Texting Esther might have been a mistake. I’d thought she’d want to hear from me, but she was short with me at first, then went off on me. She said she couldn’t support me ruining my life. That I’d hurt my parents and I had changed. She said she didn’t know this person I had become. She had said a lot of other hurtful things, but I knew that it was nothing compared to what I would face with my parents.
Knowing they were going to walk inside at any moment though, I was getting anxious. If they made any accusations toward Thatcher, I already knew I would say something that might shut them out of my life forever. I didn’t want that. I loved them. But they had always told me to tell the truth, and the truth I would tell them to shut them up wasn’t one any minister’s family wanted to hear their daughter admit. If it kept people from spewing lies about Thatcher, then I’d do it.
“I’ll send them all fucking home now. Say the word,” Thatcher said, grabbing my hands to keep me from twisting them.
“No, you won’t.” His father’s deep voice startled me. He’d been quiet, waiting behind us.
Thatcher started to turn, and I grabbed his arm to stop him. If he wanted the world to think he wasn’t crazy or dangerous, he had to stop acting like he was ready to rip off heads.
“He is right. This has to be done. But I need you to be calm. Please,” I begged.
He stared down at me before sighing and looking back toward the door.
“The media has been prepped. They’ve spoken to the officers. When the doors open, Clark and Charlene Jewel will enter, followed by the media we are allowing inside,” Ronan Salazar announced.
I nodded my head and wrapped my arm around Thatcher’s for his support more than mine. I had this. I could do it. I was ready.
“Maeme has done her best to soften them up, but she said they aren’t joyous about their daughter’s return and the news behind it,” he added.
He grabbed the door handle and opened one of the tall, ornate double doors. Thatcher felt like steel; his body was so rigid. I had to get this done and quickly.
My mother was inside first, and she paused the moment she saw the entry to the Shephards’ home. Her gaze shot up to the vaulted ceiling and chandelier. The wide, winding staircase and marble floor. My father was less impressed, and his eyes zoned in on me, then to Thatcher, where they narrowed, then back to me.
“Capri.” He said my name the same way he had when I was in trouble as a child. “Come here.”
I didn’t move. Thatcher started to, and I held on to him, putting all my weight into it.
“Dad, I’m not a child. I’m a grown woman. I left town and told you nothing. I’m sorry. It was a mistake. But you don’t get to come into the Shephards’ home and act like they’ve taken your teenage daughter from you.”
My mother finally stopped gawking at the foyer and looked at me. The firm line of her mouth told me that she was furious about my embarrassing them. In a small Southern town, the minister’s daughter, no matter what age, was to be above reproach. The entire family was under a microscope. Now that I’d run off with Thatcher Shephard and told no one, I had humiliated them. No God-fearing man would want me. I saw that as a blessing; they, however, would not.
“You were raised better than this, Capri,” she said in a haughty tone. “Running off with a man and causing all this alarm. You cost the law enforcement man time and hours, searching for you. Do you not care about your community?”
I hadn’t thought of that, but I hadn’t thought of much when I was with Thatcher other than him.
“The law enforcement has been compensated for their time and effort. Along with a donation so that they may finish the new station,” Stellan said, walking around us.
My mother’s gaze swung to him, and I saw the brief flicker of appreciation. Not for his actions, but because the man was attractive. Just like his sons.
“That’s how it is handled then? You buy the law off? It all goes away?” my father asked angrily.
“The law doesn’t have to be bought off. I left town with a man, as a grown adult, who lives on my own. I came back a few days later with him. We’d wanted to be alone. I didn’t want anyone bothering me or getting in my business. I’d had no idea it would cause such a big mess.”
He threw up his hands and stared at me like I’d lost my mind. “How did you not think we’d be worried? You weren’t answering your phone. Your friends didn’t know where you were. Your car was at home, but you weren’t. That is cause for alarm, Capri!”
Thatcher moved forward, and I was hanging on to him like a damn monkey, trying to stop him.
“DON’T!” he shouted. “You do not get to talk to her like that.”
“Thatcher,” I hissed. “Stop.”
He was breathing heavy and turned to look down at me. The media wasn’t inside yet, but when they were, he had to be calm. Dealing with my parents was only the first step.
“She is my daughter,” my father said, spitting his words. His face was red.
“She is mine,” Thatcher replied in a cold tone.
I couldn’t see his face since I was hanging on him, trying to stop him from moving. But I saw my dad’s face and my mother’s. She looked pale, and my father seemed to be properly terrified.