Mistakes Were Made

Erin tried to hold on to her affront. “Excuse me?”

“I’m wondering how many times you’ve lied to yourself about it never happening again,” Cassie said. “Surely you told yourself it wouldn’t happen again when you found out I went to school with your kid. And then again at breakfast. Probably again after you followed me to the bathroom during the a cappella concert, right? And when Parker invited me to visit—obviously then, with how bitchy you were on the phone. Did you tell yourself it wouldn’t happen when you bought this necklace?” Cassie held up the rocket ship pendant hanging around her neck. “When you hugged me in the airport? And now, after you were the one who kissed me.”

She was gorgeous in her indignation. Resplendent. And she was right. She brought up everything Erin hadn’t wanted to. She was smart and beautiful and brave, making herself vulnerable like this, even if she couched it in resentment.

Nuclear was the only option.

Without giving herself a chance to change her mind, Erin pushed her hair out of her face and shrugged. “Look, Cassie, I’ll admit you’ve been good for my ego. It’s nice to know I’ve still got it.”

Cassie’s anger wavered. The look on her face leaned more toward despair. Like she couldn’t believe this was the route Erin was taking.

“It feels good to catch the eye of a younger woman.” Erin’s stomach heaved like it was going to rebel. “But this isn’t, like, a thing. I don’t need some kid with mommy issues obsessing about my feelings, okay?”

Cassie’s eyes flashed. Back to anger. Good. That was easier to deal with.

“Are you fucking kidding me?”

“You obviously don’t have a good relationship with your mother. It makes sense you’d be drawn to some sort of mother figure. I don’t—”

“I don’t want you to be my mom. I want to fuck you.”

Jesus. The way Cassie didn’t just know what she wanted, but owned it. Erin had to go through six months of therapy before she even mentioned the word divorce.

“Well—I want to fuck you when you’re not being such a cunt,” Cassie amended. “My relationship with my mom has nothing to do with you. And, not that it’s any of your business, but I have an amazing mother figure. I’m sure it’s different for bitchy, rich Daughters of the American Revolution or what the fuck ever, but blood doesn’t mean shit.”

With that, she turned on her heel and left.

Erin counted to five before releasing her breath and letting her shoulders slump. She didn’t even know anything about Cassie’s relationship with her mother. It was just the easiest target she could come up with. Easier to make Cassie feel awful, to make Cassie hate her than to admit there was anything between them.

It didn’t matter that it made her feel awful, too.

Erin went grocery shopping to get out of the house. When she returned, as she set the bags on the kitchen counter, Parker came into the kitchen.

“I’m about to head to Dad’s. Have you seen Cassie today?”

Erin focused on the bags in front of her. “She came down for coffee before I went shopping.”

“Did she seem off?”

“I don’t think so.” She put the milk in the fridge. Nonchalant. Normal. “Why?”

“I don’t know. She’s usually down here with you in the mornings.”

“Only because you’re usually asleep,” Erin snapped.

That was too defensive. She could feel Parker’s eyes on her as she continued to unload groceries.

“Did you do something to scare her off?” Parker asked.

“Oh my God, Parker, what would I have done?”

“I don’t know! I’m just asking.”

“I went to the grocery store. Did that scare her off? Is she afraid of groceries?”

“Yeah, she’s afraid of groceries.” Parker rolled her eyes and Erin tried to remember to be reasonable. “Whatever. She just—she’s been in her room all morning and she won’t come to Dad’s with me. It’s weird.”

“She won’t go to Dad’s with you?”

“I even told her he probably got her a present she could open, and she still said no.”

Erin had counted on Cassie going with Parker today. She was supposed to leave, not to stay here alone with her. Having Cassie in the house was a constant reminder of how terrible she had been to her.

But it made sense that she wouldn’t want to spend more time around Adam than necessary after what a dick he’d been to her.

“Just like, be nice to her if she comes downstairs, okay?”

“Of course,” Erin said, tucking her hair behind her ears. “Have fun at your dad’s.”

And then Parker was gone, and Erin was alone in the house with Cassie.

She finished putting the groceries away and tried to work. She needed to work. In the New Year she’d be presenting her plans to create a free clinic to the hospital board. There were numbers to crunch and reports to look over. There was information to learn and absorb until it became a part of her. That was how she had always studied in school, and it was what she fell back on as she prepared for her presentation.

It wasn’t going well. White papers stood out against the dark walnut of her desk, but she wasn’t processing any of the words on them. Parker had left fifteen minutes ago. The house was cavernous, empty, and open, its silence reverberating.

Erin couldn’t focus on anything other than Cassie’s presence. She might as well not be here for how much noise she wasn’t making, but Erin suffocated on the knowledge that they were under the same roof.

She needed to say she was sorry. Because she was! And she could be the adult here—Cassie couldn’t mope in her room for the rest of break. That would be more suspicious than anything she and Erin had done so far. Erin would apologize and Cassie would get over it and they could move on.

Sure, maybe her guilt factored into it, too. She hated the idea of Cassie hating her. It was like the phone call—Erin chose to be a bitch, and then felt too bad about it not to apologize. But this time would be different. She would apologize but keep her distance afterward. It’d be fine.

Erin pushed away from her desk to go upstairs.

It’d be fine, she told herself again. She’d find Cassie in her room, apologize, move on. By the time Parker came back, Cassie wouldn’t be in such a mood, and Parker would be none the wiser.

Too busy thinking over what she wanted to say, Erin didn’t notice the door to Cassie’s room was open until she stood right in front of it, the room itself empty. Erin looked down the hallway. The bathroom door was closed.

As Erin approached it, the shower turned on.

Fuck.

She had to do this now, or she’d lose her nerve. Maybe Cassie wasn’t in the shower yet—the water needed time to warm up, right?

“Cassie?” Erin said through the door, knocking gently. “I want to apologize.”

“I can’t hear you. I’m in the shower.”

Erin opened the door and stepped inside.

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