“No. Actually, I don’t know. She’s been asking me not to travel as much, but I thought that was because she liked being at our place instead of staying with an older couple when I leave town.” Did he really know what had been going on at school lately? Maybe he had just figured no news was good news. “But now she says she doesn’t care about college and she wants to go into television so it makes sense to watch me work firsthand. She does have spring breaking coming up, so…”
“Are you sure you don't want some coffee?” Erin asked, pouring a cup for herself before the whole pot finished brewing.
“No, thanks. I should settle Sarah back into her own room at the bed-and-breakfast, I guess. I had checked out this morning, thinking I’d find a place on the road closer to my next stop, but maybe now that she’s here, it’ll be easier to make this my home base for a few more days. I can’t take her with me everywhere.” It wasn’t feasible. Sarah should understand that.
“Heartache makes a nice home base.” Erin added sugar to her cup.
Damn, but parenting was difficult.
“I know I overreacted when you were trying to help before?—”
Erin narrowed her eyes. “Just because I don’t have kids doesn’t mean I’m clueless in the ways of teenagers.”
“Right.” He told himself not to get defensive. She hadn’t said his parenting sucked. Just that she wanted to help. “So now I’m asking for your opinion.” He needed to make nice with her, for one thing. And for another…he really was curious. “Do you really think her driving all the way up here means something’s wrong at school? I know you don’t know her well. I just wonder about your gut reaction. Does that sound like a red flag for a teenager?”
“I don’t know if it means problems at school, but if you want me to be totally honest…”
“Please.” He grabbed the empty coffee mug and poured himself a cup, after all. He might need the caffeine to get himself through this day.
Erin stepped out of his way, giving him access to the sugar.
“Then honestly, it shouts red flag in my book. If not school issues, there could be friend trouble or boy problems. My niece went through a rough patch last year and I know that stuff causes kids a lot of stress. As we get older, we forget how life-and-death everything is at that age—the emotions, the fears…”
Remy gulped the scalding coffee.
“You’re right.” Damn it, he needed to figure out what was going on with his daughter.
“But I think it’s great she wanted to see you.” Erin sipped her drink out of a stoneware mug that looked like it had been hand painted. “A lot of teenage girls wouldn’t turn to their fathers for help.”
Something about the way she said it suggested she would have never turned to her own father—the father beloved by all of Heartache. What had it been like growing up in such a small town in a well-known family?
He sighed. “Maybe she just knows who the pushoveris.” He didn’t appreciate Sarah’s insistence that he “sweet-talk” the teacher. Worse, it bugged him that he’d done exactly that.
“I think it speaks well of your relationship.” Erin’s rings clanked against the mug handle as she set down the cup.
She wore a black dress today with a black vinyl apron that suggested she planned to do a bit of crafting. The short sleeves on her dress exposed a brightly colored tattoo. Vines twisted around one arm and disappeared up into her sleeve.
He must have taken too long to answer because he became aware of her staring at him.
“Is there anything else I can do?” she asked, making him realize he’d stood there too damn long, taking over her store and her office with his personal problems.
It must be the odd thread of attraction he experienced that had his feet rooted to the floor, but it had been nice having someone to talk to about Sarah’s behavior. Someone who wasn’t a shrink and didn’t connect everything in their lives back to Liv. A year ago, that thought would have felt disloyal to her memory. But now, he owned it for what it was—plain and simple truth.
“No.” He set down the cup and straightened. “I’ll wake Sarah and get out of your hair.”
“There’s no rush?—”
“I’ve imposed on your goodwill enough in the past few days.” He jammed his hands into his pockets to make sure things didn’t become more personal than they already were. “I’m glad you’re going to do the show, Erin. I’m not going to risk scaring you off now.”
He tested out the smile that worked with other people, but, true to form, it seemed to fall flat on Erin. She frowned.
“Remy, I’m scared off by slick, big-city manners, so please don’t feel you need to pile on the charm for my sake.If we’re going to work together, I’d rather know the real you than the television sham.”
And wasn’t that a wake-up call in his day?
“I’ve got a whole lot more real where this comes from.” He shook his head. “Too much.” He laid a hand on Sarah’s shoulder and squeezed gently. “Come on, Sarah. Time to go.”
His daughter blinked slowly and lifted her head as if it weighed too much.