Chapter Twelve
FOUR hours later Seb sat across from his mother. Customers filled every table but the exclusive restaurant offered privacy as well. He’d reserved a small booth and ensured his mother had her back to the others—in case there was a meltdown. She’d be able to mop up with some dignity and not have a restaurant full of people wonder why she was bawling. He supposed he should have met her privately, but he needed the public around to prevent his own meltdown.
He took in a breath, might as well get it over. ‘I saw Dad yesterday.’
‘Did you?’ She sat back in her chair and looked hard at the carafe of water in front of her. ‘Janine’s pregnant, isn’t she?’
Sebastian lowered his glass. ‘How did you know?’
‘I guessed as much. Obvious from the speed of that wedding. And she didn’t drink. Nor did Eric, which is very unusual.’ She tilted her head to the side and gave him a twisted, tender smile. ‘He sent you to tell me, didn’t he?’
Seb nodded.
‘Poor Seb. Always the go between. Always the jam in the middle.’
‘The fraying rope in the tug of war, you mean.’ He bit his lip. It wasn’t his job to make it worse for her. ‘He didn’t want you to be upset.’
She ignored the latter comment. ‘Not fraying, Seb. You’re very strong.’
Hardly. He was a coward. He’d accused Ana of avoiding the important things when it was he who did that all the time.
‘Well.’ Silvery sadness shone briefly in his mother’s eyes. ‘That’s wonderful news for them.’
‘Bit weird, isn’t it?’ Seb said drily. ‘I’m old enough to be the baby’s father.’
‘And I could be its grandmother.’
Good one, Seb. Still not helping.
‘It was my fault, you know.’ His mother suddenly looked intense, silver tears brimmed, threatening to spill. ‘I cheated on him.’
‘What? On Dad?’
‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I cheated. I started with Miles long before I left your father.’
Miles had been husband number two.
‘Why?’
‘I was lonely. You know I wanted more children. Eric refused to consider other options—no adoption or fostering even. As far as he was concerned it would happen naturally. And I guess we married too young. Life wasn’t fun any more. I felt trapped, resentful. I turned to Miles.’ She looked closely at Seb. ‘That was why I broke up with your father. It was nothing to do with you.’
Seb ignored the emotion in her last comment. He so didn’t want to go there. ‘Did you sleep with Miles because you wanted to get pregnant?’
‘No.’ She half laughed but it was a sad sound. ‘He’d had a vasectomy so I knew it was impossible. It was liberating, to be honest.’
That hit Seb like an unexpected bucket of icecold water over the head. Miles had had a vasectomy? She’d left his father for a man she knew couldn’t give her the other children she so desperately craved? Confusion fogged everything. ‘But you wanted more children.’
‘I’d have adopted. But like Eric, Miles didn’t want to. He already had children and he didn’t want any more.’
Well, Seb had known that—Miles hadn’t wanted anyone else’s kid, for sure, certainly not him. And he’d been happy for his ex to have custody of the ones he had fathered. But hadn’t he wanted Lily to have what she longed for?
Seb had always thought it was the kid thing that had busted his folks up—but it seemed it had been a whole lot more complicated than that. So what had happened with Miles? ‘Is that why you broke up with him?’
‘No. He cheated on me.’ Lily shrugged. ‘Served me right, I guess.’
She’d moved on to another man, another marriage. Started trying again. But still no more kids came. Seb had been into his teens then; he remembered her heartbreak. And he’d hated not being able to make it better.
‘Could you do it, Sebastian? Could you raise another man’s son?’
‘Of course,’ Seb answered bluntly. ‘If he were the son of the woman I loved then I’d love him, too. And if he was some poor kid who had no parents and needed some, then sure, I’d step up.’
The words went easily from him but he registered their importance only as he uttered them. Of course he would. For the right woman he’d take on a tribe if she asked him to. If Ana asked.
The tightness in his chest went vice-like. God, why hadn’t he thought of that before? Did he have the courage to ask it of her? To take him on for good?
Because he could promise her that no matter what the fates served, he’d somehow find a way to build the family he knew she craved. And he craved it too, didn’t he—that love, that sharing, that security that neither of them had had?
And he could offer that too. For he would never leave her—not until death made him.
Could she say yes to that? Would that be enough?
Seb reached across the table and put his hand on his mother’s wrist. ‘Are you OK?’
‘Sure.’ She smiled, a bit tremulous, but genuine. ‘I’ve done a lot of work, Seb—a lot of counselling. I know how hard it must have been for you. How much I burdened you. And I’m sorry for that.’ She placed her hand over his and squeezed. ‘But look at the man you’ve become. What mother could want more when she has a son like you?’
Ana eventually dragged herself from the heaven that was Seb’s bed. She’d spent hours lazily dozing, revelling in the warmth and the sheer blissful relaxation. Of all the nights they’d lain together that had been the most profound—so utterly intense. The connection between them had been more than intimate, more than physical. There was a bond there—an invisible, unbreakable bond. She hadn’t dreamt it, and finally felt as if she could believe it.
Nervous, she giggled at her thoughts, trying to make herself take it one day at a time and not get too fanciful. But she felt as if she’d been healed within. Her doubts from yesterday felt as distant as Pluto. She really believed it now—he cared. He thought she was beautiful. He’d told her. And he couldn’t hold her, caress her, touch her like that if he didn’t have real feelings for her. So maybe, just maybe, they might work things out.
She pulled on a robe and floated down to the study—motivated to get some real stuff done on the business. Feeling more positive and refreshed and enthused and simply more alive than she ever had.
He’d obviously been in there before going to work. The filing cabinet was open and a few files lay scattered over his desk. She pulled them together so she could access the computer keyboard, but stopped as she glanced at the writing on the cover of one. It was his writing. But it was her own name in the ink.
Curiosity was an instinct impossible to ignore.
She knew it would be bad before she lifted the flap. But that knowledge didn’t stop her. A kind of fatalistic certainty made her do it. Better to know. But even so the shock was something else.
She stared at the signature. The date. So vivid against the white paper. And she tried to comprehend its meaning.
Failed.
Blind fury roared through her system.
He’d signed them. He’d screwed her senseless for hours last night, then gone straight to his study and signed the divorce papers.
She couldn’t believe it. Couldn’t believe even he could go from such tender togetherness to such coldhearted severance. What had last night been about for him—a final farewell?
She roused her rage more, anything to cover the pain searing inside. She had actually started to think…to hope…dared to believe he might one day use the ‘L’ word.
Well, she would use it—LOSER.
That was what she was. A colossal fool who’d stayed far too long hanging onto the roller coaster that was Sebastian.
‘Ana.’
She lifted her head and sick bile rose in her throat. He was in the doorway.
‘You once warned me not to come near you,’ she said in a low voice. ‘Well, I’m warning you now, Seb. Don’t come near me.’
But he didn’t listen
. He just did as he wanted, didn’t he? As he always did. Her hands shook. She curled them into fists, crushing the paper she still held as he stepped nearer and nearer.
‘Ana.’
She flew at him, throwing the pages ahead of her, wanting the edges to cut him. To draw blood. Never having struck out at anyone in her life, she was unable to stop the violence in her now. Her fingers spread, the tips curling to claws, and she swiped through the air—wanting to slap or scratch or mar. Anything to bring vengeance. Desperate to hurt him.
As he had hurt her.
But he ducked and grappled. His hands wide, his body big—too fast, too strong. He caught her wild, flailing arms, his hands tightly squeezing her wrists as he yanked them down and clamped them to her sides.
But it didn’t stop her.
‘You signed them. You bastard,’ she screamed in his face, her body banging against his. ‘You signed them.’
‘Yes.’
She breathed in fire. ‘Today.’
‘Yes.’
‘You know what you are?’ She kicked. ‘You know what you are, Sebastian?’
‘Tell me,’ he asked through clenched teeth, his hands gripping her tighter.
‘Heartless. Deformed. An emotional mutant. Not even human.’ She spat. ‘I don’t care how much of a mess your parents made of your life, it doesn’t give you the excuse to treat people like this. To use them so callously.’ She couldn’t believe him. ‘How can you live with yourself? How can you go from being so tender with me, to tearing me apart?’
‘Is that what I’m doing, Ana?’ His face was white with anger.
‘You know you are.’ She twisted against him, trying to break free.
‘No, I don’t.’
‘Exactly my point,’ she snarled. ‘You have no idea how I feel—how anyone else feels. Or what they long for. You’re so bitter, Seb. And you’ll never be happy. You’ll just live your life with your little flings and never know real satisfaction. Real love.’
‘Well, aren’t you as bad, Ana? Aren’t you as useless as I am? You can’t handle love.’ He thrust her away from him. ‘You can’t believe that anyone could actually love you.’
It was like a punch in the gut. And she was knocked out with the one hit. She staggered back. Her tears falling like diamonds cutting her eyes.
‘Don’t you say that to me. Don’t you dare say that.’
‘Why not? It’s the truth.’
And maybe it was. ‘Well, who is it who loves me, Seb? You?’
‘Yes!’
She laughed—a high-pitched, almost hysterical sound that cracked halfway. ‘Yeah, you love me so much, you’re divorcing me.’
‘That’s right.’
She shook her head. ‘Oh, that’s really the action of a man in love.’ She cursed him, angrily wiping the rivers from her face.
He stood a little distance away, just watching her.
Finally she quietened, turned her face away. He was blocking the door; she couldn’t escape this, the final blow to her heart.
And then he spoke. Quietly, calmly, cruelly. ‘That day in Gibraltar I stood in front of that official and I lied. I said I loved you. I said I’d care for you. That I’d be your husband for ever. But I didn’t mean a word of it.’
‘I’m well aware of that,’ she said tonelessly.
‘So we both know that that piece of paper is rubbish, then, don’t we? Not worth a thing.’
She closed her eyes, but couldn’t stop another tear from falling.
‘Am I right, Ana?’
Why was he tormenting her like this?
Another tear fell as she whispered, ‘Yes.’
‘Ana, look at me.’
She choked. ‘This again, Seb?’
‘Please, Ana. Look at me.’
So she did. And even through her own pain, she saw his—his rough breathing, his wide eyes, the terrible tension in his face.
‘Ana, I know I have my failings. But understand this. I do love you. And you deserve far more than a quick, crappy, insincere wedding ceremony.’ He breathed in deep, seeming to steady himself. ‘After we’re divorced, I want us to marry. I want to do it properly—for us both to mean it. And I want you to have it all. The big rock, the dress, the first dance, the bloody cake and the flowers and frills. Everything you’ve dreamed of. Everything I short-changed you on last time.’
She stared, utterly unable to believe her ears.
‘Did you hear me, Ana? I want us to marry again. Properly.’
‘But I don’t want that,’ she said, shocked. ‘I don’t want the bridal array.’
‘Oh, be honest with me, Ana,’ he shouted, finally losing it. ‘I know you want that. I saw it in your face. You glowed at Dad’s wedding. You loved it!’
She was breathing fast, suddenly sensing that what she wanted most of all might actually be within her grasp. ‘What I loved was the way you were looking at me. It wasn’t the wedding—sure that was sweet, but that wasn’t what made my day. That was you. You couldn’t stop touching me, you wanted to be near me. You made me feel beautiful.’
She looked into his eyes now, saw the sheen in them.
‘You are beautiful,’ he said softly. ‘I love you, Ana. And I want to marry you.’
‘No, you be honest, Seb.’ Her voice broke. ‘You don’t want to be married. You don’t believe in it. I saw how stressed your dad’s wedding made you. The minute you found out about it on Mnemba you shut down.’
He stepped closer, the faintest of smiles bursting through his pallor. ‘It wasn’t the wedding that bothered me. It was the timing of it. It meant we had to leave the island and I wasn’t ready to end things with you. Then that morning on Phil’s sofa you were right, I didn’t want to go. But that was because I wanted to stay with you. To be with you. But I thought you were happy with it being over. Or, heaven forbid, you were content with being friends with me, your exlover. So, yeah, I was angry.’ He lifted a hand. ‘And then I saw you checking me out when I went to iron my shirt. And I knew I was back in with a chance.’
The faintest of smiles stretched her lips then. And he saw. Took that first step towards her.
‘What do I have to do, Ana? What is it going to take for you to believe that I love you?’
She couldn’t speak, couldn’t move, as for the second time that day he walked nearer and nearer.
‘You listen to me, Ana. And you learn to believe what I say. I love you. You deserve to be loved. You deserve everything. And we’re going to do it. We’re going to be everything and have everything together. Piece of paper or not, I am never leaving you. Do you understand?’
‘Then…’ She tried to speak but she stumbled over the words. ‘Then maybe…’ She started to sob. ‘Let’s not tear up that paper. Let’s just keep it.’
His arms went tight around her. ‘OK. OK. Oh, thank God.’
Her face was jammed hard into his chest, but she didn’t care. She could feel him shaking. Feel the kisses he was planting on her hair as he clutched her even closer.
‘I’m sorry,’ he muttered. ‘I’m so sorry.’
‘You don’t need to divorce me to make it right, Seb. Just stay with me. Please stay with me. I love you.’
He loosened his arms enough for her to lift her face to his. They kissed. Hard yet soft, full of passion, pressure and need. Until he broke away with a groan.
She gazed at him. Despair still shadowed his eyes. Her heart wrenched.
‘Am I enough for you, Ana? Am I always going to be enough for you?’
‘What do you mean?’ He was everything to her.
‘You wanted our baby, didn’t you?’
‘Yes, but—’
‘I’ve never wanted kids, Ana. Made that decision years ago and never thought about it again until the day you told me you’d lost ours. For years I watched my mother suffer. She wanted more children but it didn’t happen. Secondary infertility—no reason they could give, no remedy. It tore marriage after marriage apart. I don’t want that to happen to us.’
‘Seb, the person I want is you.’
He shook his head. ‘But will I be enough, Ana? Won’t there come a time when you want a family? You wanted our baby—losing it nearly destroyed you. So what if it doesn’t happen for us?’
She pushed him away just a fraction. ‘I’ve never thought of myself having a family either. It isn’t something I’ve had the best experience with—’
‘I know,’ he interrupted. ‘But isn’t there a part of you that wants to create the kind of family you missed out on?’
‘OK,’ she whispered, scared he read her so well. ‘But that doesn’t have to be with my own children.’ She looked into his eyes. ‘You and I both know there are enough kids out there needing some kind of loving home. We could adopt or foster. I want to do something like that anyway. I want to make some kid’s life better—give him or her what I missed out on.’
‘Are you sure?’
‘Of course.’ Her heart burst with that need.
‘Then that’s what we’ll do.’ He cupped her face with his hands. ‘I long to see you pregnant with my child, and I hope it happens. But no matter what, we have each other and we will make our own kind of family. Deal?’
‘Deal.’
They kissed again, colliding with such force and speed they had to break apart, coming together closer, more gently, as laughter and tears mixed.
‘Now,’ he breathed when he finally lifted his head. ‘Are you sure about not wanting the rock?’
She shook her head, very slowly, just the tiniest bit. Because he was reaching into his pocket and she knew there was such a thing as paradise on earth.
‘I never did get you an engagement ring. Better late than never, though, don’t you think?’
When he opened the box her smile faded in shock.
‘Not your shiny bling, but the real thing.’ He lifted it out and it caught the last of the day’s light.
‘It’s beautiful.’ She stared at it.
‘I found it this afternoon. Looked at hundreds of rings. But as soon as I saw it I knew. It’s not a sapphire, it’s a blue diamond. So it’s not what it seems, like you. It’s rare, like you. Precious, like you. Vivid, like you. And it matches your eyes. Do you like platinum? We could get it reset if you don’t. And we can get it resized if it doesn’t fit.’
To Love, Honour and Disobey Page 14