Second Chance: A Military Football Romance - Page 277

"He made his own decisions," Trent said.

"Not if his roommate planned to set him up in order to take the heat off himself," I objected. "This could ruin Owen's career, at the very least his credibility. He'll probably lose his sponsors."

"But, honey, you don't have to fix it," Trent said. "You don't have to fix everyone."

"There is a huge difference between trying to help and trying to fix someone," I said. "Trust me, I know."

As if to illustrate what I had said, there was a commotion upstairs. "Just trust me," I could hear my father saying.

I waved Trent out the front door and promised I would call him someday. He left and I shut the door just before my mother flew down the stairs.

"Who was it? Was it the waitress? I didn't tip her well enough, I know I didn't," she said.

"Mom, are you okay? What are you talking about?" I had seen the wild look in her eyes before, and it froze my heart.

My father came down the stairs and caught her in his arms. "Barbara, darling, I told you that I took care of the tip. There is nothing for you to worry about. How about I call the restaurant and tell the manager what a great job the waitress did? That'll fix it," he said.

He steered her back up the stairs. My mother's worries were descending into gibberish, yet he responded with calm, soothing answers as if he could talk her out of it. I knew he had been through this dozens of times before, but it bothered me how he thought he could just brush it aside. She needed help, that was not normal, but my father was determined to fix it on his own.

When he came downstairs 10 minutes later, I was still waiting in the foyer. "What did Trent want? It sure was a surprise to see him here. Boy trouble?"

I cringed at his easy tone. "How's Mother?"

"Oh, you know how she gets. Just overtired. She'll be fine after she rests," he said. He brushed past me and headed for his office.

I followed him and stood in the doorway before he could close the door. "She just needs to rest?"

He refused to look at me. "She didn't sleep well last night. And we spent most of yesterday out running errands, so of course she's tired. Everything's fine."

"Then, can you help me?" I asked. "Or, more specifically, can you help Owen? I think he's in trouble with the police."

"Quinn, just because I'm a criminal lawyer does not mean I'm going to help every loser that gets himself in trouble."

"Owen's not a loser, you know that," I said. "His roommate was selling drugs and when neighbors started noticing, he decided to make Owen take the fall for him."

"Then if Owen's innocent, he has nothing to worry about."

"Except that he's been set up. His roommate made it look like he was the one dealing drugs. And because Owen plays video games for a living, people are more inclined to believe it. I think he really needs your help," I said.

My father took four angry paces away from me, then marched back. His face was a dark red as he pointed a finger at me. "And you think I should help him? Why should I help the man that dumped my beautiful daughter when she needed him the most? Did you know that? Owen broke up with Sienna! Can you believe that? That loser broke up with your sister. He hurt her and that made her hurt herself."

"You think that is why Sienna committed suicide?" I knew my father had always been looking for someone to blame. The hardest part of my sister's death was realizing that she did it to herself. There was no real reason for it. It had just happened.

"He just dumped her flat and left her to pick up the pieces. Can you imagine what that did to her?" my father asked. "It’s no wonder she felt so sad."

"What happened to Sienna was a tragedy," I said, "but it was no one's fault. And it had nothing to do with Owen."

"Why are you defending him?" my father yelled. He paced back and forth again. "What is it about Owen Redd that makes my daughters lose all rational thought?"

"I'm not the one acting irrationally," I said.

My father stopped sharply and turned to face me. "No? You're just running around with the man that broke your sister's heart. Have you even thought about how that looks? Do you even care what it does to your sister's memory?"

My knuckles went white as I gripped the doorframe. "Sienna cheated on Owen. Months before. She cheated on him, he caught her, and he broke up with her months before what happened at college," I said.

"Let me guess," my father said. "He told you that. Quinn, honestly, I thought you were smarter."

"I can prove it," I said. "I was in Sienna's room tonight and I remembered what her password is for her email. If you need proof, it will all be in there. You know she needed to lay everything out in black and white."

Tags: Claire Adams Romance
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