and got the fright of her life when she found me asleep in bed. Her scream woke me up and nearly gave me a heart attack. I told her I’d come home at 9 a.m., but because she’d still been in bed, I’d gone back to bed too. She didn’t suspect a thing about what I had really been up to; she was more concerned about how she didn’t hear me come in.
I opened my door and replied to her with a loud “Yeah?”
“Can you come down here?”
I pressed my forehead against my bedroom door and sighed. “Sure. Give me a second to get dressed.”
I entered my room, got dried and changed into clothes before heading downstairs.
“What’s up?” I asked.
“Nothing,” my mother replied. “Just wanted to see what you wanted for dinner this evening.”
“I’m cool with whatever you want to make,” I said.
“Pizza and chips it is,” my mother chirped.
I stared at her back, then sat on a chair next to the kitchen table. I was silent for a moment, and then suddenly I felt like talking to her because I felt really low.
“Mum,” I mumbled, pushing my wet hair out of my face.
She glanced at me over her shoulder for a moment, then went back to the dishes as she said, “Yes?”
Talk, I willed myself.
“I like Kale,” I blurted out.
I held my breath as soon as the words were out of my mouth. My mother halted her movements and looked at me, her lips parted. “I know.”
She knows? my mind screeched.
I exhaled. “You do?”
She nodded. “I always knew you had a little crush on him.”
If my being in love with him was described as a “little crush” then yeah, I crushed on Kale hard. “How come you never said anything to me about it?” I questioned, feeling at a disadvantage. First, Kale had known I liked him, and now my mother did? Who else was aware of my clearly obvious feelings for him?
She shrugged and turned to face me fully, a tea towel in her hands, drying them. “I didn’t want to embarrass you.”
I frowned. “But you talked to me when I liked Blake, before Lochlan scared him off that is.”
“That was different,” she lightly chuckled. “I didn’t know this Blake lad. He isn’t a son to me the way Kale is.”
I felt my heart sink. “You really think of Kale as a son?”
My mother nodded. “Your father does too. Even your Uncle Harry and Nanny consider him our family.”
She wasn’t making me feel better. If anything, her words were making me feel worse.
I scratched my neck. “It’d be weird for us to . . . you know, ever wind up together then?” I asked, chuckling to help clear out the awkwardness I felt.
My mother laughed. “Yeah, it’d be strange since everyone considers you his little sister.”
I looked away from my mother so she wouldn’t see the hurt in my eyes. “Yeah, you’re right,” I said, and cleared my throat. “I guess I just liked him because he was always around me.”
I was surprised at how easily I lied about something, someone that was so close to my heart.
“That and Lochlan never let you close to a boy no matter how many times I warned him not to interfere.” My mother clucked her tongue, then turned her back to me as she carried on with hand-washing the dishes.
“You know Lochlan.” I swallowed. “He just wants to protect me.”
“Layton and Kale too,” she chuckled. “That’s what brothers do.”
I’d never thought of Kale as a brother or relative of any kind, not since I was little. “Yeah,” I said, and stood up from the table. “Lavender will be over soon.”
I heard the smile in my mother’s voice as she said, “I’m so glad you have a girlfriend to spend time with. You need to experience life outside of your circle with just Kale.”
I hated to admit it, but I needed to experience life entirely outside of Kale, now more than ever. I really needed to speak to my Uncle Harry, because he got me – he always understood me so easily. He didn’t need to know about Kale and me having sex, but he could know something serious happened and that the outcome broke my heart in two.
I heard my mother talking, but for the life of me I couldn’t hear what she was saying over my own thoughts. I nodded to her, even though she couldn’t see the gesture as I left the kitchen and headed up the stairs to