Читать книгу Rising Stars & It Started With… Collections - Кейт Хьюит - Страница 25
EPILOGUE
ОглавлениеHE MADE every day a memory.
And not just for Charlotte.
She sat on the beach beside her mother, as she did most late afternoons, stared out at the glorious Mediterranean, and when her mother was starting to get tired, Charlotte would open up the package she had brought, toss out some food and wait for the seagulls. It never failed to make her mother smile, to laugh as she once had, and though Charlotte could not be sure if her mother was going back to earlier times or just smiling at today, every day it was more than worth it.
‘Is she ready to go back to the house?’ Agira asked, walking over and smiling, a genuine smile that was warm and caring, and Charlotte knew she was blessed to have Agira to nurse her mother.
So very blessed.
Zander had made good his word—he had made the good better and eased the bad. All her mother’s furniture had been moved to Xanos, but the night-time wanderings had stopped and the aggression too. Their daily times on the beach, the salty air and the wonderful food seemed to calm and relax Amanda, or was it the change in her daughter that eased Amanda’s mind? For with help and support Charlotte could finally enjoy her mother and help her enjoy the time she had left.
And she wanted more.
As she kissed her mother goodbye and Agira walked her back to the house, Charlotte caught sight of the seaplane coming in to land, and felt the wind whip away selfish tears, for surely when she had so much, when everything she had wished for had come true, it was wrong now to ask for just a little more time.
She watched as the plane landed at the jetty that both brothers now owned. The partnership that had once seemed impossible was a reality now. Old met new in Xanos, the taverna was bustling again with locals, the hotel and restaurants were vibrant, and Ravels was the shining jewel in the island’s crown. Charlotte watched as a suited, dark-haired man stepped out, and though he looked like her husband, walked like her husband, to anyone else might well have been her husband, her heart didn’t leap, and she knew that it was Nico.
Constantine recognised him too. Charlotte turned as she saw the woman come down to the beach, baby Leo on her hip. She waved to her husband and walked over to join Charlotte, whose heart did tighten now as another suited dark man stepped out, and it was just, just … What was the difference? So many times she tried to pin it down, sure their hair fell differently, one left-handed, the other right-, but from this distance it was impossible to make that out. It was just that her heart told her it was him.
It had told Roula too. For as long as she lived, Charlotte would never forget the smile of disbelief on the older woman’s face when she had first seen her grown sons. She had named them immediately—correctly—had taken Zander’s tense face in her hands and kissed him, told him how much she had missed him, grief mingling with joy as she held again the son she had been forced to leave behind. Her heart had held more than a three-decade vigil, her love at the centre, and there was no mistaking her heart shone for them. Had Zander had any doubts, Charlotte had watched them fade as he moved towards his mother.
‘How do you think it went?’ Constantine asked, clearly trying to gauge it, because though both men lived on the island, were in business together, it was still early days. They were two strong personalities and the relationship was still new and, at times, overwhelming, for bruises took time to fade completely.
‘Well, they’re still talking.’ Charlotte smiled, because they were. Nico and Zander walked along the jetty. Zander was nodding at something his brother must have said, and then he looked up and saw her and smiled a smile that crossed the beach like a sunbeam. It warmed her on a cool spring day.
The trips to visit Roula were becoming more regular. Take things slowly, the doctors had warned them for Roula was still very fragile, but the brothers’ short visits to Roula were growing longer, and last week, for the first time, the sons had brought their mother for a visit home. It had been hugely emotional watching the fragile woman tremble as she stepped into Nico’s home, the home that had once been her father’s, watching her stare at the picture on the wall of the babies she had lost.
Only now and then did Charlotte and Constantine join the visits to their mother, but one day, Charlotte was sure, they would bring her home.
‘How was she?’ Charlotte asked.
‘Good,’ Zander said. ‘Better again. She asked after you.’
‘Would you like to come for supper?’ Constantine offered, for she was Greek and wanted family at her table. Normally Charlotte left it to Zander to accept or decline, but this time it was Charlotte who answered.
‘We’d have loved to, but actually we’ve got plans tonight.’
They said goodbye. Zander gave little Leo a kiss and then took his wife’s hand and walked along the beach toward the development and towards their home.
‘What plans do you have for me?’ he nudged.
‘Oh, I’ll think of something.’ Charlotte smiled, but her heart wasn’t in it and he must have heard the forced lightness to her voice and put his arm around her. ‘How was the doctor?’ Zander asked. ‘How is your mother doing?’
‘Good,’ Charlotte said. ‘He says she is doing well, better than expected.’ She stopped walking then. ‘I want more time for her …’
‘Who knows?’ Zander said. ‘They did say a couple of months but already she has surpassed that.’
‘I want more …’
And Zander heard the plea in her voice that was so rarely there. She asked for nothing and was delighted with everything. For Charlotte to beg, and for something that he could not give, had him turn and pull her into his arms, fighting for words.
‘Let’s just make each day count,’ he settled for. ‘Which you already do.’
‘I want more!’ If she was precise with her wish, maybe it would be answered. ‘I want seven months more.’ She watched him frown, watched it dawn, watched him realise the truth. ‘I spoke to the doctor about me as well. We went back to the clinic, he did a test,’ Charlotte said. ‘A scan.’
‘We’re having a baby?’ He looked at his wife, and he looked into his soul, and he wanted this so badly. He wanted everything that his brother had, not for selfish reasons now, but he had never expected that he would get more.
‘We’re having twins.’
He put his hand to her stomach, could not believe that it was two hearts that beat in her womb. He knew that things would be different for their babies and he felt the need to share, to spread the good news, to bring things full circle.
‘Can we tell him?’
And she nodded with delight, for she did want to be with his family. She had just wanted to tell Zander alone first and would not have been able to hold onto the news for a moment longer.
They walked back along the beach hand in hand, back to the house that had once been Roula’s childhood home.
Back to share wonderful news with family.