Read So Now You're Back Online
Authors: Heidi Rice
âWe'd only been dating a few months when I got pregnant. Which was the result of a drunken bonk in a nightclub toilet.' She gave a pained laugh. âI seem to have a knack for hitting the jackpot during drunken bonks in and around music venues, don't I?'
âYou're not the only one,' he replied wryly.
âAnyway, I planned to have an abortion. It was a hard decision, but I didn't feel I had much of a choice. I had Lizzie to think about. And my career and it had been a mistake.'
And after what had happened with Luke, she didn't want to ever be in that situation again, but she couldn't tell Luke that, it would be far too revealing.
âBut Claudio â¦' She paused, the conflicting emotions always there when she thought about Aldo's father. He
had
been a tosser, but he had at least done one thing right, even if it had been for all the wrong reasons. âClaudio argued me out of it. He was Catholic, he said, it was a sin and he would be a good father. I suspect now his desire to keep the baby had more to do with his ego than any religious convictions, because he quickly became less keen on the idea as the pregnancy progressed. Dating someone with swollen ankles and ballooning breasts who wanted to hibernate instead of hang on his arm at celebrity parties hadn't been part of the plan, apparently.'
âHe didn't like the ballooning breasts? You're kidding,' Luke interrupted. âI thought that was the best bit.'
She laughed, as she suspected he had intended. The sickening tension in her gut eased, until the ripple of memory brought with it an uncomfortable blast of heat. Luke had
certainly never been turned off by her pregnant body the way Claudio had.
She chucked one of the chewed chicken bones at him, determined to stop the stupid warm spot sinking south. âShut up, do you want to hear the rest of this or not?'
He caught the bone one-handed and smiled. âAbsolutely.'
She settled back on the rock. âSo, as the months wore on, we saw each other less and less. By the end of the pregnancy I wasn't into sex, and without that there really wasn't anything else to keep us together. But even so, I thought â¦' She hesitated, suddenly feeling like a fraud.
Had she really hoped Aldo, once he arrived, would bring Claudio back to her? When she was fairly sure she hadn't wanted Claudio in her life by then?
âAnyway, Claudio finally showed up at the maternity hospital the day after I'd given birth. He held Aldo, for about ten seconds, then handed him back to me and explained, very politely, that he had made a terrible mistake. He said he really wasn't ready to be a father. That he had found someone else more suited to his lifestyle, and that he would be happy to make a financial contribution to Aldo's upkeep, whatever I thought was fair, but he didn't feel there was any point in forming a relationship with the child.' She sighed. â“The child”, that's what he called my beautiful baby boy.'
âI hope you took him to the cleaners.'
The bite of anger in Luke's tone felt comforting.
âActually, no, I told him to shove his offer of financial support somewhere anatomically impossible.' She released a shaky breath. âThe last thing I wanted was his money.'
Because it would have given her a connection to Claudio she didn't want.
Which begged the question why she had never told Luke
the same thing? When she'd always refused to spend any of the money he'd sent without fail every month for Lizzie?
âHe doesn't sound like a tosser. He sounds like a total arsehole,' Luke said, rescuing her from stressing over that glaring inconsistency.
âYes, he was, but â¦' She forced herself to breathe round the granite boulder now sitting on her chest. âI know the pregnancy wasn't only my fault.'
Even if two accidental pregnancies in one lifetime makes me the poster girl for dumb blondes.
âAnd it definitely wasn't my fault Claudio turned out to be such an immature, selfish git.' The pressure on her lungs became painful.
Bloody hell, why is it still so hard to admit, even now?
âBut I wish I could have given Aldo a better dad. Or any kind of dad really.'
It might also be nice to know how I've managed to plan my career so successfully but made such a monumental cock-up of my private life.
âSo that's why you never told Aldo the guy's name?'
She glanced over at Luke, a bit disorientated to realise he was still sitting there, listening patiently to her confession. Luke had never seemed all that priestly. But he'd always had that knack of letting her do all the talking. After their split, she'd come to the conclusion that was because he'd never actually been listening. All he'd really been doing was allowing her to fill the void, so he could avoid talking back. But now she wasn't so sure. Could that interested crease on his forehead be so easily faked?
The warm spot grew.
She turned away.
Enough already.
Luke's ability to be such a patient and attentive listener was simply because he was a good journalist.
âOnce Aldo started asking questions, it was easier to avoid giving him a straight answer than make the effort to contact Claudio again.' She lifted her chin. âI didn't want to see Aldo hurt.'
Or at least that's what she'd always told herself.
âFair enough,' Luke said evenly. âWhy set him up to be smacked down?'
âExcept that â¦' She appreciated Luke's vote of confidence, more than he would ever realise. But now she wondered, had Claudio really been the only selfish one involved? âThe truth is I didn't want to contact Claudio.' Yes, she'd been frightened of having her child rejected again, but had she ever really wanted Claudio to be a part of Aldo's life?
âI have no idea how Claudio feels about his son now. It's been ten years. He might have had a change of heart. What if he wants a relationship with Aldo and I'm the one who's stopping it from happening?'
She'd been wrong about Luke, about how deeply he cared for his daughter, because she'd stubbornly refused to talk to him. What if she'd made the same mistake with Claudio and denied Aldo a father just to protect herself?
âIf that were the case, what's stopping the guy from contacting you? Or Aldo?' Luke said, reasonably, neatly cutting the guilt down to size. âHe won't, though, because the guy's definitely still an arsehole,' he continued. âI interviewed Claudio Benedetti last year for a piece I was doing on the Delanyo Scandal and he came across as a selfish, self-aggrandising twat.'
Halle bolted upright at the offhand comment, her heart racing. âHow do you know who he is? I never said his surname.'
What the hell had she done? Luke was a bloody journalist. What if he published the information? Then Aldo would know that â¦
âHal, chill the hell out,' he said evenly. âHow many times do I have to tell you? I'm not a celebrity hack, or that much of an arsehole, frankly.'
âBut how did you figure out Claudio's identity?'
âNot from your comment about him knowing his way round a clitoris, if that helps,' he countered, a slight edge to his voice. âI'm a journalist. You gave me enough clues to make an educated guess. I do this stuff for a living, remember. But that doesn't mean I'm going to exploit a ten-year-old boy. I do have a few scruples, you know.' He began packing up the debris from their picnic. âAlthough, just for the record, I'm not sure
you
do. What made you fall for that wanker? Are clit skills really that high on your list of attributes?'
Interesting, he certainly seems to have gotten fairly hung up on that nugget of information.
She choked out a laugh, determined not to remember Luke was the one who had introduced her to the gold standard of clit skills.
âI didn't fall for him. I wasn't in love with him.'
Not the way I thought I was with you.
âI was lonely, I suppose, and he filled a need. Not getting any for six years can make you overlook a heck of a lot of personality flaws.'
He paused while packing the last of their lunch debris into the backpack. âHang on a minute. He was your first? After me?'
âNot all of us bounced back as quickly as you did,' she declared, annoyed by the echo of bitterness.
Amelie Brouchard doesn't matter to you any more. She's just a French tart who probably can't even make a decent tarte Tatin.
âAnd I didn't have a lot of spare time,' she added. âI had a child to look after.'
Unlike you and Amelie the tart.
âWell, shit.' He relaxed back on his heels. âI never figured the three years it took me to get back in the game was particularly quick. I stand corrected.'
âDon't bullshit me, Luke.' Annoyance flared, stirring the residual hurt. âI happen to know you shacked up with your photographer on that assignment, Amelie Brouchard, the day after you walked out on me and Lizzie.'
How could saying the woman's name out loud still bring with it the sting of remembered pain?
âWho told you that?' he asked.
âYour helpful friend Ned.'
âNed told you Amelie and I were an item?'
âStop pretending you weren't.'
Really? We're going to play this game?
Maybe she had misjudged his reliability as a father, but she knew exactly how fickle he had been as a life partner. And she certainly wasn't the gullible nitwit any more who believed everything he told her.
âAmelie and I were never lovers. And Ned knows we weren't,' Luke said. âI always knew he had the hots for you. That son of a bitch.' He sounded furious.
âBugger off, Luke. What were you doing living in her apartment for six months if you weren't banging her? I happen to have first-hand knowledge of exactly how much sex you need.'
Because I'm fairly sure the fact I stopped supplying it whenever you wanted it was the real reason you left me.
The accusation echoed off the rocks and sharpened the pain in her chest.
Why was the pain still so raw? At the thought of all the times he'd come on to her and all the times she'd turned him down because she was exhausted after Lizzie's birth?
And all the times she'd been forced to regret that after he'd left. God, it was lowering to realise she could still be angry at how much she'd berated herself for not being more accommodating, more considerate of his sexual needs ⦠And how long it had taken her to finally realise Luke was the one who had been insensitive to her needs. Not the other way round.
âIf you must know,' he said, âI was sleeping in Amelie's spare room while she and her girlfriend went at it every night in the room next door. And while that was certainly an education in sexual frustration, because the walls in that apartment were paper-thin and the two of them were both screamers, I didn't get any, either, for three years. And I never got any with Amelie.'
âYou're kidding. Amelie was a lesbian?' The outrage blossomed anew. Spurred on by indignation. Had she been angry at Amelie the French tart for sixteen years, for no good reason?
âShe wasn't a lesbian, exactly,' he clarified. âShe had a girlfriend, but she was into guys, too. And they did offer to have a threesome a couple of times.'
That bitch.
âHow accommodating of her.'
He shrugged, and the tinge of colour hit his cheeks. âBut I turned them down.'
âHow very noble of you,' she said waspishly, not sure now whether she was more annoyed with Luke or Amelie. Or his shit-stirring friend Ned. âI never would have expected you of all people to be such a prude.'
Am I actually hoping he had a threesome with her now?
âIt wasn't that.' The pink tinge touched the top of his ears. âI mean, it wasn't that I wouldn't have been up for it, so to speak. It's just I couldn't do it.'
âWhy on earth not?'
âI don't know, I guess because it felt like cheating, on you.'
She sat perfectly still, listening to the quiet hum of a passing insect. With no clue what to say to that. Or how to deal with the squeezing pain in her ribs.
âLuke, you left me,' she said at last, settling on pointing out the glaringly obvious. âYou didn't even contact me for two weeks. And when you did, I got exactly six torturous words that explained exactly nothing. I had to find out from your wanky friend Ned where you were living over a month later. How on earth could you have felt like you were cheating on me? For three years? Can't you see how ridiculous that is?'
And not all that believable.
But somehow she did believe him. Which made his confession only all the more ridiculous. But not as ridiculous as the feeling of something warm and fluid in her abdomen.
Apparently, I'm glad he didn't have that threesome.
How could the fact he hadn't left her for another woman be important now?
âIt's not ridiculous at all.' He stretched his neck, looking more uncomfortable by the second. âI didn't walk out on you because of our sex life. I know it changed a lot after Lizzie, and it took me a while to adjust to that ⦠but I'm not that much of a shallow jerk.'
âThen why did you leave?'
âI told you, it had nothing to do with you. It was me.'
Well, hooray, that tells me precisely sod all.
âWe should get going.' He got up and marched over to the laurel bush to whip his dry boxers off the branch. âI've gotta figure out how to use the two-way and tell Bill where to pick us up.' Then he strode into the undergrowth, obviously to put his boxers back on.
Subject comprehensively closed.
She lifted her own underwear off the bush, contemplating her next move as she put her bra on under her T-shirt and stuffed her knickers into the pocket of her shorts.
His explanation wasn't just cheesy, it was half-arsed. And if he thought that was all he was going to say on the subject, he had another think coming.