“Morning.” I sat up, slowly extricating myself from Mira’s octopus arms. With hair everywhere, no bra on, and probably rocking some really great smudged mascara, I could only imagine how I looked to him.
 
 And he was looking.
 
 “Sorry if she woke you,” he said, voice a low rumble. “She sneaked upstairs when I had my back turned.” His green eyes followed the movement of my hands when I attempted to wrangle my hair into submission.
 
 “It’s fine. I need to get up anyway.”
 
 “Have fun?” he asked.
 
 I nodded easily. “Thank you for arranging it.”
 
 Instead of a “You’re welcome” or a peppering of questions, Liam grunted.
 
 A small laugh escaped my lips.
 
 “What?” he asked.
 
 With him, it would have been so much easier to say it was nothing. In the past, that’s what I would have done. It’s what I did with Charles for years—brush aside what I was thinking because it was easier. Because it kept the peace, and we were both too busy and stretched too thin to add arguments into the mix.
 
 With Liam, I didn’t want to do what I always did. So I took a deep breath and let my gaze linger on his.
 
 No bullshit.
 
 “I was wishing you came with a translation guide.”
 
 At my admission, his face gave nothing away. Only the tiniest tic of his jawline and a slight inhale through his nose.
 
 “What’s the fun in that?” he asked, then backed out of the doorway to head downstairs.
 
 I flopped back into bed, a sigh escaping my lips and a few errant butterflies fluttering in my chest.
 
 “No sleeping, Zoe,” Mira said, bouncing on the mattress. “Time to get up.”
 
 I turned toward her. “Swim lessons today, right? Are you excited?”
 
 “No.”
 
 With a laugh, I rolled out of bed and tossed the blanket back over her head. “It’ll be fun, I promise.”
 
 But three hours later, I wanted to take back every word I’d said.
 
 “What the hell?” I whispered.
 
 On the other end of the phone, my mom whispered back: “I can’t see what we’re mad about.”
 
 I’d called her to make sure I knew what to expect at Mira’s first appointment with the counselor, but I quickly got derailed when the backyard swim lesson turned into a never-before-tapped nightmare.
 
 “Hang on. I’ll switch it around so you can see.” I flipped the camera so that it was aimed into the backyard. “The swim teacher is here,” I said. “Liam told me he’d handle the whole thing, so I’m trying to give him his space.”
 
 My mom’s forehead wrinkled as she tried to see what I was showing her. When I panned the camera to the left, her jaw fell open. “Holy shit. Look at her ass.”
 
 Yeah, I was looking. I couldn’t help it.
 
 It was a work of art.
 
 “I bet she does alotof squats.”
 
 I rolled my eyes. “Thanks, Mom.”