LOGINWhen I’d been a child and Dad had been full of smiles and reassurances, I’d loved to see that book in his hands because it always heralded the appearance of one fun friend or another. That was when I’d thought Dad ruled the world. Back before Mom died and Dad became something else. Before he became this.
I sighed and shook my head. I never thought about those early childhood days anymore. I could barely remember them and they were as far removed from the present as rainbow unicorns and fairytale castles. I’d taken responsibility for Dad’s descent into ruin for so long that I’d stopped believing my Prince Charming might arrive and rescue me. Or any kind of royalty, come to that. But lower-level noblemen tended to avoid me, too.
Now, though, if I saw even so much as a hint of a crown and a royal monogram, or a knight on any kind of white steed coming, I’d lock the door anyway. I had nothing to offer any man—I hadn’t even finished high school because I’d spent too many days covering for Dad, nursing Dad, being Dad via email to keep the business running.
Plus, I had no experience of any sort to offer any man. Being a twenty-eightyear-old virgin didn’t really bother me. After all, some shit people just hadn’t time to do yet—and having sex was vying with cleaning the office for priority on my life’s to-do list. That said, virginity wasn’t exactly a selling point these days. I was practically elderly at this point—and every day that passed made me less confident it was truly a good quality. Society was long past days of purity, after all—experience was definitely where it was at now. At my age, anyway.
Some days—on very rare days, when I had the time to spare—I wished I was like any other woman my age, with the ability to be carefree, maybe even a little sexy. Attractive. Desirable. I hadn’t walked that walk yet, and I missed something I’d never had.
Dad was still fumbling around in the drawer, and I snapped my focus back to him. “Your contacts?” I spat the word. “What the hell good can your bookmaker do for you now? You’ve spent all the money, Dad. What you haven’t gambled, you’ve tipped down your throat. You’re literally pissing it away.”
He flinched but didn’t look at me as he continued to scrabble through the contents of the drawer. I shrugged as I watched him. What the hell did it matter if he ruined my filing system? We were ruined anyway.
He’d already made sure of that.
“I can’t be here with you right now.” I pinched the bridge of my nose and inhaled a shaky breath, trying to contain the tears that suddenly prickled behind my eyelids. Frustration rose through me but I expelled it as despair. “Look what you’ve done to us, Dad! We’ve got nothing left. You’ve taken it all, and I… I can’t fix this.”
The words left me empty, and I dug around in my pocket for my last few dollars and some change. Eight dollars and sixty-three cents. And it was all I had left in the world. I peeled the five-dollar bill off the top and left it on the corner of the desk. Dad looked up from where he was flipping through the pages of the notebook he’d found. He’d been lingering on each page like he needed to wait for his eyes to focus before he read the words.
He met my gaze briefly. “What’s that for?”
“Your ride home, Dad. I can’t do this with you tonight. I have nothing else in me. I can’t take care of anything anymore.” Exhaustion rang in my tone. I was bone tired and so weary.
Dad returned his attention to the finely lined pages. “I’ll take care of it,” he murmured.
I DROVE HOME ALMOST in a daze. On autopilot. Not even enjoying the view of the Spanish moss draped over the live oak trees as I neared our home. Instead, tonight, even through the darkness, every flaw and crack in the paintwork of our house screamed out loud and proud. I knew exactly which rotten boards to avoid on the old front porch, and the way the water pipes clanked and rattled as I filled my bath was familiar even as it scraped over each of my nerves.
Dilapidation. Disrepair.
Bordering on fucking ruin.
“Oh, Mom.” The sigh of regret slipped from my lips as I slid into a bath that was barely warm.
Once we’d had a house full of staff and lush gardens that spread out to the edges of a bayou. The crepe myrtles had been magnificent then, rather than twisted and overgrown as they were now. Try as I might, some of the maintenance work always slipped to the bottom of my list. Yard work was usually at the bottom.
Top of my to-do checklist was always Dad. Keeping him barely functioning was second nature. Then I had to keep The Pour House running to ensure we had a little money coming in as well as upholding Mom’s legacy. Lastly, I cooked and did laundry, and that was pretty much it. Housework, yardwork, repairs. They just didn’t happen. Either the issues resolved themselves or I learned to ignore them.
I lay perfectly still in the rapidly cooling bath water until my stomach rumbled. I wasn’t even part way close to relaxed, but I climbed out before dressing and heading to the kitchen. On my way through the house, I passed my floor to ceiling bookcases and trailed my fingers over the books, but I had no desire to select one. Nothing could offer me an escape from reality today—not books and especially not TV. We’d lost cable last month after one overdue bill too many, and now my TV sat dark and silent in the corner like some sort of postmodern ornament. I was pretty sure it was judging me, actually.
I was certainly judging me.
Wait. No. It was actually insane. This guy was a complete stranger, and here I was, making out with him on the street?!What the hell was I doing?I shoved him. Before I even thought about it, I thrust my hands against the stranger’s chest, and his mouth gaped as his eyes widened and he staggered back, leaving just enough space for me to run.My chest ached with every breath I sucked in, and I couldn’t hear anything but the blood pounding through my ears as I focused on my feet striking the sidewalk, running back into the store. Adrenaline f
When I’d been a child and Dad had been full of smiles and reassurances, I’d loved to see that book in his hands because it always heralded the appearance of one fun friend or another. That was when I’d thought Dad ruled the world. Back before Mom died and Dad became something else. Before he became this.I sighed and shook my head. I never thought about those early childhood days anymore. I could barely remember them and they were as far removed from the present as rainbow unicorns and fairytale castles. I’d taken responsibility for Dad’s descent into
When I’d been a child and Dad had been full of smiles and reassurances, I’d loved to see that book in his hands because it always heralded the appearance of one fun friend or another. That was when I’d thought Dad ruled the world. Back before Mom died and Dad became something else. Before he became this.I sighed and shook my head. I never thought about those early childhood days anymore. I could barely remember them and they were as far removed from the present as rainbow unicorns and fairytale castles. I’d taken responsibility for Dad’s descent into
I’d invested so much of my life into this business—at the expense of making friends and boyfriends, or having any kind of personal life at all. I always had things to do. Tables to clean, order sheets to complete, bill roulette to play. Which utility company will get lucky this month? It was truly up to a wildly spinning chamber and fate.Pierre exhaled a small sigh and stood, his gut hanging just a little over his belt. He drew a creased handkerchief from his pocket and mopped his glistening forehead. “I know you have your reasons, Leia, but
LEIAThe light above me flickered and I glanced toward the ceiling, squinting at it like I could diagnose the issue from a mere irritated gaze and willpower alone. But we were lucky the lights were still on at all, with the stack of red bills clamoring for my attention on my desk, and I sighed as I leaned over the table to swipe my rag over the worn wood.“Quiet tonight, cher.” Harry Allard’s soft voice broke the silence, and I stiffened, pausing my movement for just a fraction of a moment.I shrugged, trying to appear casual. “Guess that’s what I get for having a







