Page 32 of Starting Over


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'I don't want him to live anywhere else, I want him to come home and live with us.'

Alex's manner was almost aggressive, her mouth pouting as she glared angrily at her mother.

Olivia closed her eyes and mentally counted slowly to ten.

AT LEAST she seemed to have reassured the girls that they would be seeing Caspar again as well as explaining why it was not possible for them to have Christmas together, Olivia decided thankfully as she finished reading the chapter of their shared bedtime story and started to get up.

'Mummy...'

Olivia tensed.

'Yes, Alex...' God, but she was so tired and there was still so much she had to do before she, too, could go to bed. Far too much fortunately for her to have any spare energy left to think about that unexpected and unwanted visit from her father. How dare he simply think he could walk into her life...their lives...?

And as for that pseudo loving offer of his help...

'That man who came today who looks like Uncle Jon, is it true that he's our grandfather?'

Olivia froze. How on earth...? Anger seared her in a white-hot sheet of hate. Had her father actually dared...?

In the other bed Amelia was making a strangled anxious noise. Frowning, Olivia looked at her.

'Alex, I told you not to say anything about that,'

Amelia snapped, glaring at her younger sister.

Olivia sat down heavily on Amelia's bed. She was trembling violently but she tried to suppress it, worried that the girls might see.

'What makes you ask that, darling?' she asked Alex carefully.

'Leo said that he was,' Alex replied openly. 'He called him "Uncle David" and when I said that we didn't have an uncle David he said that he was his uncle David but our grandfather.'

'I see.'

Frantically she wondered what to do. She had never discussed her father or her childhood with her daughters. They were far too young to understand the complications of her relationship with her own parents for one thing and for another she never saw her mother and had not expected that her father would ever dare to come back to Haslewich.

'Is it true?' Alex was persisting.

Olivia paused; her throat had become dry, she ached to deny her father, but how could she without blatantly lying?

'I...yes, he is,' she agreed huskily.

She could see the troubled look on Amelia's face and had a sudden unwanted recollection of herself at Amelia's age watching over her mother as she slept off what Olivia recognised now must have been one of her bulimic attacks.

She closed her eyes momentarily. If only Caspar were here, he would know what to do—what to say.

Tears clogged her throat. He had been so furious with her when he had discovered that she hadn't told him that her father had come home. Confusing mud-dled thoughts were filling her head. Why was she feeling regretful about their quarrel? Caspar was the one who had been at fault—not her.

'But how can he be our grandfather?' Alex was saying plaintively.

'He's our grandfather because he's Uncle Jon's brother, stupid,' Amelia cut in sharply, avoiding looking directly at Olivia as she spoke.

Alex glared back at her sister.

'But if he's our grandfather then why don't we see him? Leo sees Uncle Jon and Aunt Jenny all the time.'

'That's enough. Go to sleep, both of you,' Olivia instructed them shakily.

Just hearing them talking about her father, comparing their lack of any kind of relationship with him with the warm intimate love that existed between Jon and Jenny and their grandchildren made Olivia feel sick and angry and guilty. She had tried to compensate, to provide her children with the grandparenting she wanted them to have and she had thought she had succeeded, that they were finding surrogate grandparents in Jon and Jenny just as she had found surrogate parents in them; but just recently she had found herself watching her aunt and uncle, afraid that she might see that they preferred their 'real' grandchildren above Amelia and Alex.

'But I want to know how he can be our grandfather when we've never seen him?' Alex was continuing stubbornly.

'That's enough,' Olivia shouted, immediately ashamed of her anger when she saw the shocked look in Alex's eyes and the way she clung to her bedclothes.

'I don't want to hear another word about...about any of this,' she continued in a more gentle voice.

Kissing them both good-night she walked over to the door. Just as she was closing it she thought she heard Alex whispering fiercely to Amelia, 'Well, I don't care what you say, I liked him.'

'NICK—are you feeling all right?'

Nick frowned as he looked across the room at his brother.

'Yes. I'm fine. Why?'

'You've been in a world of your own for the last ten minutes. If you overdid it at the gym earlier and—'

Nick grimaced.

'Will you please stop fussing. There is nothing wrong with me and if you weren't such a worrier—'

'So,' Saul said softly. "What is absorbing your attention to the exclusion of everything else just now?'

Nick refused to be drawn. The truth was that he had been thinking about Sara and her unbelievable acceptance of his preposterous proposition. Because she genuinely wanted to have a 'no strings—no-holds-barred' sex fling with him or because she was playing a very subtle game of brinkmanship?

Irritably Nick wondered just why he was finding it so hard to take on board the idea that Sara might simply want to have sex with him as opposed to a relationship. Most men would have been overjoyed to take her up on her offer; after all, wasn't sex without emotion or commitment every determined-to-remain-single man's fantasy—and he had to remain unat-tached. There was no way he could continue to do the job he loved if he wasn't. Oh, at first he imagined a woman would accept that there would be times when he would simply have to pack his bags and disappear for an unspecified length of time, but gradually things would change. Inevitably in a committed relationship the subject of children would arise, and once the relationship included children there would be pressure on him to put their needs first, to give up a job that didn't just take him away from them in terms of time but which also was dangerous enough to contain a risk that he may never return.

One day maybe he would feel ready to exchange his current work for a stay-at-home desk job, but that day was still a long, long way off and Sara had struck him as the kind of woman who would be very specific about what she expected from her man—her mate....

There he went again, bringing emotion into the equation.

Perhaps he should try to out-manoeuvre Sara and double bluff her, agree that they should opt for a sex-only relationship and see just how long it took her to change her mind and backtrack.

Grimly he wondered how many other men in his position would be feeling so ominously heavy-hearted about the thought of going to bed with a woman who made them ache so much just to think about her that their longing for her was a tight, taut physical pain.

'BUT OVER the years things changed, Livvy changed....'

'It's something most people do,' Molly told Caspar dryly. 'It's called maturing.'

'I'm sorry, I'm boring you,' Caspar acknowledged shortly.

His original one night stop-over in Williamsville had become four and counting. The original meal at the Italian restaurant Molly had recommended had proved so energising and exciting and the ancient se-dan so recalcitrant and stubborn about refusing to be fixed, that Caspar had found himself offering to pick Molly up from her home and drive her to work as a thank you for recommending the restaurant to him and because she had laughingly admitted that he had not been the only one to harbour a teenage fantasy of riding a Harley-Davidson.

Now, after just a matter of days, Caspar felt as though he had known her all his life and in a way he had. She was very much the type of girl he had dated through college, feisty, self-confident, proud of herself and her opinions although as a woman she presented those assets of her personality in an appealingly softer way than he remembered his collegiate dates doing.

'No, you're not boring me,' she corrected him firmly, her smile saying that she was refusing to play games and take offence at his remark as he had done at hers.

'I was simply pointing out that it's a healthy part of the human condition for us to change. To resent such a natural process in those close to us suggests to me—'

'Now, you're starting to psychoanalyse me,' Caspar groaned.

'It's my job,' Molly reminded him.

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