Seasons of Love - Harper Bliss - E-Book

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Harper Bliss

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Beschreibung

A successful solicitor, her business partner’s daughter, and their unexpected chance at love.


Alice McAllister is successful, quiet and disciplined. When her law partner Miranda forces her to take a vacation at her holiday home in Portugal, the unexpected presence of Miranda’s daughter Joy turns Alice’s world up-side down.


Despite their differences–the age gap between them only being one of many–Alice and Joy embark on a passionate holiday romance… until they have to return home.


Can their steamy summer fling turn into a love that lasts? Or will the real world impose too many obstacles to Alice and Joy’s young and fragile love?


Find out in this sultry lesbian age-gap novel by chart-topping lesbian romance author Harper Bliss!


*★★★★★ “*Harper Bliss is the queen of age gap romances. Be sure to pick this one up right away.” – The Lesbian Review

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SEASONS OF LOVE

HARPER BLISS

CONTENTS

Special Offer from the Author

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

A Note from Harper

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Acknowledgments

About the Author

Also by Harper Bliss

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Details can be found at the end of this book.

For my wife, who supports and loves me through all the seasons.

CHAPTERONE

I try to recline my seat, but as soon as I push the button and apply some pressure, I feel the knees of the passenger behind me resisting my attempt. Perhaps I should have listened to Miranda when she told me to book a business class ticket. “But this is not a business trip,” I’d said, to which she’d just responded with a sigh. Not that I would ever buy an overpriced ticket just to have some more room on any trip—or that I ever go on business trips.

“Some more wine, Ma’am?” a female member of the cabin crew asks.

“No, thank you.” I hand her my empty plastic cup. I’ve had two units already. Despite this being the start of a long overdue holiday, I won’t let go of my health principles so easily.

I close my eyes, the back of my seat straight again, and think about the two weeks of absolute nothingness stretching out in front of me.

“At the end of your life, you won’t wish you had worked more, Alice,” Miranda said a few months ago. “As your partner in this company, I demand you take three weeks off this summer.” She’d offered me her phone and had me flick through some pictures of blue skies and a stylish house a few minutes from the beach in Quinta do Lago. “Consider it booked. How does August 1st till August 21st sound?”

“Three weeks? Have you lost your mind?” I’d glared at her, but had difficulty keeping my gaze off her phone. The last picture she’d shown me was of the swimming pool, which was bathed in the most exquisite light, the water a reflection of all things summer. It didn’t help that she came to me with this on one of London’s more dreary days. “Fine, but it’ll have to be two weeks. Three is just ludicrous.”

Miranda had stretched out her hand and demanded we’d shake on the deal. Apart from a day here and there and a long weekend in Paris or down the coast in Cornwall, I’m not much of a holidaymaker. I’d rather work than spend too much time with my own thoughts, a work ethic that, in my humble opinion, has allowed Miranda to earn enough money to actually buy that house in the Algarve.

But Miranda got her wish and here I am. The plane is about to land at Faro airport.

After going through all airport shenanigans—another reason to only ever travel by car or train—I pick up my rental car and spread out the map over the steering wheel. The lady behind the counter said the car came with a sat nav, but I like to find my destination the old-fashioned way.

By the time I arrive at Miranda’s house, I’m more than ready for a dip in that pool. And I have to agree with her, because as I park my car in front of the house, a sense of summer, of intense leisure, comes over me. A sensation I’ve never experienced anywhere else. Not for a long while, anyway. I’m tired from the journey, but just arriving here engulfs me in an aura of relaxation.

The house looks every bit as stunning as in the pictures. It’s not overly big, but its white walls look picturesque against the blue of the sky, and the pool is surrounded by grass so green and lush, that someone must water it on a daily basis. I hope they won’t intrude on the complete privacy Miranda guaranteed me for the two weeks I’m taking up residence here.

I only brought one suitcase, and I wheel it into the master bedroom, which looks out over the pool area. I inhale deeply, and let the stress of London, work, and the journey here wash off me a little with every exhale.

Before I relax completely and enjoy the rest of this beautiful day, I should get some exercise. The flight was only three hours, but the entire journey took about seven, and my legs are stiff from sitting down too much. In London, my favourite—and only—means of exercise is an hour every morning before work on the stair walker I set up in my spare bedroom. It’s a great way to catch up on the news and stay in shape. When I asked Miranda if there was any gym equipment in her house she’d looked at me funnily, as though that was the most outrageous question ever, even though most hotels around the globe boast some sort of gym on their premises.

“Just relax,” Miranda had said. “Two weeks off won’t destroy your excellent physical condition, Alice.”

It’s not a hardship to have to make do with the pool. I’m not the world’s best swimmer, but it will be good for my biceps, triceps, and deltoids, not to mention release the tension from my legs. I can be adaptable, I want to say to Miranda, but I’ll have to save it for when I see her again in two weeks.

After I’ve emptied my suitcase and given my clothes their rightful place in the wardrobe, I slip into my one-piece bathing suit. I also splashed out on a bikini with a loud floral print and, looking at it again, wonder what on earth came over me when I purchased it. A one-piece will do.

The water is not warm, but not cold either. It’s just the right temperature and before launching into a few laps for sporty reasons, I float on my back, the late afternoon sun still strong enough to pierce underneath my eyelids.

The pool isn’t very long, so I count my laps until I’ve reached forty, after which I sit on the ledge panting. A tall tree casts my chosen spot in shadows, and I breathe in to acquaint myself with the summery smells surrounding me. When Miranda first told me she was buying a house here, I accused her of being foolish with money, but sitting here now, I guess I’m beginning to understand. She’s had this place for eighteen years, has asked me to come here a thousand times, and I see now that I was the foolish one for always having a good reason not to. But summers here were booked up with Miranda and her daughter spending at least a month in the house—a luxury I often scolded her for—and, after Alan left me, I was working all the time anyway. What was I going to do coming here on my own? And travelling with Miranda and her daughter somehow never appealed to me. I don’t dislike children, but, for relaxation purposes, I would never deliberately seek out their company either.

When my stomach starts growling, I take a shower and head into the nearest village. I buy enough food to last me a few days and two bottles of wine.

Just when I arrive back at the villa, my phone rings. Miranda advised me to turn it off and hide it in a cupboard, but that was simply one stretch too far. When I look at the screen, I see it’s Miranda calling. Maybe to check if I would answer. Of course I do.

“Alice, isn’t it glorious? Listen to this.” She does something with the phone and I hear a buzzing noise. “That’s the sound of a lovely London rain storm pelting against my office window.”

“It’s rather amazing.” I lean against the table in the open-plan kitchen and I can see the swimming pool from here as well.

“How do you feel?”

How do I feel? Miranda learnt to not ask me that question a long time ago. “Erm, great.” The irony is perfectly audible in my voice.

“Are you relaxed?” She pauses. “Because, well, um, there’s something…” It’s not Miranda’s style to do this much hemming and hawing.

“Is it Mr. Pappas? I knew I shouldn’t—”

“No, Alice, relax. It’s got nothing to do with work.” She clears her throat. “It’s Joy. She’s unexpectedly starting a new job in a week and she’d like to enjoy a bit of summer before going back to work.”

“Okay. Then she should.” I fail to understand why this upsets Miranda so much. She should be happy Joy has a new job, the way that girl flutters from employer to employer.

“Yes, well, the thing is, Alice, she’s asked if she could go to the house… just for a few days. Just for some much needed vitamin D.”

Is Miranda talking about this house? She can’t be. I’m here. I was promised privacy and solitude. “Joy wants to come here?” For once, I don’t hide the outright indignation in my voice.

“Only if you agree. I mean, the house is more than big enough for the two of you. She won’t be a nuisance, I promise you that. She’ll be at the beach most of the time, anyway. You’ll barely notice she’s there.”

No, a little voice in my head screams. But this is Miranda’s house. What am I supposed to say? Your own flesh and blood can’t use it because I’m here? It goes against every rule of politeness I’ve ever lived by. “Well,” I start, but Miranda cuts me off again.

“It’ll only be for a few days. She needs to come back and start work.”

I roll my eyes. The lows Miranda stoops to for her daughter, while a simple “No, the house is occupied” would have sufficed. I don’t know Joy very well. I haven’t seen her in years, but I guess Miranda hasn’t stopped spoiling her after she graduated from university.

“It’s fine, Miranda. I’ll welcome her with open arms.” But only because you’re not giving me a choice. Miranda knew full well I wouldn’t say no. It’s probably much easier for her to make this phone call to me than to say no to her daughter. Children. Neither Alan nor I were very interested in pursuing a traditional family. I got all the satisfaction I needed from pouring all my energy into my career.

“Thank you so much. I owe you,” Miranda says. “I’m well aware. I’ll make it up to you somehow, I swear.”

Miranda then proceeds to tell me Joy, who is apparently sitting next to her while she makes the call to Portugal, will book her flight straightaway. She’ll be there tomorrow afternoon. No need to pick her up at the airport, she’ll get her own car. A rental Miranda will pay for, I’m sure. By the time I put down the phone, my relaxed state has all but dissipated. So much for my holiday. While I prepare a simple salad, I think of ways to make Miranda pay for this. She’s the one who was so dead set on me going on holiday in the first place. It just goes to show where her loyalties lie. Blood is always thicker than the waters of friendship, even though we’ve been friends since before Joy was born.

While I eat my salad overlooking the pool, I exceed my self-imposed daily alcohol limit by drinking two more glasses of wine.

CHAPTERTWO

Joy arrives in a bright yellow Mini Cooper—a vehicle I didn’t even know car rental agencies provided—with just a backpack as luggage.

“You travel light,” is the first thing I say to her, which isn’t very courteous, but I can’t help it. I feel as though I need to make clear from the start that I don’t fully agree with how my holiday is being rudely interrupted.

“No need for a lot of clothes here.” Joy shoulders her backpack and walks briskly towards me. “Good to see you, Alice. It’s been ages.” She opens her arms wide. Is she really expecting a hug? I can’t even remember the last time I embraced someone. Before I even have a chance to think of an acceptable manner to refuse her hug, she’s thrown her arms around me and pulls me close to her. I find this manner of greeting a mere acquaintance highly impertinent, and squirm my way out of her impromptu cuddle quickly. When I take a step back she looks at me funnily. “Good grief, Alice, do you have a funeral to attend or something?”

I did throw on black trousers as Joy’s arrival time approached, and covered my upper body with a cream silk blouse. “Some of us like to dress properly,” I retort, and let my glance roam over Joy’s scantily clad body. She’s wearing a tank top through which I can clearly see the contours of a black bra and a pair of shorts that barely covers her behind.

She shrugs and heads into the house, dropping her backpack on the kitchen floor. “Mum has given me instructions to not bother you and avoid you as much as possible.” She opens the fridge door and peers inside. “I promise I’ll go grocery shopping tomorrow, but the food on the plane was horrible and I’m starving.” She turns to me, the fridge door still open. “And gagging for a dip in that pool.” She steps a little farther into the coolness of the wide-open fridge door. “Oh gosh, that feels good.”

Have you lost your mind? I want to ask. Has your mother not taught you how to save energy and behave responsibly? But I’ve never been very adept at communicating my inner emotions—and I never had much need to. “Take whatever you want,” I say, instead. “I’ll be in my room.”

“Thanks,” Joy shouts after me. Already, the effects of the one day of unwinding I got to enjoy are undone. A tightness has crept back into my muscles, and my brain is going into overdrive coming up with ways to make the best of this situation. I lie on my bed, the French windows opened to the pool area, and leaf through a Lee Child book absentmindedly, producing no results. The next five days with Joy will simply be one of those occurrences in life I’ll have to suffer through. Silently, of course, because that’s what I do.

I hear stumbling in the adjoining room. There’s another bedroom on the other side of the house, but it doesn’t lead directly to the pool area. I do hope Joy will at least have good enough manners to not make too much noise during the night. A little later, I see two legs appear in my field of vision. They’re supple, their skin unblemished by age, and they patter to the pool. When I let my glance drift upwards, along a piece of fabric that can hardly be called a pair of bikini bottoms, I can’t believe what I see: Joy’s back is bare. There’s no sign of any string across her back. All I see is naked flesh. I don’t have time to ponder this further, because with a neat splash, Joy dives into the pool.

Shocked, I sit up. Is this how she intends not to bother me? The nerve of this girl. I have to stop myself from reaching for my phone and calling Miranda. But all of this is Miranda’s fault in the first place, and what is she going to do? Call her daughter and tell her to put on a top? That’s even more unlikely than me joining Joy in the pool when she’s dressed like that.

My eyes are still trained on the surface of the pool. Not because I want to see, but because I haven’t been able to look away, so stupefied am I with Joy’s choice of non-dress. All of a sudden, her head bursts through the surface of the water, her face slick and her hair wet, and she rests her arms on the edge.

“Are you going to take those funeral clothes off today or what?” She plasters a self-satisfied grin on her face.

So much for my privacy. Perhaps I should move to the room at the back of the house, so she can’t look into my bedroom every time she goes for a swim. I’m still too stunned to speak. Thank goodness her arms are just resting on the edge, and her nude torso is hidden from my view.

“The water is gorgeous.” Joy tips her head to the side. “Or are you going to sulk in your room all evening?”

Who does this girl think she is? To talk to me this way? Clearly, Miranda hasn’t taught her about respecting her elders either.

Joy proceeds to hoist herself up out of the pool and sit down cross-legged in the grass, facing me with her bare breasts on full display. To my great dismay, I feel my cheeks flush. I can only hope the distance between my bed and the pool is big enough so Joy doesn’t notice.

“I shall continue to read my book.” I’m happy with the ounce of dignity I manage to inject into my voice.

“Oh yeah? What are you reading?” Joy just doesn’t leave me alone. She’s probably been showered with so much attention throughout her life that she can’t be on her own for five minutes.

“Just the new Jack Reacher.” I picked it up at the WHSmith at the airport. I don’t often allow myself guilty pleasures like these. But, if anything, it seems like the sort of book Joy would like.

“That crap. Really?” She squints. “I hadn’t pegged you for the type, Alice. You surprise me.”

“Oh, and I presume your library is only filled with the likes of Ian McEwan and Margaret Atwood?” I retort before I even give myself a chance to think.

“My library?” Joy chuckles. “If you mean the one on my Kindle, then, I guess, yes, my preferences in literature are pretty high-brow.” With drops of water slipping down her cheeks like that, and her long blond hair a tight, wet cap on her head, she looks like the least high-brow person I’ve ever seen. She probably attends raves and watches reality television—the greatest waste of time ever invented.

It’s hard to have this conversation while drops of water trickle down Joy’s neck, slide down her breasts and pool in between her crossed legs. “Good for you,” is all I say, not wanting to extend this awkward moment.

Joy cocks her head, squints her eyes.

“What?” I can’t help but ask.

“I was just trying to remember how long it’s been since I saw you last and if you were already so uptight back then.”

Uptight? I clap the book I’m holding shut and throw it onto the nightstand. “I didn’t come all the way to Portugal to get judged by a teenager.” I jump off the bed and start closing the windows.

“I’m twenty-nine years old, Alice,” Joy half-yells. “Haven’t been a teenager in a very long time.”

Without acknowledging what she says further, I shut the windows on her, erasing this brazen girl from my field of vision—as though it can somehow magically make her disappear from the property. I stand by the window long enough to hear Joy splash into the pool again. The sound of carelessness, I think, of a recklessness I’ve never known.

I switch on the air-conditioning in the room because, immediately, it’s too hot and stuffy with the windows closed, and I welcome the gentle whir that drowns out the slapping noises Joy makes outside.

The blouse clings to the small of my back in the humidity—perhaps she had a point there. While I slip out of my formal clothes, I contemplate changing my flight, because this holiday will leave me more stressed than when I first arrived. In the end, it’s stubbornness that makes me stay. I can wait Joy out. She’ll only be here for a few days and after she’s left, the sense of relief and long-awaited solitude will bring me an altogether new kind of peace of mind.

CHAPTERTHREE

A couple of hours later, I venture out of my room and onto the patio for a snack. I refuse to confine myself to the kitchen just because Joy is sleeping topless in a lounger on the other side of the pool. I wouldn’t normally get out the wine at this time of day, but my nerves are frayed, and seeing as I’m trapped in the house with Joy, it seems like the only way to relax myself a tiny bit. As I dip bread into olive oil, my eyes wander. Not even in my twenties would I ever have considered taking off my bikini top. Not under any circumstance. But I’m well aware that, across generations, things change. I have twenty-two years on Joy, and she might as well have descended upon Quinta do Lago from another planet. When I was twenty-nine, I had been married to Alan for four years—and he’d barely seen my breasts before we said “I do”.

“I’ll have a glass of that,” Joy suddenly says, her eyes only half-open.

Does she expect me to serve her now as well? “Be my guest.” I take my glass of wine and take a few gulps, hoping that my gaze wasn’t trained on her chest when she opened her eyes.

She gets up and walks towards the kitchen with her lips curved into a knowing smile.

“You might as well make use of me being here.” Joy, still topless, sits down next to me, cupping a glass of wine in her hands. “Shall I take you out later? Show you around?”

“Are you going to wear more clothes for that occasion?” There’s bite to my tone. There’s no way on earth I would go into town with Joy, but her words do spark the hope that she’ll go out later and leave me in peace for the rest of the evening.

“Does it bother you?” I can feel her eyes on me, but I stubbornly keep staring at the surface of the water. It’s darker now that the sun is slanting down more. “I do apologise, Alice. I’m so used to it. It’s more a reflex than anything else. Arrive at the house. Take off my top. It’s just the way we roll here, always have.”

“Do you mean to say that Miranda sits here like, uh, that as well?”

“Of course she does. It’s really no big deal. It’s just nature.”

“Lord almighty,” I whisper, trying hard not to imagine my oldest friend and business associate lowering herself gingerly into the pool with her chest bare. Thank goodness I never took her up on her offer to join her.

“If it makes you more comfortable I can put something on. I just didn’t realise you would mind.”

I’m torn. I don’t want to be called uptight again. But not having to sit here and drink my wine with a topless woman in her twenties would allow me to relax more. “I would appreciate it.” I turn my head and shoot her a quick smile.

“Ah well.” Joy pushes herself out of her chair. “Your loss, Alice.” She winks at me and, barefoot, wanders inside.

My loss? What is that supposed to mean? It’s as though the girl has come here for one single reason: to wind me up.

A few minutes later she sits next to me in the same sheer tank top she arrived in, no bra underneath, and although it isn’t much more than she had on before, it does ease some of the stiffness in my muscles. Before the subject of conversation again goes somewhere I don’t want it to go, I hijack it, and start talking about work—always a safe topic.

“Miranda said something about you starting a new job soon?”

“Yep.” Joy pulls her feet up onto the chair and rests her elbows on her knees. “Social media advertising. I’ll mostly be working on Facebook ad campaigns.”

I’ve heard of Facebook, of course, but I would never be caught dead on a platform like that. “Right,” I say. “Sounds interesting.”

Joy just chuckles, then says, “I don’t want to talk about work, Alice. I’m on holiday.” She lets her legs slide off the chair and deposits her—already—empty glass on the table in front of us. “So, are you game? We can either walk around the lake, or I can show you the shortcut to the beach, or we can just go for a drink in town, although ‘town’ is a big word for it.”

“I’m not sure. I’d rather—”

“You have a date with Jack Reacher or something?” She cuts me off. “I was unfair to you earlier, by the way, I have read one or two Lee Childs—who hasn’t?—and I even saw the movie, but, I mean, come on… Tom Cruise? For real?”

I’m not entirely sure what she’s referring to, so I sit there mute.

This, apparently, is another good reason for Joy to start giggling. “Do you ever go to the movies?”

“Not very often.”

“So what do you do for relaxation?” She twirls the stem of the wine glass between her fingers.

“I quite often go to plays and the opera. A museum once in a while on the weekend if there’s an interesting exhibition. Much like your mother, I would think.” I can’t shake the feeling that I’m being questioned, that something about my personality or habits or the way I choose to live my life is under scrutiny.

“Mum? As far as I know she hasn’t been to the opera for more than a decade, not since she met Jeff.”

“Ah, Jeff.”

Joy turns to me. “I never got a chance to ask you. You’re one of Mum’s best friends so you must have an opinion. What do you think of him?”

Miranda has been with Jeff for more than ten years. Any opinion I ever had about him—and I did have a few at the time—has become irrelevant. “They seem very happy together.”

“That’s not an answer to my question, Alice. Come on.” She taps her fingertips onto the tabletop now. “Whatever is said here stays between us. I promise.”

I inhale deeply before speaking. I don’t even know if I can trust Joy because, as has become overly clear since her arrival earlier today, blood is always thicker than water. And, even though Miranda is my friend, we don’t have the sort of relationship in which I would unabashedly voice my opinion on the dubious nature of the man in her life. “He’s an acquired taste, I guess.”

Joy shakes her head, a lopsided grin on her face. “Good thing I’m rather adept at deciphering middle-class social diplomacy.” Out of nowhere, she puts a hand on my lower arm and pats it. I stare at the spot where she’s touching me—openmouthedly, I realise too late. So much for social diplomacy. Joy retracts her hand. “He’s a pompous, arrogant bastard. That’s what he is.” Joy looks me straight in the eyes. “Then again, so was my dad. At least Mum is consistent in her taste in men.”

“Paul was no such thing.”

“Oh come on, Alice. I know, I know. Don’t speak ill of the dead and all that, but I’m his daughter, and very much like him when I come to think of it, so I’m allowed to speak my mind. Mum likes grandstanding men who are full of themselves. It’s a fact.”

I feel a bout of laughter rise within me, but I don’t know if it’s appropriate to chuckle at the memory of Joy’s deceased father. “Obviously, you knew him much better than I did.”

Joy rises to her feet. “How about we save our trip into town for tomorrow. I’ll get some more snacks and wine and we can just stay here and chat?”

“You don’t have to stay in on my account,” I’m quick to say.

“It’s no bother. I’m a bit tired from traveling anyway.”

No bother? There goes my quiet evening. “Sure.” I empty my glass of wine to mask any potential signs of disappointment on my face. While Joy goes inside to fetch the food and drinks, I remind myself to ask her, as soon as the occasion arises, when exactly her return flight is scheduled.

* * *

“I can’t believe this is your first time here, Alice,” Joy says, after pouring me another glass of wine which I don’t intend to touch a drop of.

“I’m not much of a traveller, I guess.” I look out over the pool, now caught in shade.

“Still. It’s barely three hours on a plane.” Joy takes a sip, then continues. “My granny loved it when Mum bought the house. She came up here at least three times a year…”

“Is it really necessary to compare me to an OAP?” I have half a mind to scoot out of my chair and retreat back to my room, but it’s a beautiful evening and I want to see the sun go down. Instead, I do drink from the wine—I bought it after all.

“I’m sorry, Alice. I didn’t mean to do that.” Joy has an amused expression on her face, as though she’s taking great pleasure in winding me up. I have no doubt she is.

“I’m not so sure of that,” I reply before grabbing a slice of the ham she deposited on the table. If I keep chugging back wine like this without eating anything, I’ll pay for it in the morning.

“I swear to you. I’m on my best behaviour. Should I try to better it further?”

“You can do whatever you want.” I start pushing back my chair, having changed my mind about watching the sunset. The sun has only gone down behind the trees and it will be a good while before we’re given a glimpse of orange glow on the horizon. I can’t wait that long—not in the company I’m currently in. “I’m going inside.”

“What? No. Come on.” Joy jumps out of her chair. “Let’s try again, please. I know I’m an annoying brat.” She cocks her head and protrudes her bottom lip. “Give me another chance?”

“If we’re going to be sharing this house I expect to be treated respectfully.” I sound like a headmistress scolding a child, which makes me feel utterly ridiculous.

“Nothing but respectful language from now on, I promise.” Joy puts a hand on her chest, just above the curve of her breast, only attracting more attention to her see-through top.

“Fine,” I say, but only because I think I may detect a glimmer of remorse in her eyes.

“It’s not easy being this obnoxious all the time, you know,” Joy says, then paints a smile on her face. “But none of us are perfect.”

“That’s certainly true.” I cast her a severe glance before pulling my chair closer to the table again. We sit in silence for a while—a silence during which I feel compelled to empty half of my glass of wine. Though I’m grateful for the moment of quiet, the silence starts getting to me because it’s awkward sitting next to someone and not making conversation.

“I’m glad I did finally make it here,” I say, while twirling the stem of my glass between my fingers. “It’s beautiful.”

“I know.” Joy has changed her tone of voice. It’s gentler—less obnoxious. “I was so lucky to be able to come here as a child.”

“Years ago, Alan did suggest we take a vacation here. I refused, as usual.” And he started his affair with Sheryl not long after, I add in my head, while wondering how these words made their way out of my mouth. It must be the wine. I’ve had too much and it sneaked up on me.

“Do you mind me asking why?” Joy seems to have injected even more tenderness into her voice, and that edge of brashness she subjected me to earlier has disappeared altogether.

I glance at my almost empty glass of wine and, once again, vow to stop drinking from it. “Work,” I say, then push my chair back again. “I’m going to get some water.”

“Nope!” Joy is on her feet before me. “I’ll get it. Sit back down.” It’s as though she’s become scared I’ll flee to my room and leave her to witness nightfall by herself.

While she’s in the house I look up to the sky, to how it’s starting to morph into that deep inky blue that sets the day apart from the night.

“Here you go.” Joy has brought out a bottle of water and two glasses and makes a show of pouring us each one.