Page 49 of The Sweetest Moment

CHAPTER 24

All the days were beginningto blend into each other as Harper forced herself to keep moving. Her painting, such as it was, was done and ready to be sent to the competition. She had given herself as much time as possible, trying to overcome her melancholy, but now she was on the very edge of the deadline and had to mail it today or it wouldn’t arrive in time to be counted.

She was currently wrapping the piece for transport and would travel to the nearest post office to get it shipped off. It would take her whole afternoon, but it wasn’t like it mattered. She had nothing else pulling on her time.

Her resume had gone out to a few jobs within the last week and Harper was waiting to hear back from them. Meanwhile, she moped around the house, pretending to paint, but really doing nothing.

She’d gone to visit Riley and the kittens a couple times and Harper was having a hard time not bringing one home. Sometimes all she wanted in the middle of the night was a tiny, soft kitten to cuddle with, but then the morning would come and sense would return.

She was getting a job. She wouldn’t be home. It wouldn’t be fair to a pet to be gone all day.

Harper sighed. So for now...she would remain single. Though she would use her friends to help with the loneliness, just like she had always done.

Luckily, Harper had yet to run into Mason, which was a blessing and a curse. She ached to see him but knew it would only prolong the hurt she was still experiencing. “Just like a Band-Aid,” she whispered to herself as she wrapped the painting. “Rip it off and get it done.”

Her phone rang and Harper ignored it. She’d get back to whoever it was when she was done. Trying to get a painting ready for the mail was no small task.

Her phone went off again and Harper sighed. “Fine,” she breathed. Setting down the wooden frame, she grabbed the device and frowned at the screen. Who in the world would be calling her from California? “Hello?”

“Is this Harper?” a deep voice asked.

Harper’s frown deepened. Who was this? And why was the tone ever so slightly familiar? “I’m sorry...who’s this?”

“This is Crew Turley. I’m Mason’s younger brother.”

Harper froze.

“Harper? Are you there?”

“Y-yes,” she stuttered. “How did you get my number?”

Crew chuckled and the sound was so like Mason’s that Harper’s knees shook. “I stole it from Mase’s phone when he wasn’t looking.”

“What can I do for you, Mr. Turley?” Harper said coolly. She didn’t need this kind of stress right now. If Crew was calling about Mason, then it wasn’t anything she needed to hear. Mason had broken up with her. Not the other way around. Not to mention, she still needed to get on the road so she could get that painting shipped before it was too late.

“Look,” Crew said in a somber tone. “I know Mason probably isn’t your favorite guy right now—”

Harper snorted. That was an understatement.

“But he needs your help.”

Harper put her hand on her hip. “If he needed my help, why isn’t he the one calling?” She wasn’t usually so snarky, but Harper’s emotions were a little on edge at the moment.

“Because he doesn’t think you’ll listen.”

Harper pursed her lips. “What do you want, Crew?” she asked, her tone softer. “I have several things to do today and some of them are on a tight deadline.”

Crew grumbled some things under his breath that she couldn’t understand. “Did you know that my mother is trying to take Layla away from Mason?”

Harper’s heart skipped a beat. “Yes. He mentioned it once,” she whispered.

“Did you know he’s at the courthouse right now fighting to keep her?”

Her eyes just about bugged out of her head. “What? Today? How in the world did it move that fast?”

“My mom has connections,” Crew said wryly. “But what matters is that he’s desperate for a good character witness and doesn’t have one. They’re using the hospital trip against him and Mason doesn’t have a leg to stand on.”

Harper’s stomach felt nauseous and she put a hand on it. “What do you mean, he doesn’t have a character witness? He has friends. Any of them would be willing to speak up for him.”

“And they are, but none of them have experience watching him with Layla.”

Except you.The words hung in their air between them, breaking down all of Harper’s carefully built defenses. “He won’t want me there,” she said hoarsely. “He practically kicked me out of that hospital.”

Crew snorted. “I think you’d be surprised by the reception you’d receive.”

Harper shook her head. “Crew...I really don’t see how my word means more than anyone else’s. I haven’t known Mason as long as Ethan or Jayden. Yes, we hang out with the same friend group, but we haven’t been close.”

“Harper,” Crew begged. “You know him. You know him better than anyone else. You tell me... How many people in that great big group of yours have seen Mason when he was mopping up spilled orange juice in his pajamas? Or when he was sleep deprived? Or when he was bathing a tiny toddler with jam smeared in her hair?”

Harper couldn’t get enough moisture in her mouth to swallow.

“How many have seen him at his worst, but also his best? How many have dealt with his need to be in control and helped him learn to let go?”

“How—?” She didn’t even know how to ask the right question. Crew was talking as if he had been there.

“He told me,” Crew said softly. “Letting you go was the hardest thing Mason has ever done. The man is a giant on the outside but full of stuffing on the inside. Layla means almost everything to him. He can’t lose you both.”

Harper bit her tongue. Mason hadn’t lost her. He’d pushed her away. But she knew from personal experience that losing Layla would break him. Harper was barely surviving and Layla wasn’t even hers. Mason would never recover.

And Layla won’t either.

“Where are they?” she asked.

Crew spouted off the directions, obviously having practiced before he got on the phone. “Will you come then? Can I tell our lawyer you’ll be here?”

Harper looked at her painting. The courthouse was in the opposite direction. There would be no way to do both. If she went after Mason, she’d lose her ability to enter the competition and any chance she had of talking to her mother about an extension. By not sending in the painting, she wouldn’t be fulfilling her end of the bargain and her mother would have the right to cut off funds immediately.

Her stomach churned once more. He doesn’t want you. He has other friends. He regrets kissing you.

Tears swam in her vision when Layla’s dark eyes and addicting laugh broke through the bad memories. She didn’t have to do this for Mason, though Harper still loved him...she would do it for Layla. Layla had never let her down and even though Harper wasn’t going to be part of the toddler’s life, she still wanted Layla to have the best, and it wasn’t with her grandmother. “I’ll be there.”

*****


Tags: Laura Ann Romance