“You think of everything, Professor.”
Gabriel’s eyes appeared to darken. “I have needs.”
She pressed their chests together, bringing her mouth inches from his.
“As do I, Professor. I’m sure we can attend to some of those needs without involving your injured parts.”
“Injured parts?”
“I’ll take very good care of you and all your parts. You’ll need me to be your nurse.”
Gabriel slid his hands down to cup her backside.
“I like the sound of that. A nurse, a librarian, a student, a professor—is there no end to your talents, Mrs. Emerson?”
“None. In fact, I have another secret identity.”
“Oh, really?”
She brought her lips to the curve of his ear, “I’m also Lois Lane.”
“I think I’ll need to pick up my Superman suit from the dry cleaners.”
“Merry Christmas to me.”
“It will be.” He gave her a heated look, heavy with promise. “So we’ll schedule a few more appointments, but we’ve agreed to pursue this?”
“Yes.”
“And we’ve also agreed that we aren’t going to start a family until you graduate. This is all—preliminary.”
She smiled and kissed him, and then they decided to delay dinner in favor of celebratory kitchen table sex during which Gabriel pretended to be Superman, coming home after a long day of fighting crime.
(It must be said that superhero kitchen table sex was an even better domestic coupling than regular kitchen table sex.)
A few hours later, Julia and Gabriel sat on the floor in their bedroom, going through Sharon’s boxes. They found photo albums filled with baby and toddler pictures. They found toys and the bracelet Julia had worn in the hospital when she was born.
She was surprised that her mother kept the baby memorabilia. She was even more surprised to find a copy of her parents’ wedding picture, along with a series of photos from their courtship. There were even a few family pictures that predated the divorce.
One box held costume jewelry and scarves and photos of Sharon with different men. Gabriel watched as Julia disposed of those pictures with barely a glance. Given what he knew about Sharon’s behavior with her boyfriends, he understood why Julia would want all memory of them destroyed.
He ran a finger across the back of her hand, caressing the knuckles. “You have a home and family now.”
“I know.” She gave him a little smile, but it didn’t touch her eyes.
She looked in vain for her mother’s engagement and wedding rings. But they’d likely been pawned long ago. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d seen them.
If Julia had expected to find answers among her mother’s things, she was sorely disappointed. The materials they found didn’t explain why Sharon decided that the baby girl she initially loved to distraction became an annoying household presence. They didn’t explain how alcohol and sex became more important than flesh and blood.
“Darling?” Gabriel’s voice broke into her thoughts.
“A whole life. Three boxes. What a waste.”
Gabriel rubbed her back sympathetically.
“Why didn’t she love me?” Julia croaked.
Gabriel felt as if his heart were being torn apart. He sat behind her, pulling her back against his chest.
“I wish I had an answer. All I can say is that I understand. Believe me, Julianne, I understand.”
“It’s hard for me to believe she ever loved me.”
“She kept the photographs. It’s clear she loved you when you were born. You can see it in her face. She loved you after that, too, when you were little.”
“But she loved alcohol more.”
“It’s an addiction.”
“I’m not without compassion, Gabriel, but I can’t contemplate choosing alcohol and men over my child.”
Gabriel’s grip on her tightened. “That’s as it should be. But you’ve never struggled with addiction, Julianne. That’s something I know too much about.
“I’m sure there were times your mother wanted to stop.”
“There were times she went into recovery, yes.”
“There but for the grace of God go we,” he whispered.
When she didn’t respond, he continued in a whisper, “This is my fault. I’m the one who insisted on looking into our parents, and now see what’s happened.”
“You aren’t the one who hurt me.
“I suppose it was silly to think I’d find an explanation in one of these boxes. If my dad doesn’t have one, how could there be an explanation in a pile of junk?”
“Your baby things aren’t junk. We’ll frame the photos and put the other things on a shelf. Someday, if we have a little girl, you can show her how beautiful her mama looked when she was a baby.”
Julia pressed her face into the crook of his neck. “Thank you.”
He gave her a tight squeeze, holding her until she was ready to pack up the boxes.
Chapter Forty-six