she had to deal with this situation with delicacy. “Rene’s on edge right now. I think he’ll handle your relationship better if we get through one crisis before we deal with the next.”
“Our relationship isn’t a crisis,” Louis insisted. “It shouldn’t affect Rene in any way.”
“Sylvie is right.” Cricket hopped off the exam table. “We have to ease him into this. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you the full truth, dear. Louis and I have been seeing each other for a few months. He’s the one who’s been encouraging me to get out and enjoy life more. We wanted to make sure it was real before we let Rene know.”
“He’s your son, not your father,” Louis argued. “You know I love him, but he’s been unreasonable about you. You’re not an invalid.”
“She did have cancer last year.” Sylvie felt it necessary to defend her husband. She also didn’t like the fact that they hadn’t even given Rene the chance to be okay with his mother dating. If Cricket had told Rene back when they were starting, he likely would have wrapped his head around the relationship by now, and it wouldn’t be a ticking time bomb she had to defuse.
“I would still like to postpone this talk with Rene.” Cricket sounded stronger than she had even this morning. “I’m not putting you off, Louis. I’m trying to make this easier on my son. If you can’t handle that . . .”
“I can. You know I can.” Louis sighed and took her hand again. “I would wait another twenty years to have a single day with you. I’ll drive you back to the house and then I’ll find a way to the office. I doubt he knows my lunch ran extra long. He doesn’t like to talk to me much these days.”
Cricket looked up at him, her eyes shining with obvious affection. “Because he’s on edge. He loves you. You were so good to him growing up.”
“That doesn’t mean he won’t think I’m trying to step into his father’s shoes.” Louis opened the door and let the ladies walk out. “He’ll resent that. I’m worried he’s blaming me for the problems we have down at the office. I know for a fact he’s been holding back on me. He changed our bid on the last job. I’m sure he did it because he had inside information, but in the past, he would have told me.”
Sylvie winced, but she couldn’t say anything reassuring. She wasn’t about to break Rene’s confidence. “I’ll give you a ride back to the office, and once Rene’s job and the house are secure, we’ll all sit down and talk about this as a family.”
They started down the hall, Sylvie letting Louis lead Cricket out.
“Sylvie is right.” Cricket threaded her healthy arm through Louis’s. “We don’t say anything to Rene until the time is right.”
She heard Cricket gasp and then realized why as she walked into the lobby and saw Rene standing there. Hallie was there, too, clutching Gracie and looking at Rene like she didn’t know who he was.
Hallie turned to Cricket, her voice hoarse in that way that told Sylvie she was holding on to her temper by a thread. “Mrs. Darois, I need you to tell your son I didn’t hit you with my car. He seems to think it’s what my family members do. Mow down the two of you.”
Sylvie hadn’t even thought about the fact that it had been Hallie’s mom who’d caused Rene the most pain he’d had in his life. She’d worried about this. Rene shoved his anger down. Always. She’d never seen him once lose his temper. Not even when he was a child. Most people mistook that as Rene not having feelings, but Sylvie knew the truth. He was a volcano of emotion and he was ready to explode.
“Rene, it wasn’t Hallie’s fault,” Sylvie said quietly, moving toward him. It was obvious Rene had gotten here in a hurry since he wasn’t wearing the suit coat he’d donned this morning and his hair wasn’t its perfect self.
“What are you doing here?” Rene’s question wasn’t directed at Sylvie. He hadn’t even looked at her. His eyes were on Louis. “Don’t you have a meeting you’re supposed to lead?”
“I called in and had it postponed.” Louis moved away from Cricket, his hands going into his pockets as though he didn’t trust himself not to reach out for her. “I wanted to make sure Cricket was all right. And it was not