hasnât he come down yet?â
Her motherâs body sank deeper into her chair. She twirled her tumbler nervously on the smooth surface of the counter.
Come to think of it , Morgan noticed, Momâs behavior is off today. Her hairstyleâup in a bun versus the loose, let-down curls. Her clothing rumpled when it is usually pressed.
Her glass sans coaster.
Dad absent from this conversation.
âWhatâs up with you?â Morgan finally asked, the pressure in her chest causing the words to stumble somewhat harshly.
âIâm not sure this is the best day to talk about this. Consideringââ
âMom, please. Is Dad all right?â
She swiveled her chair toward Morgan and gathered her daughterâs hands. There was something in her motherâs brown eyes. The darker brown flecks that normally comforted Morganâs spirit today lent to a feeling of spent exhaustion hiding something secret. Her eyes glossed over with the threat of coming emotion.
Uneasy tingles crawled up Morganâs spine. âMom, are you all right?â
She squeezed their hands tighter until Morganâs nerves numbed under the tension. âYour father was tested to see if he could be a donor for you. Heâs not a match.â
The tightness eased from Morganâs chest. âOkay, thatâs fine.â She pulled her hands away. âWhy all the drama? Itâs not that unexpected. Iâll just have to wait my turn on the list.â
Her mother shook her head, more hair falling from the loose bun. The look of a crazed mental health patient came to Morganâs mind.
âI have something to confess to you.â
Morgan pushed back into her chair. The look on her motherâs face stilled any words on her tongue.
Sally Meyer kneaded her hands, distraught. The only other time Morgan had seen her in such a state was when her aunt died, her motherâs only sibling. Even Teaganâs death hadnât risen to this level. âYou know I love your father very much.â
âYes.â
She placed a heavy hand on Morganâs cheek. âAnd he loves you. He would give you his heart if it would save your life.â
Morgan pulled her hand down. âI know.â
Her mother inhaled deeply. âEarly in our marriage, we were having some trouble.â
The distance between her and Tyler crossed her mind. Maybe their issues were present before but just intensified after Teaganâs death. âWhy are you bringing this up now?â
âI should also say I would have never told you this if my confession didnât bring up the possibility of saving your life. Your father is your father and always will be.â
Morganâs mind raced. âWhat are you saying?â
âDuring this time when your father and I were having trouble, I had an affair. I got pregnantâwith you.â
âYouâre saying Dad is not my biological father?â
A plea for forgiveness bled from her motherâs eyes. âIâm sorry.â
Morgan grabbed at her shirt with her hand, her heart now thumping painfully. âWhy would you keep this from me for so long?â she cried.
âWhat good would it have done to know?â
She slammed her hand onto the cold granite. âYouâre the one who always talks about speaking the truth.â
Sally blew a stray hair from her eyes. âI know. Iâm not perfect. I never claimed to be.â
Morgan fanned her hand against her chest to calm her rapid heartbeat. âDoes this other man even know that you had his child?â
She could merely close her eyes and shake her head no.
âHow long has Dad known?â
Her mother took a heavy hand and back swiped the base of her nose. âOnly after the tests came back.â
âYou kept this from him all these years?â
Morgan began to rise from the chair, but her mother clamped two hands on her knees. âYou listen to me. I know youâre confused
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Cara Adams
Lyn Hamilton
Patricia Veryan
Fletcher Best
Alice Duncan
A.M. Hargrove, Terri E. Laine
Mark McCann
Dalton Cortner
T. S. Joyce