BECKETT
Letter #15 Chaos,
Iโm so sorry you lost someone. I canโt imagine how hard that must be, to grieve and still carry on with what youโre doing. Every time I lost someone, my parents or my grandmother, it always shut me down, like my body couldnโt process the enormity of my feelings. It says a lot about the kind of man you are that you can continue to show up, and I mean that in the best of ways.
You say youโre bad with people, that you donโt connect, but thatโs not who I see when I open these letters. Or rather, who I hear. Someone who canโt connect wouldnโt be so open. Heck, they wouldnโt have written back in the first place. But you did, and Iโm grateful.
Maybe you simply choose who you connect with, and thatโs okay. I donโt think anyone wakes up and decides to be the social butterfly like my brother. Thatโs probably why you two are good friends. You balance each other out.
You know who else I bet youโd connect with? Kids. Maybe not everyoneโs kids, but definitely your own. Have you ever thought about kids? Itโs a random question, but Iโm curious. Probably because I had mine so young, and I canโt imagine not having them, I kind of picture everyone I meet with kids.
Except Hailey. Sheโs one of my closest friends, and Iโm sure one day sheโll make a great momโฆafter she successfully adults on her own for a while. Successful being the key word there. I bet youโll love her when you get here. Sheโs gorgeous, and fun, and doesnโt picture everyone she meets with kids.
Anyway, I bet youโd be a great dad. Brooding and tough, but also
sneaking in Star Wars marathons on lazy weekends. I could absolutely picture itโฆif I could picture you. Yep, Iโm still hankering for a picture.
I hope I managed to distract you for a few minutes. I hope you know how very sorry I am for your loss.
~ Ella
โฆ
I stood at the window of the downtown Denver high-rise, looking out over the city. This definitely wasnโt a place I could set down roots. Two months in Telluride had taught me that concrete and I werenโt compatible in the long-term sense.
Plus, Denver didnโt have Ella.
It had been a week since our fight in the truck, and weโd been politeโฆ even friendly. But that easygoing rhythm weโd always had was nowhere to be found. Not with everything hanging between us.
If I wasnโt careful, sheโd realize I was in love with her, and then weโd be in even deeper shit.
Iโd never had a woman prick my temper the way Ella did. Hell, Iโd sworn at her. Iโd also never had a woman I cared to see more than once or twice, or one who owned my soul the way she did. Of course Iโd agree to whatever terms she had when it came to the adoption. Not just because I was desperate to save Maisie and protect Colt, but because Iโd give Ella whatever she wanted if it simply made her smile.
And in return, she was giving me a family, as screwed up as the justification was. The kids would be mine, in every way that mattered to me. I could love them, protect them, make sure they had everything they needed. Iโd get Maisie approved for every treatment and make sure Colt knew I had his back every day of his life. Iโd prove myself to Ella, show up until she couldnโt doubt me ever again, and then Iโd win her heart.
Until she finds out what you did.
Yeah. That. It didnโt matter how hard I tried to ignore it, my secret hung
over my head like a guillotine.
At least the kids would be protected when Ella kicked me out. It wasnโt like sheโd unadopt the kids or risk Maisie. This was the one way I could fulfill my promise to Ryan and placate my aching heart, knowing one day the past was going to catch up to me.
My cell phone dinged, and I swiped to open the message app.
DONAHUE:ย Updated papers are ready with new dates. You sure about this?
My fingers paused over the keys. I was sure that I wanted Maisie to live, and this was the only means to that end.
GENTRY:ย Yep. But it doesnโt mean Iโm coming back.
DONAHUE:ย You keep telling yourself that.
I slid my phone into my pocket, not bothering to reply.
โMr. Gentry,โ a voice called out from behind me, and I turned around. โMr. Danbury,โ I answered. So this was Jeff. He basically looked like an
overgrown frat boy whoโd been poured into his fatherโs suit. His hair was blond and slicked back, his eyes gray and calculating.
We shook hands, and I quickly took my seat across from him at the conference table, scared that Iโd lose it and crush him for having touched Ella, let alone abandoning her and the kids.
The hell with him. He didnโt deserve her, and he sure as hell didnโt deserve them.
He adjusted his suit coat, and I did the same, unbuttoning the bottom button. At least Denver had good, fast tailors.
โSo what can I do for you, Mr. Gentry?โ he asked.
โI understand youโre the youngest junior partner at your firm.โ โI am. Just graduated law school as a matter of fact.โ
โPerks of having a dad with his name on the wall?โ I asked, motioning to the firmโs name.
His smile fell. Jeffy-boy didnโt like having his silver spoon brought up. Guys like him were all the sameโtheyโd had their cushy lives handed to them, and they despised any speed bump that kept them from the prize. God
knew heโd run right over Ella.
โI consider it part-ownership in the family business,โ he said with a shrug.
โAh, family. Iโm so glad you brought that up.โ I pushed the manila envelope across the table, and he caught it.
โWhat the hell is this?โ he asked, scanning the paper.
โYou know what it is, unless that fancy law degree didnโt teach you how to read. Sign it.โ
He read it again and then put it down slowly. Then I saw it, the look that said he thought he had one up on me now that he knew what I wanted.
โWhat did Ella pay you to do this?โ โIโm sorry?โ
โThere has to be a reason. Itโs been years.โ โThere is. Iโm adopting the twins.โ
His smirk fell off his preppy face, and his gaze dropped to my hand, looking for a ring. โYou marrying her?โ
โI canโt see how thatโs any of your business.โ
โWell, seeing as youโd like to adopt my kidsโโ
All emotion drained from my body in a familiar retreat. The sensation the same as every time I stepped into combat, preparing me to commit unforgivable atrocities.
โTheyโre not your kids,โ I said.
โYeah, Iโd beg to differ on that, considering how many times I screwed her in the two months we were married. Small-town girl with a small-town mind just wanted a ring first.โ
If Havoc had been here, she would have gone for his throat based on my tension level alone.
โYou might be their biological father, but youโre sure as hell not their dad. Youโve never so much as seen them, spoken to them, or had any interaction. They. Are. Not. Your. Kids. Theyโre mine.โ
As soon as the words left my mouth, that sweet pressure was back in my chest, the love I had for them overpowering my instinct to void my
emotions.
โSo what exactly is in this for me?โ โAre you serious?โ
He shrugged. โConsider it a business transaction. You want something I have. What are you going to give me for it?โ
โHow about I tell you what Iโmย notย going to give you?โ
He sat there expectantly while I did my best to keep a level head.
Three things: Maisie. Colt. Ella.ย They were the reason and the only things that mattered.
โIโm not going to give you the over-two-million-dollar bill for Maisieโs cancer treatments thatโs going to come due in the next year.โ
He swallowed but showed no other outward sign of hearing me.
โReason enough? Or we can just add her to your insurance, since youโre so keen on calling themย yours.ย Iโm sure that would go over really well with your dad, considering he told Ella about six months ago that he really didnโt care if Maisie lived or died as long as she left him and you the hell alone. Iโm sure that would be great for business if it got out.โ
โIs that a threat?โ
โNot in the least. Why would I do that when youโre going to sign that release, and your little secretary outside is going to notarize it all nice and pretty?โ I leaned back in the chair.
โFine. Iโll sign it.โ He ripped a pen out of the cup in the center of the table and scrawled his name across the paper. I didnโt relax. Not yet.
โHave it notarized.โ
He cursed under his breath but pushed back from the table and barked for his secretary from the doorway. A twentysomething woman in a tight pencil skirt hustled over, signing the bottom of the document and stamping it before running back to her desk.
Jeff shoved the folder at me, and I looked over the document, making sure it had been signed and notarized correctly. I wasnโt doing this a second time.
โNow if thereโs anything else?โ
I let my smile loose. โYeah. Get your checkbook.โ โExcuse me?โ His eyes popped wide in indignation.
โGet. Your. Checkbook. Youโre going to write Ella a check for six years of back support on the kids. Now.โ
โThe hell I am. Besides, I just started working last month. What do you want? Thirty percent of nothing?โ
โYeah, but your million-dollar trust fund kicked in the minute you attended your first class freshman year of college. So youโre going to write a lovely, fat check to Ella.โ
โHow did you know that?โ
โNot important. Youโre going to write what you owe her, or Iโm going to take this document to your fiancรฉeโs dad. What is he? A senator? And then Iโm going to leak it to the press that you not only abandoned those kids, but you left their mother destitute while she struggled to afford the cancer treatments Maisie needs. How do you think thatโs going to play out in the press?โ
โYouโd ruin me.โ
I took a deep, steadying breath. Even knowing that Maisie had cancer didnโt affect this selfish prick. โYeah, thatโs the idea.โ
โWhy? Because I ruined Ella? Like she had a future anyway.โ
โYou think you ruined Ella? Thereโs no man on the planet who could do that. Donโt flatter yourself. The only reason sheโs not here is because youโre not worth her time. Now get your checkbook.โ
He left the conference room, returning quickly with his pen poised over an open checkbook. โHow much?โ
โWhatever you think itโs worth to keep your future father-in-law happy and your fatherโs name on the wall.โ
He scrawled his pen across the check and then flung the paper at me.
The check rustled to a gentle stop right in front of me, and I took it, folding it in half and slipping it into my breast pocket.
โYouโre not even going to look at it?โ he squawked.
โNope. Itโs either enough, or itโs not.โ I stood, buttoning my suit coat, and
headed for the door, file in hand.
โHow did you know about the trust fund?โ he asked again, still seated. I paused, my hand on the door, debating.
What the hell. Why not?
โOh, you know. Small-town people with small-town minds, they have big hearts and bigger mouths. And just for the record, the best thing youโve ever done in your life is walk away from Ella. You never came back to mess with the kids. Iโd keep to that tradition if I were you. I protect whatโs mine.โ I walked away without a second thought, heading for a little army base just outside of Denver. There was another set of papers that needed signing
today.
โฆ
โBeckett!โ Colt flew through the door and launched himself into my arms, like Iโd been gone two weeks instead of two days.
โWhatโs up, little man?โ I lifted him into the air, savoring the smell of cinnamon and sunshine as I shuffled the folder in my hands.
โWeโre baking!โ
I carried him into the house and was greeted by the same scent. โApple pie?โ I asked.
โHow did you know?โ
โWell, the only thing that smells that good while itโs baking is apple pie or Little Boy Pie and, since youโre still here, I went with the apples.โ
Havoc swirled around my legs in greeting, and I set Colt down to give my girl a little behind-the-ear rub. โGood job,โ I told her, knowing sheโd stuck by Coltโs side.
โBeckett!โ Maisie called out from the couch.
โHowโs my best girl?โ I asked, coming around to crouch next to where she lay. She was pale, her skin nearly translucent. โFeeling okay?โ
She shook her head.
โIf you could get her to drink something, Iโd pretty much fork over my
soul,โ Ella said, coming from the kitchen, a smattering of flour on her forehead.
A pang of yearning blended with pure lust. I wanted this life and this woman. Wanted the freedom to steal her away from the kids for a second and get my hands on her. Kiss her. Touch her. Watch her eyes flutter shut in pleasure. Watch the worry lines fade from her brow.
โApple pie, huh?โ
โItโs her favorite, so I thought maybeโฆโ She shrugged.
โWhat do I have to bribe you with to get a few capfuls of Gatorade down you?โ I asked Maisie.
She looked up at me, those blue eyes turning deadly serious. โNo moreย Moana.ย Get meย Star Wars. Itโsย notย scary.โ She shot a little glare in Ellaโs direction.
Ella scoffed, but nodded to okay the transaction.
โDeal. I have the green apple flavor you like at my house. Give me a couple minutes with your mom and Iโll get it, okay?โ
โDeal.โ
I pulled her blanket up a little farther and followed Ella into her office.
YOU ARE ENOUGH.
The handwritten sign Iโd sent her hung on the bulletin board. Hell yes, she was enough. I was the one who lacked in just about every department. Including the honesty one.
How weird was it to be jealous of yourself? To know another version of you had a piece of the woman you loved?
โHow are her platelet levels?โ
โWeโre going into the medical center tomorrow morning for another transfusion. They can do it in Telluride, so at least itโs close.โ
I nodded and handed Ella the folder.
Her fingers trembled a little, but she opened it. Then her mouth dropped open. โYou did it.โ
โI did. Youโre free. The kids are free.โ
โHow?โ She read it again. โIโm very convincing.โ
She grinned up at me. โThat, I believe.โ
I slipped the check into the folder, letting it fall on top of the document.
Her mouth fell open. โWhat is this?โ โWhat youโre owed.โ
She sat back, her butt perched on the edge of her desk. โItโs half a million dollars. Why would heโฆ What did you do?โ
โGot you a little of the money he should have given you all along.โ
She looked up at me, her face a myriad of expressions I couldnโt keep up with. โI donโt want it.โ
โI figured.โ โYou did?โ
I nodded. โYou raised them on your own. I figured the last thing youโd do is take the money now. That would give him a feeling of ownership youโd never allow.โ
โThen why did you bring it?โ
โYou said once that to hurt him I had to hit the money. So I hurt him. I brought you the check because I wonโt ever take a choice like that from you. That money could pay off all the debt on Solitude, or pay for treatments for Maisie. Or for their college in the future. I wasnโt taking that choice.โ
โI donโt need it for Maisie, now.โ
โNot if you want me to adopt her, you donโt. Thatโs another choice I wonโt force on you. Iโm not Jeff. And this gives you options. That check means youโre not cornered. You donโt have to choose me.โ
We stood there, our eyes locked in a silent conversation as she considered. Mine begged her to trust me. To lean on me. To need me even a small percentage of the way I needed her. Hers pondered, weighed, and decided, staying locked with mine as she ripped the check to shreds.
โI choose you. And now Iโm free. Weโre free.โ
I grinned because I knew I wasnโt free anymoreโI was hersโฆtheirs.