She always bought generic clothes, efficiency and comfort being her wardrobe goals. Catalog shopping saved time since everything already matched, and the clothes, never in-or out of-style, lasted for years.
This morning she hadn’t been able to move her arm enough to hook her bra, so she’d left it off. She’d added the blazer over her white blouse, hoping to disguise the deficiency.
Her outfit wouldn’t have incited envy, but it would have passed muster as dressy casual on the campus of UNC-Wilmington where she was a junior faculty member. It was wrong for the breakfast.
Emmie didn’t know what to say. She couldn’t tell Grace, of all people, the truth: she was looking for Caleb. Grace would want to know why, and she wasn’t a good liar. To lie well one had to understand a society’s unwritten expectations.
Grace waived her hesitation aside. “Forget I asked. Do you have a ride back to Mother’s house?”
“Yes.” She would if she could find Caleb, at any rate. Emmie had an otherworldly innocence, plain and fresh as warm milk, that made men twice her age, balding deacons and loan officers with grown children, hit on her. The good thing about it was that people rarely questioned her intentions.
“Fine, just remember it’s going to take a long time to dress.” Fortunately, before she could add more admonishments, someone interrupted to ask Grace for an opinion about some wedding detail. Emmie made her escape with a little wave.
She could have screamed with impatience when Pickett’s sixtyish cousin Annalynn planted herself in her path, determined to pump Emmie for news.
“Pickett’s finally getting married! Can you believe it? And to a real hottie!” Annalynn gushed. Annalynn gushed about everything, but she needn’t sound as if a miracle had transpired. In Emmie’s opinion, Pickett was far too frequently relegated to “poor thing” status. Her relatives still saw Pickett as the baby of the family, the chubby, frequently-ill teenager with unruly hair and her nose stuck in a book.
Emmie nodded but refused to reply.
As college freshmen Emmie and Pickett were nerds together and soon best friends. Pickett’s health and figure had improved once she learned to control her diet. She discovered a haircut that made the most of her exuberant gold curls and overcame her nerdishness with her warmth and compassion. It was no surprise to Emmie an attractive man could fall in love with Pickett.
She was surprised at Pickett’s choice in a groom: a SEAL. Take everything bad about the military, multiply it by ten, and you had a SEAL. Pickett had always sworn up and down she’d never marry a military man-it was something they’d always been in perfect agreement about-and yet, Pickett had changed her mind. It deeply, deeply scared Emmie. Nothing could ever change the fact that she loved Pickett with all her heart, but she wasn’t sure how they would maintain their friendship. Once Pickett was absorbed into the military-industrial complex, she would become part of a culture antithetical to Emmie’s most basic beliefs.
Pickett would tell her she was worrying about events that hadn’t happened yet, and that she would never allow anything to threaten their friendship. None of this was anything Emmie was going to discuss with Annalynn.
Patience wasn’t Emmie’s strong suit. Once she had a goal in mind, she tended to fix on it to the exclusion of all else. She didn’t have time to trade party chatter with Pickett’s cousins, aunts, uncles, and assorted others whose degree of kinship was distant enough to confound the most determined genealogist, but who, nevertheless, qualified as family. It seemed like every one of them had stopped her. Emmie was utterly sick of explaining why her arm was in a cobalt blue canvas sling. Once the wedding breakfast broke up, the high-ceilinged rooms of the late Victorian house would empty quickly. If Caleb left before she talked to him, all her plans were ruined. There was a very small window before she had to get rigged out in the bridesmaid getup Grace had chosen.
The sling was rubbing the collar of the beige blazer against her neck again. Her wardrobe goal was efficiency and comfort, but she’d sacrificed comfort today for clothes she could get into unaided. She regretted the decision to add the blazer, but since she couldn’t hook a bra she didn’t see what else she could have done.
The worst part about the blazer was that it encouraged her hair to work its way under the sling. Painful tugs accompanied any incautious movement of her head. Emmie adjusted the sling impatiently and scanned the thinning crowd, while trying at least to appear to listen to Annalynn. Impatient as she felt, Emmie didn’t want to be rude. From the first time Pickett had brought her home for a college holiday, these people had hugged her and teased her and admonished her as if she belonged.
“I guess you’re next.” Failing to get Emmie to talk about Pickett, Annalynn tried another subject. “When are you going to find yourself a man?”
“Actually, I’m looking for a man right now. Have you seen Jax’s best man?”
Emmie caught the avid interest that widened Annalynn’s rather watery eyes and gave herself a mental slap. She’d done it again! Sometimes she got so focused on her goals she forgot to consider how others would interpret her words and actions. The story that she and the best man were an item would make the rounds before the opening ta-dums of the wedding march.
“I didn’t mean it like that,” she protested with a pained laugh. “But I really am looking for him. I need to speak to him before he leaves.”
“I saw him on the front porch talking to Lilly Hale,” Annalynn panted, thrilled to be fostering a romance. “Run quick. I think he was taking his leave.”
“Aunt Lilly Hale, can I borrow Caleb for a minute?”
Do- Lord felt the odd little internal shiver, like the supercharged air of a thunderstorm, a half-second before the woman appeared at his elbow. Without turning, he knew Emelina Caddington, Pickett’s best friend and maid of honor, stood beside him.
Something about her irritated him, something besides the way she called him Caleb in her cool, precise voice, oddly devoid of southern accent. Nobody had called him Caleb since he left Alabama. He’d joined the Navy the day he turned eighteen, and since then he’d been Dulaude. Do-Lord to his friends.
She wasn’t attention-worthy in any way except for her wide blue eyes that gave her the look of a serious, intelligent kitten. Appealing image, but it was canceled by her shapeless clothes and sensible shoes.
Spinsterish. The old-fashioned word fit her and matched her name, Emelina. Beside Pickett’s tall, elegant sisters, almost awe-inspiring in their cool, blonde beauty, or Pickett herself, the sweetest, most feminine thing he’d ever seen, Emmie didn’t rate a second glance.
SEALs might love one another like brothers and be willing to die for one another, but that didn’t mean they liked every SEAL. Any man who earned the Trident, the symbol of brotherhood with other elite warriors, had learned to control his reaction to people. Above all, he did not let things get to him. Which made it even more irritating that anytime she was in the room, he watched her.
“Emmie, darling! It’s so good to see you.” The older woman leaned forward to carefully lay her cheek against Emmie’s, avoiding the bright blue harness that held Emmie’s arm close to her chest. “But your poor arm! Are you still going to be Pickett’s maid of honor? How are you going to manage two bouquets and Pickett’s train and everything?”
Emmie favored Pickett’s great aunt with a stiff smile. “That’s what I need to talk to the best man about. Excuse us please?” Without waiting for a reply Emmie looped her good arm through his and tugged him back into the house.
It went against his grain to let a stranger inside his personal space where a knife could be used; or to let anyone hamper his right arm preventing him from going for his weapon; or to let himself be taken anywhere he hadn’t decided for himself to go. A tiny bit amused by her presumption in believing she could, he allowed her to lead him.
The very novelty sent a tingle of anticipation through his boredom. She seemed unaware she’d crossed lines men twice her size wouldn’t have dared, and she pressed his arm so close he could feel the soft give of the side of her breast.
Her full, soft breast that wasn’t confined by a bra.
He wouldn’t be a man if he didn’t notice.
The irritation he always felt around her morphed into a more primal awareness. He suddenly noticed her smell. She wore no perfume that he could detect. She just smelled basic. Sweet. Like a woman.
She intended to pull him past the parlors into the wide hall that would take them deeper into the house. He didn’t think she was coming on to him-not after the stiff way she always acted around him-but she was up to something. “Where are we going?”
“To Aunt Lilly Hale’s office. Someplace we can talk.”
“Talk?” Do-Lord halted so he could look into her face. He squashed an absurd blossom of hope. She was the last woman in the world who would pull him aside for a quickie. And close to the last woman in the world he would want to pull him aside. Yeah, suddenly she interested him, but not that way. Even though she reminded him more than ever of a serious, and right this minute, very determined kitten. A Siamese kitten with big, blue eyes and silvery beige fur.
Emmie intercepted the rather calculating look of masculine assessment he gave her, and suddenly became aware of the heat and steely strength of the arm under the fine tweed of his coat, and of the fact that she had left off her bra this morning. Could he tell? Surely not.
She wanted to grind her teeth with frustration. It was that goal-directed thing again making her unaware of how she was coming across. Grabbing his arm had been a stupid move, but for a man who stood out as he did, he could be amazingly elusive. For thirty minutes she’d searched the crowd for his russet head and broad shoulders, dodging jocular inanities about when she was going to find herself a man. The irony hadn’t escaped her.
Or improved her disposition, she was afraid. Her shoulder hurt with a deep, grinding ache. All she really wanted to do was take her pain medication and lie very still until it was time for the wedding.
By the time she’d spotted him framed by the double doors open to the warm day, she’d been close to frantic, the sedate calm with which she usually endured these family affairs shredded. She needed him, and she’d grabbed him, determined not let anyone interrupt. But really! These jocks! He wasn’t a college athlete, he was a member of a crack military team with an animal name. Navy SEALs, Miami Dolphins, what was the difference? She recognized the type.
They crowded her Understanding Ecology class, a Biology elective for non-majors, and thought she should be flattered. They assumed everything with a vagina was interested in them. They only had to choose which one they wanted. They walked the earth with a sense of entitlement, sure that their place in the universe guaranteed the best.
On campus she carefully kept her professorial distance and made it clear in any interaction, she was in charge. Give them an inch, and they’d take a mile.
She forgot her intention to get on his good side. Knowing the effect was probably ruined by the heat staining her cheeks, she aimed him a don’t-mess-with-me glare, “I said what I meant. You know. The other four-letter word ending in k. Talk!”
Her faced flamed redder. What was the matter with her? She never said things like that!
His grin widened. “Just checking.”
He changed the subject. “Why do you call her ‘aunt?’ You’re not kin with this family are you?”
Relief that she hadn’t offended him made her expansive. “We’re not related, but they are my adopted family. Pickett and I were college roommates. Because my parents are missionaries, going home for holidays was out of the question, so I always came home with Pickett. I just got in the habit of calling people whatever Pickett did.”
Emmie opened the door into a sunny butler’s pantry Pickett’s aunt had converted to a home office. “Here we are.”
Focused on finding a private place where they could talk, she’d forgotten how small the room was. Hundreds of framed photographs, tiny and large, old sepia-tone portraits and bright clowning snapshots, covered every bit of wall space left by the glass-fronted cabinets. The floor space, occupied as it was by an antique estate desk, left two adults hardly room to stand.
The unexpected intimacy rattled Emmie. He was so close she could see the shadow cast by his golden eyelashes. His eyes, a hazel mixture of brown and gold and green, reminded her of pebbles washed by a mountain stream. Cold and hard. She forced herself to look into them without flinching. Last night she’d noticed the way he looked at Pickett and thought maybe she had an ally. Now she wasn’t so sure.
Underneath the sling she tugged the lapels of her jacket together and took a fortifying breath. At this late date there wasn’t anyone else she could ask.
“I understand you SEALs are pretty loyal to one another,” she said, getting straight to the point. “Does your loyalty extend to Pickett?”
“What are you asking?” In his lazy, liquid drawl the question didn’t sound like a question. His voice was deep, sonorous, but damped, as if he saw no need to bring its full power to this situation. Yet the power was there. His voice felt like fur stroking down her spine from her nape to the small of her back.
She ruthlessly slammed the door on the thought. Emmie, child of missionaries, had spent her teenage years with an elderly grandmother. She wasn’t oppos
ed to wholesome sex, but the temptations of sensuality were subtle and best avoided. This was for Pickett, but still, his voice, dark as burnt umber and a little gritty, compelled more honesty than she had planned. “I’m asking, are you willing to do a favor for Pickett-no matter what the fallout?”
“Do I have to kill anybody?” He didn’t look like he was kidding.
“No, but if we’re caught, all hell will break loose. Pickett’s sister Grace might kill you.”
“And you, I presume.”
Emmie dismissed that. “Probably, but I don’t care. Pickett’s the peacemaker.”
“What do you want me to do?”
Emmie took a deep breath and looked him straight in the eye. “We have to switch wedding cakes.”
Chapter 3
Whoa! Miss Emelina might look boring in her all-over beige clothes that matched her beige hair- though bright sun streaming in the window brought out its pretty silver sheen-but she’d just proved she could surprise him.
Do- Lord laughed aloud, the first honest laugh he’d had in days. “I’m getting a vision of a cake exploding like Mt. St. Helens and spewing white frosting everywhere.”
Suddenly, he sobered. “Is this a practical joke?”
Sealed with a promise Page 4