The Friendship Pact. Tara Quinn Taylor

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had assumed she and Kora were partners, wanting to have a baby together. Kora seemed to take less offense at that misunderstanding than at Bailey’s wanting to go this alone.

      More frustrated than she’d ever been with her friend, Bailey was at a loss as to what to say here. How to help Koralynn understand.

      “Did you even listen to her, Bail?” Kora was asking in that same tone of voice. “She spent half an hour discussing the hardships of being a single mother. Which is why so few women willingly choose that course!”

      Whoa, it was worse than she’d figured. Kora’s tone was rising. As close to yelling as Koralynn ever got.

      “You aren’t one of those women, Bail. You have options. And time. Lots of it. We’re just twenty-eight!”

      “You’ve been trying for a year,” she said, feeling petulant.

      Disappointed.

      And scared to death.

      She was a lawyer. Had aced debate class. She could come up with motivation and justification, with winning arguments, for practically every situation.

      In the car that day, all she could muster was, “I have to do this, Kor.” Rather than deterring her, the hour with the counselor, during which she’d heard exactly what Koralynn had heard—mostly the negatives—had only and oddly made her conviction stronger.

      “I don’t think I have a choice,” she said. “Not if I’m ever going to be happy.” Some things were just clear without explanation. How could Kora not see that?

      “If you do this, you’ll never know the happiness you might have missed out on.”

      Bailey gripped the steering wheel, turning toward the restaurant they’d decided on for lunch, although she was no longer hungry.

      She also didn’t want to leave Koralynn like this. They’d had their spats. Their arguments. But they didn’t ever stay mad at each other.

      “I’m not you, Kor,” she said, not for the first time in their lives. “I’m not like you.”

      Koralynn turned toward her then, a beautiful blonde men ogled wherever she went—a woman who was not only smart, but wise, too. Bailey could feel the warmth of her gaze.

      “I know that, Bail, and if I thought for one second that this really was the choice that would give you everything you want, I’d be fighting to make it happen.”

      Bailey felt the truth in her words. But...

      “You have blind spots, too, you know.” She didn’t think before she spoke. Didn’t even realize what she was saying until she heard herself. “What if, this time, what you want for me really is what you want for me and not what’s best for my life?” Once the words started, Bailey couldn’t stop them. They’d been bottled up for so long; she’d refused to give them thought, let alone voice. But she wasn’t just fighting for herself now. his was about her child. “Face it, Kor, with you and Danny so tight, most of the things you’re involved in are couples things. We have Thursday-night fitness class. And anytime Danny’s on a business trip or working late, we get together. But otherwise, our lives don’t gel so much anymore. I miss you like hell and I know you miss me. I need more of you in my life and I know you need more of me, too.”

      Her throat got dry, and she saw that Kora’s eyes filled with tears. “I do need more of you, Bail. So many times I look up to share something with you and you aren’t there. Danny’s everything I could possibly want him to be, and I am so in love with him, but he’s a guy, you know? He’ll never get me in just the way you do....”

      The words were a huge comfort to Bailey, who’d been feeling so lonely during the past months—since she’d broken up with Jake. But Kora’s words also tied Bailey’s stomach in knots.

      “What you need is for me to be half of a couple, too, so that we can do things together like we used to....”

      Back when Kora and Danny could pair Bailey up with Jake. Or anyone else who was available for a night out. Back when another male body was all it took to complete the foursome.

      Kora pulled back. “You think I’m saying all of this because I’m looking out for myself?” The shock in her voice reverberated throughout the car. And hurt like hell.

      “Not purposely or knowingly, no.” Bailey had to stick to her plan. But she couldn’t lie to Kora.

      “But you think it?” Koralynn leaned back against the door of the car.

      “Can you tell me, from your heart of hearts, that there’s no possibility that I’m right?”

      A glib answer, a safe or easy answer, couldn’t come from Kora’s heart of hearts. Bailey held her breath.

      “No, I guess I can’t.” Kora’s shoulders slumped as her face fell.

      And Bailey felt a new sense of hope.

      * * *

      I had plans to spend the summer relaxing enough so my body could do its job. Getting pregnant in other words. I wanted a baby so desperately.

      I’d printed out calendars, brightly colored and decorated with little baby pictures, to log my daily temperatures.

      I’d been looking at nursery decorating folders on Pinterest. I wasn’t sharing any of that process with Bailey. I was afraid to. What if my passion to have a baby pushed her further into her life of isolation?

      But I missed her like crazy. She’d been right about that. I needed her. The same way she needed me.

      I needed her no matter how she lived her life. I just wanted for her what I’d always known she yearned for—a family of her own. A home of her own. One that was as filled with love and acceptance and assistance as mine had been.

      Bailey’s whole life had been lived one step removed. She always held a bit of herself back; that way, if there was failure or pain, it wouldn’t destroy all of her. Other than with me, I don’t think she’d ever been completely committed to another person. I’d felt her pain since the time we were in grade school. I’d spent my entire life intent on helping her get what she’d always wanted. What she’d needed and deserved. And now, when she was finally at the point where she could get it for herself, she was letting fear stop her.

      “Think about it this way,” I told her on the phone late one night in June. Jake had been over for dinner and was still pining for Bailey. But he’d met someone. Bailey could be letting her last chance with him slip by. “A child is only a temporary fixture in your home. What about the rest of your life?”

      “I’ve been living alone for a long time, Kor. I’m really okay with it.”

      “Being okay with it and being happy are two different things.”

      “I’m happy.”

      “You’re settling.”

      “I’m not you, Kor.”

      “Of course not. And I don’t want what I want to get in the way. But I know you, Bail. And I know you’re cutting off your nose to spite your

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