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“Maybe we should put off the trip,” Mia mused, interrupting Faith’s thoughts.

“What’s this?” Cole strode in the room wearing faded jeans and a white button-down shirt. He still had a trace of a limp from the injuries he’d endured overseas, but one had to look closely to notice. The long, purplish scar on his neck, however, was blatant. He wrapped his arm around Mia’s waist and kissed her briefly on the mouth. “You want to postpone the honeymoon again?”

There was no animosity in his tone, just humor. They were a cute couple. Affection shone in their eyes, and whenever Cole looked at Mia, it was like he was seeing her for the first time. Faith wondered if it had anything to do with how long it took them to get back together. She’d read Cole’s memoir, every captivating, painful word, and she felt like she knew these two on a level too personal for comfort.

Mia brushed a strand of Cole’s blond hair from his forehead. “Ginny’s upset about us leaving.”

“I’d rather have you alone, but we can take her with us. Family vacation?”

Mia looked unsure, her gaze traveling over Cole’s shoulder and around the room. “We haven’t had any time to ourselves, but I also don’t want to leave if she’s worried. There hasn’t been any stability in her life—”

“Stop it. She had you.” Cole turned his brown eyes to Faith. “What do you think?”

They also asked her opinion a lot, which was both humbling and flattering. “You don’t leave for two more weeks. It’ll give her some time to get used to the idea. I would just keep reminding her that you’ll be back. Perhaps have Jake and Lacey spend a little more time with her to get her used to the transition.”

Cole nodded. “If that doesn’t work, we’ll take Ginny with us.”

Faith opened and closed her mouth, hoping she hid her surprise. It took a special kind of person to be willing to take his wife’s disabled sister with them on a honeymoon. For the first time since accepting the job offer, Faith knew it was the right choice.

*   *   *

Alec followed Lacey and Jake into Cole’s house and whistled through his teeth. “Nice digs, Cole.” He hadn’t been inside the house in years, not since John and Kathryn Covington owned the place, but it looked different now. Instead of expensive paintings by famous artists and deco wallpaper, there were rich blue-gray walls and family portraits.

“Alec Winston.” Cole shook his hand. “Been a long time. How’s the new book coming?”

“It’s coming.” Not at all, but it would. Hopefully before his publisher threatened to sue.

Jake snorted. “He has writer’s block.”

Cole’s eyebrows shot up. “For how long?”

Alec narrowed his eyes on his brother before turning back to Cole. “A while. I’ll work through it.”

“It’s been a year.” Jake shrugged when Alec shot him another glare. “Cole’s an agent. He’d understand. Maybe he can help.”

Further awkward conversation was avoided when Mia strolled in. Jesus, her blue eyes were still one of the most intense things Alec ever had the pleasure of seeing. Last he’d seen her, her black hair had trailed down her back. She’d cropped it all off since then.

“Look at you, all grown up.” She smiled and drew him in for a hug. “And you finally grew into your shoes.”

“Har, har.” Yeah, he wasn’t so gangly anymore. He released her and stepped back. “You are as lovely as ever.”

“Aw. Still know all the right words.”

They’d never had a romantic history. Mia had only ever had eyes for Cole, and Alec had only ever wanted to live in the fantasy inside his make-believe stories, but they’d had some good summers long ago.

Jake snorted again at Mia’s comment, insinuating he didn’t, in fact, currently have the right words due to his writer’s block.

Alec pinned his brother with a shut-up-or-die glare.

“Let’s have some lunch and you can tell me about your problem.” Cole gestured deeper into the house.

Alec glanced heavenward and followed them into the dining room. Faith was standing next to the table where Ginny was seated. In daylight, her reddish-brown hair was lighter than he’d first estimated. The thick waves brushed her delicate shoulders. Today she wore khaki capris and a fitted green blouse of some kind with little ruffles on the capped sleeves. Why he noticed that, he didn’t know. A scattering of pale freckles dusted her nose and cheeks, indiscernible had she not been standing in the sunlight.

“Faith, this is Alec, Lacey, and Jake.” Mia smiled and directed her gaze from Faith to her sister. “Ginny, do you remember Alec?”

He didn’t see how she could. She must’ve been in kindergarten last they’d crossed paths. Yet the girl nodded and grinned from ear to ear. Her droopy eyes and low ears, the typical characteristics of Down syndrome, were a telltale sign of her disability, but she had sparks of Mia in her, too. Dark hair and a pretty smile.

“Ginny has an excellent memory,” Mia informed, pride resonating in her tone.

“You write scary stories.” Ginny’s speech slurred slightly and was louder than necessary.

“And how would you know that?” he teased. It was safe to assume horror fiction wasn’t something Mia let her dabble in, even if she could comprehend the story.

“Mia has all your books. She reads with the lights on because they’re scary and it’s not so scary with the lights on but I don’t think the dark is scary.” Compound sentence complete, Ginny nodded. She was an adorable charmer.

He grinned. “Well, I guess I’m doing my job if she needs to leave the lights on, but good for you for not being afraid of the dark. Everything’s still the same, even with the lights out. Right?”

“Right.”

“I’ll let you get on with your lunch.” Faith smiled at Ginny. “We’ll do your paint by numbers after you’re through.”

It didn’t escape Alec’s attention that Faith had yet to look him in the eye. He still didn’t know her eye color, and for some unforeseeable reason, that bugged him. As she turned to leave, he had the oddest urge to grab her arm to stop her, probably because that voice still had his interest piqued. In the end, he didn’t have to.

Mia took a step forward. “Where are you going?”

Clearly confused, Faith pointed vaguely toward the kitchen. “You have company . . .”

Her words hung in the air until Mia and Lacey shared a brief look. Mia turned back toward Faith. “Please stay. You’re our guest, too.”

Faith flinched. Literally flinched. As if the concept of being wanted was foreign. She obviously thought she was intruding. Her mannerisms made him think of a wallflower desperate to blend into the background. He’d bet, if she had one, she even apologized to her personal journal.

Dear Diary, I’m sorry to bother you . . .

“If you’re sure,” she said.

Uncomfortable topic out of the way, they sat down and passed the platters around. Once they had a few bites down, Jake leaned around Lacey to address Faith.

“Where are you from, Faith?”

She paused mid-chew, her gaze never leaving her plate. Slowly, she swallowed and darted a glance in his brother’s direction. “I’m from the Charlotte area.”

“Do you have a big family?”

Alec knew his brother was just trying to break the ice, but he was only making the room arctic in the process.

Faith squirmed in her seat. “It’s just me and my parents. They’re retired.”

“So, Mia. You’ve read all my books?” Alec wasn’t trying to be an egotistical ass, but Faith needed saving. He’d wonder why later.

“Guilty. They scare the bejesus out of me, but I can’t put them down.”