Love Restored (Gallagher Brothers #1)(41)
Unease crept up his spine. “What did you do?”
Blake met his eyes. “I have a daughter. Her name is Rowan, and she’s ten years old.”
Shock slammed into him, forcing him back a step. His mouth went dry, and he tried to think about what she’d said, tried to comprehend.
Words spiraled in his brain, a cascade of darkness and truths that threatened the very foundation he stood on.
Daughter.
Rowan.
Ten years old.
“What the f*ck?” he gasped. “You didn’t tell me? Didn’t tell me you have a f*cking daughter? We’ve been together for weeks now. We f*cked, and you didn’t tell me?”
She shook her head, her eyes clear but frightened. “I couldn’t tell you. I’m so, so sorry. I don’t tell people about her, and I have good reasons why I don’t. Reasons she’s a secret. But with you…it snowballed. I tried to tell you before, and then things got out of control. Yes, I should have told you before this, and that’s on me. But, Graham, there are reasons.”
“You think I give a damn about your reasons? All I’m hearing is that you think nothing of me, nothing of your child. She’s not good enough for you to share? What the f*ck is wrong with you?”
This time, it was anger that leapt into her eyes. “No, that is so far off the mark. She’s my everything. I wanted to tell you, I did. But it was too early at first. It’s not safe if I just blurt her out like that. And then, when I thought it might be time, you told me about Cynthia.” This time, she blinked away tears. “And I didn’t want to mention Rowan so soon. I didn’t know the right time, Graham.”
At the sound of Cynthia’s name, he felt the blood drain from his face. His heart ached at the thought of his daughter, and yet there was this other little girl out there the same damn age as Cynthia would have been, and yet, Blake had hidden her like a dirty secret. It was like he didn’t even know the woman in front of him, and damned if he wanted to listen to her anymore.
“Get out,” he whispered, low, dangerous.
“I came here that morning to tell you…but things got out of control.”
He remembered her saying something about that, but if her daughter were that important to her, she should have tried harder. If he was that important to her, she should have tried harder.
“So it’s my fault?” he bellowed. “What the f*ck? You didn’t tell me. You lied. Your daughter is the same age as my daughter would have been. Don’t you get that? Don’t you get that just the idea of Rowan hurts? It shouldn’t. I shouldn’t hate the idea that you have a child when I don’t. But that’s what you’ve done to me. I don’t even know what to say right now.”
“Of course, I know the ages,” she whispered. “That’s why I freaked out and made mistake after mistake.” She met his eyes. “But Rowan isn’t a mistake.”
“Get out.” He took a deep breath. “I can’t deal with you. I can’t even look at you. Just go.”
“Graham, we can talk about this.”
“No, we can’t. You didn’t want drama? Fine. Get the f*ck out. We’re over.”
She looked at him again but nodded after a long moment. Without another word, she left him standing in his living room, alone and breaking all over again. She had a kid. A freaking kid, who could have been friends with his baby girl.
Blake had the opportunity to watch her daughter grow, to watch the world grow with her, and Graham didn’t have that. While Blake had hidden her daughter, Graham had tried to bring Cynthia out more.
The fact that he’d only told Blake about Cynthia because Candice had shown up crossed his mind but he pushed it away. He didn’t know what he’d have done if things were different, but either way, he’d never have purposely hidden his child’s memory.
His heart felt like someone had squeezed it until the blood vessels burst and there was nothing left but an ache and the memory of what could never be.
Graham went to his front door and locked it, knowing Blake wouldn’t be back. She had too much pride. He wasn’t sure he wanted to see her anyway. He might be working on her family’s home—a home that he still didn’t know the story about—and he might be connected to the place she worked through family, but that didn’t mean he had to see her again.
She’d broken something inside him, and he didn’t want to find a way to fix it.
He hated the fact that her lies had forced him to resent a little girl for merely being. And for that…for that, he might not ever forgive Blake.
Or himself.
11
Blake knew she’d messed up, but even though sadness filled her, it did nothing to quench the anger.
Four days.
It had been four days.
Four days since she’d told Graham the truth and had ruined any chance she had with him. Yet she knew that no matter the outcome, she’d probably have done the same thing she had initially. Rowan was far too important to her to just let anyone know about her. And that twisted sense of logic was why Blake tried to avoid drama in the first place.
The sadness came from the knowledge that she had a relationship that was over before it had even begun. She ached for Graham’s loss and his inability to move on, but she couldn’t blame him for the latter. If she lost Rowan, she didn’t know what she’d do. The fact that she’d kept her daughter to herself because of those who would not only hurt her and Rowan, but also take her baby away, spoke of only a small fraction of what Blake would do.
Carrie Ann Ryan's Books
- Carrie Ann Ryan
- Written in Ink (Montgomery Ink #4)
- Stolen and Forgiven (Branded Packs #1)
- Flame and Ink: An Anthology (Happy Ever After #1)
- Dark Fates (A Paranormal Anthology)
- An Alpha's Choice (Talon Pack #2)
- Abandoned and Unseen (Branded Packs #2)
- Wolf Betrayed (Talon Pack #4)
- Prowled Darkness (Dante's Circle, #7)
- Mated in Mist (Talon Pack #3)