Pierce chuckled at his sister's exuberance.
“Can I talk to you for just a minute?” Charles II speared Dane with a look.
“Not now, Dad,” Dane said. In a move of obvious dismissal, he turned his back on the patriarch and escorted Julia over to the long table. “Let's all just sit and enjoy,” he said over his shoulder, “and I'll tell you all about the trip.”
“Whatever you're thinking of saying to him,” Tess whispered hotly to their father, “don't. Please, Dad, don't ruin this moment for them.”
“I have the right to know if she signed a prenup,” Charles II hissed.
“Not now,” Charles III hissed back at the same time that Tess said, “Dad! No!”
“Oh for fuck's sake,” Pierce growled. “How is that any of your business, old man?”
Charles II turned on his youngest with a harsh glare. “Anything regarding Harrison money is my business. And guarding it has become a standard. First it was your faithless mother. Then his tramp of an ex-wife.” He flicked his chin in Charles III's direction.
“Shut your mouth,” Charles III snapped, his eyes flickering to his children and back again. “My kids are sitting ten feet away, and that's their mother you're talking about.”
“So what? She's worthless and they know it,” Charles II went on. “She hasn't seen them in how long? And now, if this marriage doesn't work outâ”
“Shut up,” Pierce bit out, taking a step toward his father. “Just shut up. They're happy. You step on this moment, Dane will never forgive you. And neither will the rest of us.”
“Don't tell me what to do, boy,” the patriarch snarled. They locked gazes, tense hostility radiating from them both. “You think I care what you think of me?
You?
”
“I know you don't,” Pierce growled back. “But you care about Tess and your other sons, so maybe you should think about them for once instead of yourself.”
“Wonderful.” Tess stepped between them. She tried to keep her voice down as she said, “Pierce has been home for all of an hour, and you're already at each other's throats. Stop. Right now. Tonight is for Dane and Julia, and for celebrating. Hold off your animosity for one evening, okay?”
“She's right,” Charles III added. He looked at his father and said sternly, “Dad? Not. Now.” Then he looked at his brother and added, “For once, I agree with you. But stand down, all right?”
Pierce flicked a glance at him, gave a curt nod, and stepped back. The old familiar anger coursed through him, hot and bubbling, but he swallowed it.
“Fine.” Charles II eyed his three grown children circling him, barely reining in his irritation. “Let's all go toast the happy couple and hear about how they cared so much about our family that they denied us the pleasure of seeing them get married.”
“It's not about you or us!” Pierce cried in disgust. “It's his life!”
“I can hear you all,” Dane said dryly from a few feet away, where he and Julia sat at the long glass table. “And so can my wife.” She stared off into the distance, not wanting to make eye contact with the squabbling relatives. “So why don't you just stop and come sit down? I'm not letting anything bring us down tonight. Not even another skirmish in the ongoing Harrison Family Wars.”
Tess went over to Dane and Julia, offering apologies, while Pierce and his father stared each other down.
“Cut the shit, gentlemen,” Charles III murmured, stern and cool as he looked from one to the other from behind his black-rimmed glasses. “For Dane.”
Charles II snorted again and lifted his glass to his lips, looking away as if Pierce were a piece of garbage.
Fuck you, old man,
Pierce thought.
I made a good life for myself, in spite of you.
One he'd created for himself, through dedication, hard work, determination, and natural ability. One he'd created with very little help, financial or emotional. Pierce had spent most of his youth fighting to prove he was worthy. Eventually, he stopped fighting and simply left. But even if he'd left England in a cloud of controversy, what the hell had he been thinking, coming back here?
Pierce shot back the rest of his champagne in one long gulp, put the glass on the table, and looked over at his two nephews and his niece. Charles's kids were all under nine years old, and looked surly and bored. “Any of you like soccer?”
Ava and the older boy, Thomas, both looked up and nodded.
“Find a ball. Let's go kick it around,” Pierce said. “We'll play a little while the grown-ups have their talk.”
“I don't thinkâ” Charles III started to say.
“There's one in the playroom,” said the youngest, five-year-old Myles. He carelessly dropped his iPad mini onto the sofa and jumped up. “I'll go get it!”
Five minutes later, Pierce was out on the lawn, kicking a soccer ball around with the kids. It was the best thing for him to do just then, and he was grateful for it. Family powwows had never been his thing, much less sharing space with his father for more than five minutes.
* * *
Abby grabbed two spoons from the drawer, a few napkins off the counter, and went to join her sister in the living room. Flopping down on the couch beside her, Abby simply said, “Gimme.”
Fiona handed her a pint of chocolate peanut butter ice cream, then took a spoon from her and dug into her own pint of mint chocolate chip. “We're such rock stars, aren't we?”
“Ohhh yeah,” Abby snorted. “Ten o'clock on a Saturday night, and here we are. Party animals, that's us.”
Their parents had gone upstairs to watch TV in their room until they fell asleep, and Dylan had passed out in his bed at nine. “What movie do you want to watch?” Fiona asked. “Did we decide?”
“Need a comedy tonight,” Abby said after another spoonful. “Maybe
The Heat?
Definitely not a romance.”
Fiona frowned at her younger sister. “Something happen?”
“Allison and Jeff got engaged. Another one down.” She told Fiona the few details she'd learned from Facebook earlier that day.
“You need to start dating again,” Fiona announced. “It's time.”
Abby shook her head. “Nah.”
“Yes. Your one-year dating sabbatical is just about up, isn't it?” Fiona pointed with her spoon for emphasis. “It's time for you to get back out there.”
“No interest,” Abby said.
“That's just because you haven't met anyone. And how can you? You're always hiding behind my kid.”
Abby froze as indignation washed over her. “Excuse me?”
“Don't get me wrong,” Fiona said, digging her spoon back into her ice cream. “I'm beyond grateful for everything you do to help me with Dylan. But . . .” She shoveled a spoonful of mint chocolate chip into her mouth.
“Say it,” Abby ground out, glaring. “But what?”
“But . . .” Fiona reached for a lock of her long, blond hair and twirled it around her finger. “I worry that you're hiding here. Using watching Dylan as an excuse not to go out anymore.”
“You've got some nerve.” Abby slammed her pint of ice cream down on the coffee table. “I moved back here, for you and for him. I've been trying to help you, Mom, and Dadâ”
“I know!” Fiona said quickly. “I know, Abs! Didn't you hear me? I'm so grateful, so appreciative. But Abby . . .” The lock of hair she twirled would be knotted soon. “I know Ewan hurt you, but not all men are lying sacks of shit. Honey, you're twenty-eight. You should be out, meeting new guys.”
“Oh, like you are?” Abby countered.
“Don't turn this around on me,” Fiona said. “I
was
married to a lying sack, and he's loooong gone. I'd love to meet someone new, someone decent. I haven't been laid in how long?” She grinned wryly, making Abby roll her eyes. “But I work all the time. And I do that so that I can move out of here one day and not make Mom and Dad feel like they have to take care of Dyllie and me forever. I'm not single and free like you are. It's very different: I have a kid. I'm a package deal now. You . . . you have freedom to do whatever you want.”
“No I don't,” Abby groused, ignoring the twist of sympathy in her heart for her sister. “You all need my help. That's why I moved back home.”
“That, and because Ewan broke your heart and sent you reeling. You've been hiding while you heal. That's normal.” Fiona shrugged and took another spoonful. “You were right to not want to date for a year, to get your head back together. I agreed with you a hundred percent. But that year's just about over, and it's time for you toâ”
“I'm putting my ice cream away, then starting the movie,” Abby huffed, her face heating as she stood. She stomped away into the kitchen, tossing her spoon into the sink with a loud clang before closing the pint and shoving it into the freezer. Her heart pounded and she took a few deep breaths. Crossing her arms, she stared out the kitchen window. The darkness was soothing as she searched for a star.
Was she over Ewan? Yes. She'd fallen out of love with him soon after she'd realized what a conniving, manipulative liar he was. But was she over the anger, the betrayal? Not completely. Maybe she never would totally get over that, just past it. And the thought of opening herself up to someone new, a chance for getting hurt again, didn't appeal to her whatsoever.
Sighing, she leaned against the counter. She'd buy cats. She'd become a cat lady. If she was a crazy cat lady, people wouldn't urge her to get back out there and start dating, they'd leave her alone. Her shoulders slumped. It had been almost a year since she'd found out the truth about Ewan. Her insides were finally numb instead of throbbing with heartache all the time, and she was glad for that. But she just wanted to be left alone. After a few months, when the initial heartache had started to subside, she'd discovered how to like being alone without being lonely. That's how she'd known she'd truly started to heal.
Besides, her track record with guys was pitiful.
She looked out to the two stars she could find in the night sky and sighed again. Okay, she didn't want to be alone forever, she could admit that. But for now, she was fine with it. She felt solid again. That was normal, right? What was with Fiona and her sudden insistence that she date again?
Fiona. Ah boy. She'd snarled at her older sister. That wasn't fair. It wasn't Fi's fault that she was turning into an uptight, iron-cast shell of who she once was. Abby was just mad that Fi had called her on it.
She took a few more deep breaths, and then went back into the living room. Fiona hadn't moved. Abby sat down stiffly and reached for the remote.
“I'm sorry I pissed you off,” Fiona said. “But I'm not sorry for what I said. Because I love you. I don't want you to be alone forever, like I might be. One of us should find a good man and have a happy ending.”
Abby turned to her with wide eyes. “First of all, we don't need men to have a happy ending. We're smart, strong, capable women.”
“I know.” Fiona snorted and rolled her eyes. “You're getting so jaded, Abs.”
“
I
am? Did you hear yourself just now? You're not going to be alone forever!”
“I might be,” Fiona said flatly. “Look. I'm thirty-two, a single mom to a young boy with ADHD. I work all the time. We live with my parents because my dirtbag ex-husband took off and left us with nothing. . . .” She shrugged. “Yes, I'm smart, strong, and capable. But I'm not exactly a catch.”
“That's bullshit!” Abby cried. “You're all those things I said, not to mention hardworking, a great mom to a great kid, and drop-dead gorgeous. You're a
total
catch.”
Fiona smiled softly. “Thanks for that. But it's hard to date once you have a kid. It's just the truth. Guys my age . . . they can still find younger women, who can give them their own kids. Or at least, women who don't have the baggage I have.”
“I hate what I'm hearing,” Abby grumbled, fiddling with the remote control. “I really do, Fi.”
“Know what I hate? That you're free to do what you want, meet someone without strings, and you refuse to try.” Fiona pinned her sister with a sharp stare. “It's a Saturday night, and you should be out with your friends.”
“Shut up. I like hanging out here with you.” Abby's anger had evaporated, leaving its usual tenderness for her big sister in its place. Even though they were four years apart, they'd always been close. They were more than sisters, they were best friends. They could finish each other's sentences, had the same sense of humor, similar tastes in music and moviesâthey genuinely enjoyed each other's company. “Actually, I'm closer with you now than Allison, or Becca, or any of my girlfriends.”
“That's sweet. And I love you, too. But I'll tell you what.” Fiona put what was left of her ice cream on the table and turned to face her sister. “Next Saturday, instead of ice cream and a movie here on the couch, we're going out after I get home from work. To a bar, or a club. Like the fabulous young single women we are. We're going to have drinks, maybe go dancing, and be
out.
We need it. We need to have fun.” Her eyes narrowed. “We're doing that. Got me?”
“Yes, ma'am,” Abby grumbled.
Fiona snorted out a laugh. “Don't get overly excited or anything.”
“Starting the movie now.”
“I'm holding you to this,” Fiona warned. “We're going out next weekend.”
“Starting the movie now,” Abby singsonged, aiming the remote at the TV to bring up Netflix. The last thing in the world she wanted to do was go out clubbing. That wasn't her thing. And as for finding someone new? No thanks.