grandchild,â said her father.
âI hope youâre proud of yourself,â said her mother.
Lucy sat up straight in her chair. âDo you really think I would be telling you this if there was any way I could do all of it without you knowing? Iâm not proud that I donât really have anywhere to live, that I still depend on you both, but Iâm proud to respect my fatherâs beliefs, Iâm proud to be dealing with this like an adult and not sticking my head in the sand or going behind your back. And when someone who wants a baby gets mine, then maybe I will be proud of that too. Iâll be sure to let you know.â
âWhose is it?â asked her mother. âDo you even know?â
âOf course I know,â said Lucy. âBut heâs irrelevant.â
âCharming.â
âI donât mean it like that, it was just that he and I...â How could she explain how things had been left between them, how some of the sweetest days of her life had soured overnight so badly that it had come to this?
âDoes he know?â said her father.
She shook her head. âHe told me that he never wanted to see me again. He told me to forget he existed.â
âWho is this person? Nobody talks to you like that, I donât care how you behave.â His face flushed and he gripped the stem of his wineglass so tightly that his knuckles were white and shiny.
âPatrick, calm down.â
âDaddy, it wasnât like you think. I broke his heart.â
âYou should tell him.â
How could she tell him when she didnât have anything for him except a last known location? She couldnât call him, or write him a letter. There were no postmen or telephones on the island. Cancun was thousands of miles from where they were now. There was only one way she could think of but she wasnât prepared to go back. She never wanted to see the island again for as long as she lived.
âHeâs irrelevant,â she said firmly. âI know what I want to do.â
Her mother looked strangely gleeful as if pleased that her wayward daughter had finally got herself into a mess, but her father looked very sad. She had prepared herself for his anger, but not for this hangdog expression that was as wistful as it was miserable.
âDaddy?â
He was twisting his hands around the spot where his wedding ring used to be. âI would help you,â he said.
âWhat?â
âI would help you to raise the baby, the child.â He spoke with purpose, this wasnât a casual offer. Lucy didnât know what to say. âHe, or she, is a part of this family, our family, not some other family,â he continued. âAnd as dysfunctional as our family might be, we have the money, plenty of money, and surely between us we can muddle though the know-how. I would help you, thatâs all, if things changed.â
âSheâs made up her mind, Patrick.â
âShe has...how long do you have, Lucy? When is the baby due?â
âIn the summer. Julyâ
Her mother sighed deeply, no doubt imagining the disruption this scandal would cause to her summer season.
âShe has seven months to think about it,â he said. âWe all do.â
âI wonât change my mind,â said Lucy.
âWeâll see. Now, letâs order some champagne. We should be celebrating.â
âI canât drink!â said Lucy, and she smiled, just a fraction. âThe baby.â
âYou do care a little then?â said her father. âYou do care a bit?â
Esmeralda
Esmeraldaâs mother, Catalina, came to Cancun looking for love, but the train journey there alone almost killed her. In the cramped train carriage she clutched her little boy, Ray, close to her and prayed that by the time they reached the edge of the country they would both still be alive. What little air there was to breathe was damp with sweat and the stench of
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