Not what had or hadn’t happened with Stephen. Or worse, what she’d wanted to happen. That she’d been naive enough to think one date meant something.
The open fields of Freedom Farm stretched in front of her, meeting the vibrant blue sky. Winnie swished her tail at a fly and tossed her glorious blond mane. Hannah took a deep breath, inhaling the clean scent of spring air. Just being here eased her. It’s where she’d healed. Where she was strongest.
Luke still hadn’t spoken and she took in his tightly fisted hands, hanging over the rail. He didn’t say much on his few visits home. Fierce and strong, quiet with a touch of sad. But his eyes had always said he loved her. “I’m surprised Nick hasn’t been all over me,” she said. “No doubt you shared.” She cringed just thinking about Nick’s reaction to her going to a strange man’s house.
“I don’t report to Nick. He asked. I answered.”
Great. But the tension when he said Nick’s name had her wanting to smooth what she could. “It’s okay, Luke. I’m not mad. I mean, I was a little, but—”
“Damn it, Hannah, you should be. You’re too damn soft.” He spoke with a bite of heat, then shook his head and sighed. “Sorry. I came out here to say I’m sorry. Not for going with you,” he added quickly, “or putting a kink in your party or date or whatever the hell it was. But…for insinuating that you’re not smart. I mean, hell, obviously you are.”
Yeah, she’d taken college classes at fourteen, but it hadn’t been the kind of smart a girl needed. And she knew what her brother meant. “Just not life smart.”
“Shit, Han. You’re smart all around, but…”
“But?”
“But you don’t even know that guy.”
“That was kind of the point. Partly the point,” she added at Luke’s glare, “because he didn’t know anything about me either. But don’t worry. It won’t be a problem. I’m not going to see him anymore.”
“Why?”
She looked at the ground. “Just didn’t work out.”
Luke made a rough sound under his breath. “Then he’s a jackass.”
Hannah smiled. Luke was sweet, in a broody sort of way, intense and handsome. He should have someone to love who loved him back. Sometimes she wondered if all her brothers avoided fatherhood after being so abruptly thrust into the role because of her.
“I’m sorry.”
“Wow,” she said, raising her eyebrows and smiling. “You really do feel bad, to apologize twice.”
“I’m not apologizing for that. I’m apologizing…for leaving and…for not being there all those years.”
She knew the years he meant that he didn’t want to say, the years nobody wanted to talk about. But also the years before. He’d left when she was three and she’d always wondered why. Because of their parents’ death? Because of her? The next time she’d seen him she’d been ten and barely recognized him from a picture on the mantel.
“I guess the other night I was just thinking I have a lot to make up for.”
She wrapped her arms around her brother’s wide shoulders, squeezed him as hard as she could. “No, you don’t.”
His arms came around her in a hug that nearly crushed her ribs. “I want you to be happy, Han. That’s all I’ve ever wanted.” He drew back, looking like maybe he wanted to say more. “I better get going.”
She stretched up and kissed his cheek. “It wouldn’t hurt for you to be happy either.”
Luke just nodded and set off across the field alone. She wondered what he did exactly. What he’d seen. Why he was home now and for how long.
Seemed the tables were turning with her and her brothers. It was her turn to worry about them now. It felt good.
—
“Dee, can you get me Allen Mason on the phone?”
“Certainly, Mr. McKinney.”
“Also, line up a call with Crenshaw. If not today, then tomorrow.” Stephen released the intercom and spun his leather chair to a second computer. He worked hardest when he was trying to forget something and today he was running full speed. You get enough balls in the air, you can’t look down, can’t look around. Not even at yourself.
He continued scrolling through a list of figures, double-checking the numbers that would likely win him a bid on a high-end resort off the coast of Indonesia. One that would make people feel better? A vision slammed in. Hannah’s sad eyes staring at a beer case, her lashes heavy with unshed tears. Her smile that knocked the breath from him over candlelight. Then that sharp look of shock and hurt on her face standing in the doorway at his brother’s.
That’s the one he couldn’t get out of his mind. It was arrogance he’d let get in the way when she wouldn’t give him her phone number. Because he didn’t lose. Well, he sure as hell hadn’t won.