Unspoken had been the fact that if ísa cut her off, Jacqueline would have to maintain the bonds with Catie and Harlow on her own. And Jacqueline frankly sucked at being maternal. It was ísa who was the glue, ísa who made sure Jacqueline wasn’t lost and out in the cold.
“As for Harlow,” ísa had pointed out, “he’ll be fine.” The summer had been good for her brother—he’d come out of the internship with a new confidence that had girls suddenly giving him a second look. He was still in awe of Jacqueline, but at least now he knew he could hack it in a business workplace.
“If you think I’m letting that boy go after all the work I put into him this summer,” Jacqueline had snarled, “your head’s been addled by love hormones.” A gimlet-eyed glance. “When did you learn to be so ruthless?”
“I have your genes,” ísa had said with a dry smile. “I try to keep the ruthless under control, but every so often it just bursts out.”
A twitch of her mother’s lips. “You know you have me over a barrel.” There was a strange vulnerability to her in that moment. “I have no desire to grow old surrounded by money and no children but Trevor.” Her lips curled up. “He sent me flowers the other day. As if Jacqueline Rain’s forgiveness can be charmed.”
Caught by that vulnerability, ísa had done something she rarely did—she’d hugged her mother, the scent of Jacqueline’s perfume swirling around them. When she drew back, she’d held her mother’s eyes. “Keep the dragon breath under control and we’ll be fine. Also, you need to schedule a visit to Catie this weekend and take her out for a mother-daughter lunch.”
Jacqueline’s eyes had glinted, but she’d made the appointment in her diary. Then she’d sighed. “Poetry, ísa, really? You’re truly going to waste that incredible, ruthless mind on poetry?”
“Nope. I’m going to use it to educate thousands of young minds through the years—and hopefully, one day, send my own words out into the world.” ísa felt nothing but peace with the choices she’d made. “I’m also going to use it to love my family and create a legacy of love.”
Expression softening in a way ísa had rarely seen, Jacqueline had touched her fingers to ísa’s cheek. “Does that Sailor Bishop know what he’s got? Does he understand the gift of you?”
Yes, ísa thought now, he did.
Two weeks ago, he’d brought her home a surprise, a refurbished antique writing desk that ísa adored and petted and sighed over every time she sat down to work on her poetry. Sailor had found the beat-up and badly treated desk online, then brought it back to a lovely condition himself.
He’d stashed it in Gabriel’s garage and worked on it during the times when ísa was in Hamilton to see Catie. Sailor usually came along, but every so often, she and Catie would have a girls’ weekend and he’d stay back to hang out with Gabe, his older brother’s life having been turned upside down as a result of a career-ending on-field injury.
“Gabe’s always been impossibly strong,” Sailor had said to her a month after it happened. “That grit’s still there, under the grief. He just needs a little support to find it again.”
ísa agreed with Sailor; she had a feeling Gabe would surprise them all with his next step in life. What she also saw was that the brothers shared an innate strength—they simply showed it in different ways. The man she loved with all her heart and soul grinned and just kept on going step by step, while Gabriel was more intense
As for those girls’ weekends she had with Catie, Jacqueline was starting to turn up and join in once out of every three times. Mostly because ísa would call her assistant and make sure Jacqueline’s schedule was blocked out for the weekend. But at least the Dragon was making an effort. And it was slowly paying off; Catie going as far as to invite Jacqueline to a school event—to which ísa had driven Jacqueline when her mother made noises about canceling in favor of a strategy meeting.
Dragons didn’t change their scales without some help.
Harlow wasn’t only thriving, he’d become best friends with Jake despite the year that separated them and the fact that Jake was as sporty as Harlow wasn’t. ísa’s brother was also, for the first time in his life, part of a group of boys and men who hung out together doing “manly-man stuff” as Catie had put it.
He’d gone white-water rafting with the Bishop-Esera males, tutored Danny in chemistry, and analyzed entire rugby games for Jake using statistical methods. Inspired by Jake’s dreams of playing for international clubs, he’d also been talking to ísa about working abroad after he qualified.
Her brother was like a butterfly coming out of his cocoon.
Catie, meanwhile, had finally stopped growing—after reaching five feet nine. Which annoyed poor Danny no end. Sailor’s baby brother was still the shortest kid in his class, but ísa had started to spot the signs of a growth spurt. Given the family genes, she had a feeling he’d one day be able to loom over Catie.
To which point Catie had the perfect comeback: “I’ll just get taller prosthetics.”
Laughing inwardly at the memory of Danny and Catie’s last bickering session, ísa stroked her hand over her belly, her thoughts on the man who’d made her dreams into reality. Tough or not, she and Sailor had done it together every step of the way, sharing their dreams with one another and in so doing, making those dreams even better.
“How about Calypso?” Jake said from the back.
That happened to be the name of Jake’s girlfriend—his first real one. The two had been in puppy love for the past six months. It was adorable.
“I like Sofia,” Harlow said, pushing up his glasses at the same time. “Or you could name her after Jacqueline.” A pause. “You know she was hinting for that last weekend.”
“We’ll see,” ísa said, not giving away the fact she and Sailor had already decided on a name for their daughter.
It had taken lots of whispered, late-night conversations and laughing disagreements before they’d agreed, but they’d been using the name for the past month when they talked to their baby girl, and it fit.
“Oh, geez, they’re doing work on the road.” Harlow swallowed and glanced at ísa’s belly. “I really love you, Issie, but I totally don’t want to deliver your baby.”
Amused at the petrified look on his face, ísa patted her brother’s unshaven cheek. Somehow he’d started growing into a man while she hadn’t been looking. “You’re safe. We should get there in plenty of time.”
But as the traffic dragged on, ísa started to worry that she’d been overconfident. Because her contractions were coming closer and closer together. Biting the inside of her cheek, she managed to keep that from the boys.
When Jake said, “Do we have to change diapers?” she said, “It’s one of the duties of an uncle.”
“Oh, man.” Both boys groaned.
Someone’s phone rang. “It’s Catie,” Jake said from the back. “I texted her.”
ísa hadn’t, aware her sister was attending a training camp this weekend. But she was happy to hear her voice. “Hey, Catiebug. How was training?”