Her Reason to Stay

Her Reason to Stay by Anna Adams Read Free Book Online

Book: Her Reason to Stay by Anna Adams Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anna Adams
Tags: Romance
term in college. If anyone had ever found out…”
    Daphne formed the word What? with her lips, but couldn’t produce sound. Already, she’d built an image of her sister. Listening while Raina blew it up was like hearing a nuclear explosion. “You—?”
    “My father was angry because my grades weren’t—” she lifted her head and shook it “—what he expected from an Abernathy. He threatened to cut off my tuition. I had to make money.”
    “You cheated?” Daphne covered her mouth, but too late as the guy from the counter leaned in for a closer look.
    Raina followed Daphne’s eyes. By the time she turned back, her skin was burnished pink. “You never did anything wrong?”
    Daphne stared at the breakfast Raina had brought. “Plenty of bad stuff. Probably worse than you can imagine. But I never—”
    “Well, now you know I’m not perfect.” Raina pushed her chair back. She waved at the plastic on the table. “Just throw that stuff away when you finish.”
    “I’m not going to throw away your silverware. Raina, wait. Talk to me. I was surprised. I never meant…”
    “You didn’t like what I said.”
    She disappeared in a whirl of pink tweed before Daphne could gather up the silverware and damask and plastic and her own bag. Finally, with everything in her arms, she ran to the door.
    As it closed in her face, she hit the glass, elbows first. Her right funny bone sang a teeth-clenching song.
    “Hey,” said the kid behind the counter.
    Daphne looked at him as she fumbled with the metal handle.
    He nodded toward the square outside. “She’s mean.”
    “She isn’t.” Already, she was protective of Raina, who’d dared to confess one sin. “Leave her alone.”
    She finally got the door open and peered both ways on the sidewalk. A woman in red was pushing a stroller, and Daphne hopped back to give her room. A guy in a suit that had never touched a rack looked her up and down so deliberately she could almost see herself burying her fist in his stomach. Maybe she had something against rich, spoiled men, too. A little boy sailed his big, green plastic airplane just beneath her chin, roaring an engine noise.
    She couldn’t see Raina.
    “What’d you say to her?”
    The kid from the counter had followed. Not much else to do.
    She shrugged. “That I was disappointed in her.”
    “I hate when my dad says that.”
    She glanced at him. He nodded, wise despite his youth and coffee-stained Cosmic Grounds T-shirt.
    “I was the mean one,” she told the kid.
    She pulled out her phone and dialed Raina’s cell number. It rang and rang until voice mail took over. “Raina? I’m sorry. The things I did as a teen you wouldn’t believe.” Wrong tack. The truth was, she’d been shocked, a little dismayed that Raina’s halo had slipped.
    Which was ridiculous. Raina would have good reason to board her windows and lock the doors when she finally heard the whole truth about her sister.
    “Please, just call me. Trying again might be our best thing. I wouldn’t have the courage to ask you if you hadn’t come to me in the coffee shop yesterday.” She could hardly say her mistake might be a good thing, even though it made her see how much Raina already meant to her. “I think we’re starting to be sisters because I seriously need to explain.”

CHAPTER FOUR
    M ITCH E SPY CAME around his desk to take a check from Patrick’s hand. Every so often Lisa called Mitch with a request for money. Blackmail. As long as Patrick paid her, she stayed away from Honesty. And Will.
    “Don’t worry.” Mitch laid a hand on Patrick’s shoulder. “If Lisa comes back, we’ll be ready for her.”
    “She’ll be back. Don’t think for a moment she won’t. Just come up with a cogent argument for the day she takes us back to court. I’ll never allow her to be alone with Will again as long as I live.”
    Mitch nodded. “I understand, but no judge in his right mind will allow her visitation until she takes care of the

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