Chapter 11: Telling friends
Two weeks after the dinner explosion, Harper’s life had settled into a strange new normal. Her parents were officially separated. […]
Two weeks after the dinner explosion, Harper’s life had settled into a strange new normal. Her parents were officially separated. […]
The dinner was Ruby’s idea. Harper’s aunt called three days after the confession, her voice bright with forced optimism: “Family
Harper went to her mother’s house the next morning. Not her parents’ house. Her mother’s house. Because that’s what it
Harper and Mason dated for two weeks before everything exploded. Two weeks of dinners and late-night phone calls and stolen
Harper confronted her father on Wednesday. She found him in his study at 9 PM—the only place he seemed to
Harper made it four days without thinking about Mason Rivers. Okay, that was a lie. She made it four hours.
Harper woke to sunlight streaming through her bedroom window and the warm weight of an arm across her waist. For
“One more drink” turned into three. Harper lost track of time somewhere between Mason’s story about accidentally photographing a celebrity’s
Harper was going to throw up. She watched from across the ballroom as Mason approached her mother, watched him introduce
Mason Rivers had made plenty of questionable decisions in his twenty-nine years, but taking $500 from a beautiful stranger to