He had to be fine.
I couldn’t...I couldn’t cope if he wasn’t.
Swallowing those thoughts, I strode away and used the end of his stick to scratch into the sand. Mist and sea spray dampened my holey clothes. I was miserable and low but my mother had taught me this trick. However, she hadn’t shown me on the beach; she’d shown me in a field where the wind was the eraser and not the ocean. But it worked, that much I knew.
Everyone crowded around me.
The songwriter part of me had an outlet for my emotional troubles. I found solace in scribbling sonnets when no one was looking. Each time I jotted something down, I felt a little lighter, a tad calmer, more able to deal.
I had that outlet. But what did Conner, Pip, and Galloway have?
“What are you doing?” Pippa asked, her hair tangled like a kelpie.
I smiled. “Something secret.”
“Doesn’t look secret.” Conner crossed his arms.
“Well, it’s magic then.”
“Doesn’t look like magic, either.”
I scowled at the teenager before scratching more words. He’d been getting argumentative as the calendar inched onward. “Just wait. You’ll see.”
Biting my lip, I manhandled the large stick-pen and finished my design. My heart skipped a beat as I stepped back and bumped into Galloway.
He stiffened but didn’t move away, letting me catch my balance. His body was warm (so much warmer than mine) and the same electrical charge flowed from his skin, lighting up dormant cells, turning my blood into a heated pathway of need.
My insides clenched and melted at the same time.
I gave him a fleeting smile. “Thanks.”
He cleared his throat but didn’t reply.
Pippa read what I’d carved into the sand: “Give me your worries and I shall make them disappear.” Her brown eyes met mine. “What does that mean?”
“Ugh, I’m not interested.” Conner’s hair stood up in all directions as he shook his head. “It means a counselling session, Pip. And we don’t need one of those.”
Is it puberty turning him into a brat or the lack of sunlight and endless drizzle?
I held my frustration...barely. “Just go with me, Co. You don’t have to question everything.”
“Yeah, I do. I know about this stuff and I’m not playing.”
“It isn’t a game.”
“Don’t care.”
My eyebrows rose. “How do you know about counselling, anyway? Why would you know about that stuff?”
He shrugged, full of blustery blasé, but his gritted teeth hinted at glass-sharp memories. “My parents went to a marriage counsellor. I overheard them doing homework exercises and ‘sharing their worries’ so they could be happy again.”
The memory of Amelia and Duncan Evermore didn’t fit with the description of a strained couple. But no one truly knew the inner workings of another’s life.
Pippa sucked in a shaky breath, her eyes filling with tears. “I miss them.”
Immediately, my arm lashed out and snuggled her against me. “And you’re allowed to miss them.”
She wiped her nose on the back of her hand. “When will it stop hurting?”
My heart broke. “No one can tell you that, Pip. It’s a time thing.”
She stared at the sand, her little shoulders quaking.
“So how does this work?” Galloway’s voice blanketed my soul, gracefully planting himself on my side of the argument. “What exactly are we meant to do?”
I looked up.
His gaze was locked on Pippa, despair and helplessness on his face. As much as he pretended to be unaffected by the children, he adored little Pippa. And the fact she grieved and he couldn’t do anything about it...it drove him wild.
Knowing he had such capacity to love drove me wild in return.
Why am I staying away from him again?
Why did I sleep alone when I could sleep with him? Why did I punish myself with no contact when I could touch him whenever I wanted?
My reason seemed less and less a deciding factor and more and more like a pesky nuisance.
I cleared my throat, forcing my jackrabbit heart to calm down. “I’ll show you.”
Galloway cocked his head. “Show us what?”
“The magic of washing our worries away.”
Conner groaned dramatically but didn’t leave. For all his ‘I’m too cool for this,’ he was still young enough to value togetherness and joint activities.
I see through you, Conner.
Stepping forward, I held the walking stick ready to write. Everyone fell silent as if I truly had the ability to conjure a spell.
I wished I did.
I wished I had a wand where I could manifest a boat and sail away. Or whimsically wish for a plane to fly home. Or pluck a phone signal from the sky and call for help.
I wanted to see Madeline. I wanted to hug Shovel-Face. I wanted to buy contraception so I could jump Galloway and not be afraid.
But I wasn’t a witch and this wasn’t that sort of magic.
Ducking to look into Pippa’s eyes, I murmured, “What are you most afraid of?”
She flinched.
Galloway growled, “You really think that’s a good question to ask?”