Whatever It Takes (Second Chances #2)

BOOK: Whatever It Takes (Second Chances #2)
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To everyone who had wished
for a second chance at love

CHAPTER ONE

tess


T
ell me again,” Noah begged. “About my mom and dad.”

I stared down at the little boy who had completely taken over my life more than two years ago and ruffled his curly blond hair. It was time for a haircut, but I couldn’t bring myself to cut his shining, lush locks just yet. I did this every time. He was going to be four next month, but more like going on forty; entirely too perceptive for a three-year-old.

Unsurprising, considering the life he’d had so far.

“You know this story already.” I pulled the covers up around his neck and patted them around his little body. He’d chosen fire truck pajamas tonight, his favorite. He smelled sweet from his bath, and his blue eyes had that sleepy look that made me want to curl up next to him and pretend the world outside didn’t exist.

Tomorrow I had to go to the Harnett Correctional Institution and see my father. Every six months I had to check in with him, and every three months I couldn’t fight the dread that pooled in my stomach for days beforehand.

I had only temporary guardianship of Noah, my little brother, and every time I saw my father, I had to prove to him that I was doing fine both in school and financially. Every time I saw my father I begged him to let me adopt Noah permanently—after all, Dad still had five more years on his sentence before he’d be out, and it wasn’t like he even wanted Noah.

But I did, and I was going to do everything in my power to make sure nothing could come between us.

I took a deep breath. I hated lying to him about his parents, but when he started asking about a year ago, I couldn’t tell him the truth: that his mother was an ex-student of our father’s and they’d been fooling around until she got pregnant. The student was eighteen, so my father got only a verbal reprimand and it all got swept under the rug, except for Noah, of course, who ended up with my father when the girl decided she didn’t want to be a mother when he was just under one.

The next time it happened, though, my father wasn’t quite so lucky.

I had just finished my first year at Brown when everything fell apart. The accusations. The arrest. The trial, and then . . . my father got sentenced to eight years in prison for having sex with a minor.

Noah’s mom didn’t want him back after my dad went to jail; she had her own life and was happy, so it was either me or foster care. It was an easy choice for me. I dropped out of Brown and made Noah my top priority. The only way my father had agreed to this plan was if I would check in every six months with bank statements and grades showing I was not only moving forward with my education but also getting all A’s while doing it.

All while holding down a job and raising my little brother.

I knew my father was just waiting for me to fail so he could say “I told you so” and put Noah in foster care, erase the glaring evidence of his mistake and his problems. He hated that I’d put Noah above everything else in my life, especially when he had pushed me so hard to succeed. It took all my willpower not to point out that he was the one who had ruined it all, but I didn’t.

Not when he held all the control.

I took a deep breath and started the story like I always did, absentmindedly rubbing his back in small circles as I spoke. “Your mom and dad loved you very much, but they just couldn’t take care of you. But they knew someone who would love you more than anything . . .”

Noah grinned and pointed at me. “You!”

“Yes, me. So that’s what they did, and now we are a family and always will be.”

Noah nodded very seriously, his tiny brow furrowed. “You’re my sister, but you do all the things a mom does. That’s what Louisa said. You cook me breakfast and take me to the park and kiss my boo-boos and hug me every day.”

My chest tightened. “Yep,” I managed to squeeze out around my thick tongue.

Noah snuggled against my chest and even though I hadn’t given birth to him, he was my heart. He was my life. And tomorrow, I’d have to once again prove to the biggest bastard I knew that I was capable of taking care of him.

But it was a dance I’d perform every day for the rest of my life if it meant that I got to keep Noah with me.


Y
ou look tired. Are you sure you can handle everything? Don’t you want to go back to real college and start taking care of yourself? Earn a real degree? Learn how to make a proper living?”

That was the first thing my father said when I sat down across from him in the dreary visiting area. It was the same thing he said every time I came to see him. He’d gotten a haircut since the last time I was here, and despite the new gray at his temples, he was still handsome. I looked a lot like my father, with the same cheekbones and chin shape, though I hated it. I wished that I resembled my mom. She was beautiful, both inside and out.

There wasn’t a day that went by that I didn’t wish she were still alive. If that drunk driver had never hit her, I never would have gone to live with my grandma when I was just eight. I never would have had to go live with my father, a man who barely acknowledged I existed before that, when Gran got sick.

Even back then my father was selfish. He left my mom when I was very young to go and teach English at a private college in California. She wanted us to go with him. He divorced her instead. It was hard to believe Gran could have a son who was so uncaring when she was the most loving person I knew, apart from my mom.

I stared at my father. He had blue eyes and thick eyelashes, and when he smiled, which I rarely ever saw, a dimple would appear in his left cheek that made him look boyish.

I guess that’s what made it so easy for him to seduce his students.

My father raised an eyebrow, waiting for my answer. Of course he wouldn’t acknowledge the community college where I’d been taking online courses for the past two years as a “real” school. To my father, if it wasn’t Ivy League, it wasn’t worth anything.

It didn’t matter to him that I studied my ass off when Noah napped or after I got home from work late at night. He wouldn’t care that I tried to make sure Noah had a happy childhood, despite how hard it was for me to keep everything together while working toward a degree.

He barely acknowledged my 3.99 GPA when I told him about it.

“No. I’m happy right where I am.” I set the manila folder down in front of me, the one that basically outlined my life the past six months. I hated this, letting my father in on every little detail. But that was him—controlling—and I had to play his game.

“You moved?”

The way he said it made me realize he already knew the truth. I wasn’t going to tell him about that. I narrowed my eyes.

“How did you know that?”

My father snorted. “Like I’d take your word on how things are going just because you bring a fancy folder with you. I have someone checking up on you. Telling me how things really are.”

Anger flared in my gut. “Then why make me go through this charade?” I waved vaguely toward the folder. If he already knew everything, then this check-in he made me suffer through every six months was a farce. “To make sure I know who’s in charge?”

I didn’t miss the look of satisfaction flicker over his face. It had always been that way. Him telling me what I needed to do and me doing it. Not because I wanted to, because I had to. Because he made it almost impossible to make my own choices, even now.

With the anger came panic this time. I’d had to use up a good part of my savings when the brakes on my ten-year-old Honda had to be replaced the same week that tuition was due two months ago. I had very little set aside right now, but he had to know it took time to build back up a savings account.

And that had been my last tuition payment, so I would be able to set more aside now.

Except he didn’t open the folder. He barely glanced at it.

“Come back in three months and show me something worth looking at or I’ll make the hard decisions for you, Tess.” Then without another look, he stood up and pushed his chair back. The guard moved to his side and then my father left.

I sat at the table in stunned silence.

My father had just threatened me with taking away the most important thing in my life, and there wasn’t a goddamned thing I could do about it.

CHAPTER TWO

ryan


P
ops,” I called out as I banged through our front door. “I brought burgers from that place down the road that you like.”

I set the bags on the kitchen table and started clearing away the newspaper and plate left over from Dad’s lunch. At least he ate today. Some days I came home and there was no indication he’d even moved from his chair, save for the empty beer cans lined up alongside his recliner.

None of which was new.

It had been that way for the past six years, since the day my mom walked out on us. I didn’t know what had happened, what made her decide that we weren’t worth it anymore. I asked Pops right after it happened, but he refused to talk about it with a sixteen-year-old, brokenhearted kid.

I was never a kid again after that, though.

My memories of my mother weren’t bad ones. I don’t remember my parents arguing or yelling much at all. Actually, she was the mom who had cookies waiting when I got home from school, and the trailer was always sparkling clean and smelled like vanilla and flowers.

I don’t think she was unhappy, but looking back, I don’t think she was really happy either. I never had the chance to ask her, because aside from a birthday card every year, I hadn’t had any contact with her since she’d left. No return address, no phone number, not even an e-mail address.

It was clear she didn’t want me in her life, so I accepted it and moved on. Pops, on the other hand, sank into himself the day she walked out and still hadn’t come back. He stopped caring about his small handyman business, which had always been his pride and joy, so eventually I stepped up and started doing his jobs for him while I finished high school. I learned everything I knew about construction through our school’s vocational program during my last two years of high school and hands-on after school every day.

Over the four years since graduation, I’d built up a pretty damned good business. I made a name for myself and I was the one people called when they wanted something done. I made more than enough now to move out on my own; I even thought about getting my own place, but that wasn’t really an option. With Pops like he was all these years, he needed me around to take care of him.

So I decided to get both of us out of Granite Estates. I thought maybe the change would be a good thing, but Pops had a fit. He owned the trailer and had to pay only a lot rent, and this was his home. He wasn’t ever going to sell it. He put his foot down and I had no choice.

Part of me wondered if it had anything to do with my mother, but I didn’t ask.

So it was either leave him alone, or stay.

So here I was, twenty-two, stuck living at home, taking care of my father.

Pops shuffled over with a fresh can of beer and sat down at the table. He had on an old flannel shirt that I’d washed yesterday and a pair of worn jeans. There were dark circles under his red-rimmed eyes, a side effect of sitting up all night watching TV. At least tonight he was sitting with me to eat. I pulled out a cheeseburger and fries and set them in front of him.

“How was your day?” I asked him the same question I always did during our dinners, and got the same answer.

“Damned ruckus all day. Someone moved in next door,” he grumbled. “A woman, by the looks of it. She hung up a damned wind chime first thing and it’s been making noise ever since.”

I stared at Pops. That was the longest sentence he’d said to me in forever.

“I went to the door after a couple of hours and told her to take the damned thing down.”

Shit. Now I was going to get a visit from an angry neighbor about my father’s manners, or lack thereof.

“You know what she said to me?”

I shook my head.

“She said my chi needed cleansing and that the wind chimes would help my attitude. Then she smiled and went about her business. Damned broad,” he muttered. “Don’t know what the hell chi is, but mine is just fine.”

I fought the urge to laugh. Whoever she was, I liked her already. Pops hadn’t been worked up about much of anything except his reality shows for a very long time.

I took a huge bite of my burger and washed it down with a swallow of soda. “What’d she look like?”

“Black hair, twisted into some kind of knot on her head. This long skirt that had about a million colors on it and this top that kept sliding off her shoulder. She looked like some kind of gypsy. Damned woman didn’t even have shoes on either. And bracelets, from here”—he pointed to his wrist—“to here.” He indicated toward his elbow.

I think my jaw was on the table. That he had noticed all these details was crazy. I’d made us a new kitchen table and chairs a few years ago and it was more than a year before he even noticed. Even then all he said was that the old one was just fine.

“Did you get a name?” I asked.

Pops snorted. “Why the hell would I want to know her name?” He finished his burger and grabbed his fries to take back to the recliner. He propped them in his lap, shifted the lever, and sat back with a long exhale.
Jeopardy!
began blaring from the TV.

I finished my dinner and balled up all the trash. The garbage was full and I knew Pops wouldn’t take it out—he didn’t do much of anything around the house anymore—so I tied it up and carried it out to the Dumpster. It was only a few trailers down and I had to walk by our new neighbor’s place to get there. The front door was open, so I could see in through the screen. The place was lit up like Christmas and a string of white lights had been wrapped around the front-step railings.

No matter that she was irritating Pops, the smells coming from the place were incredible. Spicy and sweet, and my mouth watered despite my full stomach. On the way back inside, my phone vibrated.

Feel like getting together Friday night?

Shari. I grinned and texted back,
Hell yeah.

Shari was Avery’s best friend, and Avery was my best friend’s girl. We’d all hung out together for a while now, but it wasn’t like Shari and I were a couple or anything. I didn’t do the whole relationship thing, and Shari was sowing her wild oats before she settled down with some trust fund dick.

Until that happened, though, we had a pretty good thing going. Hooking up: no strings, no expectations. Just two people enjoying each other. I was perfectly happy with the casual thing and didn’t see myself ever wanting anything else. I’d seen firsthand what loving someone did to a person. It had ripped my pops in two.

And I wanted no part of that.


Y
ou need to find a nice girl,” Seth said Friday afternoon when I met him for lunch.

I nearly choked on a bite of my gross salad. I would have chosen pizza or burgers at our favorite dive bar over this rabbit food any day, but Avery had Seth on this ridiculous “clean foods” kick, so here we were digging into these tooty-fruity salad bowls at a lame health bar like a couple of chicks. I swear, I loved what Avery had done for Seth and his life, but she had his balls in a vise and everyone knew it.

After I managed to swallow, I laughed. “I do just fine, thanks, even without my wingman.”

“I’m not talking about getting a piece, man. Something more serious. A relationship. What about Shari? You guys have been spending more time together lately. Avery mentioned it last night.”

“Don’t go there, bro,” I interrupted. “I’m happy that you found Avery and all, but that relationship shit isn’t for me. You know that. Shari and I are having fun—no strings attached. Neither of us are looking for anything beyond that.”

Seth sighed. “If anyone deserves to find someone, it’s you, man.”

“Except I’m not looking for a
someone
. I’m happy with the way things are, okay?” And no way in hell did I need to fall for some chick who would just turn around and walk out when everything seemed to be going great. I loved women, but anything more than messing around, no fucking way.

I was never going to be the settle-down-with-a-picket-fence guy. Seth knew that; he’d been there when all the shit with my mom happened. I wasn’t sure why he was pushing me so hard, except for that he was happy with Avery and wanted me to be that happy. He was my best friend and I loved him like a brother, but if he didn’t back off soon, I was going to gut-punch him.

I didn’t want what he had. It would only lead to heartache.

I took a bite of what I think Seth told me was arugula to cover the bitter taste in my mouth, not that it helped much. Did people willingly eat this shit? I gulped down a huge drink of flavored sparkling water and cringed.

There was a McDonald’s drive-through in my very near future.

“Not all women are like her, you know,” Seth said quietly.

Suddenly I was chewing a mouthful of sawdust. I didn’t want to talk about this shit, and Seth knew that. The topic of my mother was and always would be off-limits, even with my best friend.

“I’m not trying to piss you off, man,” Seth said. He sat back and crossed his arms over his chest. “You’re just always taking care of everyone else, and I’d like to see someone taking care of you for a change.”

I finally managed to swallow and pushed the plate away. No way was I getting any more down right now. Not while Seth insisted on being a Grade A asshole.

“Oh, I’m taken care of just fine, thank you.” I lifted an eyebrow so he would not miss the double meaning. “And I appreciate the thought, but it isn’t gonna happen. I like how things are. I got decent money in the bank, a good job, and I’m not shackled to one woman. It’s the life for me.”

And Seth needed to drop this line of conversation before shit got ugly.

“I’ll drop it, okay? I just want you to be happy.” Seth reached over and clapped me on the shoulder. “If Shari helps, then keep doing what you’re doing. I won’t piss you off about it again.”

The anger faded. He had my back. Seth knew better than anyone else what my mother’s leaving had done to me and my dad.

“I get it, man, but what you have, it’s just not for me.” I grabbed my plate and pulled it back over. I was suddenly so hungry again that even this nasty excuse for a meal was looking appealing. “So Avery’s at the club with her parents today? Without you? Her mother still hasn’t warmed to the idea of you two, huh?”

Seth choked back a laugh. “She fucking hates me. It’s awesome. I begged Ave to let me go with her, just to see the look on her mom’s face.”

I shook my head. “You are crazy.” How the hell had he gone from prison to dating the daughter of the fucking mayor? No matter, he was happy and on track to make something of himself and I was proud as shit of him. I always knew he’d be the one to get out.

Me?

I planned on making sure my old man was taken care of and that meant I’d probably never live anywhere other than the esteemed Granite Estates trailer park.

This was my life, and nothing was going to change that.

“So Sunday, concert in the park. You, Shari, me, and Ave? I hear there’s a picnic involved.”

Shari had mentioned something about that the last time we were together. Her dad was some big-deal music exec and often asked her to go check out bands with her friends. Sounded like a good time. I laughed. “Who would have thought we’d be picnicking in a fucking park listening to live music? On purpose?”

Seth laughed. “If Ave asked me to walk across a tightrope dressed in a tutu, I’d do it.”

The thing was, he wasn’t joking. He loved Avery enough to do anything she asked, and
that’s
what scared the living hell out of me the most.

I
hated grocery shopping.

Usually Dad and I managed with a pizza or subs every night, but we still needed essentials every couple of weeks. I had my chicken-scratch list in my hand.

I’d stopped at the Discount Food Mart two blocks from our trailer park. The place was a zoo even though it was evening by now, and bored-looking cashiers didn’t seem to notice the lines of people at their registers. Typical really.

I knew where everything was and could shop blindfolded, so I had my basket of stuff pretty fast and got into the closest line. I grabbed a king-size peanut butter cup as my reward for sticking it out and for actually swallowing that sorry excuse Seth called a meal earlier.

A cute kid with blond hair, about three or so, sat in the cart in front of me and looked at my candy bar, then leaned forward and stuck his hand out.

“My candy, pwease?” He gave me a gap-toothed grin that I couldn’t help returning. Couldn’t blame him at all. Peanut butter and chocolate rocked.

And I’ll bet no one told him no with that smile.

The woman who was unloading the cart seemed distracted, muttering numbers under her breath as she shifted items from the cart to the moving belt. I realized she was adding up her total in her head as she went. She stopped for a second and barely glanced at me before she looked at the candy bar and then the boy.

“Sorry, Noah, not today.”

Her hair was twisted up in a loose knot and dark brown pieces stuck out at odd angles. She had on a light green jacket and jeans that hugged her legs very nicely. She didn’t have on any makeup, which was surprising, but I still recognized her.

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