“You don’t want to get in the middle of this,” Liz told her.
Ethan hung up the phone and stood. He took one look at Liz, then turned to the girl. “It’s all right, Cindy.”
Liz stepped into the office and carefully closed the door behind her. Now that she was here, she couldn’t think of a single thing to say. She’d thought she might want to throw things, to scream, to threaten. She’d worried if she had access to a weapon, she would use it. But all her energy was gone, bled away in the open wound of her missing heart.
“You don’t know what it means to love a child,” she said softly. “To be willing to die to protect him. Loving a child isn’t about winning. You don’t deserve him. But you can’t see that. You wanted to punish me. Well, congratulations. You have. You may think you’ve won, but you haven’t. Because for now, you’re a bright, shiny new toy. Eventually Tyler will see that. And then he’ll come home.”
At least that’s what she was telling herself with every breath. That her son would come back to her. That he would love her again. That he loved her now…still…he was just too angry to see it.
Ethan moved toward her, stopping in front of her. “What are you talking about?”
The question sounded genuine. He looked more confused than upset.
No. It was another trick. All of it. She couldn’t trust him. He was the enemy—she’d been the fool who’d forgotten that.
“Tyler told me that he wants to live with you,” she repeated flatly. “Don’t pretend this wasn’t part of your plan.”
“What?” Ethan took a step back. “Jesus, Liz. What are you saying? Tyler’s not living with me.”
He sounded so sincere, she thought. Of course he’d made love with her as if she was important to him. As if she mattered.
“You’ve played me from the beginning,” she revealed. “I let you, so I suppose the blame is as much mine. You pretended to want what was best for everyone. You kissed me and touched me, all the while knowing you were going to do this. You must not have a conscience. At least the guy who tried to kidnap me was honest in his intentions.”
“Wait a minute. Stop this.” He grabbed her upper arms. “Look at me. I’m not trying to hurt you. I never talked to Tyler about coming to live with me.”
Maybe that was true. Maybe Tyler thought of that on his own, but he would have had help getting there. “Didn’t you tell him that if you’d known I was pregnant that you would have married me?”
“Yes, but—”
“Didn’t you talk about all the time you’ve missed with him? Didn’t you blame me?”
“At first. I was angry. But not recently. Liz, I want what’s best for him and that means you. You’re great with him.”
“What was it you said that first week? That I’d had him eleven years, so you should get the rest of his childhood?”
He tightened his grip. “No. I didn’t do this.”
The worst part was she wanted to believe him. “I trusted you. Even when I knew what you’d done to me before, I believed in you.”
He stared into her eyes. “Don’t stop believing in me. Please, Liz. We can make this work.” He sucked in a breath. “Marry me.”
If he hadn’t been holding on to her, she would have fallen. “What?”
“Marry me. It solves everything. Then we both get Tyler. It would be better for the girls, too. They could stay here with their friends. Marry me.”
She pulled free of his grip and crossed to the sofa. After collapsing, she rested her elbows on her knees and dropped her face to her hands.
It was too much, she thought. She was physically and emotionally drained. That was the only reason she hadn’t run screaming into the afternoon. Or hurled a lamp at him.
Marriage as a practical solution?
“We have a child together,” he continued. “It makes sense.”
Of course it did. Because why would love enter into it? He’d married Rayanne because she was pregnant—why wouldn’t he marry her because they had a child together?
She straightened. “No.”
He sat on the sofa and angled toward her. “Come on, Liz. Why not?”
Where was she supposed to start? “We don’t love each other.”
Only a half truth. She loved him, but this was hardly the time to go into that.
“We like each other,” he stated. “We get along. And it’s better for the kids. You said being a good parent was all about making sacrifices.”
“Not those kind.” She rose.
“Wait.” He stood. “We have to figure this out.”
“No, we don’t. I have to.”
“Tyler is my son, too.”
“You’ve made that very clear—to all of us.”
She left.
Ethan stared after her, not sure if he should follow her or give her time to sort things out. He still couldn’t believe what Tyler had done. The kid hadn’t warned him that he was about to tell his mother he wanted to live with Ethan.