Brenda Harlen

A Forever Kind of Family


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and length at birth and the day he came home from the hospital to his first smile, when he rolled over, sat up, clapped his hands, waved bye-bye, got his first tooth and took his first step.

      It was a meticulous record of her love as much as her baby’s growth, and Harper didn’t know if she should continue what Melissa had started or leave the book as she had left it. Either way, she knew she had to talk to Ryan about taking the little boy for a haircut.

      Sooner rather than later if he was going to insist on putting things like cheesy macaroni in it.

      “I think that’s a sign that you’ve had enough to eat,” she said to him.

      “Mo!”

      She shook her head. “No more. Not today.”

      “Kee.”

      She was starting to understand his unique baby language and that word was one of his favorites. “Let’s get you cleaned up first. Then you can have a cookie.”

      She wiped his hands and his face—and his hair—with a wet cloth, ensuring that no traces of orange sauce remained. “There’s my handsome boy,” she said.

      He grinned at her, melting her heart. “Kee.”

      She laughed. “Yes, I’ll get you a cookie.”

      While he was munching on his arrowroot biscuit, she tidied up the kitchen. Then she washed Oliver’s hands and face again.

      “What are we going to do this afternoon?” she asked the little boy.

      He banged his hands on his tray. “Bah-bah-bah.”

      “I’m going to need a translation on that,” she said as she unbuckled him from his high chair. “Either you want to play ball or you want to pretend you’re a sheep—which is it?”

      “Bah-bah-bah.”

      “Blocks,” Ryan said from the doorway.

      Harper glanced up as she set the little boy on his feet. He ran straight to Ryan, who swung him up into his arms. “Do you want to play with your blocks?”

      “Bah-bah-bah.”

      Harper frowned as she moved into the living room. “Do you think his speech is delayed?”

      “No, I think he’s a sixteen-month-old with the limited vocabulary of a sixteen-month-old.”

      He was probably right but she thought she’d check the vocabulary lists in her books again to be sure. “Your conference call is done already?”

      He nodded. “I knew it wouldn’t take too long.”

      She put the bucket of blocks on the carpet and sat down to play with Oliver. The little boy immediately upended the container. “Are you going into the office now?”

      “Not today.”

      She started the base of a tower for Oliver, aligning three square blocks for the bottom, then overlapping a second row to hold the blocks together. “Why not?”

      “I thought I’d spend some time hanging out with Oliver this afternoon.”

      “Big,” Oliver said again, offering her a blue block.

      “He wants you to make the tower bigger,” Ryan told her, squatting down to add more blocks to the base of the structure she’d started to build.

      “You just want to play, too,” she remarked.

      He didn’t dispute her claim. “Do you have a problem with that?”

      “You had Oliver all morning—it’s my shift now,” she reminded him.

      “Just like no one’s keeping score, no one’s punching a clock here,” he said gently. “If there’s something else you’d rather be doing, I don’t mind honing my construction skills here.”

      She hesitated, torn between the temptation to accept his offer, annoyance that he handled the little boy so effortlessly and guilt that if she let him, she would again be doing less than her share. “I do have some notes to write up for Caroline for next week’s shows.”

      He shrugged. “Or you could take a nap so you’re not cranky tomorrow.”

      “I’m not cranky now,” she snapped, her tone in contradiction to the words.

      He just lifted a brow.

      She turned on her heel and walked out.

      Harper hadn’t planned to fall asleep.

      She’d decided that her notes for Caroline could wait, and she’d lain down on her bed to read another chapter in What to Expect the Toddler Years. She managed to keep her eyes open for four pages.

      When she woke up, it was almost five o’clock and her grumbling stomach chastised her for not thinking about dinner before she’d put her head on her pillow. After a quick detour to the bathroom, she headed down to the kitchen to see what she could scrounge up for the evening meal.

      But Ryan had apparently beat her to that, too, as he was peeling potatoes at the sink. Oliver was on the floor nearby, playing with some plastic lids. They both glanced over when she stepped through the doorway.

      “I guess I should say ‘sorry’ and ‘thank you.’”

      “Why?”

      “The ‘sorry’ because I was tired and cranky. The ‘thank you’ for letting me sleep and getting dinner started.”

      “No worries,” he said easily.

      “What’s for supper?”

      “Steak pie, mashed potatoes and corn.”

      “Do you want me to finish the potatoes?”

      “Are you going to eat any potatoes?”

      “Probably not,” she admitted.

      “Then you can make your salad.”

      She got the ingredients out of the fridge and set to work.

      * * *

      Half an hour later, they were sitting down to dinner, just like a regular family.

      Except that she had almost no experience being a regular family. She’d grown up in New York City, where her father was an actor and her mother was a talent agent. And for as long as Harper could remember, her parents had been going in opposite directions—to auditions and meetings and events. Occasionally one or the other would take her and her brother, Spencer, along for the ride, but more often they were left at home with the nanny.

      The unconventional upbringing was something she’d had in common with Melissa. Her friend’s parents had split when she was in the third grade, and after that she’d done her share of moving from one home to another, never feeling as if she completely belonged in either. As a result, she’d been determined to provide a better upbringing for her son—and a “normal” home in which parents sat down to share meals with their children. Harper wasn’t convinced that was “normal” but she was willing to do her part to maintain at least the illusion for the little boy.

      “This pie is delicious,” she said after she’d sampled her first bite.

      Obviously Oliver agreed, because he was managing to put more of the steak and gravy in his mouth than on his face.

      “One of my aunt Susan’s specialties,” Ryan told her. “I can only take credit for moving it from the freezer to the oven.”

      “Between your mother and your aunts and your cousins, we probably have enough pies and casseroles and pastas to last until Christmas.”

      “My family has always believed that food can help alleviate any crisis.”

      “That