Her heart stopped beating faster and started slamming against her chest, her nails tore fiercely into her palms and her eyes flew to the stairs.
“Prentice, the children,” she warned.
“Tell me now,” he demanded.
Her eyes jerked to him and her heart stopped.
“What?” she breathed.
“All of it, Isabella. Tell me now.”
“But… why?” she stammered.
He leaned forward at the waist and clipped, “God damn it, tell me now.”
Isabella could take no more.
“Why?” she snapped, throwing her unclenched hand through the air. “What does it matter now?”
But he wasn’t paying attention to her. His eyes had followed her hand.
“Jesus,” he muttered, anger out of his voice, gaze still on her hand. “You’re bleeding.”
She quickly looked at her palm, saw he was right and closed her hand into a fist. As she did this, he advanced so he was close.
Very close.
She tipped her head back to look at him and declared, “It’s nothing.”
His head was bent toward her hand, his fingers closed on her wrist and he said, “Elle, you’re bleeding. Let me look.”
Isabella blinked, feeling the name only he used wash over her like she hadn’t had a bath in decades and that name was warm, clean water.
“Open your hand,” he ordered, his thumb insistently pressing on her fingers, he looked distractedly over his shoulder to the kitchen and asked, “Did you break a glass washing up?”
“It’s nothing,” she repeated.
His head came back around and he lifted her hand between them, thumb unrelenting, trying to open her closed fist.
“Let me see,” he murmured coaxingly.
Panic stricken, she jerked her wrist and he lost hold. When he did, his eyes snapped to hers.
“I said, it’s nothing,” she whispered.
Prentice stared at her.
Isabella took a step back, holding her wrist where his hand was, feeling his warm strength still there. Memorizing it, she pressed her hand against her chest.
His eyes dropped to her hand. Then they went back to hers.
And they were cold. So cold, she shivered.
“Secrets,” he said softly, his voice awful. “Which is the same as lies. Secrets and f**king lies.”
She held his gaze, it cost her but she held it and didn’t breathe a word.
After long moments, Prentice looked to the floor and shook his head.
Then he turned away and asked, “Turn the lights out, will you?”
Then he walked up the stairs and disappeared from sight.
Chapter Seven
Elle
Prentice
Prentice stood on the terrace of the pub, whisky in hand, eyes on the sea.
Two days it had been since he’d discovered Isabella had not abandoned her best friend in her hour of need but, against the odds (and Annie could be stubborn so Prentice knew the odds were most assuredly against Isabella), she nursed Annie back to her old self.
Two days it had been since he discovered she’d endured only the beginning but most definitely not the end of a fairytale.
And two days since he’d discovered that, at eight years old, she’d found her dead mother in a pool of her own blood.
His hand tightened on the glass as his jaw tensed.
He hadn’t handled that last very well. In fact, he’d been a complete, selfish jackass.
It had been two days and those two days had not been uneventful.
To say the least.
The first morning after dinner with Mikey, Prentice had woken up to find his closet full of ironed shirts.
When he went downstairs, he found the coffeepot full.
Isabella was not there, however, and didn’t make an appearance until the children came downstairs.
Then she arrived wearing jeans and a thin, mostly see-through, skintight, scoop-necked, cream t-shirt with a camisole under it. Her feet were bare but her wild, tangle of hair had been sleeked and pulled into sophisticated ponytail at the back of her head and she’d made up her face.
She also had a band of white gauze wrapped around her hand.
She’d arrived to make breakfast, chat with the children and ignore Prentice.
Sally was unaware of the drama the night before though she was highly curious as to the white gauze which Isabella airily informed his daughter was “nothing”.
After what occurred the night before, Jason, it appeared, had formed some kind of motherless-child bond with Isabella and decided to cast himself as her protector. He was watching her carefully as if she was made of fragile crystal and he was going to be there to catch her before she fell and shattered on the floor.
Isabella quickly realized this and just as quickly (and skillfully) teamed up with Sally, using his daughter’s constant good cheer and Isabella’s own charm to tease and joke with Jason until he was smiling and even laughing.
It was quite a feat but she mastered it effortlessly.
When the children disappeared to get their books, without a word, Isabella headed to the hall.
“Isabella,” he called, she stopped and turned polite eyes to him in enquiry.
He looked at her and realized they were, indeed, playing a game.
It was the game of life. His life and his children’s life.
And also Isabella’s.
Too much had passed, he’d moved on and so had she, neither, it seemed, to things that ended well.
But this game didn’t have to end ugly and his children needed every friend in their life they could get.
And Prentice thought Isabella would make a good one.
With a new strategy in mind, Prentice walked directly to her and got close.
She stiffened but didn’t retreat, simply tipped her head back and looked at him, eyebrows raised.
“We need to talk,” he told her.
“There’s nothing to say,” she replied, her tone cultured, controlled, remote.
“You’re wrong,” he returned.
Her face remained polite but expressionless. “Well then, there’s no time. You have to take the kids to school and I’m going to Annie’s and I won’t be home tonight. It’s her hen night tonight, it’ll go late and I’ll probably crash on the couch at Fergus’s.”
“We’ll talk tomorrow.”
She shook her head. “Tomorrow is the day before the wedding. I’ll be tied up all day helping Annie and tomorrow night is Dougal’s stag night.”
He got closer and her body went solid as a rock.
This he took as a good sign.
He dipped his face close to hers, willing for some flash of something to light in her eyes but he got nothing.