Meet Cute (Page 49)

“You’re sure you’re not just playing rescuer?”

It’s a valid question. If I had more space, I’d probably have ten cats instead of two. Once I saved an entire litter when a feral mother gave birth under the back deck. I was so desperate to keep them I even suggested building them a house in the backyard because both of my parents were allergic. Despite my pleas, they insisted we give them up for adoption. I put up the ad and vetted those families like the lawyer I now am.

“It’s not uncommon for people who have experienced similar losses to find comfort in each other.”

Holly smiles. “That’s true.”

“I love him. And Emme.”

“Enough to walk away from an opportunity to be partner?”

“Yes.”

“You didn’t even have to think about that.”

“I was going to tell Beverly tomorrow morning that I didn’t want my partnership to be based on Daxton coming to Whitman anyway. That I wanted it because I’d earned it. You know, for years I had this goal based on a bet with my dad, but he wouldn’t want me to forfeit the chance to have something real and meaningful just to further my career. And honestly, Holls, trust law isn’t what I want to do forever. I’d rather not make partner and shift gears than keep going in the same direction I am now.”

“So then you shift gears.”

“I want to move to family law. Help people who really need it. Like the Lipsons and the Wilsons and Dax and Emme.”

“It’s a great fit. I think until now it was just too close to your heart, and you didn’t have enough of your own people to love to really take it on.”

My chest aches as I recall just how upset Daxton was in my office earlier. “I might’ve lost two of those people tonight.”

“He’s hurt and he’s dealing with more than is reasonable. The stress of what happened with his sister, the custody battle, all the uncertainty, he’s been relying on you for a lot.”

“And I let him down in the worst possible way, Holly. He thinks I did it all to make partner, not because I care.”

“Do you really think he believes that?”

“You didn’t see him today. He was so angry and hurt. I did a lot of damage.”

“So how do you undo it?”

“I don’t know. Find a way to help him keep custody of Emme, I guess?”

“You’re resourceful, smart, and determined. You always find a way to make it happen if you want it bad enough.”

There’s no way Emme’s aunt wants what’s best for her. It’s the trust she’s after. Now I just need to find a way to prove it, and make Dax see it was never about the partnership for me when it came to him and Emme.

Leading up to the final custody hearing, I only hear from Dax when it’s absolutely necessary. He uses email and cc’s his lawyer. Everything is polite and professional. He doesn’t text, doesn’t call, and avoids stopping by the office when he knows I’ll be there. My heart aches on a daily basis. The only similar pain I can recall is the loss of my parents. But, no matter how much it hurts, I don’t regret falling in love with Daxton, I just regret not telling him what I should have before I damaged what we had.

Heartache is the worst affliction. It robs a person of rationality, of logic, of forethought and patience. It makes everything good painfully bright and magnifies the bad with an intensity that’s difficult to tolerate.

Thankfully, the one light in my darkness is the constant texts from Emme. Whatever Dax has said to her, it hasn’t been enough to make her turn on me, too, which gives me hope.

So do the reports from Emme that Dax is sad, and whenever she brings me up he gets all cagey and dejected. While I wait out his silence, I dig into his aunt, dissecting the emails she sent me, looking for more in them. I seek out more information on her past jobs and her husbands, trying to make connections, but without input from Dax, it’s difficult to make any progress.

Emme’s still worried she’s going to have to live with her aunt, but since the journal entries and the social media pictures—which were a stretch considering Emme was with me and I have the pictures and receipts to prove it, Linda hasn’t made any more moves.

Regardless, I can’t shake the feeling that she has more to do with the whole underage alcohol situation than we know. She was too smug, too all-knowing and just waiting for Dax to blow. And none of the girls had been drunk according to the police reports, since it turns out they’d all taken Breathalyzer tests. It doesn’t make sense that a group of girls would steal alcohol and not bother to drink it.

A few weeks after the whole blowout at my office, Emme texts about an assembly she’s performing in and wants to know if I can come.

I’m not sure if Dax is aware Emme and I are still communicating on a regular basis. I don’t ask about him, even though I want to. Although I certainly don’t stop her when she wants to share. He’s home every night. He’s overly attentive. He’s a terrible cook, but he’s trying.

She misses me.

I miss them both.

I decide the conversation warrants a phone call. “Hey, sweetie, how’s it going?”

“Okay, I guess. Do you think you’ll be able to come?”

“Does Dax know you invited me?”

She’s silent for a few seconds. “Everyone gets two tickets, so I can invite whoever I want.”

I smile at her defiant tone. “You don’t think it would be better to let him know instead of surprising him?”

“Why is he so upset with you? He won’t tell me anything and he’s, like, moody and stuff when I ask about you.”

I sigh. “I made a mistake and I hurt him.”

“Can’t you say you’re sorry?”

“Sometimes it’s not that simple, Emme.”

“He misses you, though, I know he does. You left a ring here and he’s always sitting in front of the TV at night, playing with it.”

Well, at least I know I didn’t lose it. It’s not particularly valuable, apart from sentimentality. “Hopefully with time Dax will be able to forgive me.”

“Was it really bad? Your mistake?”

“It was.”

“Oh.” She’s quiet for a few seconds. “Does that mean you won’t come to the assembly?” I want to reach through the phone and hug away her sadness.

“Of course I’ll come.”

“Maybe you can try to tell him you’re sorry again. I could tell him for you if you want?”

Her sweetness chokes me up, and I have to clear my throat before I answer. “It’s probably better if it comes directly from me.”

“Yeah. Probably. Okay. I’ll text you the date and stuff. I can’t wait to see you. I’m gonna give you a huge hug.”

“I’m looking forward to it.” I end the call and exhale a steadying breath, willing myself not to get my hopes up, but the heart doesn’t always listen to the head.

chapter twenty-four

THE PIECES

Kailyn

I leave work early on the night of the assembly and change into a nice pair of normal black dress pants and a family-friendly blouse that’s still a little sexy. Dax is going to be there, after all. I check my voicemail on the way into the school—I’m half an hour early, obviously hoping to run into Dax before the performance begins, and if the universe is on my side, possibly snag the seat beside him before one of the vulture-like single moms does. That’s provided he’ll speak to me.

I have a voicemail from Holly, but I can’t hear it with the noise in the foyer, parents chattering excitedly as they wait for the auditorium doors to open.

I can’t see Dax anywhere in the throng of waiting families, but I’m short, so my ability to see over all the heads is compromised. I navigate my way through the crowd, looking for a quiet room. I push through the first door that opens and step inside. I’ve found the library, and it appears to be empty.

I’m about to listen to the voicemail when someone else speaks. For a moment, I consider making my presence known, until I realize the voice is familiar.

Setting my phone to silent, I creep a little farther into the room. I can’t see Linda, but I can certainly hear her.

“As soon as this custody business is wrapped up, we’ll head to Vegas for the weekend, my treat this time.”

There’s silence for a moment, and I move toward the sound of her voice. How can Linda be planning a trip to Vegas when she’s battling for custody of a thirteen-year old? I hit the Record button on my phone, hoping to catch what I’m overhearing on the off chance it’s somehow incriminating.

I peek around a shelving unit and find her sitting in a chair, behind a desk on the other side of the room, the space made up to look like an office. She holds her phone in one hand, the other curved around a mouse, her attention divided between the call and whatever’s on the laptop screen. She stops clicking and throws her head back as she laughs. “I’m not worried about that. Once I have custody I’ll have lots of money to play with. We’ll hit the blackjack table and double what we lost last time. By the time we get back, no one will even know it was missing.”

She looks over her shoulder. “I don’t think that’s going to be a problem. She can stay with her brother on weekends. It’ll make me look like I’m being accommodating and it’ll get her out of my hair. Two birds, one stone, right?” She laughs again. “It shouldn’t be long before I get what should’ve been mine in the first place.”