Some Kind of Perfect (Calloway Sisters #4.5) Read online

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  I test it out. “I was punched by the thing.” I like it. “Sounds better.”

  “Thirdly.” There’s a thirdly? He pauses for a short moment, his gaze roaming my features, and then he tucks a strand of my hair behind my ear. “There is absolutely nothing you could do or say or anything that could happen that’d make me embarrassed to be your husband.” He shakes his head and repeats, “Nothing.”

  I sniff, trying to restrain incoming tears. I put my hand to my burning eye, pain increasing. “Don’t make me get all emotional.”

  “Well don’t get so down on yourself.”

  “Fair enough.” I feel time ticking by now, especially since people are waiting for us in his office and whoever needs to use this elevator. “Are we good?”

  “Not yet.” He bends down a little, and before I locate my brain, his lips are on mine. The surprise kiss jolts me, but as the shock wears off, I sink into the embrace. My hands wrap around his shoulders, and I rise to the tips of my toes, intensifying the kiss. My eager body curves against his, and our tongues skillfully tangle together.

  He grips my hips, one large hand edging towards my ass.

  Squeeze it again. My mind pleads.

  Instead, he swiftly tugs my body further against his, the kiss deepening. A moan catches in my throat, and I tremble, heat building between us.

  He breaks apart. “Now we’re good.” His lips are a little pinker and more swollen.

  I touch mine, stinging from the quick force. What a tease.

  I eye Lo greedily: the few brown strands hanging in his eyes, his hair shorter on the sides, his cheekbones—yes those cheekbones that I will mention from here until eternity. You would too if you saw them.

  It’s not even his appearance. It’s the way that he keeps glancing over to me as he presses the elevator button. It’s the way his pinky hooks with mine, just for a second, before he full-on cups my hand. It’s the way he spent all this time giving me a pep talk—when I know tomorrow, I’ll be there to give him one if need be.

  It’s the way he feels like another extremity of myself. Like a huge, overwhelming part of me.

  We’ve been through so much, and I can see our road paved with more bumps, our fight filled with more battles—but ones we’re finally equipped to face.

  The elevator doors slide open, and we walk ahead.

  Ready to face one more together.

  [ 2 ]

  June 2018

  Hale Co. Offices

  Philadelphia

  ROSE COBALT

  “They’re late,” I announce, ice dripping off each syllable. “Late arrivers must pay the consequences.” I spin a pen between my fingers, seated at the head of the table in a Hale Co. conference room.

  Connor is seated at the other end, the long stretch of the table separating us. His calmness proves infuriating, per usual. I make sure to send him scathing glares made of fire and brimstone.

  He should be worried too. Loren is his best friend, and he’s now—I check my phone—fifteen minutes late. It’s not like Lily and Lo are always prompt, but they’re usually here before Ryke.

  My brother-in-law has chosen the leather chair closest to my littlest sister, both in the center of the conference table. As though to declare their neutrality between Connor and me. I would test Daisy’s loyalty, but her wide-eyed baby preoccupies her attention. She rocks the little five-month-old in her arms, trying to ease Sullivan Minnie Meadows into a post-lunch nap.

  I love my niece, but she was not invited.

  Ryke peels his gaze off his daughter. “Do I even want to ask what paying the consequences fucking involves?”

  “Blood sacrifice probably.” Daisy wags her brows; then she tucks a yellow baby blanket tighter around Sullivan. The air conditioning blows a violent stream of cold air onto them.

  The air ducts, too, recognize that babies are not allowed to this particular meeting. We all agreed. I dropped Jane, Charlie, and Beckett off at our parent’s house. Lily did the same with Maximoff, so I don’t expect to see my nephew when she arrives.

  Daisy was supposed to follow suit, but she retreated at the last minute and brought her daughter here. I’m not sure if it’s because she doesn’t want to leave Sullivan with our mother or if she doesn’t want to part with her baby.

  I just want to make sure my sister is mentally doing fine. After what happened—I inhale a strained breath, my collarbone jutting out from my red dress. I try to block out a moment that ripped me to shreds.

  I almost lost my sister.

  I bear hard on my teeth and focus back on the topic at hand. “It involves my wrath, but depending on how late they are, blood sacrifices might need to be implemented.”

  Connor cups a steaming mug of coffee. “How will we decide who goes first?” he challenges. “Your sister or Loren?”

  “I’ve had to make harder decisions in preschool.” I click my pen. “My sister will be spared—of course.”

  He doesn’t blink. Instead he sips his coffee with smugness pooling in his deep blue eyes. What does he even have to be smug about?

  I click my pen more forcefully, drilling a hot glare between his eyeballs. The war is not over, Richard. You haven’t won a thing.

  His lips rise as he sets down his mug. “Your vote plus Daisy’s vote against my vote and Ryke’s—that’s called a tie. You do know what those are, don’t you?”

  I flip my glossy hair off my shoulder. “Not as much as you. I win more than I tie.” I say win with so much hostility that his small smile transforms into a blinding grin.

  Ugh.

  That didn’t go as planned.

  I glower and gesture to Ryke and Daisy. “And they haven’t even voted yet, Richard. You can’t just assume what they’d choose.” My head whips to their side of the table.

  Ryke is focused on someone who lingers in the hallway.

  Did I mention that all of the boardrooms and offices have glass walls? A young employee loiters by a copy machine, his tie crooked and hair smoothed with too much gel. He does a pathetically awful job of pretending not to watch us.

  I snap my fingers towards Ryke until I gain his attention. It takes him a second to catch up.

  He raises his hands in surrender. “Fuck no. I’m not getting into this.”

  “Daisy.” I lift my chin and pull back my shoulders. “Choose your next words wisely.” Sister loyalty.

  She adjusts her baby in her arms. “I don’t want to sacrifice anyone. Can’t we all hypothetically live?” She offers me the kindest smile. I love Daisy for being able to voice her opinions, even when they differ from mine.

  Can’t we all hypothetically live?

  Literally, I’d fight for all of our survival.

  Hypothetically and figuratively, I don’t mind a few casualties.

  I click my pen. “If we must.”

  Sullivan smacks her lips and then yawns against her mom’s palm. Daisy nuzzles her forehead against her daughter’s.

  It’s borderline nauseating.

  I don’t grow fuzzy feelings at the sight of cooing babies and maternal warmth. Infants are miniature devils.

  Mine included.

  And I love them. Including their downfalls: the snotty noses and incessant crying and inability to carry intellectual conversations. I may not appear as affectionate as any of my sisters, but I show affection in ways that don’t involve using my nose to tickle a baby’s nose. I’d never tell her not to be that way. I want her to be her. Just as I’d hope people would want me to be me.

  If anyone says that my love is somehow less than another mother’s, then fuck them. They have no clue the lengths I’d go for my little gremlins.

  I watch my sister murmur a few soft words to Sullivan, the baby finally nodding off. Ryke has his arm draped over Daisy’s shoulders, his focus partly on his daughter and partly on his wife. I see exhaustion in his face and hers, but more so my sister. Dark crescent moons lie beneath her eyes.

  I set my pen down. “Daisy?”

  “Yeah?” Sh
e keeps her voice hushed but meets my gaze.

  “Connor and I would be happy to babysit anytime you need us.”

  Connor has his annoying finger to his annoying jaw like he’s in mock contemplation. There’s nothing to contemplate. Daisy and Ryke have been glued to Sullivan since she was born. Five months without one break. I understand every parent is different, but I’m worried about my sister.

  Ryke runs a hand across his unshaven jaw and then swivels his chair towards Connor. “You’d be fucking happy to babysit my daughter?” He’s disbelieving.

  “Of course,” Connor replies. “Your daughter is already more articulate than you are, so really, I like Sulli more than I like you.” Connor sips his coffee again like he just professed the weather: sunny with a side of fuck you.

  Ryke flips him off. The more direct approach to a fuck you.

  They can act like they’re enemies for as long as they want, but in their eyes, even I can see how much they care for one another. I’ve seen real hate from my husband. I’ve seen real hate from Ryke. What they share doesn’t even come close to aversion.

  Confusion furrows Daisy’s brows. “…I don’t know.” She thinks longer. “I don’t want to put more stress on you.”

  I scoff. “She wouldn’t be any stress.”

  “You already have three babies.”

  I remember how Daisy and Ryke saw me at a lower point when I first had Charlie and Beckett. I was admittedly stressed out, and the new change scared me. I like order, but once I found a better routine and delegated more to Connor, I became invincible. In mind and body, and if I wanted to house a hundred children, I could do it with high heels and lipstick and a dress.

  I’m the raging blizzard and the fucking wildfire. There is nothing that will stand in my way of what I want and what I will achieve.

  I remind Daisy, “And another baby would hardly topple my world. I’m a fucking fortress.” This fact makes my little sister smile. I point my matte black nail at her infant. “You dressed her in a cupcake onesie. How could she cause any stress?”

  Before he pipes in, I raise my hand towards Connor, shutting him down. I already see his grin in my peripheral and the words behind his lips: being dressed in a pale yellow cupcake-printed onesie has no relation to stress. Blah. Blah. Blah.

  I’m trying to convince my little sister of something. I’m not trying to win a Quiz Bowl right now.

  Connor, thankfully, withholds his comment. Instead, he says to Daisy, “If you don’t want us to watch her, I’m sure Lily and Lo—”

  “No.” Ryke slams the door to it first. “I’m not putting any stress on my brother.”

  “They’ve watched Jane before,” Connor says before I can. Ryke has been giving Lo more credit lately, so I don’t understand why he’s withdrawing.

  “Once we pile one fucking kid on them, it’ll be two, then three. They probably only want one baby for a fucking reason.” He exhales heavily.

  I tap the table. “You look more stressed than Loren.”

  Ryke rolls his eyes and groans.

  “And maybe they do want another child sometime soon. They’ve mentioned keeping that door open. We haven’t heard otherwise…unless they spoke to you about something different.” I already simmer at the sisterly betrayal, but Ryke looks at me as though I’m being overdramatic for no reason.

  “No—no one said anything to me about trying for kids. I”—he groans again and combs his hand through his hair—“I…”

  “I take it back,” Connor says, “it’s worse than talking to a five-month-old.”

  “Fuck you.” Ryke rests his elbows on the table. “Look, truth is…it has nothing to do with my brother or with you two. Maybe Dais and I are just doing great without any of your help? You all did fine without us.”

  Connor and I lock eyes, understanding shared between us.

  In this sudden moment, we’ve declared amnesty and come to eons worth of agreements. We’re so aware of their role in our children’s lives. We were all living together when Jane was born.

  They played with her. They babysat her. They held her when she was fussy, and they found her lost lion. They brought her laughter and smiles and so much love.

  It’s not that we feel the need to pay it forward. We just want to be as much a part of their lives as they’ve been a part of ours.

  “We did fine without you,” Connor agrees with him. “But we also did better with you. Just like Lo and Lily do better with all of us, and you and Daisy do too. All of our children benefit from the love and support of family.”

  Translation: you’re my family, Ryke.

  I inhale the vigor of his words. Connor never had a true family. He had a mother who purposefully distanced herself from him, who refused to show him the power of love. Connor is acknowledging the benefit of real human connections. All the ones based on love. All the ones between us.

  Ryke holds his gaze, and I think he can see the meaning behind Connor’s declaration too.

  Daisy is fixated on her baby, her brows still knotted in pained contemplation.

  I can’t bite my tongue. “Is it Mother?” At first, I even hesitated leaving Jane there for long periods of time. Lily did too. We’ve all had different upbringings in that house, none perfect, and we wouldn’t want our children to experience what we did.

  But Samantha Calloway is different as a grandmother than a mother. She’s less overbearing. It helps that she has staff there to cater to the kids. She won’t be overwhelmed with all four at the Villanova house, but we also don’t leave them there often.

  Connor and I have already started a discussion about nannies. Growing up, we’ve each had our fair share of bad experiences with them. So I’m still cold towards the idea, but it feels inevitable. We’ll need to set boundaries so the nanny is more like a babysitter and less like a surrogate mother.

  Trust is also an important factor.

  Very softly, Daisy says, “It’s not Mom. I’m going to leave Sulli there for a day. I will. But I’m just not…ready yet.” Tears well in her tired eyes, and she pinches them, choking down a strangled sound.

  Ryke rubs her shoulders and whispers in her ear.

  I immediately stand at the same time as Connor—ugh, whatever. I normally don’t go towards any waterworks, but this is my sister. I pad over to their side of the conference table.

  Connor has already moved closer too, and we both sit on either side of Ryke and Daisy. In our shared silence, raw realizations cling to the air. We’d been right beside them on their long journey to have a child. We were their safety nets—something they could rely on if everything else failed.

  We didn’t want to have to catch them, but we watched them fight. And they did fight, so long and so hard, to bring their daughter into this world. For a while, it seemed like a real impossibility. Then it seemed like my little sister might not survive.

  She wouldn’t hear her daughter’s first words or see her first steps or even hold her in her arms.

  I don’t pretend to know that grief. I couldn’t possibly feel what she has felt, but I know my sister. I know her kindness and her love and how much she wanted that little girl in her arms.

  So it’s only natural she wouldn’t want to break apart.

  Daisy hangs her head, her tangled blonde hair hiding her watery gaze. The strands are as wild as my littlest sister. Ryke skims his thumb over Sullivan’s buttoned nose, and the baby coos before falling into a content slumber.

  “She’s beautiful,” I say in my quietest voice. My heart is full of this indiscernible, overpowering sentiment—because this child is so much of my sister and Ryke.

  I realize I’m not making the situation any better, especially when Connor mouths to me, what was that?

  I press my lips in an aggravated line, and then I silently huff, knowing what I need to say. “And this beautiful thing was not invited today.”

  Ryke’s jaw hardens.

  More calmly, Connor says, “If you let her go, just for an afternoon, she won’t disa
ppear from this world. I promise you both that.”

  Ryke dips his head down to look at Daisy, behind her cascade of hair. He whispers to her and then kisses her cheek. When he raises his head once more, he nods to Connor like he understands.

  I’m not sure Daisy is there yet.

  I put my hand on hers. “I’m always here for you. That won’t ever change.” I’ve expressed this sentiment many times before.

  Her shoulders sink with exhaustion. She wipes at her eyes and then turns to me, her scar reddened on her cheek. “I just don’t want to miss a moment. We’ve been given this gift, and I can’t…” She growls beneath her breath as more tears fall. She rubs them away quickly before they land on her sleeping baby.

  “I can’t say that you won’t because you will,” I tell her honestly. “Maybe you’ll miss that one time she snorts up food or the one time she falls on her ass, but you know the ridiculous thing about children? They do these painfully cute and stupid things all the time.” I help brush the rest of her tears off her cheek. She nods to me again. “So you will miss that one moment, but you’ll have a million more to make up for it.”

  What’s not a dream: my sister has sleep problems and PTSD and depression. All I want is for her to be healthy. So does Ryke. So does Connor. So do Lily and Lo.

  She just needs to let us help her.

  Daisy pushes her hair out of her face. Softly, she says, “Okay.”

  We exchange I love yous, and then I’m distracted by the two guys, their chairs turned towards one another. I think Connor asks Ryke something beneath his breath. Or maybe it’s the other way around. They speak in hushed tones.

  I don’t pretend to wonder or care what they share. Though, I sort of do. It’s not often these two whisper together, not without Loren present.

  I clear my throat loudly until I catch their attention. “What is it?”

  Ryke and Connor glance at Daisy like they’re protecting her from shrapnel and gunfire. It’s absurd.

  “She can handle your criticism.”

  “It’s not fucking criticism,” Ryke retorts.