men,” she mutters. “Of course you don’t get it.”

“Enlighten me.”

“She doesn’t even know who she is anymore. Her whole perception of herself has been blown to pieces because now two great guys want her. And to answer your question? Yes. She loves him.”

I tear my eyes away from her and grab my guitar because I need something to do with my hands.

“She loves you too. You know that. You can’t tell me you can spend two seconds around her without feeling it.”

“But?”

Maggie shrugs. “The choice isn’t mine.”

I strum a chord on the guitar—the opening chord to the song with the elusive lyrics. In my mind, it’s always been “Hanna’s song,” but I never called it that. The first chord, then the second.

“I never believed she’d choose him,” I say softly. “Maybe I didn’t realize it at the time, but in retrospect, I know I thought I was the easy choice.”

“Why?”

“Because she fits me. Because life was this crazy, chaotic disappointment and then Hanna came along and everything got quiet. Everything slowed down. It’s like I spent my whole life only half filling my lungs because I was too busy running to the next thing. She makes me take a deep breath. She silences the bullshit and washes away my ambivalence.” I drag a hand through my hair. “And I assumed that I did all of that for her too.”

Maggie studies me for a quiet minute. “You’re not so bad, Nate Crane.”

“I’m a fuck-up,” I mutter. “A fuck-up who can’t keep his promise.”

“What promise is that?”

“I promised that, if she chose him, I’d let her go. I promised that I wouldn’t make her second-guess her decision.”

“You think you broke that promise?”

I shake my head, grinning now. “No. But I plan to.”

 

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