Barefoot in the Sun (Barefoot Bay)(20)



“Ten to one your bathing suit came off,” Jocelyn added.

“I went all in for the whole enchilada.” Lacey grinned. “And I don’t mean the one I ordered from South of the Border.”

Zoe rolled her eyes but didn’t quench their pathetic curiosity.

“Zoe,” Tessa said, her voice weary with frustration. “You know we hate secrets.”

“You hate them, Tessa. The rest of us deal with them as part of life. Right?” She looked at the other two women, but Lacey peeked under the blanket and Jocelyn was suddenly interested in her wineglass. “Okay, let’s get this over with, then. Start the inquisition.”

Tessa dove right in, of course. “You know Dr. Oliver Bradbury.”

“Define know.”

“In the biblical sense,” Tessa added.

Zoe almost spewed her wine. “You didn’t really just say that.”

“C’mon, Zoe, talk to us,” Jocelyn said. “We know he’s the guy that freaked you out that day at the Ritz.”

Lacey leaned forward, her jaw opened. “The one who came in when you and I were buying me condoms.”

“That you clearly forgot to use.” Zoe pointed at the baby, then lifted her glass. “He was a stupid flash in my past, okay. I knew him years ago in Chicago for a couple of weeks. He’s not a secret as much as a mistake, which you’ve all made.” She took a sip, looking over the glass at three disbelieving faces.

“Oh, you haven’t?” she demanded. “Jocelyn, the Alabama game, that’s all I’m going to say.” She put her finger in her mouth and fake-puked. “Lacey, I believe his name was David Fox and you have a lovely sixteen year-old daughter to remember him by.”

Lacey shrugged. “Best mistake I ever made.”

“And Tessa…” She dug into her memory for some misdemeanor, but Tessa hadn’t committed a lot of them. “Surely you ate a burger and mainlined Splenda in a moment of unorganic weakness.”

“Never.” Tessa smiled. “Okay, once during finals. Stop trying to deflect with humor, Zoe. Spill the doctor dirt.”

“There’s nothing to spill.” At Tessa’s furious and unforgiving look, Zoe sighed. “It all happened a long time and a lot of men ago, okay? He doesn’t matter except he’s a paying guest of Casa Blanca and that’s a good thing. Right, Lace?”

She looked up from the blanket. “Jocelyn said he was with his wife at the grand opening. Did you know he’s married?”

“Not anymore, he’s not.”

“Was he married when you ‘knew’ him?” Lacey asked, the tiniest bit of accusation in her voice. Tiny, but as sharp as glass and straight to the heart.

“No.” Zoe closed her eyes and swallowed hard. “But thanks for the vote of confidence, my friend.”

Lacey looked suitably miserable for asking. “Sorry. Baby hormones.”

“We’re just trying to figure out what happened,” Tessa added.

“Why?” Zoe spun on her, all the forgiveness she was ready to shower on Lacey gone. “Why doesn’t ‘we dated, had mind-blowing sex, and broke up’ cut it for you, Tessa? Why do you have to know every soul-crushing, heartbreaking, dream-dying detail?”

Lacey pushed herself up slowly. “I’m taking Elijah inside.”

“Oh, Lace, I’m sorry,” Zoe said, putting her glass on the table to stand. “I didn’t mean to lose my temper in front of the baby. Or any of you.”

“Only me,” Tessa said softly.

“Yeah, you.” Zoe gave her a smile she had to fight to find. “We live to antagonize one another, remember?”

Still holding the baby in one arm, Lacey laid her free hand on Zoe’s cheek. “Honey, we don’t antagonize. We don’t argue. And we don’t want to pry. We want to help you.”

Zoe closed her eyes, a whirlwind of emotion fluttering through her chest. Love, longing, friendship, and, damn it, the burning need to hang out without worrying about revealing everything. But mostly she wanted to respect Lacey, her home, and her newborn.

She nodded and stayed quiet while Lacey went inside, then plopped down again, directing her attention to Jocelyn. “You had a secret,” she reminded her. “We didn’t pry it out of you.”

“I felt better after I shared,” she said.

“Closer to us and happy to be honest,” Tessa added, getting up from her chair to join Zoe on the chaise. “Don’t hate me for wanting to help you.”

Zoe fought the instinct to shake off Tessa’s arm. “What happened that makes you think I need help? I saw an ex. He has a sweet son and now he’s going to be a guest at the resort. What’s the big deal?”

“Your face,” Tessa said. “The way you look at him and the way he looks at you. And Pasha acted kind of weird, too.”

Lacey returned, babyless this time, buttoning her top while looking at Zoe. “He came to see you, you know. His son let it slip to Clay.”

“He came to see Elijah.” But she knew that wasn’t true.

“But you weren’t surprised to see him,” Tessa said.

Zoe speared her with a look. “You really should have been a lawyer.”

Tessa didn’t take the bait but rubbed Zoe’s arm with love and patience. “He’s more than just an ex, isn’t he? He was important in your life.”

How could she fight Tessa the Tsunami? “More than you know,” Zoe finally whispered. The ache to say more twisted inside her, the need to know the bliss of pure, open honesty as powerful as any of the needs she’d been battling for a few days.

But she had never been allowed that privilege in her life.

While they were all quiet, Zoe took a sip of wine, considering how much she could tell them. Certainly it wouldn’t hurt to share the news about Pasha being sick. That wouldn’t break any promises, would it?

“The fact is, I went to see him first, the morning after the baby was born.” She rubbed some condensation off the glass, not looking up. “He’s an oncologist.”

The word took a moment to sink in, then she got a chorus of two gasps and one “Oh my God.”

“Not me,” she said quickly. “No, I’m fine. It’s Pasha.”

“Oh, no.” Tessa’s chest sank like she’d been sucker-punched. “I’ve noticed how weak she seems. I thought it was old age.”

Zoe dragged her curls off her face, the sense of relief palpable in her chest. Was it always this good to share secrets? “She’s really sick. We got a quasi-diagnosis in Arizona and I talked to Oliver, who more or less thinks she might have esophageal cancer.”

“More or less?” Jocelyn asked. “What does that mean?”

“I don’t know. We’re going to find out. He’s going to see her,” she said. “If she’ll let him.”

“Why wouldn’t she?” Lacey and Tessa asked the question at the same time.

“Because…” She lifted the glass to her lips to buy time, but then realized that the wine would only make her more talkative, so she put it down. She was walking a very fine line with what she could reveal. “He broke my heart, as you’ve all probably figured out by now, so he’s on her shit list.”

And that was true enough.

“If he won’t work, we’ll find another oncologist,” Lacey said. “In fact, I can make some calls now. I know some people in town who’ve been through chemo.”

“No, no.” Shit, now it was going to get tricky. “She…doesn’t have insurance.” Again, not a lie.

Jocelyn waved her hand. “We’ll pool funds, Zoe. Did she have a doctor to refer her—”

“She doesn’t want to see a doctor.”

“If she has cancer?” Tessa was incredulous.

“Tessa, she will not see a doctor.” At least not one who will make her fill out paperwork and have a legit Social Security card. “She’s…terrified of them.”

“What if she got a sign that she had to see a doctor?” Tessa asked. “You know how she responds to messages from the universe and nature.”

“Like that pain in her chest and the doctor in Sedona using the C word isn’t enough of a sign?” Still, Zoe appreciated the idea.

“We have to come up with a solution,” Jocelyn said.

“This is not an insurmountable problem,” Lacey agreed.

“As long as you’re being completely open with us.” Tessa gave Zoe’s arm a slight poke. “And you are, aren’t you?”

For several heartbeats Zoe stayed silent, a dozen different smart-ass quips threatening but not actually coming forth. It would be so easy to joke. To straight-arm her friends, who only wanted to help. To make sure that wall she’d started building at ten years old stayed nice and high and impenetrable.

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