if she were on the earth solely to defend Margaret Cawthorneâs honor. Everything she believed in was being tested and though she was trying, really trying, to understand, she was having difficulty. Rise above it. Itâs not a big deal. Momâs gone, her mind argued with the loyalty that burned bright in her heart and the belief that love lasted a lifetime.
Her father reached across the scarred maple table and took her hand in his rough, callused fingers. âIâm sorry, Bliss, really. I never wanted to hurt anyone. Not you. Not Margaret. Not Brynnie. Seems itâs all I do.â He frowned, patted the back of her hand and picked up his fork again. âBut now itâs time to heal, to make some peace, to recognize the family that I have.â His lips pinched together. âI wanted you to be a part of it, to meet your sisters, to find out about them. This is a chance for all of us to finally be a family.â
âOf sorts.â
âYes. Of sorts.â
Dear God, why did she feel like a heel? Someone had to make him face the truth. Now was one of the times she wished she really did have a sister or brother with whom she could share the burden of her fatherâs problems. But she did have sisters, didnât she? Two half sisters. Certainly they would add up to a whole oneâOh, for the love of Pete, this was making her crazy.
The sound of a truckâs engine rumbled through the air, and from the porch Oscar gave an excited âwoof.â Bliss recognized the pickup from the day before and her heart did a little lurch when she spied Mason behind the wheel.
âNow what?â her father grumbled, looking over his shoulder and squinting against the sun rising over the hills.
âTrouble,â Bliss predicted.
âYoung, upstart pup, Lafferty. Always pushing.â He eyed Bliss speculatively. âYouâd think with all he owns, heâd give up on this place.â His jaw hardened slightly and his eyes thinned in anger. âThen again, maybe itâs not the place thatâs got him so interested. Maybe itâs you.â
âI donât think so.â Bliss remembered how easily Mason had left her ten years before but couldnât drag her gaze away from Mason as he stepped out of the truck. Tall, lanky, hard-edged, with a walk that bordered on a swagger, he approached the front door. Tinted sunglasses shaded his eyes and a scowl etched deep grooves over eyebrows slammed together.
âIâll get rid of him,â she said, wiping her hands on a dish towel and telling herself that she had the guts to face him.
âNo way. Heâs as sticky as hot tar.â
Bliss scraped her chair back and hurried to the front hallway just as he knocked. Yanking open the door, she faced him across the threshold and ignored the stupid, wild knocking of her heart.
A slow-growing smile wiped the grim expression from his face. âMorninâ, Bliss.â
âHi.â Dear Lord, was that her pulse jumping in her neck, visible in the V neckline of her T-shirt? Great! What a fool she was. A naive, stupid fool. She and Mason had been in love once, or maybe it was even puppy love, but what they had shared, that hot flirtation, was long dead. Yet she couldnât help the fluttering of her pulse or the urge to swallow against a suddenly dry throat. âDo you make it your primary objective in life these days to harass people?â
âOnly a few special ones,â he teased and she fought the urge to smile.
âLike Dad.â
âOr you.â He pocketed the sunglasses and stared at Bliss with eyes that were as seductive as cool water in a blistering desert at high noon.
âWonderful.â She managed a bit of sarcasm.
âLook, I just want to talk to your father.â
âYou talked to him yesterday.â
âI know, but Iâd like to finish the conversation.â
âItâs finished, Lafferty. Take a
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