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Chapter 16

When Sarah arrived at Lucas’s apartment early, it was to the scent of roast in the oven and the sounds of a five-year-old watching cartoons on the huge flat-screen TV.

Sarah wouldn’t say she was up on the hip cartoons of the day, but she recognizedSteven Universewell enough. She also recognized the excited grin on her boyfriend’s face when he stepped out of the kitchen wearing jeans and a T-shirt instead of the three-piece bespoke suit from earlier. He already had sauce and God knew what else stains on his shirt.

“As you can see, we here at Casa de Blackbourne only deal in the finest of entertainment and, in the words of my son when he saw me put broccoli in the steamer… ‘gross nasties.’” Lucas gave Sarah a kiss on the forehead. “More broccoli for us.”

She hung her bag up on the rack by the front door before removing her shoes and following Lucas into the living room. He picked up the remote and muted the colorful cartoon. Victor turned to them, eyes wide in surprise when he noticed a new person in the room.

“I’d like you to meet someone, Victor,” Lucas said with nervous pep in his voice. Sarah squeezed his hand. Maybe it would give him more impetus to introduce her. “This is my friend Sarah. She’s going to hang out with us tonight and have dinner and watch movies. Sound good?”

There was no mistaking Victor for anyone but Lucas’s son. His bright blue eyes were the same exact shade as any other Blackbourne’s, and his moppy black hair hung like Lucas’s. The only distinctive markings that must have come from his mother’s side were the freckles littering his face, as if he picked up a brown Crayon and had fun in front of the mirror.

He looked Sarah up and down, not sure what to make of her.Yeah, kid, I don’t have a lot of experience with children.“Okay.”

“Okay? Just okay?” Lucas released Sarah’s hand and sat next to his son. “You gonna say hi to Sarah?”

“Hi, Sarah.”

She waved back at him. “Nice to meet you, Victor. Your dad talks about you all the time.”As of last weekend, but who’s counting, right?“What are you watching?”

Lucas stood back up and motioned to the kitchen. “I’ma let you two get acquainted and check on dinner.”

What? Leaving me alone with him?Victor didn’t seem to mind. He looked back toward the TV, which Lucas unmuted before heading back to the kitchen. Sarah sat on the far end of the couch, a respectable distance from the boy she only just met.

“Steven Universe.”

“I’ve never seen it before. What’s it about?”

“Gems.”

That told her nothing. “Looks good.”

What else should she say?

Sarah was not prepared for this, no matter how nonchalant she was before showing up. It didn’t help that she never grew up around other children in her family, had younger siblings who weren’t only younger by five minutes, or dated men who had younger children before Lucas came into her life.What did I think I was going to do when I had a baby?No, that was different. She would’ve been the mother, damnit, and known this child from the day he was born. She would have intimately known his quirks, his personality/mood swings, and know not to ask questions likeWhat are you watching?Besides, Victor was five. Sarah knew enough to know that he was at such a precarious age. While he was still too young to understand the implications of his father dating a new woman and what that might mean for their future, he was old enough to remember her should she stick around long enough to form an attachment. Who knew what this boy had already gone through when it came to losing people he loved? His parents had divorced when he was only four. He saw his father once a week, sometimes more, but usually not.What would I have done?No way would Russell have wanted to be involved with their son’s life. That had suited Sarah fine. Better for him to be completely out of the picture than to get her boy’s hopes up. Nigel would be his male role model for better or for worse.

Not that it mattered anymore.

So they sat in silence on the couch, Victor watching TV while Sarah contemplated the alternative history where she became a mother and dealt with this as Jill Blackbourne currently did.When would I introduce a new boyfriend? When would I explain getting remarried? What would I do if my son hated my boyfriend?

The night was worse than Sarah had anticipated. No, Victor wasn’t untoward or impolite to her, but he barely acknowledged her as they ate dinner at a small table by the kitchen and followed it up withThe Lego Moviein the living room. Lucas made microwave popcorn and dumped it into a large blue bowl that Victor asked to carry to the couch. When it proved to be much too big for him, Sarah snatched the rim and helped him haul it the several feet to the living room. That was the extent of their interaction for most of the movie, since Lucas sat between them on the couch, one arm around both like he was the luckiest man in the world.

Sarah crossed her legs away from them, her arms useless in her lap. She sat up straight but couldn’t pay attention to the movie. She barely touched the popcorn. Every time Victor or Lucas laughed, she suddenly gave the film her rapt attention, attempting to figure out what was so funny and what appealed to the Blackbourne sense of humor.

Why am I obsessing over this?There was no point being so standoffish, let alone around a small child. Let alone around her damned boyfriend.

“Dad?” Victor asked toward the end of the movie.

“Hm?”

“Why isn’t Mama here?”

Sarah excused herself to the bathroom, even though she didn’t have to go.When she determined it safe enough to come back out ten minutes later, she discovered a scene she never expected.

“Whoop! There he goes!” Lucas held his son upside down between his legs. Giggles exploded every time Victor’s father swung him around or lifted him up into the air. Lucas’s muscles flexed under the onus of moving forty pounds around his living room. Was he enjoying the moment? Wondering how long it was until his son was too big, too heavy to pick up again? Did they do this often, or was this one of his ways of assuaging his son’s concerns toward his parents? Sarah stayed near the bathroom, entranced, her heart unable to bear the intimate moment that would one day be a fond memory for both father and son.

What the hell was she doing, thinking she could possibly be a part of it?