A Chesapeake Shores Christmas
inquired. “You do know that getting us killed probably won’t solve anything.”
    “At least you wouldn’t get to marry Dad and ruin his life again,” he said, his tone petulant.
    “Does your father seem as if his life’s ruined?”
    “Maybe not, but only because he’s living in a dreamworld right now. Just wait till you take off again.”
    “Maybe what we really need to talk about is how I ruined your life,” she suggested. “That’s what this is actually about.”
    “You’re irrelevant to my life. You have been for years.”
    Megan blinked back tears at the deliberately cruel words. “If I truly meant nothing to you, you wouldn’t sound so bitter,” she said quietly. She tilted her head and studied him. “You’ve fooled us all, you know. You have this easy, lighthearted way about you, but I think hurts run even more deeply. You’re like your father that way.”
    “Don’t try analyzing me, Mother. You don’t know anything about me.”
    “Is that so?” she countered. “Let’s see. I know you graduated at the top of your class from college, that you could have played pro baseball, but chose to go to law school. I know that you won a highly coveted job as a law clerk with a top Baltimore firm. I know when one of the senior partners was getting a divorce, he chose you to represent him and bragged that he’d never seen anyone fight harder for a client.” She gave Connor an assessing look. “I assume that was because you saw me in his wife and your father in him. Obviously my divorce from your father was good for something.”
    Connor looked faintly surprised by her recitation. “What, did you hire a private detective to dig up all that information when you started seeing Dad again? You must have figured you’d need a way to worm your way back into all our lives.”
    Megan sighed. “I didn’t need to hire anybody, Connor. I’ve kept tabs on each of you. Abby and I grew close again after she moved to New York. I went to Chicago to see Bree’s plays. I even came to a few of your college ball games.”
    He snorted with disbelief.
    “Remember the game against Carolina?” she said. “You hit an inside-the-park home run, and when you slid into home base, you broke your wrist.” She shuddered at the memory of his face contorted with pain. “It took everything in me not to run to you on the field.”
    “You could have read about that in the paper,” he said.
    “I could have,” she agreed. “Or someone in the family could have mentioned it to me. But if I’d found out either of those ways, would I have known that a pretty blonde cheerleader left with you in the ambulance?”
    He sighed and closed his eyes. “Okay, fine. You were there. Big deal.”
    “It was for me,” she said quietly. “Knowing that I had no right to come to you even when you were hurt tore me apart, Connor.”
    “So it was all about you, as usual.”
    “No, it was about you, and knowing that you wouldn’t have appreciated me showing up out of the blue at the hospital. It’s always been about you and your sisters and Kevin. Everything I did, I did because I thought it was for the best for you. Even leaving your father.”
    “Oh, no,” he said. “You can’t spin that now. Leaving was all about you, Mother. You can’t deny that. You didn’t give a second thought to what it would be like for us after you ran off to make an exciting new life for yourself.”
    “Okay, I’ll admit that I needed to leave and build a new life for myself, but I thought that would be better for all of you, too. You wouldn’t have a mother who resented your father the way I did. You’d have one who was strong and sure of herself again.”
    “That sounds to me as if it was all about you.”
    “Well, it wasn’t,” she said defensively. “Surely you know by now that I planned for all of you to come to New York with me. I had rooms ready, schools picked out. I even had your father’s blessing.”
    “Funny, but I don’t recall

Similar Books

Unravel

Samantha Romero

Alex Haley

Robert J. Norrell

All the Way

Marie Darrieussecq

The Bet (Addison #2)

Erica M. Christensen

What You Leave Behind

Jessica Katoff

From What I Remember

Stacy Kramer