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Gansett Island Boxed Set Books 1-16 (Gansett Island Series)

Page 151

by Marie Force


  “You folks have a nice evening,” Seamus said on his way out the door.

  “Do you want to tell me what that was all about?” Evan said when they were alone.

  Clearly, he was spoiling for a fight, and Grace was in no mood. “Not really.”

  “How would you feel if you came home and found me snuggled up to some woman?”

  “We weren’t snuggled up, and he’s not some guy. He’s my friend.”

  “A friend who’s interested in being much more than friends with you.”

  “You are such an idiot sometimes, you know that?”

  “What the hell is that supposed to mean?”

  “He was here talking to me about a woman he’s in love with, and her name is not Grace.”

  “Oh.”

  “You can apologize any time now.”

  “Apologize for what?”

  “Implying I was fooling around on you.”

  “I didn’t imply that.”

  She raised an eyebrow to let him know she wasn’t buying his crap. “Oh no? What would you call it then?”

  “I don’t know.” He flopped down on the sofa. “Why are we fighting?”

  “Because you acted like a jealous fool when I had a male friend here.”

  “Sorry,” he muttered. “I overreacted, but that guy pushes my buttons with all his Irish blarney.”

  “I think you mean Irish charm,” Grace said, sitting next to him and reaching for his hand.

  Evan scowled at her.

  “Are you still mad at me?”

  He shrugged.

  She moved so she was straddling him and framed his face with her hands. “Look at me.” When she had his full attention, she bent her head to kiss him. “I love you, you silly, jealous fool. Only you.”

  “I know.”

  “Do you?”

  “Of course I do.”

  “Then why do you still look all funny in the face?”

  “I’ve been thinking…”

  “About?”

  “I want to understand why you didn’t tell your parents about me, and I think I get it, but still…”

  “Still what?”

  “Is it because my job situation is up in the air right now? Is that why you didn’t tell them? Because I’d understand if that was why—”

  “No! That has nothing to do with it. I swear to you, I didn’t tell them because of stuff between us. Not because of anything to do with you.”

  “What did they say when I wasn’t around?”

  Grace diverted her gaze. “Not much.”

  He cuffed her chin. “Liar.”

  “It doesn’t matter, Evan. They’ve got nothing to do with us. That’s why I didn’t tell them.”

  “They’re your parents, honey. You can’t disregard them like they mean nothing to you.”

  “You heard what my mother said the other day about there being other ways to lose weight besides going under the knife?”

  “Yes, and I didn’t think she needed to say that.”

  “It’s the least of what she’s had to say since I decided to have the surgery. Who knows better than she did how I tried every other possible way to lose weight before I opted for surgery? Yet she made me feel like a loser for doing it. She’s still making me feel like a loser.”

  “Probably because she doesn’t have the courage to do it herself.”

  “You think so?”

  Nodding, he said, “She’s probably jealous that it worked so well for you and you’ve lost so much weight. How long has she been heavy?”

  “Always.”

  “There you have it. You’ve managed to successfully address a situation she’s grappled with her whole life.”

  “I suppose you’re right. Sometimes I wonder why she can’t be happy for me, you know?”

  “Don’t let her—or anyone—take away from your accomplishments, Grace. You have a lot to be proud of.”

  “Do you know what I’m proudest of?”

  “What’s that?”

  “You and me. We’ve come a long way in the last eight months. I can’t imagine my life without you in it.”

  “Same here, honey. You’re the best thing to ever happen to me, and I’m sorry I overreacted about Seamus being here.”

  Grace leaned her forehead against his. “And I’m sorry I didn’t tell my parents about us.”

  “It’s okay. I have a few thoughts about how you can make it up to me.”

  “What kind of thoughts?”

  As Evan whispered in her ear, Grace felt her face get hot. Would she ever get used to the blunt way he talked about highly personal matters?

  “Right now?” she asked.

  “Uh-huh.” He twirled a strand of her hair around his finger. “Unless, of course, you’re not really all that sorry. In that case—”

  “Oh, shut up.”

  “Shut me up.”

  “Gladly.”

  As Grace poured all the love she felt for him into a kiss for the ages, she counted herself lucky to have found the one who was meant for her. Seamus’s woes made her extra grateful that Evan loved her as much as she loved him.

  Since he had an hour before he was due to captain the next boat, Seamus took his time walking back to town. He felt bad about the scene at Grace’s place. It was no secret that Evan McCarthy didn’t like him or the attention he paid to Grace. But they were just friends. Gracie’s heart belonged to Evan, and Seamus’s heart belonged to a woman who didn’t want him. What a fine mess this had turned out to be.

  His boss, Joe Cantrell, was due in on the boat coming now from the mainland, and when he had the chance to talk to Joe, Seamus was seriously considering resigning as manager of the Gansett Island Ferry Company. Joe would have the summer to find a replacement before he and his wife returned to Ohio for her third year of veterinary school. Seamus hated to leave Joe in the lurch, especially with Joe’s wife Janey due to deliver their first child soon, but it was too hard to be on the island a few miles from the woman he loved but light years from her.

  The fact that the woman he loved was Joe’s mother only made things more complicated in some ways and simpler in others. He couldn’t pine for the mother of his boss, and he couldn’t have her because she couldn’t handle the age difference between them—or her son’s potential disapproval.

  If this were happening to someone else, Seamus might’ve found it comical. But there was nothing funny about this kind of heartache. For the first time in the more than two decades since he’d come to this country as a teenager, he was thinking about going home to Ireland. Nothing here made sense anymore. One night with Carolina Cantrell and his entire life had careened off course like a car that lost a wheel on a curve.

  He had a posse of sisters, so he’d certainly witnessed heartbreak before. However, he’d learned it was an entirely different experience when it happened to you. It sucked the life out of a body. It kept you awake at night, thinking about what might’ve been. It made it nearly impossible to enjoy any of the simple pleasures that used to make life worth living. Food didn’t taste the way it used to. Even his favorite Irish whiskey didn’t appeal. He was a wreck, and he couldn’t continue to function in this condition. Thus his conclusion that the only possible solution was to leave.

  Walking with his hands in his pockets and his head down, Seamus approached the ferry landing deep in thought, which was why he didn’t see the object of his desire leaning against a piling waiting for the boat that carried her son and daughter-in-law to arrive. He didn’t notice her until he was nearly on top of her, until it was far too late to avoid seeing her for the first time since Luke and Syd’s Christmas Eve wedding.

  When he recovered his senses, he realized she looked even better than she had then. She’d cut her hair, and the shoulder-length style suited her. Ironically, it made her look younger. For some reason, it pleased him that she seemed as stunned to see him as he was to see her.

  “I, um…” she said. “Joe and Janey…”

  “They’re on the boat
.” He nodded to the ferry approaching the breakwater. “Word tends to get out when the boss makes a car reservation.”

  “Yes, I suppose it does.”

  “How’ve you been, Caro?”

  “Oh, well, busy. You know.”

  “Did you make that?” he asked of the elaborately beaded necklace she wore.

  When her fingers covered the beads, he noticed a slight tremble. “This? Yes, a while ago.”

  “It’s quite lovely.”

  He kept his gaze fixed on her face as he said the words, and watched, mesmerized, as a flush crept into her cheeks.

  Realizing he was getting to her, he decided to try one last time. Maybe the passage of months had had the same effect on her. “I’ve missed you, Caro.”

  As he watched her process what he’d said, she glanced at the ferry and smiled.

  Realizing the moment between them had passed, Seamus followed her gaze and saw Joe at the aft controls, guiding the ferry into port. “Just like riding a bike,” he said with feigned lightness.

  “He’s been a natural from the time he was a young boy. My father went on and on about how he’d had to show him only once, and he got it. He just got it.”

  Listening to her talk about her son, Seamus finally got it, too. She’d made her choice a long time ago. She’d chosen her son, and nothing he said or did would ever change her mind. It was time to cut his losses and move on.

  “Nice to see you, Carolina.”

  “Nice to see you, too.”

  “Have a lovely visit with your son and his wife.”

  Walking away from her, Seamus ached worse than he had before, if that was possible. But at least he had his answer now. He knew what he had to do.

  Chapter 8

  Hoping to run into Tiffany, Blaine accepted Mac’s invitation to stop by for dinner. The family was welcoming Joe and Janey home for the summer with a cookout that included all the McCarthys, Ned and Francine, and Joe’s mom, Carolina. When he arrived, Blaine couldn’t believe how disappointed he was to learn that Tiffany had stayed home because Ashleigh had a stomachache. He’d been so looking forward to seeing her after his shift.

  “Are you enjoying the last few weeks of sanity?” Big Mac asked Blaine over burgers on Mac’s deck.

  Because he was on duty, Blaine was nursing a soda rather than the beer he’d prefer. “It seems to start earlier and earlier every year,” he said. “We’ve already had a couple of kids with alcohol poisoning on the town beach and lots of open container citations. Wyatt, my newest patrolman, stumbled upon a couple of kids getting busy out at the bluffs two nights ago. I think he’s scarred for life.”

  Big Mac roared with laughter. “Poor kid.”

  “He may as well get used to it. Such is police work on Gansett Island.”

  Joe came over to shake hands with Blaine. “Good to see you, buddy.”

  “You, too. Congrats on the impending arrival.”

  Joe glanced over at his pretty blonde wife, who was hugely pregnant and clearly miserable. “Not sure how we’ll survive three more months. Janey’s already had enough.”

  Blaine’s radio crackled with a call from dispatch. He winced when he heard the address. “I’ve got to run,” he said to Mac, who was tending the grill. “Thanks for the burger.”

  “Any time. Come back later if you’re free.”

  “Will do. Thanks, Mac.”

  “See you later, Blaine.”

  He bounded down the stairs from the deck to his SUV. When he reached the main road, he flipped on the lights and siren while calling for backup. Daisy Babson’s neighbors had called the police. Again. Anxious to get to town before Daisy’s abusive boyfriend could hurt her, Blaine pressed the accelerator to the floor.

  By the time he pulled up to Daisy’s rundown place in town, the neighbors were standing outside, listening to the fight rage on inside.

  “Back it up, folks,” Blaine said. “Give us some room.” The sound of breaking glass had him taking the stairs two at a time. He pounded on the door. “Police. Open up.” More crashing of glass and other items, along with thumping and a muffled cry. “Open up, or I’ll take the door down.”

  Wyatt pulled up in his cruiser, and Blaine gestured for him to hurry. When the patrolman was in position on the other side of the door, Blaine drew his weapon and kicked in the door. Daisy was huddled on the floor, surrounded by broken glass, her face and hands bleeding. She looked up at him with big, haunted gray eyes. Her boyfriend, Truck—aptly nicknamed because he was built like one—held a glass vase over his head. His tattooed biceps bulged from the effort to restrain his rage. If he brought that vase down on petite Daisy, he’d kill her.

  Blaine had gotten there just in time. “Freeze, Truck. Don’t even think about it.”

  Truck seemed almost surprised to see him, which was no surprise to Blaine. The big man was known for his meth-fueled rages, and Blaine had been trying to get Daisy to leave the abusive relationship for as long as he’d been chief of police.

  “Get the fuck outta here.” Truck’s eyes were red and crazed. “You got no business here.”

  “When you’re beating up your girlfriend and destroying her home, I got business here.”

  “I ain’t beating her up. She’s getting mouthy with me—again.”

  “Put down the vase slowly,” Blaine said. “I want your hands on the back of your head. You know the routine.” To Wyatt, he said, “Call the paramedics for her.”

  By the time the ambulance arrived a couple of minutes later, Blaine had Truck cuffed and on his way to the station with Wyatt. After ensuring none of her bones were broken, Blaine lifted Daisy free of the glass. She was so tiny he barely had to strain to pick her up.

  “I’m sorry,” she said, wiping tears from her cheeks. “I promised you I wouldn’t let him in again, but he was so sweet and so sorry. I’m such a fool.”

  “Don’t apologize, Daisy. I know you love the big lug. For some reason.”

  “Not anymore, I don’t. He broke my grandma’s china.” A new flood of tears wet her bruised and battered face. “That was all I had left of her, and now it’s gone.”

  “We can help you get free of him, Daisy, but you have to want to. The next time he comes around looking to kiss and make up, you have to be strong.”

  “I know,” she said with more conviction than he’d ever heard from her. “No more of this. No more of him.”

  Blaine carried her out to the paramedics and shielded her face from the gathered crowd of neighbors. He deposited her gently on a gurney.

  “Hi, Daisy,” Libby, one of the volunteer paramedics, said.

  She, too, had been here before.

  “Hi, Libby.”

  “Show me where it hurts,” she said as she got busy cleaning the cuts on Daisy’s hands and face.

  Blaine stepped out of the ambulance and placed a call to David Lawrence. “Sorry to bother you at home, Doc, but I’ve got Daisy Babson on the way to the clinic.”

  “Again?” David asked.

  “Afraid so. She’s going to need some stitches.”

  “I’ll be right there.”

  “Thanks.” Blaine ducked his head inside the ambulance. “Is there anyone you want me to call for you, Daisy?”

  She shook her head, as she always did.

  “Are you sure?”

  “I don’t want anyone to know.”

  “I have to file a report, and I’ll need you to appear in court.”

  She’d done it before, so she knew the drill. “I know.”

  “I’d hate to see you go through this alone. You have friends.”

  “Fine. Okay. Call Maddie.”

  “McCarthy?”

  Daisy nodded.

  “I’ll have her meet you at the clinic.”

  “Thank you.”

  Her quiet dignity got to him every time. He’d gleaned a few facts about her past that had led him to believe that she didn’t think she could do any better than a violent drug addict named Truck.

  “Every
thing will be okay, Daisy,” Blaine said. “We’ll take good care of you. Don’t worry.”

  “That’s right, Daisy,” Libby said as she discreetly produced a tissue Daisy used to dry her tears.

  “You all are so nice to me when you must want to shake me for taking him back. Again.”

  “We don’t want to shake you,” Blaine said. “We want you to be safe, and we want to help you make that happen.”

  “Let’s get you to the clinic,” Libby said.

  “I’ll follow you.” Blaine stepped back from the ambulance and closed the doors, rapping on the side of the vehicle when the doors were secured. “Show’s over,” he said to the neighbors.

  He took a minute to secure Daisy’s front door as best he could and placed a call to Mac.

  “Hey, didn’t I just see you?” Mac said when he answered.

  “Yes, you did, but duty called, and I need to borrow your wife.”

  “What for?”

  “A friend of hers had a bit of trouble tonight and could use some support.”

  “Which friend?”

  “Daisy from the hotel.”

  “Oh jeez. Truck again?”

  “Yep.”

  “Shit.”

  “Could you ask Maddie to meet us at the clinic? Daisy is pretty busted up, and she’s in for a long night.”

  “She’ll be right over.”

  “Could your folks stay with the kids for a bit?”

  “Sure. What else do you need?”

  “We broke down Daisy’s door to get in there before he killed her.”

  “Say no more. I’ll get it fixed.”

  “Thanks, Mac. Appreciate the help.”

  “Happy to do it. Daisy is so sweet. I can’t imagine how anyone could raise a hand to her in anger.”

  “I can’t imagine how any guy takes his frustrations out on a woman. Happens far more often than you think, even here in paradise. Thanks again for the help.”

  “Any time.”

  Blaine called for a patrol officer to stay at Daisy’s house until Mac got there. As soon as the officer arrived, Blaine gave him his instructions and headed for the clinic. On the way, he left a message for Tiffany to let her know he had to cancel their plans for later. This was going to be a long night.

 

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