All Wrapped Up Page 3
“You okay?”
Across the park, Ella was patiently showing Toby how to use the bubble blower someone had bought him. She had a crowd of kids around her, all in their best party clothes, jaws hanging open as the bubbles flowed out around them. Inevitably, they started trying to slap and step on them as the bubbles flurried in the wind.
“Yeah. I’m okay.”
Lane nodded. “It’s been a great party.”
“It has.” Yet, Anna looked back down at the cake, even as Lane pushed Anna’s hair back off her shoulders and rested her fingers atop the dampness along Anna’s neck. “What is it?”
How did Lane always know?
“For Toby’s first birthday, Sally made a bunny because he was obsessed with them. And now it’s trains, but they knew about his love for those. Next year, though, it’ll be something new. Maybe dinosaurs. Maybe princesses, or princess-dinosaurs—whatever he wants. And they’ll miss it.” She gave a shrug and picked up a lighter. “It’s all just weird.”
Those fingers stayed against her neck, soft and reassuring. “But you’re okay?”
This time, Anna smiled at her. “Yeah.” She lit the candles and looked back at Lane. “I really am.”
Lane leaned forward and gave her a quick kiss.
When they pulled apart, Anna was still smiling. “Thanks for putting up with my crazy.”
“I like your crazy.”
“And I love you.”
Lane grinned. “Me too.”
“Ready?”
“Ready.”
Anna picked up the cake, and they walked towards the main bench, Lane starting to sing and everyone joining in, the kids flocking to the table. Wide eyed, Toby was held over the cake by Sandra, his cheeks covered in cupcake icing. When they finished singing, Lane’s arm around Anna’s waist, Ella showed him how to blow out the candles while everyone clapped and cheered. Toby looked proud, even though he couldn’t have any idea why.
The candles were lit another six times so all the kids could have a turn.
Cake was passed out, and everyone said how amazing it was. Someone even congratulated Anna on how well she had made it. Anna didn’t correct them, smiling sweetly and saying, “Thanks. Old recipe.”
Before Ella could completely open her mouth, Kym clapped her hand over it and gave her a wink, pulling her hand away to reveal a huge grin on Ella’s face as she caught on in an unsubtle, six-year-old way. She tried to wink back at Kym but only managed an exaggerated blink.
By the time four rolled around, kids were starting to crash, and people were drifting away. At four fifteen, everyone had left. Thankfully, with the five of them remaining, it wasn’t long before the clean-up was done. Anna was putting some Tupperware into a storage box when Sandra walked up next to her, adding a cupcake rack to the contents and sliding her arm around Anna’s shoulder. Gratefully, Anna leant into her. Nearby, Ella propelled herself sleepily back and forth on the swing, the bright yellow party dress she had chosen covered in grass stains from playing soccer with her friends. She looked to see if Toby was still where he had been for the last half hour. There he was, curled up on Lane’s jacket where he had put himself and had promptly fallen asleep, hands and face covered in cake. At her mother’s squeeze, she turned her head and kissed Sandra.
A cheeky expression more befitting Toby crossed her mother’s face. “How’d your list go?”
Anna groaned. “Yes, okay, you were right.”
“I’m your mother, I’m always right.”
In the swing next to Ella, Lane sat pumping her feet, getting her swing up into the air, and Anna smiled at them. Kym soon began pushing Ella to let her compete with Lane and see who could swing higher.
She turned back to her mother. “You are.”
“Well, that was far too sincere.”
Anna gave a shrug and kept her gaze on the swing set. “You said I could do this.”
More tightly than before, Sandra squeezed Anna to her. “As your mother, I am biased, but I think you can do anything.”
At the face Anna made, Sandra laughed, dropping her arm. “Let me know if you still think you’re coping tomorrow after trying to keep Toby in his new bed, especially since he’s currently having a late afternoon nap.”
“Oh God.”
“It’s karma.” The delight in her tone did little to make Anna feel better. “When we got you in yours, you used to go into Jake’s room in the middle of the night and wake him up by patting his face. Only, we clued in and tried to stop you. I could never get you back to sleep, but whenever your father was home, you became like butter. He’d pick you up and put you back in bed and read to you until you fell asleep. When he was gone, you were a horror.”
Watching the man in question pull down streamers, a warmth spread through Anna. “I didn’t know that.”
“Oh please. As a toddler, you were a typical daddy’s little girl.”
Grabbing a box, Anna held that information close.
When Sandra and Andrew finally made it into their car, they waited to give Kym a lift, while Kym hugged Anna like she was never going to let go. When she finally pried herself off Anna, Anna grinned and elbowed a bouncing Lane standing next to her.
“We aren’t making a big deal,” Anna’s face arranged itself into what she hoped was a neutral expression. “But just—have some fun, okay?”
After untangling herself from Lane’s hug, Kym nodded, her lips pressed together in a thin line. “I’ll try. That, or I’ll be at your house with wine in a few hours.”
Anna squeezed her shoulder. “Either one.”
As she walked away, Anna thought she looked small and a little lost.
“Kym!” When Kym looked back, Anna waved a dismissive hand at her. “You could wear a sack, and he will think you’re gorgeous. Strut your stuff tonight.”
With a wave and a coy, definitely cheerier expression, Kym slipped into Anna’s parents’ car.
A sniff made her turn to Lane, who then sniffed theatrically again. “Our little girl is all grown up.”
Laughing, Anna grabbed her shirt, pulling Lane against her, trying to kiss the smirk off her lips. When she withdrew from the embrace, Lane grinned and grabbed her, bringing Anna to lips that were soft against her own.
“If you two are going to be gross, can we go home now?”
Hands on her little hips, Ella stared at them with her eyebrows raised. Letting Lane go, Anna poked her tongue out. “Yeah. Let’s go home.”
Anna ruffled Ella’s hair and walked over to Toby, scooping him up and holding him against her chest, his head on her shoulder. The weight of him in her arms was solid, almost heavy. He grew too fast to keep up, surprising her every day with new words and new skills. There were moments he took her breath away as he’d look up from an accomplishment, eyes lit up like her brother’s once had as he discovered a new talent.
Now in her arms, Toby murmured but didn’t wake up. His eyelashes left shadows against his cheeks, and he smelt like grass and sugar and baby shampoo. At that moment, watching Ella take Lane’s hand and start chattering, Anna didn’t care that she had two overly tired, sugared kids to try and settle that night.
There wasn’t much else she’d rather be doing.
With Ella’s sticky hand in Anna’s left hand and the right under Toby’s bottom in order to carry him, they started the walk home. Between Lane and Anna, Ella swung their hands back and forth.
“Nurse Lane?”
“Yeah, Ella?”
Lane winked at Anna over Ella’s head.
“You’re staying tonight, right?”
“Yeah?”
“Can we have pancakes in the morning?”
With a snort, Anna grinned at Lane, who looked back down at Ella. A smile played at the edges of her lips, and Lane let go of Ella´s hand to wrap an arm around her small shoulders.
“Sure.”
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If you enjoyed All Wrapped Up, check out All the Little Moments to really get to know Anna, Lane, Ella, and Toby.
&n
bsp; About G Benson
Benson spent her childhood wrapped up in any book she could get her hands on and—as her mother likes to tell people at parties—even found a way to read in the shower. Moving on from writing bad poetry (thankfully) she started to write stories. About anything and everything. Tearing her from her laptop is a fairly difficult feat, though if you come bearing coffee you have a good chance.
When not writing or reading, she’s got her butt firmly on a train or plane to see the big wide world. Originally from Australia, she currently lives in Spain, speaking terrible Spanish and going on as many trips to new places as she can, budget permitting. This means she mostly walks around the city she lives in.
CONNECT WITH G BENSON:
E-Mail: gbensonauthor@gmail.com
Tumblr: gbensonauthor.tumblr.com
Other Books by this Author
All the Little Moments
G Benson
ISBN: 978-3-95533-342-3 (mobi), 978-3-95533-343-0 (epub)
Length: 132,000 words (350 pages)
A successful anaesthetist, Anna is focused on herself, her career, and her girlfriend. Everything changes abruptly when her brother’s and sister-in-law’s deaths devastate her and her family. Left responsible for her young niece and nephew, Anna finds herself dumped and alone in Melbourne, a city she doesn’t even like. She tries to navigate the shock of looking after two children battling with their grief while managing her own.
Filled with self-doubt, Anna feels as if she’s making a mess of the entire thing, especially when she collides with a long-legged stranger. Anna barely has time to brush her teeth in the morning, let alone to date a woman—least of all one who has no idea about the two kids under her care.
Just when Anna finally starts to feel as if she’s getting some control of the situation, the biggest fight begins and Anna really has to step up once and for all.
All Wrapped Up
© 2015 by G Benson
ISBN (mobi): 978-3-95533-556-4
ISBN (epub): 978-3-95533-557-1
ISBN (pdf): 978-3-95533-558-8
Published by Ylva Publishing, legal entity of Ylva Verlag, e.Kfr.
Ylva Verlag, e.Kfr.
Owner: Astrid Ohletz
Am Kirschgarten 2
65830 Kriftel
Germany
www.ylva-publishing.com
First edition: November 2015
No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to locales, events, business establishments, or actual persons—living or dead—is entirely coincidental.
Credits
Edited by Michelle Aguilar
Cover Design by Streetlight Graphics