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Maid for Love (A Romantic Comedy)

Page 7

by Caroline Mickelson


  Her mother held up a hand. "Darling, if you'd just answered your cell phone, none of this would have happened."

  Zoe cursed her bad judgment. "You mean that if I'd answered any one of those calls, you wouldn't be here?"

  Her mother laughed. "No, of course not. I just meant that you wouldn't have been so surprised, that's all. I left Miami before dawn."

  Zoe narrowed her eyes. "So you were already on your way up here when we spoke earlier? And you didn't say anything?"

  Marlene shrugged. "I daresay I'd have worked it into the conversation if you hadn't been in such an awful hurry to get rid of me." She dropped her gaze to the bottle of wine on the table. "Would I be imposing too terribly if I asked for a drop of Chardonnay?"

  Michael looked between them both. "Of course, Marlene. I'm sorry, I should have offered. Have a seat and I'll get another glass."

  Once he disappeared into the kitchen Zoe made a beeline for her parent. "Mother, I swear I could just...I could just...I could just...-"

  Her mother sank into a cushioned chair. "Let me know when you figure out what you want to do to me. Heaven knows I deserve the punishment for dropping everything to rush up here to save you."

  “From Michael?”

  “No, darling, from yourself.”

  Zoe slid into the chair across from her. "Why are you doing this?" She kept her voice low. "You know I wanted to spend this evening with Michael before-"

  "Just stop it, Zoe." Her mother's face was suddenly grave. "If I didn't love you so very much I'd think you deserved to be as miserable as you are trying to make yourself. I haven't yet had the chance to tell you what your Aunt Matilda told me about your gift. You need to hear me out."

  Michael's return with a wine glass stopped Zoe from giving her mother an earful. Instead she sat back and struggled to compose herself, which was no easy task. She'd never been so livid with anyone before in her life. Ever. But what could she do short of driving her mother back to the airport and putting her on the next Cape Air flight back to Boston?

  She only half listened as Michael and her mother made small talk. How had she tracked them down? And what on earth did her Aunt Matilda have to say that couldn't wait?

  An even more pressing question weighed on her mind. How was she going to get rid of her mother?

  ***

  Michael wasn't surprised when Zoe insisted on driving Marlene to the restaurant in her own car. Judging by her reaction, she'd been caught totally off guard by her mother's arrival. Just why Marlene had turned up out of nowhere, he didn't have time to ask when she'd called to announce her plans but it served his purpose admirably. With Zoe's mother there when he proposed, it would be a true family affair.

  "You look pretty calm for a guy's who about to shackle himself to someone for a really long time."

  Michael shot a sideways look at his nephew. "I should have let your sister ride shotgun." "Just kidding." Josh grinned. "I'm actually kind of nervous for you."

  Michael followed the GPS provided directions and turned right. "Why?"

  "What if Zoe says no?"

  "I hadn't thought of that," Michael confessed. He probably should have given how spooked Zoe had been when he'd brought up marriage last year. She'd been unsettled enough at the idea of matrimony that she'd broken up with him. But a lot had changed in a year's time and he knew that Zoe loved him. Marriage seemed the inevitable next step.

  "Uncle M? Hello?" Kathryn called from the back seat. "Are you still with us?"

  Michael met her gaze in the rear view mirror. He smiled reassuringly. "I was just thinking. Don't tell me you're worried too?"

  She shook her head. "Not really. I think Zoe will say yes. I hope she does. I really like her. We both do." She reached forward and poked her brother's shoulder to get his attention. "Did Zoe act suspicious when you guys were getting ice cream?"

  "Nope." Josh's smile was smug. "She didn't have a clue that you two were looking for a ring. I was asking her for fashion advice and had her totally distracted."

  "Yeah, cause you're such a fashion nightmare," Kathryn teased him.

  Michael laughed. "Sorry but you set yourself up for that one."

  Josh rolled his eyes. "Whatever."

  Michael pulled into the restaurant parking lot. He switched off the engine. "Wish me luck."

  Kathryn leaned forward and patted his shoulder. "You don't need luck, you've got love on your side."

  Josh's smile was reassuring. "You've got this, Uncle Michael. It's totally going to work."

  ***

  "I'm telling you, Zoe, it's not going to work. Not the way you think it will."

  Zoe still couldn't believe her mother had come all the way up to Nantucket. But here she was, sitting in the passenger seat, her bracelets making a tinkling sound and her jasmine perfume overwhelming Zoe's senses. All of this was vintage Marlene, except for the doom and gloom predictions that she'd been issuing non-stop since they got in the car.

  "Are you not hearing me?" A sigh of epic proportions conveyed the extent of Marlene's frustration. "It's not like you to be so closed off to reason, Zoe. This is not how I raised you."

  This comment Zoe couldn't leave unchallenged. "Untrue, mother. If you've said it once, you've said a trillion times that a woman should know her own mind. Not only that, I've heard you decry women who won't live and love with passion. So it's highly hypocritical for you to begrudge me my time with Michael."

  "Is that what you think I'm doing here? How ridiculous." Her mother spent the next few moments looking out the window at the passing scenery without saying a word.

  Which only meant she was searching her arsenal of words for the most pointed ones. The battle wasn't over. Sure she knew what was coming, Zoe began to count backwards from five. Four, three, two, one....

  "I want nothing more than for you to be happy," her mother began, right on cue. "Which is why I want to stop you from throwing away your chance at happiness with Michael. He's a good man."

  "Ah, we can agree on that, at least."

  "Don't be smart with me, young lady. You may be too old for me to ground but I am still your mother. And I care desperately what happens to you."

  Her mother's last few words took the fight right out of Zoe. "I know, mother. And I realize that I sound ungrateful to you," she took one hand off the steering wheel and held it up to forestall her mother from launching into a long speech. "But I have to do what I have to do. It's my decision how I handle my future, not yours."

  "But your Aunt Matilda, who I might remind you has a gift not unlike yours, told me that you aren't going to be able to erase Michael's memory. You're up against something too powerful. I think she's right. It didn't work before and it's not going to work when you try it again."

  Zoe pulled into the parking lot with more than a little relief. This was not a conversation she wanted to continue. She put the car in park and shifted in her seat so she could face her mother. "Here's what's going to happen. We are going to go in there and have a lovely evening. Good food, good conversation, great company, nothing more. That's it. One lovely evening. So please don't say or do anything to jeopardize what is simply a nice family dinner. That's all I ask. Can you promise me that much?"

  In answer, Marlene got out of the car, slammed the passenger door shut, and headed into the restaurant without a backwards glance at her daughter.

  CHAPTER NINE

  Zoe could not have been more on edge during dinner if they'd all been dining on a rickety bridge overlooking shark infested waters. Not that the food wasn't delicious, it was. Despite the influence of surf on the menu, the entire group opted for turf and enjoyed a round of top sirloin steaks. The restaurant's retro country club ambiance was charming and the wait staff was top-notch. Best of all was how much Josh, Kathryn, and Marlene, appeared to be enjoying each others company. Michael was a charming and gracious host. All of this, Zoe realized, should have made the evening perfect.

  So why then did she feel perfectly miserable?

  T
he trip to Nantucket hadn't turned out at all like she'd planned. It had seemed so simple in theory. But now she felt consumed with guilt for thinking only of herself. She'd been selfish enough to set this all up because she'd wanted one more weekend with Michael. But it wasn't enough because it wasn't forever.

  She looked up from the steak she'd been pushing around her plate and met Michael's gaze across the table.

  "Are you okay, sweetheart?" His voice was rich and warm, full of concern.

  All conversation at the table ceased as everyone looked at her.

  "Is something wrong, Zoe?" Kathryn's expression was just as concerned as her uncle's.

  "You've been quiet," Josh added.

  Marlene pushed back her chair and got to her feet. "There's nothing wrong with Zoe that a moment outside with her mother won't fix." She came around to Zoe's chair and slid a hand under her daughter’s elbow. "Come along, darling."

  Obediently, Zoe got to her feet and followed her mother out onto the restaurant's back deck. A handful of families occupied the tables but they barely glanced over as Zoe and Marlene headed to a quiet corner.

  Her mother spoke first. "Darling, why on earth are you acting like you're at a wake?"

  The description struck Zoe as quite apt. She felt as if she was in mourning for a future that she and Michael weren't going to have. "Because that's just what it feels like."

  Marlene's groan was one of exasperation. "Zoe, can't you see that you can make a choice here? You can decide how your future will turn out." She looked around before leaning closer to her daughter. "Your ability is just that, a special gift. Not a curse, not a burden, and certainly not a life sentence."

  Zoe leaned against the deck railing and focused her gaze on the boats that bobbed in the sea. Her mother made it sound so easy. But that shouldn't come as a surprise, they were two very different women who made very different choices in life. Her mother had given up her gift to marry Zoe's father. While she was glad of it, that didn't negate the pain and suffering her mother experienced after the loss of her husband. Nor did it take away the helplessness Zoe had felt watching her mother struggle to find a way to fill the void in her life.

  "You're not me, Zoe." Her mother's voice had lost its frustrated edge. "If you're thinking what I think you are, you're way off base."

  Zoe turned to face her mother. There was just enough evening light left to read her mother's expression and she didn't like what she saw. It was not the regret she'd expected to see. It was pity. She pushed back from the railing and turned to go but her mother reached out and grabbed a hold of her arm. "Wait, Zoe, just let me say one more thing. You need to make a decision."

  "What decision might that be?"

  "It all boils down to one question you need to ask yourself."

  "Which is?"

  "Is Michael enough for you?"

  The words pierced Zoe's heart. Michael was more than she ever could have hoped for, more than she could have ever expected. The question was ludicrous. She wasn't going to dignify it with an answer. She shook her head. This conversation was not going to happen. "No."

  Marlene's eyes widened and her hand went to her throat. "Oh, Zoe, no."

  "You don't-" but Zoe's words faltered as the horrified look on her mother's face sank in. Her mother wasn't looking at her. She was looking at something over Zoe's shoulder. She whirled around.

  Not something. Someone.

  "Michael." Zoe's heart constricted in her chest. "Oh, God." Judging by the shocked and hurt look on his face, there was no doubt that he'd overheard her. And misunderstood her. "You don't understand. I meant that...my mother asked-"

  He held up his hand to stop her convoluted explanation. Without looking directly at her, he addressed her mother. "Marlene, would you please take my niece and nephew home in Zoe's car?"

  Zoe met her mother's worried eyes and nodded. "My keys are in my purse."

  Despite her obvious reluctance, Marlene nodded. She laid a brief but reassuring hand on Zoe's arm as she passed by her. She paused to look up at Michael. "You didn't hear what you think you did. Listen to what Zoe has to say." With a last sympathetic glance at her daughter, she headed back into the restaurant.

  Zoe took a step forward and closed the space between Michael and herself. He didn't move back but he radiated a distinct wariness that pained her. "Michael, please hear me out."

  "I've heard enough." He looked away.

  A cold chill that had nothing to do with the Atlantic breeze ran through Zoe. As she stared up at Michael she felt a pang of fear at the thought of losing him. Her mother's question ran through her mind. Was Michael enough? Enough for her to give up her gift? Enough for her to surrender her abilities so that she could have his love? Absolutely yes. Now she just had to make Michael see the truth. She reached out to touch his arm, but he shook his head.

  "Don't."

  "We need to talk. I need to talk. Please."

  "Not here." He stood back so she could pass in front of him. "Let's go."

  His tone of voice made it clear that he wasn't willing to negotiate. With a calm composure that belied her thundering heart and shaking hands, Zoe made her way back through the restaurant and out to Michael's car. He opened the passenger door and she slid in.

  She stared unseeingly as Michael drove back toward the beach house. The thought of seeing Josh and Kathryn, of having to face them, made her heart ache. It wasn't fair to them that they were caught up in all of this. Thank heaven her mother was with them. As crazy and unpredictable as Marlene was, Zoe knew she'd handle the situation with the teens as gently and tactfully as possible.

  She shifted in her seat. The moonlight coming in the window allowed her to see how tightly Michael's jaw was clenched. As the miles slipped away, Zoe realized that she had a choice. She could fight for Michael or give up without a struggle. There was no need for her to think. She knew what she wanted. "Pull over."

  "What?" Michael shot her a quick glance. "Why?"

  Zoe drew in a sharp breath. It was time to not only jump in the deep end but to swim the blasted English channel if that was what it took to make Michael hear her out. "Pull over. I'm sick."

  The last two words did the trick. Michael pulled onto a scenic overlook. He switched off the engine and came around to open Zoe's door. He reached across her lap and unfastened her seatbelt. He then knelt down beside her. "What's wrong?"

  Zoe touched her chest.

  "You're having chest pains?" Michael's voice held more than a note of panic. "Let me call 911."

  "Michael, wait," she tried to interrupt him as he pulled out his cell phone.

  "Don't try to talk, Zoe."

  "But-"

  Michael held up his hand. "I'll get you help, just hold on."

  But Zoe wasn't about to wait. She glanced over at the car's ignition. The keys were still in it. With one quick glance at Michael, who was pacing anxiously beside the car and not watching her, she decided to go all out. She reached over and grabbed his keys before getting out of the car. "Michael."

  "She just said her chest hurt. No, no history of heart disease that I know of."

  "Michael," she tried again to get his attention, this time using a louder voice.

  He whirled around.

  "I'm fine. Really." She gestured to his cell phone. "Tell them it's a false alarm and hang up."

  He frowned. "What?"

  She walked over to him, took the cell phone out of his hand, and spent two full minutes convincing the emergency operator that she was perfectly healthy. Once that was done, she held the phone out to Michael. "My heart is aching. I'm not having chest pains."

  Michael grabbed his cell phone. "Get back in the car."

  Zoe didn't move.

  "Let's move, Zoe. This evening is turning out to be an unmitigated disaster. I've had enough."

  Her fingers closed around his car keys. "That makes one of us." She was pushing the envelope but she didn't care. Correction, she cared very much. Enough to do whatever it took to get Micha
el to listen. She might not get a second chance so she wasn't going to waste this one.

  "I mean it, Zoe. Don't tempt me to leave you here."

  "You'd never do that." She heard the confidence in her voice. He was too much of a gentleman to risk her safety. "Besides, I have the keys."

  For a long moment there was only the sound of the Atlantic waves rolling in. And then the ever-so-soft sound of Michael cursing under his breath. "Zoe, give me the keys."

  "I will. After you hear me out."

  "Unbelievable. Are you blackmailing me?"

  In answer, Zoe simply rattled the keys.

  Michael closed the distance between them with surprising speed but Zoe was still able to duck when he made a grab for the keys. He might well be bigger, stronger, and more agile than she was but the darkness of night was on her side. "Ready to listen?"

  Instead of answering her question, Michael reached out and pulled her close. Close enough she could hear his slightly labored breath, close enough she could smell the muskiness of his cologne, and when she placed her hand against his chest, she was definitely close enough to feel his heart beating rapidly.

  "Do you really think I'm in the mood to play games?" he demanded. "What's next? You drop my keys down the front of your dress?"

  "Not what I had in mind." She pulled back just enough so that she could have the free use of her right arm. "This isn't a game to me, Michael. I'm playing for keeps." And then before he had time to say anything, or try to stop her, she pitched his keys into the darkness.

  CHAPTER TEN

  The keys made a pinging sound as they bounced off of a rock. The next sound she heard was Michael's sharp intake of breath.

  "You didn't just do that."

  "I did." Zoe felt a rush of confidence in her choice. If nothing else, her brazen out of character behavior might convince Michael how much she loved him. "So now you have a choice. We can sit and talk in the car like two mature adults or you can start crawling around looking for your keys."

  Michael swore under his breath.

  "So what's it going to be? Car or beach combing?" There was a pause, long enough and quiet enough that it unsettled her. "Michael?"

 

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