Tragic
Page 22
With my free hand, I clutched my heart. Not only was my mom incredibly thoughtful, but I loved that she and Kaine talked. He talked to my dad too. And my brother. It wasn’t for long stretches, but they all knew him and on occasion, they’d chat if he answered my phone or we called them together.
“We should try your mom again,” I suggested. “You can tell her about the mini toolboxes you found.”
They were by far the cutest toys I’d ever seen. The boys wouldn’t be able to play with them for a while, but Kaine had bought them from the toy store anyway.
“Maybe I should have waited on those,” he muttered.
“Why?”
“No reason.”
There was a reason. Kaine was worried that something bad might happen to the babies. I’d caught him lost in thought many times over the last two months. I’d find him in the nursery, holding a white baby bootie or a soft blanket, staring blankly at a wall. He’d be completely lost in his own head, battling his fears.
Every time, I did the only thing I could think of.
I hugged him.
Not once had I promised him that everything would be okay. Life was unpredictable and harsh—something he understood better than anyone.
“Call her.” I knew talking to his mom would help ease some of his fears.
Suzanne Reynolds had become a solid presence in our lives. I’d never met the woman. I’d never seen her picture, so I had no idea what she looked like. But she’d become one of the most important people in my life.
Because she was so important to Kaine.
He called her every day, trying to make up for the years lost. He talked to her about the babies and his work. He’d introduced her to me on a phone call the day after he’d told me about Shannon and their daughter.
Kaine brought up his phone on the Tahoe’s system. He drove it so often, it was basically his vehicle. Whenever I had to go down to Logan’s house for work, he drove me and would then come and pick me up. He took me to dinner or to the grocery store. Thea teased me about being the only person in Lark Cove who had a chauffeur.
The sound of a dial tone filled the cab. We’d tried Suzanne after leaving the doctor’s office but hadn’t gotten ahold of her. I was afraid we’d miss her again when the fourth ring came, but at the last second, she answered.
“Hello,” she panted.
“Hey, Mom. You busy?”
“Hey! No, I was just out in the garage, putting the flower pots away before it snows.”
Kaine frowned. “I should have done that for you when I was there.”
“The mums were still blooming. And it’s not like I haven’t done it before.”
“Sorry.” Kaine tightened his grip on the steering wheel. I’d lost count of his apologies these last two months.
“Hi, Suzanne,” I chimed so she’d know I was there.
“Piper! What a nice surprise. So . . . did you guys find out?”
I smiled and looked at Kaine. He was smiling too as he delivered the good news. “Boys.”
“Boys!” Suzanne cheered. “Twin boys. Having two boys is so much fun.”
My head tilted to the side, replaying her words. Suzanne sounded like she knew what it was like to have two boys, but as far as I knew, Kaine was an only child.
I opened my mouth to ask, but Kaine cut me off.
“Sounds like you’re busy, Mom. I’ll let you go and call you later.”
“No, I’m—”
He hung up on her. His eyes stayed glued to the road as I gaped at him. With one push of a button, he’d thrown a wet blanket on the special day.
In so many ways, he’d been remarkable these past couple of months. He was opening up and talking more. He didn’t brood or sulk like the man I’d met this summer. When we hadn’t seen one another for a few hours, he’d seek me out.
He’d come into my office and say hello. If I was cooking dinner, he was sitting across from me at the island, listening to me talk about work. Each night, we’d sit on the couch together, watching television, and when I’d inevitably fall asleep an hour into a movie or show, he’d carry me to bed.
In so many ways we were a couple. We didn’t have sex. We didn’t kiss. But Kaine touched me often. He held my hand. He massaged my shoulders or my feet when I was tired. He was still the rugged mountain man I’d fallen for, but he was showing me his softer side, the one that was caring and attentive and present.
Things would have been perfect, except for the fact that he didn’t trust me. He was holding something back.
Which meant I was holding back something too. My heart.
How could I trust him with my heart when he didn’t trust me with his past? How could I love him completely when he kept his secrets locked away?
I’d let myself believe that my marriage had been blissful and happy, ignoring the problems piling up at Adam’s and my feet. I wasn’t doing that again.
I’d given Kaine time—two months, to be exact. I’d been patient, hoping that the rest of his confession would come. But after this long, I was giving up hope. There were times when Kaine would talk to his mother in hushed whispers from the guest room. Just like now, he never let me speak to her for long. Whatever he was hiding had everything to do with his family.
What had happened to them? Why had he disappeared to the mountain for three years?
I refused to beg for answers. Refused.
I’d asked once and he’d blown me off. He’d hung up on his mother to shut me out. Well, I was fairly adept at staying silent too.
I slipped my hand out of Kaine’s and crossed my arms over my chest. As I turned to the side window, he just sighed.
But did he speak up? No. He just drove us to my house.
When he parked, I didn’t wait for him to open my door like he usually did. I pushed it open myself and hurried inside. I went to the kitchen pantry and dug around my cracker stash for another snack.
My mouth was full, chomping angrily on Cheese Nips, when he came through the door. His arms were overloaded from our shopping haul.
“Seriously?” I rolled my eyes, swallowing my bite. “Take two trips.”
“I can get it all in one.”
“Whatever.” I shoved more crackers in my mouth.
Kaine would do just about anything to avoid multiple trips from the car. When we got groceries, he’d load up every single plastic bag on his forearms, then cradle a gallon of milk and a box of ginger ale against his chest. He risked my groceries’ well-being on a regular basis because he didn’t want to take two trips.
He took the bags down the hall to deliver them to my bedroom and the nursery. I continued to work out my frustration with the man by eating.
When Kaine returned to the kitchen, an apology was written on his face. “She was busy.”
I glared at him, telling him exactly what I thought about his bullshit excuse. “You have to give me something, Kaine.”
“I’m trying.” He braced his hands on the counter. “Things are complicated with my family.”
“And things were complicated with me, but I told you everything. I opened up to you about all of that stuff with Adam.”
He cringed at my ex-husband’s name but didn’t say anything.
“Fine.” I went back to the pantry in search of more food.
The space was big enough I could stand inside the door. I was scanning the cabinets for something sweet when two strong arms wrapped around my shoulders and the heat from Kaine’s hard chest pressed against my back.
“Ask me something,” he said softly.
“No.”
“Please.”
I sighed. “Why didn’t you talk to your mom for three years?”
“Ask me something else,” he murmured into my hair.
Disappointment settled on my shoulders, but he didn’t let me go. So I asked another one of my unanswered questions. “Where is your dad? You never talk about him.”
“He and Mom got divorced when I was just a kid. He was a good dad when he live
d in Bozeman, but then he moved. He worked for a company that did some development overseas. He was living and traveling through Asia a lot but did his best to call and check in. It was just too expensive for him to come home and visit much. When I was thirteen, he got pancreatic cancer. He died eight months later.”
“I’m sorry.” My heart broke for him, and I wished I hadn’t asked.
“It was a long time ago.” He let me go, and I followed him out of the pantry.
All of the skeletons in Kaine’s closet caused him pain. Did he have any pleasant memories from his past? Because I couldn’t think of a single happy story he’d told me from his youth.
“I’m sorry.”
“It’s okay.” He shrugged. “If I didn’t want to talk about it, I wouldn’t have told you.”
No kidding. I’d figured that out the hard way. When Kaine wanted to avoid a topic, he did so wholeheartedly.
“So . . . dinner?” I asked.
He held out his hand. “Take a walk with me first.”
I placed my palm in his and let him guide me to the door. I hadn’t bothered to take off my coat or my shoes when I’d come inside, so we went right out into the cold. I gripped his hand harder as we started down the path between our houses. My heels weren’t ideal for traipsing in the forest.
Kaine grumbled, letting go of my hand so he could take my arm. “You and your damn heels.”
“I like to look cute for the doctor.”
“You’re always beautiful, no matter what you wear. I don’t know why we need to risk breaking your neck with those extra three inches.”
I leaned into his side. “Soon I won’t be able to even see my feet. You can pick out my shoes for me.”
“Thank fuck.”
I giggled, letting my bad mood slip away as we walked. It was hard to stay mad at him when he called me beautiful and fussed over me.
“Should we check on progress?” I asked, pointing to the cabin.
He nodded and escorted me up the porch steps. Since his return from Bozeman, he’d finished staining the chair he’d built to replace the one he’d murdered by chainsaw. It was now situated by the other, both facing the trees.
He opened the door and we were assaulted by the smell of fresh paint as we stepped inside.
“Looks like they got done early today.” Kaine let me go and went to the laundry room while I inspected the living room.
The couch had been trashed because of the fire, along with one of his end tables. Most of his other belongings had been saved, including his clothes, which had been safe in the closet along with the box of his daughter’s things. Though I’d had to wash all his pants and shirts about five times to work out the smell of smoke.
“Looks good.” Kaine stepped up behind me, inspecting the new walls and flooring.
The crew had completely rebuilt the exterior and interior walls on this side of his house. It would probably always be obvious where the new logs had been placed from the outside because their color was brighter than the original ones. But inside, you couldn’t tell what was new.
“Looks like they’re almost done.” I frowned, hating the idea of him moving back here. I’d gotten used to him in my house. “Not long now and I guess . . . you’ll be home.”
“Yeah.” Kaine scowled.
His angry look gave me butterflies. Did he not want to come home? Because that would be awesome.
“I’m going to be sad when you move back here.” I was fishing now. I might not beg for him to share information from his past, but I wasn’t above begging to keep his incredible woodsy scent in my home.
“Me too.” He stepped closer and cupped my jaw in his hands. “I like being at your place.”
“What are we doing?” I whispered.
“Going backward.”
My eyebrows came together, but before I could ask what he meant, Kaine leaned in and kissed my forehead. “Let’s get you out of here. It smells. Got something to show you in the shop.”
I savored the smell of fresh paint, taking every breath a bit deeper, but he’d deemed it unhealthy. He’d kicked me out of the house the day he’d painted the nursery, delivering me to Logan and Thea’s house for the day.
Kaine took my arm and led me outside, then down the slope to the shop, letting us in through the side door. “I’ve been working on these for a couple of weeks.”
I reveled in the smell of sawdust as he flipped on the lights. “Working on what?”
“You’ll see. I still need to sand them and get them stained, so use your imagination for what they’ll look like when they’re done.”
“I can do that.” I walked behind him to a canvas tarp at the back of the shop.
He gripped the cloth and paused with a long breath. Then he met my eyes before whipping the tarp clear.
My hands flew to my mouth, my eyes instantly filling with tears.
He’d made bassinets for our babies.
Each cradle was rounded, like an oval nest. They reminded me of nutshells, but with slots. They sat on pedestal bases that allowed the top to rock and sway.
“Kaine,” I whispered, trying to blink the tears away, but they were too overwhelming.
His face softened as he came over and pulled me into his arms.
“Damn hormones.” I sniffled into his sweater. I’d cried more in the last few months than I had in the last few years, including all the nights I’d cried during my divorce.
Kaine rubbed my spine gently until I got the tears under control. Then I stepped out of his arms and gingerly touched each of the bassinets.
“They’re perfect.”
“I was going to do a darker wood to match the changing tables you ordered online.”
“That sounds great.” I nodded. “Now I know why you told me to wait on ordering the cribs.”
He chuckled. “I wanted to have them completely finished before I showed you, but I could tell you were getting antsy. I didn’t want you ordering cribs tomorrow when I wasn’t looking.”
I smiled. “You know me too well. How did you come up with this design?”
I’d looked at probably a hundred different crib and bassinet designs over the last couple of months, and nothing had this much character.
“I made one of these when Shannon was pregnant.”
My god, this man was strong. How hard had it been for him to make these for our babies? How many painful memories had he relived just to give our boys something special?
My love for him doubled in that moment. Maybe even tripled. And I realized that I had to cut Kaine some slack.
He was still dealing with the grief of his baby’s loss. He was still coming to terms with us becoming parents. So what if I didn’t understand the complexities of his family dynamic? I’d learn about it in time. When he was ready.
Walking to his side, I slid my arms around his waist. His arm automatically snaked around my shoulders.
Our babies will be okay.
I didn’t say the words, but I felt them. I just hoped he could feel them too.
We stood there for a while, holding one another until the rumbling of my stomach was so loud we both laughed.
“My boys are hungry,” he declared. “Let’s get some dinner.”
As we walked back to my house, I felt the craving for a cheeseburger. So instead of eating leftovers like we’d planned, Kaine took me down the mountain to Bob’s Diner. After a huge meal that would last me at least two hours, we came back home.
I changed into my pajamas, then settled into the couch next to Kaine, letting my feet go into his lap. He worked his hands on them both, digging his thumbs into the arches.
“Magic hands,” I murmured.
Magic hands. Magic sperm. Magic man.
When Kaine touched me, I wasn’t able to think about much else. My worries melted away with the tension in my muscles, and I drifted off to sleep not twenty minutes into the movie he picked.
Hours later, my eyes fluttered open as he carried me to bed, but they didn’t stay tha
t way for long. He set me down on the bed, tucking me under the heavy blankets. Kaine’s fingers brushed away a lock of hair from my forehead right before his lips took its place.
“Love you,” I murmured into the pillow.
I was asleep by the time Kaine had backed out of the room.
Asleep and dreaming that he said it back.
Two weeks was all it took for my blissful state to disappear. My pregnancy mood swings were becoming a real bitch.
So was I.
At the moment, frustration was my disposition of choice. Sitting next to Kaine on the couch, the scowl on my face felt permanent.
Work had been long and hard over the last week. The foundation board had made the decision to completely revamp the process in which proposals were reviewed and approved. I’d been lobbying to streamline the process for years and they’d finally agreed.
I’d been ecstatic when Logan had shared the news. That excitement had died when he’d told me about the ambitious timeline. The change, which would have been smooth and flawless over six months, was crammed into three so the bulk of the expense would be incurred before the end of the year.
Logan and I were leading the charge on the project, but it meant the two of us had been putting in long hours. I knew we’d get it done. We’d push fast and hard and get our win. But I’d be exhausted by the time we hit December.
My only saving grace was Willa. As the director of a summer camp, her winters were quiet months, and she’d begun working for Logan part-time a few years ago. She’d stepped up and taken a huge workload off my shoulders so I could focus on our project.
The results of this project would be amazing. It was going to save us all time and make the most deserving charities float to the top of the stack. It would be my career’s crowning jewel.
But it meant I’d be stressed and snappy and grumpy for a while.
Kaine drew the short straw as my neighbor, my friend, and the father of my children. He was bearing the brunt of my frustration.
Except his presence only made the frustration worse.
His house was complete, and he could move home at any time, but he hadn’t. Weeks ago, that would have sent me over the moon, but instead, it frustrated me to no end.