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Her Son's Hero

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2019
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“I don’t want to say it, Mom.”

“Are you telling me you started that fight?”

“He called you a dirty word!” Sean argued hotly. “He called you a—”

“You’re right,” Dom interjected, “we don’t need to hear the word, Sean.” Fiona’s grip on the wheel tightened as her temper ratcheted up at this man’s nerve. Dom went on, “I think it was honorable of you to defend your mother.”

“No, it wasn’t,” she snapped, and suddenly the day’s stress and frustration cascaded over her. “He got kicked out of camp because of his fighting. He didn’t have to let Rene bait him, but he did. Fun camp was the only place I could send him on Saturdays. What am I supposed to do now? Who’s going to take care of Sean while I go to work?”

Silence descended. Fiona glanced in her rearview mirror and saw Sean staring down at his hands, humiliated. Her heart sank.

“He fought for you,” Dom said quietly. “Aren’t you proud of him for defending you, even if he won’t defend himself?”

She’d had just about enough of Dominic Payette. “I’m his mother. I can take a little abuse from the Rene Kirkpatricks of the world. I don’t need anyone to tell me or my son how to behave.”

She felt her neighbor’s steely gaze on her, felt the intense pity there, and she hated it. She couldn’t pull onto their street soon enough.

“Thanks for the ride. I’ll see you later,” Dom said as he got out of the car. Sean waved and watched him walk up the steps and into his house, even as Fiona jerked the car back onto the road and drove the last few yards up to their home.

Any distance that she could put between herself and her neighbor was welcome.

LATER THAT EVENING, the doorbell rang. Fiona was in the middle of preparing Sean’s favorite meal. When they’d returned home, her son had gone straight to his room and slammed the door behind him—again—telling her exactly how he felt.

“Dominic.” Her breath caught as she took in the figure filling the doorway. He’d changed out of his jogging clothes into jeans. A thin gray T-shirt stretched across his broad, muscled chest, tapering to his narrow hips and flat stomach. She stiffly asked, “Can I help you?”

“I really hate to bother you,” he said, “but I just blew a fuse and I can’t find the fuse box, or even a flashlight.” He rubbed the back of his neck. “I tried calling my landlord, Mr. Patterson, but he’s not answering. Do you suppose I could borrow a flashlight, or a candle and some matches or something?”

Finally. An opportunity to make amends for her poor behavior. She wasn’t setting a good example for Sean. She needed to make things right between them…for her son’s sake.

“The layout of your house is a lot like mine, actually,” she said. “Give me a minute and I can show you exactly where the fuse box is.”

He seemed surprised by her offer. “I…yeah, okay, thanks.”

Gail was lounging on her front porch, so Fiona asked her to keep an eye on Sean for the few minutes she’d be away. She grabbed a pair of flashlights and walked across the street with Dom. “So what happened?”

“I plugged in my stereo and laptop, then went to boil some water for tea, and the power went out.”

Fiona nodded sympathetically. “My aunt Penelope, who owned the house before I moved in, put in all kinds of extraneous switches. To this day, I can’t use my toaster if the porch light is on, and there hasn’t been a single electrician who can figure out why without tearing the walls apart.”

They walked across the porch and stepped into the dark hallway. Fiona turned on the flashlights and handed one to Dom. It took her a minute to adjust to the layout, a near mirror image of her own house. “This way.” She led him to the basement.

The lower level was pitch-black and smelled musty. Fiona shone the light around and found a curtained-off corner where the electrical box was hidden. Fortunately, John Patterson had upgraded the most important components so that all she had to do was flip the breaker switch on the panel. She could hear the hum as appliances upstairs turned back on.

“There you go.” It was still dark in the basement, but another pass of the flashlight beam revealed a switch on the wall.

She didn’t realize Dom had gone for it, too, until they crashed into one another in the dark. Fiona’s face collided with his chest, squashing her nose and knocking her flashlight away.

“Sorry,” he murmured. She felt his warm hand grip her waist to steady her. “Are you all right?”

She peered up, just making out his rugged features, his square jaw and high cheekbones, in the soft, yellow light of his flashlight. His eyes were in shadow, but she could tell he was looking at her.

Her gaze automatically went to his mouth, and she licked her lips.

What would it be like to taste him? The thought flew at her from nowhere, but the absurdity of it didn’t keep her from leaning forward, drawn magnetically as if by some—

Something small and dark was inching across his throat. Fiona screamed and jerked out of his hold. “S-spider! Spider!”

Dom reached up, brushing the little creature away.

“Kill it, kill it, kill it!” Fiona cried, shrinking back. She cringed, her skin crawling.

“It’s gone.” Dom flicked on the light switch. The harsh bluish glare of the compact fluorescent blinded her momentarily. “Arachnophobia?”

“No. Well, yes. Let’s get out of here.” She pounded up the steps, careful not to touch anything.

When they reached the kitchen, Fiona kept shaking her hair.

“How about some tea?” Dom offered slowly, watching her nervous twitching with concern. “I’ve got this great jasmine green tea. It’s very good for soothing nerves.”

She gave her head one last shake before folding her hands and nodding resolutely.

“Sorry I screamed in your face,” she said, once they’d settled down with their little clay cups of tea. “I hate spiders.”

“I figured.”

“No, I mean, I really hate them.”

“That’s okay. Fear’s a good thing. It lets us know we’re alive.” He said softly, “Don’t tell anyone, but…I’m afraid of mice.”

“Mice?” She raised an eyebrow. “What’s so scary about them?”

“I just can’t stand all those squeaking noises, and their little pink tails…. And don’t get me started on rats!” He shuddered.

“I’d brave a vat of mice and rats over a tank of spiders any day.”

“Let’s make a deal then. I’ll get rid of all the spiders in your house if you get rid of any mice that show up in mine.” They laughed together.

Hearing about each other’s quirky phobias opened a door that Fiona forced herself to step through.

“I want to apologize,” she blurted, before pride could stop her, “for the way I’ve been treating you. Not just today, but from the moment we met. It’s just that…seeing Sean come home all roughed up…” She spread her hands helplessly. “I just blew up, and you were unfortunate enough to be in my line of fire. It wasn’t the best way to be welcomed into the neighborhood. Not at all.” Her apology loosened the knot in her gut.

Dom leaned forward. “Listen…it’s not my place to tell you how to raise your son. But I was bullied a lot as a kid, too, so I know what he’s going through.”

“You were bullied?” She had a hard time imagining anyone picking on him.

“You don’t have to be small or weak to be a victim. Just different.”

Sadly, Sean was all those things. “Try to understand. I don’t want Sean fighting. I don’t want him to think fists will solve all his problems. His father…” She hesitated. “My ex-husband wasn’t very tolerant or patient. He brought a lot of anger and violence into the house.”
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