outside the door.
I give him a nod before Marie closes the door on him.
She turns to face Bob and me. “Tiffany is in the living room,” she says in a hushed tone. “Don’t do anything to upset her.”
I part my lips to speak, but Bob beats me to it.
“We’re not here to upset Tiffany, Marie. We’re just here to talk about my grandson,” Bob tells her in a gentle manner while I grit my teeth.
She looks at Bob and then me. For some reason, her eyes narrow on me.
What the fuck have I done?
Then, she looks back to Bob, and her face relaxes a little. “I’ll take you through,” she says to Bob in a tone sounding a little nicer than before.
We walk down the hall and into a small living room. And on a chair by the window is Tiffany.
“Tiffany, Bob and Jake are here to see you.”
She looks straight at me. I see the familiarity come to life in her eyes, but I know it’s not in mine because I don’t recognize her.
It’s been years—I know it has—and of course, she wouldn’t look the same. I can see that the cancer has ravaged her body. She looks frail. And I assume the headscarf she’s wearing is to cover the loss of her hair.
If I’m being totally honest, I didn’t think I would recognize her. But a part of me hoped I would, so I could tell myself that my life wasn’t as fucked up as I remembered it to be.
Clearly, it was.
I force myself to smile at her. I know it’s as awkward as I feel.
“You don’t remember me, do you?” There’s no malice or distaste in her tone. She’s just plainly stating a fact.
“I don’t. I’m sorry.” I shake my head.
“Don’t be sorry.” She smiles. “You lived a different life back then.”
Her eyes move from me to Bob. “Mr. Creed.” She smiles as she puts down the book in her hand on the small table by her chair, and she starts to slowly get up.
“Don’t get up,” Bob says, stopping her, as he walks over to her. Leaning down, he takes her hand. “Thank you,” he says to her in earnest, “for giving me a part of my Jonny back.”
Fuck.
I can’t stop the blur in my eyes or the burn in the back of my throat.
Irrespective of everything, the fact that she kept Storm hidden from us for thirteen years doesn’t matter because, now, we have something we never dreamed we could have.
Pressing my hands to my hips, I look to the floor, blowing out a breath.
Marie is quiet behind me.
“I don’t deserve your thanks, Mr. Creed—”
“Please call me Bob.”
“Bob, I kept Storm from you for thirteen years. You have a right to be angry about that.”
“None of that matters now. And I know you must have had your reasons. My Jonny…he was easy to love, hard to handle.”
Fuck. This hurts to hear.
I pinch the bridge of my nose, exhaling another breath.
“I know the way Jonny lived his life. He and Jake both.”
My name brings my eyes to them, but neither of them is looking at me.
“Tom and Denny, too. And if you took on one of those boys, you took them all on. They always were a package deal. And I can understand not wanting to raise a baby around the kind of lifestyle they all lived back then. They were pretty wild.”
She lets out a relieved-sounding laugh. “Yeah, I guess I was a little wild back then, too—before Storm was born. I changed the minute I found out I was pregnant.”
Bob rubs a hand on his back, and I can see that he’s struggling with standing.
“Let me get you a chair, Bob.” I get an armchair and pull it over, opposite Tiffany’s chair, so Bob can sit. I take a seat on the edge of the sofa adjacent to them.
“Marie, you can get back to the shop. I’ll be okay here.”
Marie gives her a dubious look. “You sure?”
For fuck’s sake, what does she think we’re going to do to Tiffany?
“I’m sure.” Tiffany smiles.
“You want me to make some tea before I go?”
“Do you want anything to drink?” Tiffany asks Bob and me.
“I could drink a tea,” Bob says.
“Jake?” Tiffany looks at