If only it were that easy.
“Your mom and I are doing the best we can right now, sweetheart. But no matter what, we love you more than anything. You know that, don’t you?”
Intense blue eyes met mine in the mirror, honest and pure. “I always know that, Daddy. It just makes me sad that you can’t stay.”
Relief assuaged some of the guilt that wouldn’t let go, and a wistful smile pulled at my mouth. “You’re an amazing child, Little Elizabeth.”
Lizzie blushed the brightest red and fought a grin. Dimples dented her cheeks.
Affection pushed at my ribs.
I rarely called her that, but sometimes, I just couldn’t help myself.
She bore little physical resemblance to her mother, but I glimpsed her in so many things, the child a striking reminder of a young Elizabeth.
Sweet and kind.
Timid and shy and incredibly confident in the exact same moment.
Wise, but continuously led by her emotions.
Good.
That, and she shared Elizabeth’s grandmother’s name.
“I like that name, Daddy,” she mumbled through her shyness, that sweet little girl back again.
“I do, too, princess,” I whispered to her, emotion cresting my mouth. I loved her so much, so much it hurt.
She smiled a little. A silent conversation passed between us, something that spoke of a deep understanding. On some level, my little girl recognized what I was going through and the way I truly felt. She knew I would go home to them if I could, that if I could break down Elizabeth’s walls, I would.
I made a left-hand turn and merged right to wind into the circular drop-off in front of Lizzie’s school.
“Look!” Lizzie suddenly squealed.
I craned my head to try to take in what had caused such a reaction in Lizzie, the child overflowing with excitement. As I came to a full stop at the curb, she quickly unbuckled and shot forward in her seat. She pointed out to the sidewalk.
“What is it?” I asked, my eyes scanning the sea of children jumping from backseats of cars, slinging backpacks onto their shoulders, yelling and laughing as they began their day.
“Daddy, look it…right there!” She jabbed her finger in emphasis, and my sight finally settled on the source of the furor that surged through Lizzie.
A wistful smile emerged on my face.
Kelsey Glenn.
She stood on the sidewalk with her father, Logan. He knelt on a knee in front of her, helping her secure her backpack onto her shoulders. The little girl grinned as her dad lightly nudged her chin with the hook of his finger.
I’d met her a handful of times. Over the summer, the two girls had become close friends. I thought it was cute that Lizzie finally had a playmate that she gushed about almost every time I saw her, the way Lizzie would worry if Kelsey would like something or not, going on about Kelsey’s favorite food or favorite color or favorite show.
There was nothing that gave me mixed feelings like watching Lizzie grow up, to see her excited to have friends, to talk on the phone and giggle like a teenager. She was only six, but the last year had passed in what seemed a blink, a blip of time that now flickered and held as memories in my consciousness. I knew that as the years passed, they would only quicken. Lizzie would be grown before I could make sense of it.
It made me proud and sad, ushering in a fearful expectancy of what the future would bring.
Kelsey spent her time living between her parents’ houses, carted between the two on whichever day belonged to her mother or father. The two girls had been in the same kindergarten class. As the school year had neared its ending, right before everything had fallen apart, Elizabeth had found out her father lived just two streets over from us, and Lizzie and Kelsey had clung to each other over the difficult months that had ensued.
I guess I’d never thought it possible that Kelsey and Lizzie would end up having so much in common.
Lizzie couldn’t stop talking about her.
“What’s her name again…Kelly…Katie…Karen?” I teased.
“Daddy…” Lizzie drew out in a frustrated groan. “It’s Kelsey. And she’s my very best friend. Didn’t you know that? She even gave me a necklace that says so.”
I grinned as I peeked at my daughter in the rearview mirror. She played with the little pendant necklace she proudly wore around her neck. She lifted it a little higher when she caught my eye.
“See!” she prodded.
“Well, it looks like it’s official then.”
“Yep.” She giggled a little.
The sound filled the car, filled my heart. It felt so good to hear her laugh. For so long, it’d been missing. And I knew even if Elizabeth and I never healed from this, our daughter would.
“Well, we better get you out of here so you can catch up with her.”
I came around to the rear passenger side and opened the door. Lizzie slid out onto the safety of the walkway and grabbed her backpack from the seat. She slammed the door shut behind her.
Dropping to a knee, I helped her slide her backpack straps up her arms, then pulled her hair free from underneath it.
Softly I smiled at her, my attention locked on the sweetness in her vibrant blue eyes.
“You have a great day today, okay? I’m going to be thinking about you all day and all night until I see you again tomorrow morning. Then you’re going to come and spend tomorrow night with me. Does that sound like a good plan?”
She smiled a little. “Yeah, Daddy, I like that idea.”
“Lizzie!” The peal of a high-pitched voice reverberated across the lot. “Lizzie, over here!”
We both jerked to see Kelsey running our direction, the biggest grin on her face. The little girl smiled up at me as she approached. “Hi, Mr. Davison. Is it okay if Lizzie walks with me to class?”
“That’s fine by me.”
Lizzie beamed as she squinted up at me, every trace of her earlier melancholy erased. “Thank you, Daddy! I’ll see you tomorrow.”
I dropped a quick kiss to her forehead. “Bye, sweetheart. You be good. I’ll call you tonight.”
“Okay!” she said as the two turned. Giggles rolled from them both as they shot off in the direction of the school gates.
Logan casually walked up, wearing a pair of cargo shorts and a tee-shirt. He shoved his hands in his pockets. “Morning.”
“Morning,” I returned absently, my attention on the two little girls skipping up the sidewalk.
“They sure are cute together, aren’t they?” he mused.
“Yeah.” They really were.
“Kelsey can’t stop talking about Lizzie,” he continued. “She asks if Lizzie can come over and play just about every time she’s at my house.”
“Yeah?” I said, the word not really a question, but a filler to take up the time that passed until my daughter disappeared into the mass of students flooding into the school hall.
“Elizabeth looked a lot better last week when I picked Kelsey up over there. I was glad to see a little color in her face.”
A deep frown burrowed in my brow as I cast a suspicious glance his way.
He was looking forward, watching the girls. His body was relaxed, chunks of his light blond hair stirred up by the short gusts of wind. But he was working his jaw. Nervous. Agitated.
Awareness prickled along my senses like a solitary string that pulled at my consciousness. A warning flare.
This asshole was digging. Waiting. Wanting.
The anger that had smoldered for all those months boiled, rose up in a swollen rage.
Did he think for one fucking second I’d let him have her? That I’d stand aside and watch the woman I’d loved for all my life fully slip from my grasp?
Yeah. Maybe I’d lost her. But that didn’t mean I was letting her go.
He looked over at me. Flinty green eyes narrowed as they took in my expression. He lifted his chin.
“I’ll see you around.” Then he turned and headed back toward his ca
r. He pitched a fleeting glance at me from over his shoulder before he climbed into his car.
The sharpest shot of possessiveness rattled me straight to the core, deep enough to cut into the compulsory resignation that had spurred me to pack my things and walk out of Elizabeth’s house.
He pulled from the curb and out into the swarm of merging and exiting cars. He caught the severity of my gaze as I followed his departure. There wasn’t a god-damned thing I could do to stop myself from staring him down.
Because it slammed me—the realization that just because Elizabeth couldn’t stomach the sight of me didn’t mean she might not one day want someone else.
My hands curled into the tightest fists, and I buried them in the pockets of my slacks, struggling to hang onto my last ounce of sanity because I knew I was about five seconds from losing my fucking mind.
I just wasn’t rational when it came to her.
She was mine.
She’d always been.
And I was going to make sure she always was.
Chapter Four
Christian
Mid-January, Eight Months Earlier
Distorted, late afternoon light diffused through the small, glazed window, tossing muted beams of sunlight across Elizabeth’s alcove bathroom. They struck the floor in slanted rays and lit up the dense motes that floated, suspended in the air. The walls felt as if they were closing in, and it was quiet. So damned quiet.
I paced the floor. My footsteps echoed back my impatience. What else was I supposed to do?
These had to be the longest three minutes of my life.
I raked two restless hands though my hair. My fingers dug into my skin and scraped along my scalp. Gripping the back of my neck, I turned my face to the ceiling and exhaled, hoping to release some of the pent-up pressure I couldn’t seem to expel from my body.
God, I couldn’t take this.
“Would you stop? You’re making me nervous.” Elizabeth fidgeted from her spot where she was propped up against the bathroom counter. She glanced at me askew. The tiniest of smiles played at her mouth. It tugged at those places inside me that only existed with her, simply because in her, they’d been created.
One side of my mouth lifted in a soft curl of affection. Her blonde hair was piled in a messy twist on her head, and a misshapen sweatshirt fell off one shoulder, the perfect partner to the pair of thin, black leggings she wore. Standing there, she looked so much like the eighteen-year-old girl I’d first met rather than the twenty-seven-year-old woman she was.
God, she was a vision, perfection in my eyes.
It was her expression that loosened that ball of anxiety knotting me tight. She looked up at me in anticipation, with trust and hope and the same excitement that was just about to fry my nerves.
I drew in a calming breath.
She was late. Just one day. But that didn’t matter. I think both of us already knew. We could feel our lives teetering on the cusp of change. The only thing left now was begging that little stick to put to rest the uncertainty, to give us its promise, to tell us that this was really happening.
Elizabeth stretched out her hand and silently beckoned me to her. That smile she wore on her beautiful face grew a little, nervously fluttering around the edges.
How could any one woman affect me this way? How could her touch both burn me and soothe me in the same simple stroke?
A smile teetered at my mouth as I slipped up in front of her. I gently wound her in my arms, and she laid her head on my chest. Little tremors rolled the length of her body.
“You’re shaking,” I murmured, running my fingers through her hair, hoping to calm her.
She edged back a fraction. Between us, she placed both hands flat across her belly. She looked up at me from beneath her lashes, her eyes all alight and alive.
“I’m not shaking.” Her voice dropped low, and she whispered her awe. “It’s butterflies.”
A sharp exhale escaped through my nose. There was no fear hiding below the surface of her words, no remnants of distrust spinning though her spirit. Nothing here threatened to take us back to that day. This…this was the way it should have been, how I should have been, standing there supporting the one who meant everything.
I ran my thumb across the sharp angle of her cheekbone. “Butterflies, huh?”
“Yeah,” she answered, chancing a hopeful grin. Warmth gleamed in her soft brown eyes.
Somehow Elizabeth managed to undo me a little more.
“Does that mean you already know what that test is going to say?” And I thought I did, too, thought I could feel it. Maybe I’d convinced myself into believing something just because I wanted it so badly. I didn’t know. But damn, if I didn’t ever want this.
Things were crazy with the wedding plans. It was hard to believe we’d gotten home from New York less than a month ago. We’d announced to Elizabeth’s family our plans, that we were actually setting a date.
June seventh.
God, it seemed impossible to fathom that things were finally as they should be.
Just five short months and Elizabeth would be mine, completely.
Natalie and Elizabeth’s sisters had immediately set to work on wedding plans, fretting over this day that, in my eyes, couldn’t be anything less than perfect simply because Elizabeth would become my wife.
It didn’t matter the place or the food or what everyone would wear.
All that mattered were the vows we were going to make.
Our lives had transformed so drastically in such a short period of time. We hadn’t been trying for this, but thought we’d just let it take its course. I mean, things were already chaotic, a disorganized mayhem, both of our houses on the market as we searched for a home to fill with love and the memories of our lives, plus the constant wedding plans we were running around organizing. But it was a welcomed mayhem.
I had a feeling it was about to get worse.
Seeming to get lost in thought, Elizabeth let her attention travel to the far wall. A few seconds later, she turned the force of it back on me.
“I didn’t think this would happen so fast. I’m not sure why, but I thought we’d have to work for it. But this…” Earnestly she pressed her hands more firmly to her stomach. “This blessing…I’ve been pretty sure of it for the last week. I just…know.”
I cupped her cheek. My attention flitted over every line and curve of the face forever burned in my mind. “I can’t wait to do this with you.”
She smiled up at me. A faint blush tinted her cheeks and tears glistened in her eyes. “I really hope we’re not getting ahead of ourselves.”
Longing rushed from her in waves. Each one crashed into me, as if some unconscious part of her were begging me to make this real.
I wanted so badly to give it to her.
“If not today, then we will celebrate it on another. But we will do this together, Elizabeth.”
She nodded against my palm and brought hers up to cover mine. She wrapped her fingers around mine. “Thank you for being here, Christian. For sharing this moment with me…whatever direction it goes.”
On the counter, the timer dinged.
I lay my cheek against hers, let her warmth surround me. My hold was secure. I was there for her one way or another. Even if this didn’t turn out the way we wanted it, we’d deal with it.
“You ready?” I asked.
She blinked. “So ready.”
Her message was clear, rang in my ears and in my heart, a promise that every question of my devotion to her had been erased from her mind.
She clung to me as we turned our faces to the test sitting beside us on the bathroom counter.
I felt her lose her breath, and I wound my arms around her a little tighter to hold her up as her legs weakened beneath her.
Two pink lines.
This time, there was no question she was shaking. She trembled in my arms. “Christian,” fell as a breath from her mouth, bled into the room as wonder and awe.
Two pink lin
es.
There was no greater joy than what I felt in this moment. It just didn’t exist. Nothing else could compare.
She was crying as I knelt on the floor in front of her. I wrapped my hands around her waist, buried my face in her stomach where our child grew. Where a new life had begun.
I was overcome.
Elizabeth gentled her fingers through my hair. I tipped my head back so I could look at her. I slipped my hands to the outside of her waist in the same second she took my face in her hands.
“We’re going to have a baby, Christian,” she said.
Saying it aloud seemed to rip something open inside of her. She choked over a cry that spoke of so many things—shock and relief and joy, crushing the vestiges of disbelief that had lingered in these walls.
“A baby,” she whispered again through a fervent sob. “Oh my God, Christian… I don’t know how to explain what I’m feeling right now. How happy I am. I didn’t think I’d ever get to have this again. I’d accepted that it was only ever going to be me and Lizzie.” Passion poured from her mouth, her spirit seeking understanding in mine. “I…I…” She stumbled over her thoughts, wet her lips as she looked at me through bleary eyes. “You know, you’re the only one I’ve ever wanted this with…the only one I’d ever give this to. Thank you for finding me, for loving me, for filling up the void in my life…for giving me this.”
“God, Elizabeth…”
How could I respond to that when I’d been the one to leave that void in the first place? But I knew…knew I was the only one who fit in that void, because it was Elizabeth that perfectly filled mine, too. “Nothing in this world could make me happier than this,” I urged.
Unchecked tears streamed down her face, and she took me by the hands and held them flat at her stomach.
I swallowed over the lump wedged at the base of my throat, my hands burning into her flat stomach that would soon grow round.
In the fading light of the room, we held our child.
My mind raced with images of what was taking hold in the deepest places of Elizabeth’s body.
Was this a boy or girl?
I wondered if again the child would take after me the way Lizzie did? Maybe have a tiny cleft like the one Lizzie wore on her chin and the same shock of black hair on her head? Would he watch the world through intuitive, blue eyes, just like Lizzie?
The Regret Series Complete Collection Box Set: Lost to You, Take This Regret, and if Forever Comes Page 45