Montana Cherries (32 page)

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Authors: Kim Law

BOOK: Montana Cherries
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Dani had shown up at the house, without calling or even telling anyone she planned to return to Montana before next Thursday, but as she’d driven up the driveway in her rental, it had occurred to her that this was no longer her home. She’d moved away. And her dad and another woman had moved in.

Her dad and the woman he loved—who loved him back—had moved in.

That was the pertinent fact. And it made her happy.

But still, it was their home now. She couldn’t very well just traipse in the back door as she’d always done. Especially not when the air between her and her dad had not been fully cleared.

Therefore, she’d found herself standing on the front porch like a stranger. And she hadn’t liked it one bit.

As she made her way down the hallway, she caught a glimpse inside her open bedroom door. The colors were brighter in the room, and there was a new bed in there, as well as matching, breezy curtains hanging at the windows.

“It’s still your room.” Gloria patted her on the arm. “It just needed a bed.”

Dani nodded, unable to speak. The changes weren’t bad . . . just different.

When she came into sight of her dad, he rose from the recliner. “Dani.” His surprise was evident in his voice. As well as not a small amount of nerves. “What are you doing home already?”

She wasn’t sure how to answer. Honestly?

Instead of immediately replying, she took in the room. It was different, same as her bedroom. For starters, there was a lovely flowered armchair in the space where her mother’s chair had once sat. Dani had removed her mother’s chair before leaving, and the new one looked very much like something Gloria would pick out. It complemented her dad’s recliner nicely.

The colors had been changed in here too. The room had a softer feel than ever before.

Happier.

And there was a basket of kids’ toys sitting by the fireplace. She assumed it was there for Haley.

As she noted the changes, Dani could sense the nerves coming from Gloria.

“It looks good in here,” she finally said, including the other woman in her gaze. “Really lovely.”

“I was worried I might have changed too much,” Gloria hedged.

“No.” Dani shook her head. “You didn’t. It’s needed this for a long time.”

Her mother was now completely gone from the space, and seeing that had the strange effect of allowing Dani to breathe much more freely. Thus making her decide to answer her father’s question with brutal honesty. It was time to move beyond their issues.

“I’m home because I missed it.” She faced her dad. That was part one of the truth.

The lines on his face eased, and he crossed to her. They’d had several conversations over the past few months, but talking from twenty-five hundred miles away couldn’t compete with face-to-face.

“I’m home because this is where I belong, Dad. I’m not healed—I won’t ever be ‘healed’—but I am better. I can’t forget, but I can forgive. And you’re my dad. Your life wasn’t easy either, I do understand that. You were a victim in your own right. So I’m here bearing an olive branch. I hope you’ll accept it and hold out one of your own.”

He did better. He pulled her in for the best hug of her life.

She clung to him as if she would never again get the opportunity to do so, and she noticed that his embrace felt the same. Their distance over the past months had been needed, but it had also healed.

“I’m so sorry, Dani girl. I should have done better for you.” He took her by the shoulders and pulled her out from him, and she noticed Gloria quietly slip out of the room. “I shouldn’t have let you stay here after your mother died,” he said. “You were in school. That’s where you belonged.”

“You tried,” she said. She now remembered him and Aunt Sadie trying to talk her into returning to New York. “I recall those conversations. But I’d cancelled my scholarship before I ever came home, Dad. I couldn’t have gone back if I’d wanted to.”

“We could have fixed it, and I should have. I could have raised the boys myself. Or hired a nanny. You deserved your life.”

Yeah, she had. But he wasn’t fully at fault.

She took a moment to fortify herself with a breath before pushing forward. “I needed to be here, Dad. I didn’t know it at the time, but I needed you all as much as I thought you needed me. Also . . .” She paused and pulled in another breath. “I’d promised Mom that I would come home if anything ever happened.”

At his questioning look, she told him about the phone call the day before the wreck.

“I refused to come home that weekend,” she explained, “but I also promised that if you all ever needed me, I’d be here. I was loaded down with guilt after the wreck, and nothing could have stood in my way to fulfill that promise. It was my chance to make her proud. I wanted my mother’s approval.”

Her dad shook his head, his eyes drawn with sadness. “You never needed her approval.”

“And I never would have received it. I get that now. But in my head, that was it. The one and only opportunity I would ever have again. And if I didn’t succeed?” Dani shrugged. “Then she would never love me.”

Dani understood that her mother never had loved her, and had she lived, never would have. And she understood that those lack of feelings
had nothing to do with Dani. Her mother
couldn’t
love anyone. That
fact was sad, but her mother’s lack of ability did not alter who Dani was.

“I came home back then, and I took over your life,” she told her dad. “And I apologize for that. I pushed you out. Possibly I even made you feel similarly to how Mom once had.”

“No.” The word burst from his lungs. “Never. Dani, this wasn’t your fault.”

“I know. But I took the spotlight and I made sure you all needed
me
.” She laughed lightly. “I’d developed a few unhealthy traits of my own while growing up. If I kept everything spotless and on schedule, everyone in school, then you all had to be proud of me. I put myself at the center of our world. Quite similar to Mom, only in a different way.”

“You’re nothing like her.”

“Only, in some ways I am.” And she was working on that. “But I do understand my own behavior better now. As well as yours.”

He nodded. “I’ve learned a thing or two myself. I shouldn’t have allowed you to be kept in the dark about your mom’s accident. That only hurt you in the long run.”

“No, you shouldn’t have.”

“And I certainly should have stood up for you well before then.”

She agreed with his words, and it still hurt that he hadn’t.

But the hurt was remembered pain, and didn’t include the facts she’d learned. She wouldn’t play the it’s-not-fair game any longer. That got her nowhere, and she was finally starting to move past it. So as she’d told her father when she’d first come in, she could forgive. He hadn’t intended any harm.

“I added to the problem by burying my head in the sand,” he continued. “My actions hurt you. And I can’t change that. I can only apologize.” He took her hands. “And swear to you that I’ll never stand aside and allow anything to hurt you ever again. I love you, Dani. And I thank you for coming home and allowing us to have this talk.”

He’d offered to come to New York to see her last month, to talk. But she wouldn’t let him. She’d made it clear that when they saw each other again, it would be her call. She’d needed that control. But today she simply needed her dad.

“One more hug?” she asked.

He held open his arms. “All the hugs in the world.”

When they separated, Gloria had returned with warm bread and cookies, and the three of them took a seat. Dani filled them in on New York and her job, telling them of a few trips she’d taken for BA. But what she didn’t immediately share was that she’d quit her job. That she was home to stay.

Her dad talked about the orchard. Pruning had started, and they were looking into new cooling machinery for the next season.

It was mundane talk mostly, but it was nice. It was great to be home.

She keyed in on the toys by the fireplace. “Are those for when Haley comes over?”

Gloria’s gaze turned to guilt. “Yes,” she answered, the word coming out quick. She motioned to the small pile of dog toys nearby. “And when Montana comes with her.”

Dani’s dad shook his head. “That dog’s a runt, but he acts like he’s as big as his name.”

They talked for a minute about the house Ben had bought just up the road, and Dani learned that her father and soon-to-be stepmother had been there. It apparently had a majestic view of the lake and the mountains. Which made Dani wonder if Karen, from the coffee shop, had seen that particular view.

And if it had been first thing in the morning when she opened her eyes.

“So you guys keep Haley when Ben goes out?” Dani continued down her path of torture. Hearing the facts of Ben’s love life would only cause her pain, but she needed to face it. He’d moved on. She hadn’t wanted to believe it, but her trip to the coffee shop had proved otherwise. He’d been unable to take his eyes off the other woman.

“We do.” Gloria’s hands fidgeted in her lap.

Dani opened her mouth to ask how often, and if it was always overnight, but decided at the last minute that she didn’t want to know. That kind of pain she could do without. So instead, she nodded, expertly changed the subject, and the three of them acted as though her heart weren’t bleeding right there in front of them.

Eventually, the conversation turned back to New York. In fact, Dani steered it that way. Time to face the facts.

“I didn’t like New York as much as I expected to,” she confessed.

“What?” Her dad and Gloria spoke at the same time.

Gloria leaned to the edge of her seat. “We thought you loved it.”

“And I thought I would.”

“You didn’t like the job?” her dad asked.

“Actually, I loved the job. And I was really good at it.”

“So, what happened?” He looked as shocked as she’d been when she’d come to the realization that she intended to go home. New York had been her dream. For forever. She was supposed to love it.

Only . . . she loved home more.

“Did you know you can’t see the stars in New York?” she asked. “And the Hudson River is no Flathead Lake.”

Her humor was lost on them, so she stood from her seat.

“I was running away,” she admitted. “New York wasn’t really the dream. I needed to be away from Mom, and it just so happened, New York was the one place I’d visited that gave me something better than I could get here. That’s why I fell in love with it. It’s why I applied to Columbia. It’s why I never let the idea go. I needed the escape. But take everything else out of the picture”—she paused and shook her head—“and I would have regretted being there all this time. I would have missed seeing everyone grow up. And as annoying as they can be, I love my brothers. I’m glad I was here with them.”

“Oh, Dani,” Gloria whispered. She had tears in her eyes. So did Dani’s dad.

“I’ve finally found myself,” Dani told them. “And I don’t need New York to be who I want to be. I just need to be here.”

Her dad nodded in approval. “I’m glad you’re home.”

“What will you do now?” Gloria asked, and Dani couldn’t contain the smile.

“I’ve already put in calls to my old clients. I’ll soon be renting an office in town.”

Gloria came to her then, and gave Dani a hug. She kissed her cheek, and Dani squeezed the woman tight. Her own mother had never showed her as much love as this woman had in this single moment.

“I’m glad I’m home too,” she told both of them. “I’m ready to start the rest of my life.”

“I’ll fix your room up for you,” Gloria told her.

“There’s no need.” Dani’s words stopped her before she made it out of the room. “I’ve got a hotel room for tonight, and tomorrow I’ll start looking for a place of my own.”

“Dani, it’s your room,” Gloria assured her. “Your house. You’re always welcome here.”

“I know.”

“Do you?” Her dad stood. “Because I feel the same way. Or we’ll leave if you want to stay but don’t want us here.”

“Dad.” She swallowed as her emotions threatened to suck her under. “It’s
your
house. Not mine. And no, you aren’t leaving. But it’s not because of you that
I’m
not staying. I need my own place. I need my own boundaries.” She touched his arm. “I need to not have the pressure of too many memories in this house,” she finished softly.

He hugged her again, and that time it didn’t feel so much like desperation on either of their parts. It felt like healing. It also reminded her of being a kid. When her mom hadn’t been around.

Her dad had tried so hard to love her back then. She knew that. He just hadn’t always been able to show it.

Standing in his arms now, it occurred to her that she’d once thought her mother had deserved more from her dad, but that hadn’t been the situation at all. Her
dad
had been the one getting the short end of things.

“You deserved more from her, Dad,” she spoke against his chest. “We all did. But you too. I hope you and Gloria are happy together.”

He kissed the top of her head. “Gloria makes me very happy. But this moment is my favorite.”

Tears fell from both of them, and Gloria hurried off for tissues.

When Dani straightened and made to leave, her father pointed a finger in her direction. ”Don’t ever come through the front door again.”

She agreed. “It’s a deal.”

Gloria stood, her hands at her mouth, seemingly thrilled with the outcome of the visit. “Will we see you before Thursday?” she asked.

“I don’t know yet. I have a lot to do. Getting my business back up and running. Finding a place to live. I’ll be here early Thursday morning, though. I’ll help cook dinner.”

Gloria’s smile widened. “No need. The boys are cooking. All of them. It was their idea.”

Dani’s gaze shot to her dad.

“I got roped into it.” He didn’t sound upset by the fact.

“Who among you all even knows anything about cooking?” she asked.

“To hear Nate tell it,” Gloria began, “he’s quite the chef these days.”

“Nate?” Dani was struck dumb. The most difficult one of them all?

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