My Song For You (Pushing Limits Book 2)
Page 16
“Hospital? What happened to him?”
“He broke his hip.”
“Oh my God. Is he okay?”
“He’s fine now. He’s still making those stone carvings of his.” A few of his newest forest animals had taken up residence in his garden—including a rabbit that Emma thought was real.
Craig’s SUV was already parked in the driveway when we arrived at my parents’ house. Callie helped Logan out of his car seat. He jumped down, clutching the palm-sized stuffed Pooh he’d gotten at Disneyland yesterday.
Biting her lip, Callie looked up at the house. She had always gotten on well with my parents, so I couldn’t figure out why she was nervous. I should’ve been the one who was nervous. They were about to meet their grandson—the grandson they didn’t know existed.
I lifted Logan so he could ring the doorbell. A moment later, the door opened. Kristen was holding Emma in her arms. “Oh, good. You’re just in time.” She held her daughter out to me.
“Just in time for what?”
“Your niece pooped her diaper and I thought you could use practice changing one before you have your own kids.” She grinned at Callie, mischief in her eyes. “Diapers are in the bathroom.”
With a sigh, I took my niece and was rewarded with an unpleasant smell. “Phew, what on earth do you feed this kid?”
All Kristen did was cackle.
“So, Logan,” I said, “you wanna help me change a diaper?”
Frantically shaking his head, he grabbed hold of Callie’s leg. You’d have thought, based on his reaction, that I had asked him to deal with toxic waste.
Or maybe I had.
Seriously, what did my sister feed her daughter?
Mom rushed out of the kitchen. Before anyone could say anything, she had Callie in a tight embrace . . . like Callie was her own child. A child who needed comforting after losing someone she loved. “I’m so sorry about your parents and Alexis. I wish we had known.” She released my girl from the hug, worry still on Mom’s face.
“I’m sorry I didn’t tell you. I was just so overwhelmed at the time and in shock, I didn’t think to tell you. I didn’t think to tell most people.”
Once again regret powered through me at how different things could’ve been if I had remained in contact with her after she and her family had moved away. At how different things could’ve been if not for the lie between us about Logan. I could have been there for her. My family could have been there for her. She wouldn’t have been forced to go through everything alone.
Mom smiled at her, her love for Callie undeniable. “Well, I’m glad to have you back with us again.” She then squatted in front of Logan. “And who is this big boy?”
Still clutching Callie’s leg, Logan moved to hide behind it. “He gets shy around strangers,” Callie explained, “but he gets over it quickly. Logan, this is Jared’s mom and his sister, Kristen. They’re really nice. His mom used to bake the yummiest chocolate-chip cookies when I was a kid.”
At the words “chocolate-chip cookies,” a huge dimpled grin broke out on Logan’s face. Mom gasped and looked at me, but at least she had the foresight not to say anything.
“I’ll tell you later” was all I said.
“Would you like a cookie?” Mom asked her grandson, not missing a beat.
He nodded, and she led Logan and Callie into the kitchen with Kristen while I changed Emma’s diaper.
When I returned, thanking God that Logan was already potty-trained, I introduced Emma to Logan and Callie.
“Did Uncle Jared give you a clean bum?” Kristen asked her daughter.
“She’s good to go, but next time you do your own dirty work.” I smirked at my sister. As I handed Emma to Mom, I added to Callie with a wink, “Don’t worry—Emma got her sparkling personality from me and not my sister.”
Callie giggled. “I see things haven’t changed between you two.”
“You’d think with him away touring all the time that I’d miss him, wouldn’t you?” Kristen said, chuckling.
Mom sat at the kitchen table and deposited Emma on her lap. Logan showed his cousin his stuffed Pooh. She reached out, possibly wanting to chew on it.
“So how old are you, Logan?” Mom asked him.
Logan held up his fingers to show his age. “Four!”
“Wow, you’re a big boy.” Mom bounced Emma on her lap, getting a giggle out of her. Logan poked her gently in the stomach, which made her giggle more. Mom glanced at Callie. “He’s hearing-impaired?”
“No, he’s deaf, but he has a cochlear implant.”
Craig entered the kitchen through the back door. “Sam sent me in for the chicken.”
“Dada,” Emma said, holding her arms up to her father. Mom passed her granddaughter off to him, like Emma was a football.
“Why don’t we go outside?” Mom didn’t wait for a reply. She grabbed the casserole dish with the chicken pieces from the counter and hustled us out the back door.
Outside, I placed my hand on Callie’s lower back and let my thumb brush against the skin under her T-shirt, as much for support as for contact. I would have kept it there if we’d been alone. If we hadn’t been in front of all these people—especially Logan—I would’ve kissed her deeply. I hadn’t kissed her lips since Friday night, and the memory of her taste and the feel of her soft lips against mine had been playing overtime in my head.
I was royally screwed.
Even after dropping her and Logan off the previous evening following our trip to Disneyland, I hadn’t gotten a chance to kiss her. The guys had been waiting for me, and Callie needed to get the very sleepy Logan to bed. All I’d had time to do was give her a quick kiss on the cheek—not the kind of kiss I was aching to give her.
And I couldn’t do that now either. I could only sneak in subtle touches of her body—until I could get her alone tonight.
Logan spotted the old tree house in the backyard and scurried over to the thick trunk. In awe he gazed up at the large, finely crafted wooden structure, complete with a balcony.
“Wow, your parents still have it?” Callie said, grinning.
“They saved it in case Kristen and I gave them grandkids one day.” The structure was still solid, and Dad had recoated it with stain the previous summer.
“Is it safe?”
“Absolutely.”
Callie helped Logan up the steps. A moment later they disappeared inside the wooden structure.
I was about to join them when Kristen sidled up to me. “I didn’t know you were dating Callie.”
“We’re just friends.”
Kristen rolled her eyes. “You just keep telling yourself that.” Snickering, she left to play catch with Emma. A few minutes later, Logan and Callie emerged from the tree house, and before I knew it, the three of us, along with Kristen, Craig, and Emma, were running around the backyard, kicking a beach ball like it was an oversized soccer ball. Mom and Dad cheered from the sidelines. Logan and Emma giggled the entire time as they attempted to kick the ball around.
And damn, it did my heart proud seeing Logan enjoying himself like this. With his family.
After we were finished eating dinner, Mom stood up and started gathering the plates. “Jared, can you help me with the dishes?” she asked, even though I already was. It was her hint that she wanted to talk to me—alone. Callie offered to help, but Mom waved her off and told her to take it easy. She already knew Callie worked full-time and took online classes part-time. It was clear to her that Callie was exhausted.
Mom and I finished gathering the dishes and carried them into the house. “Logan’s the reason you came over last week to check out the old photos, isn’t he?”
“Maybe I was just interested to see what I looked like when I was four.” I placed my stack of dishes on the counter and leaned back against it, then toyed with my lucky guitar pick as I waited for the Q&A to begin.
“Right. So it’s just a coincidence he looks a lot like you did when you were the same age? I just never realized you
and Callie had been dating.”
“We weren’t . . . and we’re still not. He’s not Callie’s. He was Alexis’s son.” I told her the entire story of what had happened. Mom didn’t say anything while I spoke. She just listened, her face not betraying her thoughts.
“The poor girl,” she said, after I explained how Logan had ended up deaf. “Callie had to go through all of that on her own? She never should’ve been thrown into that situation.”
I had no clue which situation she meant: Callie being a single mom to her nephew, the meningitis and subsequent deafness, or both.
“So what are you going to do about my grandson?” She stressed the last two words, making it clear she had no intention of not being a part of his life. But this didn’t come as a surprise. Mom would never turn her back on a grandchild, no matter what the situation surrounding him.
“Callie and I haven’t told Logan the truth yet. I’m spending time with him first, letting him get to know me better before we finally tell him.”
“But you’re planning to have joint custody with Callie, right?”
“I have no idea what I plan to do.” It was true. I knew my options. Cameron had discussed them with me at length.
“I can imagine there’s a lot to consider. It’s obvious Callie loves Logan as much as if he were her own biological son. I can imagine it would devastate her if she lost him. But you also have to consider what will happen if you marry another woman. If you and Callie have joint custody of Logan, it means he would be shipped back and forth between you two, never feeling like he truly belongs anywhere, especially if you and your wife have children of your own. And then there’s the touring you need to consider. How often will you be in Logan’s life while you’re on the road?”
None of this was news to me. God only knew how many times over the last few days I had considered leaving the band just so I could be there for Logan. “You think I should give Callie full rights to Logan and walk away as his father?”
“Heavens, no. I just want you to make sure you’re doing what’s right for everyone, but especially for your son. If you decide to be his sole parent and not share custody with Callie, we would definitely take care of him while you’re touring. He would be treated no differently from Emma or any other grandchild.”
“Even if you’d have to drive him to the special preschool he goes to for his deafness?”
“Yes, even then.” She closed the dishwasher. “Can I ask you something? If it’s none of my business, just tell me so.”
“Sure.”
“What’s going on with you and Callie?”
I cringed inwardly. “What do you mean?”
Mom peered out the kitchen window toward the gazebo where Dad and Craig sat. Logan was running around the massive tree trunk, with Emma toddling after him, while Kristen talked to Callie.
“I’ve seen how you look at Callie,” Mom said. “You admire her, respect her. But there’s also something more. I guess I just want you to be careful. She’s been through a lot in the last few years. Don’t add to her pain more than you have to.”
The back door suddenly opened, and Callie and Logan stepped inside the kitchen.
“He needs to go to the bathroom,” Callie said, walking past.
Mom grabbed the cake from the fridge and went outside, leaving me to think about what she had said.
Was I making a mistake when it came to Callie? She had been avoiding relationships in the past out of fear of being hurt. I had no intention of hurting her, but if Mom was right, it might be impossible to avoid doing just that if things didn’t work out between Callie and me, at least when it came to Logan.
But as much as I knew I should walk away before things became even more complicated, I couldn’t. Not when all I could think about was kissing her. Not when all I could think about was being inside her.
I was seriously fucked.
26
Callie
Once Logan was finished in the bathroom, he opened the back door to the yard and rushed out to the gazebo, where Jared sat with his family. Unlike Logan, I didn’t rush to join them. I stood in the doorway, watching everyone. Jared’s mom was exactly as I remembered: friendly, kind, generous. She would do anything for her kids—and grandchildren. I had no doubts that she, Jared’s dad, and Kristen would welcome Logan into the family without question.
Logan climbed onto Jared’s lap, completing the picture I didn’t belong in. They were the happy family I had long since lost and would never have again.
But while sadness clung to me like a child’s blanket, another emotion, one that provided a different kind of warmth, filled me. This was exactly what Logan deserved. I might not have a family, but at least Logan would finally have one to replace the family we had both lost. I couldn’t have wanted more for him than that.
I went outside and sat next to Jared on the gazebo bench. His hand shifted from Logan’s leg to my lower back. A tingling sensation warmed my skin at his touch. I greedily leaned into his hand.
“Who wants cake?” Jared’s mom asked, pointedly looking at Logan.
He bounced on his father’s lap, yelling, “Me, me, me.”
Everyone laughed. The nervousness I had felt on the way here eased. Alexis had told me once that she feared his family wouldn’t be so accepting of her baby. It was another reason she hadn’t told Jared she had decided to keep their child. I’d argued that she was wrong, because I knew his family better than she did. See, Alexis, I told you they’d love him as much as Mom and Dad did.
Jared’s mom finished serving the cake. “So what are you up to these days, Callie?” she asked before I could stuff a piece of homemade cake in my mouth. I had missed her cakes and cookies. The store-bought stuff wasn’t the same.
“Weren’t you planning to study something to do with drawing cartoons?” Kristen asked.
“Animation,” I corrected. “I decided to become a graphic designer instead.” I shoved a forkful of cake into my mouth. Unlike before, it felt like I was choking down a piece of chalk.
“How come?”
“More job opportunities.”
“I guess that’s true,” Jared’s mom said. “But it’s sad you had to give up your art. You’re so talented.”
“I still do it, just not as much as I used to.” I didn’t have time for it with everything else going on in my life.
“I love Mommy’s pictures,” Logan said, now that he’d finished his slice of cake. “They look like the ones in my books.”
“You mean picture books?” his grandmother asked.
He enthusiastically nodded.
“How come I haven’t seen them, other than those on your walls?” Jared asked.
I shrugged. “I tend not to show them to anyone.” Because then they would know I was a failure. I had done nothing toward achieving my dreams.
“I would love to see them,” his mother said, smiling. “You have to bring them with you next weekend when you come for dinner.”
“I will. Thanks.”
After we finished with dessert, Jared drove us home. It was already past Logan’s bedtime when we arrived. As was the usual routine now, we both got him ready for bed, and Jared read him three picture books.
“So when are you going to show me the pictures that Logan mentioned?” Jared asked, after we tucked him into bed and left his room.
“You really want to see them?” The tension between us was thick. I was practically bursting at the seams to touch him, but I was also curious to see what he would think about my artwork. Nervous but curious.
“Of course. I agree with my mom. You’re a talented artist, Callie. I’d hate for you to give that up.”
Easy for him to say. Would things with the band still have been as they were for him if Alexis hadn’t lied about the abortion? Would he still have had time to write songs and perform? Or would he only have been able to just play around with the guitar from time to time?
“They’re in my bedroom.”
Jared followed me int
o the room. I indicated for him to sit on the bed, then retrieved the stack of printed digital artwork from my closet. I had created them after my parents and Alexis died. Logan was the only person who had seen them.
Some were pictures of kittens, puppies, chubby birds and owls, rabbits, and mice. The animals in the earlier pictures had large, sorrowful eyes. The later ones were of animal families doing fun activities together, like having a picnic or paddling a rowboat—stuff I used to do with my family. Those were Logan’s favorite.
Jared leafed through the thick stack of paper. “Wow, these are amazing. Logan’s right. They do look like they could be from a picture book.”
“Thanks.”
“Have you considered doing this professionally?”
“I don’t think there’s a huge demand for it.” Not unless I wanted to be a starving artist. Eventually my parents’ life insurance money, their savings, and the money I got when I sold their house would run out. The rent on this apartment and Logan’s preschool and medical expenses weren’t exactly cheap.
“I was thinking more like an illustrator for children’s books,” Jared said.
“I don’t know. . . .”
He studied my favorite picture. In it, a boy fox and a girl rabbit were hanging out in their tree house. The corners of Jared’s mouth curled up, and for a moment all I could think about was tasting those perfect lips.
“Do you enjoy doing them?” he asked, snapping me out of my lust-filled moment.
“Yes.” That was an understatement.
“More than being a graphic designer?”
I nodded. I didn’t mind graphic design, but it wasn’t where my heart lay. It didn’t mean the same to me as music meant to Jared, or as my artwork meant to me.
“I’m not saying you have to give up your plans to be a graphic designer. Not unless you want to work in the diner for the rest of your life. But I think you should at least give being an illustrator for kids’ books a chance.” He placed the pictures on the bed. “You’re too talented an artist to abandon your dreams,” he murmured, his breath warm against the shell of my ear. “You just need to adapt them to make the most of what you have.”