Authors: Aliyah Burke
over a whisper. “I’d take it back in a second.”
“What was? Letting me go full term?” Her tone was
cutting.
“No, letting you go. Never about your birth.”
Tempest shrugged with as much nonchalance as she
could muster. “Well, you can’t take it back.” She was not going
to weaken before him. This was
her
home.
“You have no idea how sorry that makes me.”
“You’re right. I don’t. What do you want? Money?
What?”
He held up a wrinkled hand and waved it before him.
“No, nothing like that. Please, I wanted to apologize. Try to
mend fences. Make amends for my stupidity.”
She crossed her arms over her chest and raised her
brows. “And you think by showing up here…unannounced…is
going to further your cause?”
“Didn’t think you’d agree to meet if I called first.”
Tempest sank heavily into her overstuffed recliner. “I
wouldn’t have. But why should I? You tossed me away like
garbage when you were supposed to protect me.”
He couldn’t hold her gaze. As if ashamed, he glanced
down and began wringing his hands together.
Pushing up, Tempest asked, “Can I get you something
to drink?” She wasn’t sure why the offer slipped from her
mouth, but it was out now.
“That would be lovely. Coffee, if you have it.”
“Sure, no prob.” Tempest got up and set two cups, a
plate of cookies, cream and sugar, and the coffee pot on a tray.
Once back in the living room, she set it on the table between
them. She poured him a cup and placed it before him. “Here.”
“Thank you.”
His hands trembled as he reached for the steaming mug
and added two cubes of sugar. She noticed the pallor of his
skin.
“Are you okay?”
He took a sip of the drink and nodded. “I’m fine. Just
getting old. That’s all.”
She doubted that but let it go. What business was it of
hers anyway? “So say what you need to say.”
“There’s so much. So much I want to say. I know he
warned us to leave you alone, but I can’t, not anymore. I have
to tell you.”
She believed she knew who he meant. Maverick. But
still, Tempest asked, “Who?”
“Mr.
Lonetree
.”
Warmth filled her. He was doing his best to protect her,
even when he wasn’t near. “Well then, get to saying it.”
“I wish there was a way I could make you understand.”
She ground her back teeth. “That makes two of us. I
would love to understand how you can toss your youngest
child off to the side.”
He licked thin lips. “I didn’t want to. Lord, help me, I
didn’t, but I honestly believed it was the safest thing I could do
for you.”
Tempest snorted.
Right, and monkeys fly
outta
my ass!
“I didn’t think you’d believe that, but I swear by
everything I am, that’s the God’s honest truth.”
“Why
should
I believe you?”
He looked up at her and in that moment, Tempest saw
not the name who’d abandoned her, but an old, worn down
man who seemed desperate to get her to understand. His heart
was in his eyes, his soul bared.
She swallowed. “Why don’t you just finish telling me,”
she suggested, her tone much softer. Tempest sat there and
listened as Mitchell Whitehall did his best to explain his
position. She remained silent and her coffee grew cold, sitting
untouched beside her.
“Carol’s a narcissist. She had plans,” he paused and
poured more coffee, “grand plans and grander delusions of
how you could make her life better. All of that was threatened
when you told us you were pregnant. And with your news, all
of her dreams vanished. In her mind the only way she could
save face was to eliminate the problem. That meant getting rid
of you and pretending you never even existed. You simply had
to vanish. So, when I knew all her anger and rage would be on
you, I did what I thought would save you. Carol has always
been unstable, but I knew she was really losing her grip on
reality.”
Plans. Everyone had plans and none of them had
included her. Not in the least.
Tempest licked her lips and kept her pain inside. She
would hear him out. She wasn’t a scared little girl anymore.
And the man before her didn’t seem as imposing anymore.
“So I’d hoped Bertha would provide you with a safe
home, even though we’d lost touch since I married Carol. I can
only hope you had a kind stay with her.”
“She was my mother,” Tempest insisted. “
We
were a
family.”
Mitchell worried his lower lip. “Bertha never spoke to
me again.”
“I see.” Tempest had done her best to forget about the
life she had left behind in South Dakota.
“I wish things could have been different.”
“Don’t we all,” she said absently, her mind drifting to
thoughts of the handsome Maverick.
“Were you…happy?” he asked quietly.
“Yes. We had a rough start; but like I said, we became a
family. Her adopting me only furthered our bond.”
“What about…about my
gra
…your son?”
“Dakota?” Her father nodded as he ate another
chocolate chip cookie. She continued. “He should be home
soon. You can wait and ask him if you wish.”
Eyes filled with hope. “You’d let me meet him?”
An eyebrow rose. “If James warned you away, then I’m
sure you’ve seen him.”
“That man is very protective of you. He always was.”
That intrigued her. “What do you mean?”
“Young
Lonetree
always stood up for you. Beat up
Mitchell Jr. once.”
This was news. “I didn’t know.”
“Carol hated him from the get go. Never got along with
his parents, especially Dawn.” A short chuckle burst from him.
“I don’t know why they despise each other. Just always have.”
The door opened and Dakota walked in. “Hi, Mom,” he
hollered before falling silent and frowning at the man in the
room. “You! What are you doing here?” Dakota bit out.
“It’s okay,
Dak
,” Tempest said.
Her son stepped toward her, searching her face.
Tempest sent him an encouraging nod.
Dropping his bag on the floor, Dakota kissed her cheek
and looked at the third party. “What are you doing here?”
Dakota asked again, with only slightly less animosity in his
voice this time.
“I wanted to see my daughter. And my grandson.”
Tempest watched her son cross strong arms over his
chest.
“Didn’t you give up that right when Bertha adopted
her?”
He is so much like his father.
Tempest saw her son
protecting her with the same fierceness she’d seen in Maverick.
“Yes,” Mitchell said. “I made the biggest mistake of my
life when I listened to Carol. I just want a chance to get to know
you.”
Dakota glanced at her again. Tempest shrugged. She
wasn’t going to force anything on him. It was his decision.
Twenty-Five
The home phone rang.
“Excuse me,” Tempest said as she went to the kitchen to
answer. Leaning against a counter, she watched her son sit
warily in the chair she’d just vacated.
“Hello?”
“Good evening,
mitawin
.” Maverick’s voice wound
around her like a warm velvet blanket.
“James,” she replied, her belly flip-flopping at hearing
his tone.
“I miss you.”
She smiled. “Can I ask you something?”
“Of course,” he purred. “After you tell me you miss
me.”
“Why would I say that?”
Even if it
is
the truth…
He sighed. “Because I need to hear it.”
The pain in his voice was palpable. “I miss you, James.”
“
Pilámaya
ye,
mitawin
. Thank you for telling me.”
“It didn’t kill me,” she said lightly, determined not to
ask him what he insisted on calling her.
He chuckled. “What’s your question?”
“Did you tell the Whitehall’s to leave me alone?”
“Are they harassing you?” There was no longer any
warmth in his timbre.
Suppressing a shiver, Tempest peeked into the living
room where the tension was still just as thick. “Mitchell
showed up at my door tonight. He’s here now, talking with
Dakota.”
“Are you okay, baby?” he asked with intense concern.
“Surprisingly, yes. I’m doing okay. I was shocked, but
he doesn’t seem so scary anymore. Somewhere along the way,
he turned into a sick and frail old man.”
“I
told
them to leave you alone,” he grumbled in a deep
tone. “I
warned
them.”
She heard him take a drag of his cigarette. “You need to
stop smoking,” she said instinctively. “And I don’t need you to
protect me, James. No matter how sweet the gesture may be.”
“It’s my job to protect you,” he determined.
She changed the direction of the conversation. “Was
there a specific reason why you called?”
“I wanted to hear your voice. I want you beside me; but
since I can’t have that yet, hearing your voice is the next best
thing.” He hesitated a brief moment. “Unless you have a
webcam you’d like to tell me about.”
She laughed outright at that. “The only computer I have
is at work; and even if I did have one, I don’t think I’d spend
time in front of it for you.”
“Then come here to me so I can see you. Hold you.
Worship your body the way I long to every second of every
day.”
Oh damn, he was good. Her body thrummed with
passion. The lower portion grew moist at his words. “What do
you need?”
“You,
mitawin
. I need you, Tempest.”
Tears threatened as his words reached her. How could
this one man make her feel so important?
She cleared her throat. “I have to go, James. I think I
should be with
Dak
right now.”
He muttered something in Lakota. “Okay. Have a
wonderful night at work, baby. Stay safe.”
“Goodnight, James,” she whispered before hanging up
the phone.
Unsure of the emotions coursing through her, Tempest
got another mug for Dakota and went back to the living room.
Maverick swore a blue streak. It was after eleven at
night and he was so full of pent up energy it was unbelievable.
He was angry and longed to be with Tempest. Pure
astonishment at Mitchell Whitehall’s actions, despite his blatant
warning, coursed through him.
Every cell in his body screamed for him to protect and
defend Tempest. At her side was where he belonged, keeping