Page 51 of Take Your Breath Away
Eighteen
Andrew
I have to admit, I hadn’t seen that coming.
If I had, maybe I would have known how to react, could have prepared myself, said something that gave the impression I was thrilled with Jayne’s news. Because when someone tells you she’s pregnant, you want to look delighted. And I’m not saying I wasn’t. I believe, given a moment to get my head around what Jayne had told me, I would have been more than delighted. I would have been downright fucking thrilled. Having a child was not something we’d really talked about, but we would have gotten there eventually, and when that time had come I know I would have been on board with the idea.
But considering the kind of morning it had been—the appearance of that woman, Detective Hardy coming to the house, my relationship with Jayne seemingly on the verge of unraveling as my past came to light—I wasn’t quite in a mood to jump up and down. I should have said something along the lines of, “That’s wonderful!” or, “Oh my God, that’s great!” A simple “Wow!” might have done the trick.
What I said was, “What?”
And I imagine I looked pretty stunned when I said it.
“I’m pregnant,” Jayne said again.
I was frozen for about two seconds, then bolted forward, and, given that she was still in the chair, went down to my knees and put my arms around her for a hug. She returned the embrace, but it didn’t feel as though she was putting as much into it as I was.
I pulled away and said, “When did you find out?”
“Yesterday,” she said. “I’d done the test last weekend, peed on the stick, you know? And it was positive, but I wanted to go to the doctor first, get her two cents’ worth, before I told you. I saw her yesterday.”
“That beer,” I said. “When you came out with those two bottles, yours looked different.”
“Non-alcoholic,” she said. “I picked up a six-pack yesterday, tucked them into the back of the fridge where you wouldn’t find them.” Jayne motioned for me to stand up, which I did, then sat back in the chair across from her. “You didn’t exactly look thrilled a moment ago.”
“You caught me by surprise,” I said. “It’s been a day full of them.” I ran my hand over the top of my head and sighed. “Man. How far along?”
“About seven weeks, the doctor figures,” she said. “I think it happened the weekend we went to Mystic. Couple of days before Tyler joined us.”
My mind immediately went back to that mini-vacation. I behaved like someone released from prison. Jayne was no less insatiable.
I couldn’t help but grin. “Yeah, it could have been then. We were going to do a charter, check out the museum, but I don’t remember our leaving that B&B much.”
“I’d had this plan,” she said. “That we’d go out to dinner tonight, that I would tell you the news, but now …”
“Jayne.”
“This can’t be happening,” she said. “Not now.”
“Wait, what do you mean? You don’t want to have the baby? I thought—”
“That’s not what I mean,” she said. “This, whatever this is, what’s happened today. That can’t be happening.”
“Jayne, I swear, I don’t know what the hell is going on.”
“What if she’s back?”
“We don’t know that it’s Brie,” I said. “It doesn’t make any sense that it’s Brie.”
“Why do you say that?” she asked. “How do you know it couldn’t be?”
That was the closest she’d come to asking the question. I took a moment to consider my answer.
“Because, if that was Brie, how do we explain it? Where’s she been for six years? Why would she just pop up out of nowhere? I mean, what’s she been doing all this time? If it was really her, why’d she decide that this, of all the times she could have come back, was the right time? Did someone keep her prisoner and she finally escaped? And if that was what happened, why didn’t she go straight to the police? How does she end up showing up at our old house? There’s no rational explanation for it.”
“But it happened.”
“Something happened. Someone showed up at the house.”
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