Read Flirting with Disaster Online

Authors: Jane Graves

Flirting with Disaster (40 page)

Adam yanked his hand away from her. “Don’t you know how much this is killing me? If you loved me as much as you say you do, you wouldn’t be doing this to me!”

Sera recoiled at his sudden outburst. Adam took several harsh breaths. He closed his eyes, sadness washing over his face, his voice becoming a painful whisper.

“God, Sera, I’m sorry.”

“No. Please don’t apologize.”

“I just want you to listen to me. To understand.” He opened his eyes again and fixed his gaze on hers. “When we were on the road coming here, I thought about Ellen. About how she’d cried and screamed and begged me to help her. And then . . .” He hesitated. “Then I imagined it was you.”

When a fresh flood of anguish filled his eyes, Sera could feel her dream shattering—her dream of getting pregnant with Adam’s baby, living those months of anticipation together, sharing the joy of childbirth. Still, the grief he’d suffered and the pain he’d lived with all this time only made her love him more. It only made her that much more desperate to be the light at the end of that long, dark tunnel he’d been walking in for so long.

“Of course I want to have a baby,” she told him. “But there are other ways. We can adopt a child, can’t we?”

“Don’t you remember what I asked you a few days ago?”

“What?”

“I asked how you would feel if you knew you were going to go through your entire life and never get pregnant, never have a child of your own. You told me you would be devastated.”

“Disappointed. That was what I meant.”

“You said what you meant.”

“Losing you. That’s what would devastate me.”

He shook his head slowly. “My problems aren’t magically going to go away. You saw what happened earlier this evening. Just how fit am I to be a father under any circumstances? Or a husband, for that matter?”

“I can’t believe you’re even saying that.”

“If we were to get married, a year would pass, then two, and sooner or later you’d come to resent me. You’d think about the old man you married and all his hang-ups and wish to God you’d made another choice. And if that ever happened, I couldn’t bear it.”

“But nothing else matters to me without you!”

He looked at her so tenderly that her heart nearly broke. “Find another man, Sera. One who will love you and cherish you and give you the family you want. And sometime in the future, the day will come that you’ll realize it was the right decision. And instead of resenting me for the rest of your life, you’ll thank me.”

Tears filled her eyes. “No. That’s not what I want. Please, Adam,
please
. . . .”

“I love you enough to let you go, Sera. You’ve got to do the same for me.”

She bowed her head and began to cry. He reached out and stroked her hair, and she took his hand, kissed his palm, then clutched his hand with both of hers. She knew now that he was never going to allow her to love him through this terrible situation.

He was going to tell her good-bye.

At eight-thirty the next morning, Dave climbed the steps to Sera’s back porch, kicked dirt off his boots, then came through the door to find Lisa in the kitchen making a pot of coffee. She was barefoot, hair still damp from the shower, wearing a T-shirt and jeans. He sat down at the table and pulled off his boots.

“You took care of it,” she said.

Dave let out a weary breath. “Yeah.”

“You should have woken me,” she said. “I could have helped.”

“No need. It’s done.”

Lisa sighed. “Thank you.”

“Considering everything Gabrio did for us, it was the least I could do for him.”

She came closer and stared down at Dave. “You even said the Bible verse, didn’t you?”

“Yeah,” he said. “But it’s been a while. I imagine I screwed it up a little.”

“But you said it anyway.” Lisa kissed him gently on the lips. “You’re a good man, Dave. You know that?”

As he stared up at Lisa, Dave thought about how they’d made love last night and how he’d seen right inside her to the vulnerable woman she tried so hard to hide. There was suddenly so much more involved in the way he felt about her that he couldn’t begin to sort it all out. All he wanted to do when this whole mess was over was drag her right back to Tolosa with him and insist she stay forever.

But that was impossible. Hadn’t she said it? Repeatedly? She didn’t want a family, she didn’t want responsibility, she didn’t want anything tying her down, and in her mind everything about his life would do just that. A sudden image sprang to mind of him keeping her under lock and key like a bird in a cage to make sure she didn’t fly away.

“I need to get a shower,” he said.

“Coffee will be ready when you get out.”

He went upstairs and showered, but when he came out of the bathroom ten minutes later he was surprised to find Lisa upstairs, tucked into bed. Wearing nothing.

He smiled down at her. “Coffee?”

“I decided it would only keep us awake.”

Dave slid into bed beside her, pulling her into his arms and making love to her, slowly, tenderly, taking his time, making sure she felt every gentle touch, every whispered word. She opened herself to him in every way a woman could, then gave it back to him in ways he’d only dreamed about. For the next few hours he felt as if they were two people insulated from the rest of the world, connecting to each other in the most intimate way possible.

Afterward, Dave rose to one elbow and stared down at her. Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes glowing. In the late morning light pouring through the bedroom curtains she looked radiant. He brushed his fingers through her hair in a languid caress.

“Now, this doesn’t mean I never want to get wild on a kitchen table again,” he said. “You know that, don’t you?”

She smiled. “Yeah. I know that. Balconies are nice, too.”

“Don’t forget the shower.”

“Anywhere you say,” she told him. “Anytime you say.”

He lay back down and wrapped her in his arms. As they dozed off, Dave made a mental note to hold her to that promise.

Two hours later, Lisa opened her eyes, squinting against the noontime sunlight streaming through the window. Turning over, she glanced at the clock.

“Dave,” she said. “It’s nearly noon.”

After a moment, Dave sat up in bed. “I’d better check the answering machine to make sure we didn’t sleep right through a call from Alex.” Yawning, he rose from the bed, went to Sera’s room, then returned a moment later. “Nothing.”

“How long do you think it’ll be before we hear from him?” Lisa asked.

“I have no idea. It could take him a while to pin down an informant.”

Lisa sat up in bed and stretched. Glancing out the window, she saw the barn in the distance. “The ponies have wandered back up here. Suppose we ought to feed them?”

“Sera said they’d be okay on pasture alone. But they probably wouldn’t mind a little grain.”

“Let’s go down there. I’ve never petted a pony before.”

“Never?”

Lisa slid out from beneath the covers. “My childhood wasn’t exactly privileged, remember?” She dug through her bag and pulled out a pair of panties. “Ashley, on the other hand, is probably riding one in your backyard as we speak.”

“What?”

Lisa put on the panties, then wiggled into a pair of jeans. “You told John to buy her one, didn’t you?”

Dave sighed with disgust. “It’d be just like John to actually do it. Just to piss me off.”

“There’s nothing a kid likes better than a pony.” She stopped and stared at him. “Aren’t you going to get dressed?”

Dave smiled, clearly admiring the fact that she still had nothing on from the waist up. “I’m just watching the show.”

Lisa rolled her eyes. “If you don’t get dressed, I’m dragging you down to the barn naked.”

“Hmm. A naked man, a domineering woman, and a pair of ponies. Didn’t I see that in a porn movie once?”

“I wouldn’t know. I only watch chick flicks.”

He grinned. She gave him an admonishing look, then tossed his bag to the bed. “Move it.”

He pulled out a change of clothes. “Actually, Ashley’s afraid of dogs, so I don’t know how she’d do with something as big as a pony.”

“Nah. Ponies are different. All little girls like horses.”

No. Ponies weren’t different. Not to Ashley. Everything loomed bigger and more frightening to her than to the average kid.

“Last week a kid smacked her with a swing at school,” Dave said, pulling on a pair of jeans. “She sat down in the corner of the playground and cried.”

“Was she hurt?”

“No. Not really.”

Lisa slid her arms into a T-shirt. She tugged it down over her head, then swept her fingers through her hair. “Well, I’d cry, too, if somebody hit me with a swing.”

“No, you wouldn’t. You’d tell him if he ever messed with you again, you’d put the swing where the sun don’t shine.”

Lisa smiled. “Sure. Now I would. But when I was five?”

“I’m betting even then.”

“I’m the exception, Dave. Not the rule.”

Dave shrugged into a shirt. Instead of buttoning it, though, he paused, a brooding expression on his face. “Ashley’s really timid most of the time. Even clingy. She just can’t handle things, you know? And the older she gets . . .”

“She’s just a little girl. A lot of little girls are timid.”

“You weren’t.”

“I didn’t have that luxury. Ashley does. She has a father who’ll keep her safe.”

“What if I can’t?”

“What are you talking about?”

“I see her mother in her. I’m afraid that she’s going to be like Carla. And if she is . . .”

His voice trailed off. Lisa had no idea what he was trying to say. She stood there for a moment, confused, then started tucking her shirt into her jeans. “So what if she’s a little shy like Carla was? You’re a good father. I know you are. Why do you worry so much?”

He sat down on the end of the bed, and for a moment he seemed lost in thought. “Carla was more than just a little shy.”

Lisa buttoned her jeans. “What do you mean?”

“She was dependent. Needy. Helpless.”

Shocked by his words, Lisa froze for a moment, then walked over and sat down on the bed next to him. “What are you talking about?”

He exhaled, closing his eyes. “Day in and day out, she clung to me as if I was only one step away from walking out the door.”

“I don’t understand. Why would she think that?”

“Insecurity.” He paused, then turned his gaze to meet hers.

“And because she knew what happened between us.”

Lisa recoiled. “She what?”

“That day in the shop. She knew.”

Lisa was horrified. “But how? I never told her, Dave. I swear to God I didn’t.”

“I know you didn’t.”

“Then how—”

“I did.”

For the count of three, Lisa stared at him with total disbelief. “You
what
?”

“I told myself that if she was going to marry me, she should know everything about me. No secrets. So I told her.”

“But why? I never would have said a word. She never would have found out.”

“I know. I told myself that I was just trying to be honest with her. But I think . . .” He was silent for a moment. “I think I was trying to drive her away. Deep down, I was hoping she’d call off the wedding.”

Lisa couldn’t have been more shocked if he’d slapped her. “You didn’t want to marry her?”

“No. At the time I didn’t really realize why. But somehow I knew. Deep down, I knew it wasn’t right.”

“What did she say when you told her what happened between us?”

“She made excuses for me. Told me it was your fault, not mine, and that she knew I’d never do anything like that again.”

“She wasn’t angry?”

“Sure she was. At you. It was my fault, and she was angry at you. No matter what I told her, she just kept taking up for me.” He rubbed his hand over the back of his neck. “Finally I made a decision. If she wasn’t going to call it off, I was.”

“You told Carla you didn’t want to marry her?”

“Yes.”

“What happened?”

“As soon as I said it, she started to cry. She told me over and over how much she needed me, and said if I walked away from her then, she couldn’t go on living.” He paused, then turned to Lisa, a strange light in his eyes. “Then she told me she knew where her father kept his gun.”

Lisa’s mouth dropped open. “Oh, God. She didn’t.”

“I was stunned. I couldn’t believe I’d driven her to something like that. I apologized. I told her that of course we’d get married, and I promised that I’d always be faithful to her so she’d never have to feel that way again. And I never told another soul what happened.”

“But, Dave, you should have. Don’t you know that? You should have told somebody what she was doing to you!”

“I was just a kid, Lisa! What was I supposed to do? I was terrified to say anything. I thought if I humiliated Carla by telling someone that I’d even thought about calling off the wedding, she’d kill herself.”

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