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Anna by Amanda Prowse (17)

‘So, tell me once again.’

It was two months since Anna’s fainting spell and emergency dash to the hospital. Tonight she sat at the kitchen table, topped up her large glass of white and took a slug, as if his announcement or more accurately her response to it might require this Dutch courage.

‘I’ve bought the warehouse in Bristol. I did it!’ Theo grinned as if he were a schoolboy trying to convince her that his hare-brained scheme might just work. ‘I thought about what my dad said, that I should put my money where my mouth is, and I did it!’

‘For how much?’

‘A little under a million.’

‘Wow!’

Anna was torn. Part of her was delighted Theo was finally following his heart, building studios as safe houses for kids straight out of care. This had been his business proposal to his dad all those weeks ago, to buy a warehouse near the docks, convert it into studios and do some good. It all sounded sensible. But part of her was concerned that at this point in time, just as they were starting down the route to adoption, he was risking all of their security, their routine, to buy a warehouse in a city she had never even visited. She hated the thought that this might be the thing that stopped her from becoming a mum. The possibility was more than she could stand.

‘And it doesn’t have planning permission?’

‘Yet. No planning permission yet.’ He drummed his fingers. ‘That’s the critical word, but the potential is huge!’

‘And you did this with our money, not the company’s?’

‘Yes. All of our money, in fact.’ He gave a small, nervous laugh.

‘And you get mad when your parents don’t tell you things? Wow!’

Anna emptied her glass and reached again for the bottle. It wasn’t the amount of money that was the issue – that sort of sum never felt real to her anyway. No, her main hurt stemmed from the fact that in spite of telling her constantly how they were a partnership in every sense, Theo had made the decision alone, a huge decision that had the power to affect every aspect of their future. His actions told her in no uncertain terms that neither her permission, approval nor even her knowledge of the transaction was required. It made her feel invalid, like sticks on a river – a feeling she had forgotten of late.

‘I know it sounds reckless and seems a bit of a gamble.’

It was Anna’s turn to give an uncomfortable laugh. ‘Ya think?’

He reached across the table and gripped her wine-free hand. ‘It’s a beautiful red-brick warehouse with a view over the bend in the river looking down towards the Avon Gorge. The original tilt windows are still in situ and it has two towering chimneys. It reeks of history, Anna! And I can see the finished units in my mind’s eye.’ He used his hand to draw a line in the air. ‘Wide, open-plan spaces with industrial detailing and simple kitchens and bathrooms – somewhere those kids can be proud of. All the floors will be stripped back and we’ll use waxed ship’s timbers. It’ll be loft living on the water with beautiful Bristol as a backdrop. And the beneficiaries will be young people who need the support, people like Shania!’ He smiled at her. ‘This is the first thing I have done on my own, and it feels good! I know the business, Anna. I know we can make money on this and make a difference.’

‘But your dad didn’t seem to think so?’

The set of his jaw told her that she shouldn’t have mentioned this, but that was just too bad.

‘He didn’t even consider it because it was my suggestion. You know how he is.’ He sat back in the chair. ‘If it had come from anyone else on the board or he’d thought of it himself, it would be a different matter. The numbers are solid and I am excited about the whole project. For the first time ever, I am excited about a project, and I would like you to be excited about it too.’

Anna tucked her hair behind her ears and sat forward with her elbows on the table. For most of her life she had been told how to feel, where to live, how to travel, given clothes from a communal box, shipped this way and that, until she’d finally been able to find her feet when she left care. Being part of any decision-making process when it came to her life was very important. ‘I will be. I am excited for you, happy you’re following your instinct, I get all that...’

‘But?’ he prompted, rolling his hand, hoping this might bring her to her point quicker. She noted the flicker of irritation in his eyes.

‘But we’re just about to have our first chat with the agency. Adoption is what we’re working towards. That’s what we’re supposed to be excited about.’

‘It doesn’t have to be the end of your plans.’

‘Our plans, Theo. Our plans.’ She spoke sharply, and hated the look of disappointment on her husband’s face. ‘I just need to let it sink in a bit, that’s all, and I hate that you did this thing without talking to me first. I even ask you before buying a pair of shoes!’

‘Yes, but you don’t have to. You know that. You’re free to do as you please, of course you are.’

‘I know I don’t have to, but I still do. I do it out of courtesy and because I believe in transparency. No secrets, remember?’ She took a sip of wine. ‘And because at the back of my mind I’m still more than a little aware that our home, our lifestyle is only possible because of your family money and not the few shekels I toss into the pot each month. I guess this action from you enforces that.’

There was a beat of silence.

‘Anna, you’re my wife! I have never, ever wanted you to feel—’

‘And I don’t!’ She cut him short. ‘But that’s the difference, I guess. I would never feel like I could do something like that with our money, but you do, you did! And I get it.’

A wave of unease washed over her. Talking about money made her feel uncomfortable. ‘What will happen if you don’t get planning permission?’

Theo held her gaze. ‘I will. You have to trust me on this, Anna. I will show you and I will show my dad.’

‘Is that why you’ve done it, to prove a point?’

‘No. I’ve done it because I believe I can turn a million pounds into three and I can give kids who need it a helping hand, and if I can do it once, I can do it again and again. I thought you of all people would get that?’

‘I do, I do. And I love that you want to do something like that, but from a purely selfish point of view, I don’t want to do anything that might get in the way of our adoption plans.’

‘I need to do this, Anna—’

‘I know,’ she interrupted. ‘To prove you’re not the little boy eating alone in the dining hall, the little boy who no one thought would amount to much. The little boy who wants to show his dad what he’s capable of. I get it. But you should still have spoken to me first.’

Theo stood up and ran his fingers through his hair.

‘I... I need to get to bed, I have an early start tomorrow – I’m getting the first train to Bristol. It leaves at stupid o’clock.’

‘Please, Theo, don’t just walk out! I want to talk to you.’ She hated the desperate tone to her voice. She pictured herself on the stairs at her Aunt Lizzie’s house. No one wants me, I am annoying, weird.

‘I’m very tired, Anna.’ He unbuttoned his collar.

‘No, you’re not! You’re just tired of talking to me.’

She cursed the tears that spilled, aware of how quickly their conversation had deteriorated, as if this was always the destination and it was only the route they took that differed. ‘We are supposed to be a couple, but it doesn’t always feel like it. I’m your wife! It’s not just the Bristol thing – there’s so much you won’t discuss. And it seems to be getting worse. Ever since... Ever since Spud went to the States. Is that it? Is it that now he’s not here you can’t even talk to me?’ She sobbed. ‘It makes me feel like less of a person – what am I if you can’t even face me, talk to me? I don’t want to be confrontational, but it often feels like that’s all I’m left with, the only way to talk to you and the only way to get a response.’

Theo sighed. ‘I thought you’d be happy!’

‘And you can sigh, but it doesn’t make the problem go away, Theo.’

‘Can’t this wait? I really do have to be up very early.’ He looked at the floor, and at that moment she hated his cowardice.

‘I want to be a mum,’ she levelled. ‘I really do, more than anything. I want us to adopt! It was your idea and it’s the best idea you’ve ever had, not to mention my only chance now. I don’t want to run out of time.’

‘We’re not running out of time,’ he whispered. ‘We’ve started the process, we’ve got a meeting with the adoption agency in a few days, and I’m right behind you. And if after that things have to be put on hold because—’

‘Don’t you dare!’ Anna raised her voice and it surprised them both. ‘Don’t you dare throw another reason, another justification into the mix! You can’t do that!’ Her tears fell freely.

‘Don’t cry. Please, Anna, don’t cry.’

‘You think I want to cry? You think I like feeling this sad? You just don’t understand what this would mean to me. I can do it on my own.’ She brightened as she spoke. ‘I’ve been thinking about it – if you don’t want this, then I can do it alone!’ She clasped her hands in unconscious prayer. Her next words were slow and considered. ‘I don’t want to do it alone, Theo. I want you by my side. I honestly, truly believe that once you see a child in our home, you’ll feel differently and all your doubts, all your worries will disappear! I am begging you. Please, Theo, let our adoption be a priority...’ She let this hang in the air.

‘You think it’s the answer for everything.’

‘What if it’s the answer for me?’ Her voice was croaky, stretched reed-thin with emotion.

‘Then maybe you’re with the wrong guy!’ he shot back angrily.

Anna felt herself shrink backwards. Her mouth fell open and her fear wrapped itself around her throat, making breathing difficult. Her husband’s stricken expression told her that his words had either not been meant or had inadvertently revealed the truth. Either way, she was aghast.

‘Don’t say that! Don’t say that, Theo!’ she managed.

‘Oh, Anna, I’m sorry!’ He leant forward and kissed her hair.

‘And I always thought...’ She took a deep breath. ‘I thought if I loved you enough, I could make you see just what an amazing person you are. I thought if I listened, really listened, you’d understand that what you have to say is always of interest to me. But I’ve come to realise that there is no such thing as loving you enough to fix you, Theo.’ She beat her fist against the scrubbed wooden tabletop. ‘It doesn’t matter how much I love you. You need to love yourself and I can’t make you do that.’

Theo ran his thumb along the pale underside of her arm. ‘It’s complicated.’

Anna’s laughter exploded from her. ‘You’re telling me! That much I know, but it was never meant to be complicated, it was meant to be easy.’ She sat up straight in the chair and collected herself, chugging the remainder of her wine and thinking of all the people who had drifted in and out of her world for whom life had been impossible – Joe, Shania, even Jordan, who lived a half life, cloistered away from his parents. But her and Theo? They could have had the moon! ‘And it should have been so easy: we met, we fell in love, we got married, one way or another we should have had kids and stayed together, happy ever after! That’s it! Nothing complicated at all!’

‘Nothing is ever that simple.’

‘Correction, nothing is that simple with you!’ She was yelling now. ‘Nothing! You turn every event into an excuse for even greater introspection, shutting all the little doors in your mind and your heart. You are so closed in!’ She formed her fingers into a tight ball. ‘All I wanted was for you to love me and for us to have our babies. That was all. And I thought I deserved you. I really did! Things have always been so shit for me, I thought I deserved you!’ Her tears came again, beating a path that was as familiar to them both as the discussion itself. This was what happened: they drank, they fought, she cried and fell asleep and he stayed up and drank some more.

‘I cannot bear the idea of a child going through what I went through, but I have said that I will try.’

‘God, listen to yourself!’ Anna wiped her face with the back of her palm, smearing her make-up across her cheeks. ‘I’m sick of hearing it! Why is it always about you? Why is everything about Theo and what’s best for you? Do I not count? Do you think because I don’t come from money or because I’m common, I count less? Is that what you think? Is that why you feel able to go and blow a million fucking pounds on a shed somewhere without discussing it? Oh, it’s only Anna, she won’t mind!’

Theo shook his head.

‘And you know what, buster?’ She jabbed her finger at him. ‘You didn’t have it so bad. Okay, so you didn’t have friends, and your parents are useless, but you weren’t on the streets, you were in a real fancy school and your dad collected you in his sports car and whisked you away for foreign holidays. I can hear you telling that to the social worker right now! Poor Theo!’ She laughed, but this quickly turned to more tears – this too was part of their routine.

‘I don’t expect you to understand,’ he whispered. ‘There’s other stuff too. Difficult stuff, but I can’t—’

‘No, you’re right, I don’t understand because you can’t explain it to me.’ She balled her fingers into fists as her frustration bubbled. ‘Because I lived with kids who’d come off the streets, kids whose parents were in jail! My mum and my brother died, the only family I had ever known, they died, Theo, and I was only a little girl and I went into care and slept with one eye open, trying to hide from a man who came into my room and put his fingers in my knickers!’ She was yelling again now, banging the table. ‘So don’t you dare tell me how tough you had it because your tuck box ran out or the nanny forgot your name!’

‘I don’t know how to make you understand what I went through. I don’t know what to say to you. I don’t know how to make things better,’ he said quietly.

‘No, Theo, you never do!’ She raised her palms. ‘And that one stock phrase doesn’t mean anything any more, not when you don’t do anything to change the situation. They’re just words that you hand out like Band-Aids.’

‘I can’t do this,’ he murmured.

She heard his words and felt a stab of fear right through her core. She heard defeat in his tone and it felt as if the room was spinning. It was all she could do to hang on, trying not to fall.

* * *

Melissa stirred her coffee and licked the foam from the teaspoon. ‘God, it’s good to see you. And lovely to be out in the world of grown-ups!’ She looked around the coffee shop.

‘It’s good to see you too.’

‘And as much as I love them, the best bit is having a morning without some little person saying “Mommy! Mommy! Mommy!” fifteen times a minute. I swear to God, I often think about changing my name to something they can’t pronounce, like Algernon or Myfanwy.’

‘Myfanwy would work.’ Anna smiled weakly, finding it hard to see beyond her own sadness and thinking how utterly joyful it would be to hear someone calling ‘Mummy! Mummy! Mummy!’ fifteen times a minute.

‘So let me get this straight – you were gabbling a bit on the phone.’ Melissa folded her arms on the table and looked at her friend. ‘Theo has blown all your cash on this random building project?’

‘That’s about the size of it, yes.’ She bit the back of her knuckle.

‘So what does that mean? Are you having to sell the family silver? Live off beans?’ Melissa waved her teaspoon in the air. ‘Should you not be delighted that he’s got this off the ground?’

‘I probably should be, yes.’ Anna sighed and rubbed her eyes. ‘But what it actually means is that Theo is one stubborn idiot who has taken a gamble with our future, and right now I don’t know if we need to sell the house, or whether we’re broke or...’ She raised her hands. ‘I don’t know much.’

Melissa squeezed her arm. ‘Will you have to quit the broker’s and go get a proper, better-paid job?’

She’d gone part time at Villiers House eighteen months ago, but she smarted at Melissa’s derisory tone. She was still good at her job. ‘Possibly, I really haven’t thought that far ahead. We may even have to go and live in a bloody warehouse in Bristol.’

‘Where is Bristol exactly?’ Melissa asked.

‘I’m not entirely sure, but it’s up the motorway or across the motorway – I don’t know. West. And the worst thing...’ She looked up at her friend, trying to keep her emotions under control. ‘The worst thing is that this project is a distraction, another reason to avoid the whole adoption thing. It might mean another delay.’

Melissa winced. ‘Well, I’ve already told you what I think – you need to go for it! Fake his signature, lie, do whatever it takes! Do you think Gerard would have smiled and agreed if I’d told him I wanted a big wedding, two kids in quick succession, a dog, a large mortgage on a tiny house with no storage that we can’t afford, and that my mom would be coming over from the States to stay for three months of every year? Of course not! He’d have run a mile. You have to be subtle, keep the sex good, make him feel like a king and quietly do exactly what you want to, or rather what you need to.’ She winked. ‘It works for me.’

Anna actually laughed out loud. ‘I think that might work for a new car, but not for adopting a little person. I need him to be invested in it, otherwise it’s a no go, at least not for us as a couple. And I don’t see why it should be about pleasing him. Plus it’s already killing me to have to ask for permission.’ She shook her head. ‘I just wish it were simpler. I wish he felt differently. But I’m getting desperate. I can’t force him.’

She stared at the sugar shaker in the middle of the table. ‘We had our initial interview with the adoption agency a couple of days ago and it was a disaster. Theo kind of fell apart...’ She hung her head, remembering the awkward exchange where he’d given self-incriminating answers and had done anything but shine.

‘Why do you think you would make a good parent?’ they’d each been asked in turn.

To which he’d replied, ‘I don’t...’ And then he’d gone all taciturn and rabbit-in-the-headlights, giving one-word answers, acting like exactly the sort of potential father no one in their right mind would go near. She still had no idea why he’d gone so weird all of a sudden, though despite her reservations she was pretty certain it had nothing to do with the Bristol thing.

Anna wasn’t quite ready to share with Melissa the full horror of this, or their row afterwards, but she was confident her friend had got the gist.

Melissa banged the table. ‘Well, you know what they say: desperate times call for desperate measures and wishing never changed jack shit. It’s “doing” that does that.’

‘True. It’s his birthday next month and I’m thinking of really going to town, making him feel special, a way of wiping the slate clean. I need to do something to try and get us out of this arguing rut. I must admit, Mel, I’m getting close to—’

‘Ditching him as the dad and adopting with someone else?’

Anna had been going to say, ‘close to giving up’. Her friend’s option hadn’t entered her thoughts, until now.

She kissed Melissa on both cheeks and waved as they walked in opposite directions along Marylebone High Street. Preoccupied with thoughts of Theo’s birthday, Anna wondered if tickets to a concert would be a good idea and whether she should invite his parents over for supper. It might heal the rift with Perry over this Bristol project.

A party! That was what she would do, a big old surprise party! Sod the expense – it would give them all a wonderful lift. Now, which cake...?

*

As her taxi back from Marylebone High Street pulled up outside the house, she noticed someone sitting on the wall. Shania! With a bubble of excitement in her gut, she jumped out onto the pavement and ran over to her friend.

‘Hello! Shania! It’s so lovely to see you! You should have said you were coming over, have you been waiting long?’ Anna spoke as she rummaged in her bag for her keys.

‘Not long, no.’

‘Come on, come in!’

‘This is pretty nice.’ Shania stared up at the front of the house.

Anna watched, with a pulse in her womb, as Shania rubbed the front of bump. ‘And that little fella is growing! How far are you now?’

‘Nearly four months and, actually, Anna, it’s not one little fella – it’s two!’

‘What?’ Anna screamed and grabbed her friend by the arm. You are so lucky and I am trying to be happy, but part of me wants to cry with how unfair it all is. How I would have loved, loved to get my Fifi and Fox... ‘No way! Oh my God, that’s amazing! How do you feel?’

‘Tired, nervous, excited – the usual.’ Shania shrugged, pulling at the open front of her coat, which had no chance of meeting over her distended stomach.

Anna pushed open the front door and watched as Shania walked in and stared up at the ceiling and the landing above. ‘God, Anna!’

‘It’s beautiful, isn’t it?’

‘I should say. That bloke of yours got any brothers?’

Anna gave a wry smile, thinking of Alexander, whose name was not to be mentioned, ever, by anyone...

Shania shook her head in awe. ‘To think we had to share that little wardrobe and a chest of drawers.’

‘I gave you the biggest drawers, even though you were so grumpy!’

‘I loved you, Anna. You were the first person in my whole life who wasn’t mean to me. The first person who told me I was brilliant.’ The two women exchanged a look of understanding.

Anna felt the swell of sadness at her friend’s admission. ‘You are brilliant. Now come on, let’s get the fire going and I’ll make us some tea.’ She ushered her friend into the sitting room and sat her on the sofa, then put a match to the fire Theo had set.

‘This is like a fancy hotel or something in a film.’ Shania shrugged off her coat to reveal her thin, bobbled sweatshirt, a little stained with food on the front. She sat back on the deep sofa and Anna saw her expression soften as she settled into it.

‘I’ll be back in a mo. Just relax and I’ll make us a cuppa.’ She paused in the doorway and looked back at her friend, remembering her own first time in this grand room, the gateway to another world.

She was no more than a few minutes in the kitchen, making a quick cup of tea and letting Griff out, but when she came back in, Shania was deep in sleep. Anna pulled the soft throw from the arm of the chair and laid it over her friend’s large stomach. There we go, little babies, that’ll keep you snug. She sat back on the sofa and watched the fire jump and dance in the grate, sipping her tea and happy to be in the company of her mate, thinking of the time she had seen her on the street and how her heart had ached for her. Her eyes kept jumping to the shape of her bump. What does it feel like to have those little ones in your tum? I bet it feels lovely. She pulled the cushion from under her arm and shoved it up her jersey. Lying back, she looked at her feet over the bump. It made her cry.

Shania slept for an hour. When she finally opened her eyes, for a second she didn’t know where she was.

‘It’s okay, Shania, you’re here with me, Anna.’

‘Jesus! Did I drop off?’ Shania sat up straight, rubbing her eyes.

‘Did you ever! You were dead to the world.’

Anna smiled. There was something about a person you’d shared a room with, slept next to for so long, that meant you could be completely relaxed in their company. Even after all this time apart, they didn’t have to fill the air with pleasantries or be on best behaviour. She and Shania had cried and laughed together into the early hours, got dressed and undressed in front of each other, shared their meagre possessions and looked out for each other when they needed it the most; being together now was easy, comfortable, familiar.

‘That cab driver who dropped you off, did you flag him down and ask his name? Or have you grown out of that now?’

Anna threw her head back and laughed until her tears gathered. It was as funny as it was sad. ‘Actually, my dad found me.’

‘For real?’ Shania asked wide-eyed.

Anna shook her head. ‘But we never got our happy ending. I got a letter from his solicitor after he died. And I met my half-sister, Lisa, who is lovely, and my half-brother, who is not so lovely.’

Shania shook her head. ‘What was his surname?’

‘Harper, Michael Harper.’

‘Michael Harper,’ she repeated. ‘This information would have been very good if we’d had it TEN YEARS SOONER!’ she shouted and they both collapsed laughing. ‘Now, did I hear mention of a cup of tea?’

Anna giggled. ‘I made you one earlier, but I drank it.’

‘Bloody typical.’ Shania knitted her fingers over her wide middle. ‘I am thinking that maybe I should tell Samuel, their daddy.’ She pointed at her tummy.

Anna remembered their chat in the hospital foyer. ‘Well, that’s up to you, but I think it’s only fair. It doesn’t mean he has to be involved if you don’t want him to be, but not to tell him at all...?’ She thought of her dad and wondered what might have happened if communication had been different.

‘It’s a hard conversation to have, Anna.’

‘I know it. And you don’t have to make a decision now, there’s still plenty of time.’

Shania nodded. ‘Now, about that cup of tea...’

Anna jumped up and headed to the kitchen.

She returned with a mug of tea and watched her friend hold it between her palms.

‘I’ve never been in a room with a real fire before. It’s lovely. I want to keep staring at it.’

‘Me too. Hypnotic.’ Anna tucked her feet under her legs. ‘Shania, there’s something I want to say to you. Something I want to tell you.’

‘Well, good, because there’s something I want to say to you too. You go first.’ Shania sipped her tea.

‘I bumped into you a while back. A few years ago. You were on the street, and I gave you some cash and tried to help you, but you weren’t very with it. I’d feel uncomfortable if I didn’t tell you. But it broke my heart and I’ve been worried about you ever since.’

Shania turned to face her and took her time responding. ‘I’m sad you saw me like that. I know I promised you...’

Anna smiled. ‘Yes, you did.’

‘Things after I left Mead House were...’ She paused. ‘They were pretty bad.’

Anna thought of Theo’s project. Shania continued.

‘I got in with the wrong crowd. Actually, that’s not true, I was the wrong crowd. I gave up. I honestly thought my mum or dad might come and get me, invite me home, but...’ She shrugged. ‘Nothing. They’d just moved on and changed the shape of their lives and there was no space for me. It shocked me. Still shocks me.’

‘I’ll bet.’

‘Drugs were the escape and with that choice everything else collapsed.’

‘I know that story.’ She thought of her beloved Joe, and Ruby Red Shoes, who she still remembered from time to time.

‘I’ve fought hard over the last few years to get clean, to come back, and I have and I’m winning and I want to stay winning.’

‘I am so proud of you.’ Anna laid her hand on her arm. ‘Really proud of you.’

‘Well, I am proud of me too.’

‘And now this! Babies!’ Anna pointed at Shania’s tum.

‘Yep, babies. Not planned, but no less loved for that.’

‘So, want to talk about their dad?’

Shania raised an eyebrow. ‘Samuel’s a nice guy. Clean-living, hard-working, but he wasn’t for me, wanted to settle down and take me to the sunshine.’

‘God, he sounds like a right bastard!’

Shania gave another booming laugh. ‘As I say, a nice guy, but he’s a bit... boring.’

‘God, you think everything is boring!’

Shania laughed again. ‘It was more than that. You know me, Anna, I can’t fall for promises. I can’t be let down again. It’s better this way. It was a six-month thing before he went back to St Lucia, but for me it turned out to be a whole life thing! Who knew!’

‘You’ll be fine, Shania. You’ve turned your whole life around and you’ve put up with so much since you were a little girl. This is just another chapter.’

‘I guess. I’m scared though, Anna. I don’t want to mess this up.’ As she sat there biting her lip, she looked to Anna like the teenager who’d perched on the end of the bed all those years ago in Mead House. ‘And that’s what I wanted to talk to you about.’

‘Go on.’ Anna sat forward, as if this might require her full concentration.

‘When I went for my check-up they asked me who was going to be my birth partner and I felt like it was fate that I’d bumped into you in the hospital, so I said you.’

‘Really?’ Anna placed her hand at her neck.

‘Yes, but only if you want to. There’s no one else I’d want by my side when I go through this – I want it to be you, Anna.’

Tears flooded the back of Anna’s throat. ‘It will be an amazing thing for me to see your babies born and I would be honoured.’ She stretched forward and held her friend close. ‘Thank you for asking me.’

‘Who else would I trust with this?’ Shania kissed Anna on the cheek, the sweetest kiss she’d been given in a long time.

They heard the sound of a key in the door.

‘That’ll be Theo.’

‘Will he mind me being here?’ Shania prepared to stand.

Anna pushed her back into the seat. ‘Of course not! He’ll be glad to meet you at last.’

‘Hello, you gorgeous boy!’ They listened to him great Griff in the hallway and both of them giggled.

‘Hey, Anna!’ he called.

‘In here! With Shania!’

‘Oh.’ Theo walked in and nodded at the two of them. ‘Hi, Shania, it’s good to finally meet you. I’ve heard so much about you.’

‘You too.’ Anna noted she spoke quietly.

‘How’s it going with the...’ He pointed at her stomach, clearly unsure of the right thing to say.

‘It’s going great. I’m about sixteen weeks now and I’ve heard the next bit goes very quickly. And it’s twins.’

‘Twins? Oh my goodness!’

‘Shania’s asked me to be her birth partner.’

‘Oh, wow!’ He smiled. ‘What does that mean?’

Anna felt a flip of love for her man, which was a pleasant change to how things had been of late. ‘It means that I’m the one who guides her through this pregnancy and I’m the one she calls when we need to do the dash to the hospital!’

Theo looked at her and she could read his thoughts. Can you cope with this, Anna? Is it too much for you, too painful? ‘I am so honoured, Theo – what a wonderful thing to be asked.’ She hoped this would put his mind to rest.

‘So you must be excited,’ he said to Shania.

‘More scared, to be honest. My own mum and dad were pretty rubbish and I’ve always been a bit scared of doing it wrong. But like it or not, these little ones are on their way and so I’ve just got to figure it out, you get me?’

Theo nodded. Anna saw the pain of recognition in his eyes. ‘Yes, I get you,’ he managed, before coughing and leaving the room in search of a beer.

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Protecting the Girl Next Door (The Protectors Book 3) by Samantha Chase, Noelle Adams

A Gift for the Doctor (Terranovum Brides Book 2) by Sara Fields

Winter at The Cosy Cottage Cafe: A deliciously festive feel-good Christmas romance by Rachel Griffiths

Laws of Attraction by Sarah Title

The Deadbeat Next Door (Catalpa Creek Book 1) by Katharine Sadler

In Search of Mr. Anonymous by J B Glazer

Scent of an Angel (Angel Paws Rescue Book 1) by Mimi Milan

Wicked: A Small Town Romance (Love in Lone Star Book 3) by Ashley Bostock

The Right Move (Mable Falls Book 1) by Amy Sparling

Dirt Road Promises by Leigh Christopher

Sundown: A thrilling tale of revenge by Tia Louise

Thin Ice: (Sleeper SEALs Book 7) by Maryann Jordan, Suspense Sisters

Room Mates (The Series) by Kendall Ryan

Poet (Avenues Ink Series Book 3) by A.M. Johnson

Right Man/ Wrong Groom: Paradise Cove Series - Destination Wedding Book 1 by Patrice Wilton

Stolen: Wilderkind MC by Kathryn Thomas

The Fifth Moon’s Dragon: Book Four of the Fifth Moon’s Tales by Monica La Porta