Funny how she hadn’t ever thought to compare the two, mainly because Scott seemed so different these days. But Riley and Scott were similar in many ways. With Diana and Scott being older, she hadn’t drawn the tight comparisons but she now thought back to the wild fires eight years ago and how much Scott had been chomping at the bit to go. He loved an adrenaline rush more than anyone she’d ever known until she met Riley.
“It’s different. Sure, it can be dangerous but everyone loves firefighters. No one loves a cop until they need one.”
Diana shook her head. “Good point but danger is danger.”
“Okay, so how did you do it?”
“By realizing I loved every side of him, even the adrenaline junkie side. The rest of it takes care of itself. Don’t worry be happy and all that.”
“I don’t think I can do that. I love Riley too much.”
Diana laughed. “Is that what you think? You think I only love Scott a little bit?”
“Okay, I get it. You’re braver than I am. Congrats. Remind me to get you a medal.”
“Please. Look, the truth is Riley will eventually calm down like Scott did. A wife and kids have a way of doing that to a man. Too much to lose. Know that I mean?” She smiled.
“It might take some time, but I could change him!” Her heart lifted at the thought. “Me and our unborn children.”
“No, no.” Diana sighed and shook her head. “This is all coming out wrong. I blame the baby hormones. Look, the truth is I love the side of Scott that won’t back down. I consider myself a strong and independent woman. I’m a feminist. But damn I love his tough, gritty Alpha side. He takes charge. He takes care of me and the girls. I know without a doubt he’d walk through hell for any one of us. He’s protective. He’s strong. What is there not to love about that?”
A few hours later, Sophia was the last to leave, helping Eileen in the kitchen long after all her sons and grandchildren had all said goodnight.
“Don’t you need to get home?” Eileen said, loading a water glass into the top rack of the dishwasher.
Sophia didn’t bother pointing out the obvious. She no longer had someone to rush home to, no one with whom she could fall into bed. Tonight, she’d even brought Hershee along to play with the nieces and nephews and she was now resting not far from Sophia on the throw rug near the sliding glass door.
“No hurry.” She rinsed off another plate and handed it to Eileen.
“I appreciate the help. It’s like feeding an army when the boys come over.”
Army. Would that word ever make her stop thinking of Nikki and David? She’d never told Eileen about them, thinking that she couldn’t possibly understand. It didn’t even make sense to Sophia at times why she’d aligned herself so closely with Nikki, taking comfort in the fact they were so much alike. That same similarity had come back to haunt Sophia, in a way that didn’t make any real sense but was nevertheless forever tied to her memories.
“Remember when I wouldn’t tell you about everything that happened after I left Riley?”
“Sure, honey, but some things are hard to talk about. I understood.”
Sophia dried her hands on the kitchen towel. “I want to talk about it now.”
Eileen stopped loading to stare. “Are you sure?”
A flood of words fell out of Sophia. Nikki’s friendship on Riley’s deployments. David’s death and the unexpected shock of it all. Watching strong Nikki, who reminded Sophia so much of herself, fall apart.
“I don’t know why we were surprised. We shouldn’t have been. Neither one of us. Maybe we should have expected it.”
“Absolutely not. You girls did it right. Thinking positive and expecting the best out of a situation. Nothing will change when you worry. But that must have been so hard for you. Watching your good friend go through such a heavy loss.”
Sophia kept Nikki’s indiscretion out of the whole explanation. No point to that anyway, since Sophia had been too naïve to know it at the time. “I kept picturing that Riley was next. I couldn’t stop praying enough or lighting enough candles.”
“I’m sure none of it did any harm.”
“Maybe if I’d done it right, but it didn’t seem to bring me any comfort like it did for other people. I never let it go. And then Riley did come home safely and I was so happy. Ecstatic. It was like we’d missed it, missed the lightning strike somehow. But he wanted to go back. I couldn’t take it anymore.”
“That’s understandable.”
“Do you think so? Maybe I should have stuck it out with him.” Regret. Would she ever learn to live with it?
“I think you were right to come home. It’s a difficult life for most women, much less a young woman out on her own for the first time.”
Sophia nodded. Riley had figured that out before she did. He’d been right. She hadn’t been strong or resilient enough to be the military wife he needed. “I wish he’d at least tried to come after me. But I’m sure that’s just the Italian romantic in me.”
Eileen made a sound between a choke and a gurgle.
“Are you okay?” Sophia asked, slapping her back.
Eileen coughed again. “I should sit down.”
“Sure.” Sophia helped Eileen to the table, then filled a glass with water. “Here you go.”
Eileen swallowed a gulp.
“I don’t think you’re supposed to swallow that fast when you’ve just choked,” Sophia said, and then took a good long study of Eileen’s red face. “What’s going on?”
“I thought maybe I’d get away with never having to tell you this. Sit down, dear.” Eileen pointed to the chair next to hers.
The kitchen chair scraped across the wood floor as Sophia pulled it out and sat down with a thud. “You’re scaring me.”
“I’m scaring myself. You have nothing to worry about.” Eileen took a deep breath. “But I think it would help you to know this right now. It seems like you’re at a crossroads with Riley and—”
“Spit it out!”
“Okay, okay. Well, dear, he did come back. It was three years ago and the restaurant was doing so well. You were content. You’d recently hired Angie as your full time chef and Lizzie had been working for you for six months. You three were like the Three Musketeers and to anyone else from the outside looking in, you looked quite happy. And remember, I thought you were divorced!”
“I know.”
“I was meeting your father for dinner that night and running a little late. I ran into Riley standing outside the restaurant door, looking like a man who’d lost his best friend. I followed his gaze. You and Lizzie were laughing at the table with your father, looking like you didn’t have a care in the world. He said he was on a short leave visiting Lucy. Said he’d only dropped by to see how you were doing. Make sure you were okay. I should have known then that it didn’t sound like any divorced couple I’ve ever known. Why should he care? I swear, if I had been lying in the street bleeding, my ex-husband would have stepped over me. Anyway, he made me promise not to tell you. But I wouldn’t do it. Until he promised me that if he still cared this much about how you were doing when he got out, he’d look you up.”
Sophia didn’t speak as she absorbed it all. Three years ago she’d been online dating Montana Guy and her family rightfully believed she’d moved on. Why not? She’d made it sound like she and Montana Guy would meet up any day. Riley had still cared about her, even years after she’d left him. Maybe he hadn’t chosen her over the Marines, but he also hadn’t re-enlisted at the end of his contract. It may have taken him some time, but maybe he had chosen her in the end.
And now, she was forcing him to make a choice again.
“I was right not to tell you, wasn’t I? Please tell me I was.”
Poor Eileen. Sophia had been so unfair to her. So unloving at times. “If anything, you made him consider coming back to me.”
“He would have done that on his own. I’ve never seen such a look of longing and love on any man’s face. Except your father’s. And of
course, Billy with Brooke and Wallace with Gen and Scott with Diana. Well, I digress.”
Sophia could barely listen any longer. Instead, all she could think of was how badly she’d screwed it up. Other than her family, Riley was the only real thing she’d ever had in her life. Yes, sometimes he was a little too much reality all at once. He made her breathless both in the good way and the bad way, too. But she’d never lived as large as when she’d been with Riley. Never held her heart in her hands, taken big risks and watched them work out.
And wasn’t that what she’d wanted her whole life? To live a rich life full of love and…reality. It couldn’t be escaped, good or bad, because it came right along with the risk of living out loud.
In a way she’d been moving towards Riley her whole life. Waiting and longing to trust someone enough to love them completely. And he’d made loving him so easy.
“I screwed everything up. He must think I don’t love him enough.”
“Then you better show him that you do.”
“Right.”
No more sitting on the sidelines watching life pass her by. She had to make this up to Riley somehow. Make him see she loved him and she’d take him any way he came. But there was one more thing she had to do, as long as she was straightening out of her life. Might as well start with the woman sitting right in front of her. She’d been thinking about this since the night Riley was in the hospital.
She took a deep breath and went for it.
“I wish I’d let you in sooner. I appreciate the way you’ve made my father so happy. You might be the best thing that ever happened to him. And I do know you’re the best thing that ever happened to me. For a long time I needed a mother, and it took me a while to realize that I was lucky enough to have two. One in heaven and one right here on earth.”
“Oh, honey. You’re so precious to me. I never had a daughter.” Eileen grabbed Sophia in a hug that practically swallowed her whole.
These constricting hugs used to bother her a long time ago when it felt like Eileen was a blubbering mess of a stepmother. She used to complain about it to Scott, Gen, Diana, and to anyone who would listen. She’d kept her distance from Eileen out of a sense of misguided loyalty to Mama, who truth be told would probably also love Eileen. It was hard not to.
They sat at the kitchen table, Eileen crying and Sophia patting her back. She looked up when she heard soft footsteps, to see Daddy-o walk into the kitchen and stop short as he caught the scene before him. He then literally backed out of the room one exaggerated step at a time.
Sophia giggled.
“What’s so funny?” Eileen sniffled.
“My father. But you already know that.”
24
Riley glanced at the wall clock hanging over the city hall conference room and tried to disengage the pick from his brain. How long had he been sitting in this blasted chair, waiting for the five minutes it would take to give the boys the service award? Too long. The Mayor had called the meeting to order while Riley stretched his legs as far as they’d go under the table. Not far enough, as it turned out. Some of the council members had discussed plans for a new bike park while his left leg jiggled. A council member was now asking a question about the new parking regulations they’d discuss later.
Not him. He’d sneak out of here right after the ceremony. Mack was waiting for him at the gym. The gym would be closed by the time Riley got there but Mack was going to let him in anyway seeing as Riley had promised not to over-do anything after the doctor had cleared him. He needed to do something to get rid of the tension that had been building since he’d last touched Sophia. He figured any day now she’d be serving him with the divorce papers she’d already signed and this time he saw no way out. If that was what she wanted, that was what she would get. At least he’d tried to work out his marriage.
He cleared his throat as it was announced there would be more on the proposed traffic light from Mr. Schwanbeck. The fun never stopped around here. Good thing he was chief in a small town because the past month had shown him he wasn’t exactly cut out for life behind a desk. At least here he could look forward to his at-risk group as well as changing the brakes from time to time, fixing the lock on their temporary jail cell and the occasional patrol shift to round out the boredom.
Riley stood up when it was finally his turn and called up the boys, who were there with their parents.
This would be a good thing, he thought as he called up Eric. The sixteen-year-old kid was dyslexic and ADD. A teacher’s worst nightmare, he’d been told again and again. And yet a good kid who wasn’t sure what he’d do with his life. Now, according to his parents, he was interested in law enforcement. Riley was determined that he’d be rewarded publically for once, since the kid regularly missed out on any kind of academic recognition.
Sure enough, Eric stuck his chest out when Riley pinned the Community Hero medal on his shirt lapel. For once the kid was dressed in a pressed button-up and wearing a pair of jeans that didn’t fall below his ass line.
“Thanks for saving my life.”
“You’re welcome, dude. I mean chief.”
He shook hands with each boy. Posed with the newspaper’s photographer. Seconds now and he’d be out of here and on his way for some much needed physical exertion. But there were even more photos with the kid’s parents. Applause from everyone, eventually dying down. Finally time to go. Riley made his way to the side of the room. In five minutes he’d move to the back of the room and sneak out. No one would miss him.
Then he saw Sophia make her way to the mike and he froze. There was no new business that had mentioned her restaurant. What the hell was she doing here? And while his heart seemed headed for a cardiac event, he forced himself to remember that he still had his dignity. Chief of police and not some horny man-child Marine on leave. It didn’t help that she wore the same white dress she had the first time they’d met, and he wondered if she could have done it on purpose. If she even remembered. It wasn’t something he’d ever be likely to forget since he still recalled every detail of that night. The way her soft olive skin and dark hair had contrasted against the white of the dress, the sweet flowery scent that had lingered on him for days, her shy and skittish ways. The taste of her.
“And now for some new business I accidentally neglected to put on the roster. Sorry about that,” Ophelia said, and funny thing she didn’t look sorry at all. And accidentally? Not Madam Mayor.
There was an audible groan from the audience. Mr. Schwanbeck stood up. “This is highly irregular. I want all my time for the traffic light presentation. The power point alone takes thirty minutes and then I’ve got the Venn diagrams and my Excel spreadsheet.”
More groaning, this time from some of the council members.
“Sit down, Mark. You’ll get all your time,” Ophelia said. “Now Sophia Abella, dear, what is your business?”
“Forgive me, Madam Mayor. I know this isn’t normal business but I have something very important to say and I want as many people to hear it as possible.” She cleared her throat and a notable silence came over the room.
Riley returned to the front of the room so he might better use his psychic abilities to figure out what the hell was going on.
“Is this restaurant business?” Mr. Schwanbeck stood up again. “Because I don’t think it’s fair she should be able to jump to the front of the line.”
“It’s not!” Sophia yelled at him. “Now shut up and let me talk.”
“Go ahead, Sophia.” The Mayor waved her on. “We have a lot on the agenda for tonight.”
“I’m sorry. I’m so nervous.” She laughed into the mike, was rewarded with squeaky feedback and winced. She glanced at Riley, then at the crowd. “First of all, I want to clear up something. I’m not divorced, as some people think. I’ve been married now for eight years and I was a young military wife. Not a good one, as it turns out.”
Mr. Schwanbeck stood up again. “Sorry Mayor, but this is obviously not city council business!”
> “Okay, that’s it.” Riley made a move towards Schwanbeck, who sat down in a hurry. “Let her finish.”
Sophia cleared her throat. “Thanks for your patience, everyone. You all know I’m a simple girl who loves Italian food and romance. I believe in love and not only on a day like Valentine’s Day, but every day of the year. But I fell in love with a Marine, which might not sound like the best mix.”
Laughter from the audience. Not from Riley.
“Turns out you can’t help who you love and I love Riley Jacobs, your chief of police. Thank you, boys, for saving his life. Just personally, from me.”
“You’re welcome, dude.” Eric stood up.
Sophia smiled and waved back to Eric, and Riley’s heart cracked open. But love wasn’t exactly their problem, nor ever had been. Unfortunately, he’d known for a while that he’d been quite possibly the worst person for Sophia to love, a girl who’d already suffered the loss of a parent early on.
And still he’d never managed to stay away from her.
“But the last thing a Marine needs is to worry about the people he’s leaving behind at home. He has to worry about staying alive and his fellow Marines staying alive. They need their wives and family to be strong for them. I wasn’t all that strong. Okay, I was a hot mess. There’s a lot of worry in being the wife of an enlisted man. A lot of sacrifice and distance. But loving him? That’s the easy part.”
There was a collective sigh from the audience as Riley moved towards Sophia.
She gazed at him, the fear and worry gone from her beautiful brown eyes. “And Riley, if it’s okay with you, if you’ll forgive me for being stupid, I’d like to keep on loving you the way I promised I would eight years ago. In sickness and in health. For better or for worse. And even if you insist on being a cop.”
More laughter from the audience.
“It’s okay with me.” He swooped her up in his arms.
The audience and the city council applauded. He set her down and covered the mike with his hand. It made a piercing sound that had everyone covering their ears and wincing.
Starlight Hill: Complete collection 1-8 Page 114