Authors: Margaret Daley
“I don't eat meat.”
“You don't?” Zachary glanced from his son to Jordan. “Are you a vegetarian, too?”
“No, I'm not a purist like Nicholas. I occasionally eat meat.”
“Mom tries to support my beliefs as much as possible.”
“Okayâ” Zachary ran his hand through his hair “âI'm sure we can find something for you to eat.”
“I've got peanut butter,” Becca piped in.
“I like that.”
Mike studied his cousin. “Do you eat pizza?”
“Sure, cheese and a vegetable one.”
“Yuck! I hate vegetables.” Six-year-old Cal squirmed on the floor by his dad's feet.
“Mom makes a great one.” Nicholas peered toward her. “She's the best cook.”
Jordan released a slow breath. He might be upset with her right now, but his comments gave her hope she would be able to make it right with him soon. She needed to give her son time to bond with Zachary and his family. She owed Zachary that much.
Rising, she said, “I'll leave you all to enjoy your dinner. Zachary, what time should I come back to pick up Nicholas?”
“I'll bring him home.”
“Fine.” Overwhelmed by the past week, Jordan hurried from the house, fighting tears just below the surface. At her car she hesitated, staring at Zachary's home. For her son's sake, she and Zachary needed to get along. Could they come to an understanding?
My life is a mess, and I only have myself to blame.
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Zachary pulled to a stop in front of Jordan's place and glanced at his son in the front seat of his truck. “If your mom says okay, grab your pj's and some clothes for tomor
row. We'll do some riding before some kids come for a lesson.”
“Super.”
He started to say, “Let me talk with your mother first,” when Nicholas hopped down from the cab and raced toward the house.
As Zachary ambled toward the porch, his son announced his plans to Jordan, then scurried awayâpresumably up the stairs to get his stuff to stay overnight with him. When he mounted the steps, she came out onto the porch.
The light from the house illuminated her concern. Her beauty, which had plagued his dreams many nights, touched his core, tempting him to forget the last eleven years. “I get it that you want to make up for lost time, but you don't have to cram it all into the first few days. Nicholas has a habit of tiring himself out, then he gets sick.”
He came to a halt a couple of feet from her, close enough to get a whiff of her vanilla scent. At least that hadn't changed in eleven years even if just about everything else had. Her fragrance stirred memories best left locked away. Zachary backed away to give himself some space. But he couldn't forget the times he'd held her close enveloped in the vanilla-laced fragrance. “I'll make sure he doesn't overdo it. He asked if he could. He wants to see what I do. I didn't see any reason to say no.”
“How about the fact that I was starting his homeschooling tomorrow?”
“One of the nice things about teaching your child at home is that your schedule is flexible. You decide the when and where.”
“I know we have to work out some kind of arrangement, but please run things by me before you say anything to Nicholas. He's been through a lot in his short life.” Her voice quivered.
He could never resist the urge in the past to soothe away her concerns. This was no different. “Are you talking about the surgery to repair his heart defect?”
She nodded. “What did he tell you?”
“That his doctor says he's fine now. Fixed.”
“That doesn't mean he shouldn't be careful.”
“He'll be safe. I just found my son. I'm not gonna let anything happen to him, but I have a lot of catching up to do.” He wanted this to work out for Nicholas's sake.
Tears misted Jordan's eyes. “I want this to work out for Nicholas. In order for that to happen, we need to be a team. Can you put aside your anger at me so we can work together forâour son?”
J
ordan's unshed tears nearly undid Zachary. His gut tightened as though preparing to be hit. “You want the honest truth?”
“Always.”
“I don't know. Yesterday morning I knew nothing about having a son. Then you appear and tell me Nicholas is my child. I'm still trying to digest what you told me. I need time.”
“Fair enough.” Jordan closed her eyes for a few seconds, a tear leaking out and running down her cheek.
The sight of it jolted him back to another time when they had fought and partedâher going to Savannah while he stayed in Tallgrass licking his wounds. Where would they be now if they had never fought that day or his mother had told him about Jordan's calls?
“Nicholas's welfare is the most important thing to me, so I want this to work. If we fight all the time and use him as a pawn in some game, he'll be the one who ends up hurt the most.”
“Agreed. Let's start over. I'm Zachary Rutgers. I raise quarter horses and have a small herd of buffalo on my
ranch.” He held out his hand, shoving his anger away. He'd loved her at one timeâknew she had a good heart. Working as a teamâas Nicholas's parentsâwas what was best for their son.
She fit hers in his grasp and shook it. “I'm Jordan Masterson. I have a graphic design business and as of today I'm homeschooling my child and terrified I'm going to mess it up.”
The warm feel of her fingers seared his palm. It took every ounce of willpower not to drop her hand, not to react to her touch, the softness of her skin against his work-toughened flesh. “I'll try to help with the homeschooling. I've picked up some things from Becca. And I know my sister would help you.” Releasing her, he inhaled deeply. He could do thisâbe on friendly terms with Jordanâbut he would make sure he guarded his heart. He wouldn't let her hurt him again.
“It'll be all I can do to stay one step ahead of him, especially in math.”
“Check with Ian Ferguson about his math group. I know Ian and Alexa are planning to leave after the New Year, but until then it could be a solution to Nicholas's math needs.”
“I'll do that. Nancy Baker said something about that when I met with her last week.”
The door opened behind Jordan, and Nicholas exited. “I've got everything.”
“Let's go, partner.”
Jordan stopped their son and hugged him. “I love you, Nicholas. I know you'll behave.” She kissed his cheek.
“Ah, Mom.” He tugged away and hurried down the stairs toward Zachary's truck.
The crestfallen look on Jordan's face prodded Zach
ary to move closer and touch her arm. “Just exerting his independence.”
“I wish he'd wait a few years. I'm not ready for him to grow up.”
At least she'd had the first ten years with Nicholas. Her words drove home the fact he'd lost out on so much of his only child's life. He stepped back from Jordan, stomping down the rising anger. A teamâhim and Jordan. He would make it work somehow. For their son.
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“What do you want for breakfast?” Zachary looked in his refrigerator and saw the few food provisions he had. He should have gone grocery shopping, but he hadn't originally thought that Nicholas would spend the night. “I've got some milk. We could have cereal.” He took the carton, opened it and smelled. The rancid aroma of sour milk accosted his nostrils. “On second thought, maybe we could go out for breakfast.” He glanced toward his son standing by the kitchen sink.
“That's okay.” Nicholas rubbed the sleep from his eyes. “I'll go get dressed.”
“Thanks, partner.” When his son left the kitchen, Zachary massaged his temples. What else was he forgetting? He wasn't starting out very good as a father.
Note to self: get food in the house. See what Nicholas likes. Find out everything I can from Jordan about him.
When he heard a knock at the front door, he made his way toward it. Jordan stood on his porch with a sack full of food in her arms. The beat of his heart sped as if he was settling on the back of the bull in the chuteâseconds before the gate opened. He moved to the side and allowed her into his house, actually pleased at her appearance.
“I saw your empty refrigerator yesterday and figured you might not have much for breakfast, so here I am. I can
make both of you buttermilk pancakes. Okay?” She turned in the foyer and waited for his answer.
She was trying to make the best of their situation. He needed to meet her halfway. “I haven't had pancakes in a long time.”
“And you used to love them.”
“Still do.”
“So does Nicholas.” She started for the kitchen.
Zachary followed her and watched from the doorway while she made herself at home, taking the food out of the sack and putting some of it away while setting the rest on the counter to use. The sight of her in his kitchen reconstructed some of his past dreams when he'd thought they would marry. He couldn't emotionally afford those dreams, and yet she fit well into his kitchen.
“Blackberries are in right now. I use them as a topping. Remember that time we went blackberry picking? That snake that slithered among the bushes?” She opened a cabinet and withdrew a mixing bowl, then threw a glance over her shoulder.
“You couldn't move fast enough.”
“Right into your arms. All I could think about was getting my feet off the ground,” she said with a laugh. “That seems to be my reaction when I see a snake.”
The sound of her merriment drew him forward. Crossing the kitchen, he kept his gaze on her. All of a sudden he was whisked back to when he was eighteen, in love with her, spending a morning picking blackberries because she asked him sweetly to help her. Her grandmother was going to make her blackberry jam and needed some fresh ones. He'd been on top of the world, in spite of the snake that had quickly slid away, probably because of Jordan's loud scream.
“I never did get a jar of the jam.” He stopped a few feet from her, their looks still entangled together.
“Neither did I.” She blinked and averted her head.
“Yeah, you left for art school three weeks later.”
The air thickened with charged emotions. Recalling that time brought bittersweet memories to the foreground. Zachary clamped down on his jaw to keep the words from boiling to the surface. Words of recrimination. If only the past had been different, they would be a couple now. If only⦠He had to stop feeling this way. He needed to live in the present.
“Mom, what are you doing here?”
Jordan whirled around, a grin on her face. “Rescuing your dad with breakfast.”
Your dad.
Zachary liked the sound of that.
Nicholas checked out the ingredients on the counter. “Buttermilk pancakes?” She nodded.
His son pumped his arm in the air. “Wait till you eat them, Dad.”
Dad!
That was the first time Nicholas had said it. The best sound in the world. It filled him with joy. “Can I do anything to help?”
She waved her hand. “No, you two go somewhere and get to know each other. I'll call you when I've got it fixed.”
He studied Jordan for a moment. What was this Jordan like? She wasn't a teenager anymore. He suddenly wanted to know the woman standing before him. Maybe then they could be the team Nicholas needed. “We'll be out on the porch.”
“Great. It'll be about fifteen minutes.”
Outside Nicholas sat on the top stair next to Zachary. His son set his forearms on his thighs just like him, clasping his hands loosely.
“Did you ask Mom to come?”
“No, but I guess yesterday she saw how pitiful my food supply is.”
“She's perceptive like that.”
“Yeah, and better organized than I am.”
“I find if you're organized it saves a lot of useless time looking for things you've misplaced.”
Zachary chuckled. “You're one hundred percent right. You two will have to rub off on me.”
“How did you and Mom meet?”
The question flooded him with memoriesâall good ones. “I was on the football team in high school. A fullback. It was the first game, and not far from where I was sitting on the bench waiting for the offense to get their turn to play, I spied your mom cheering. She was the new one on the squad. I caught her gaze. As we were staring at each other, she missed her move and the girl next to her ran into her. She blushed a nice shade of red. Matched her uniform. Of course, after the game I had to apologize.”
“So you two started dating?”
The journey into the past prodded good memories into his mind. But she wasn't the same. He wasn't the same, either. Zachary kneaded the cords of his neck. Too tightâtight as the cinch on a saddle. “Well, not exactly. It took me a few weeks to wear her down. She was embarrassed in front of the student body. A piece of advice for the future. Not the best way to meet a gal.”
“You played football. I don't know anything about the game. Isn't it just a bunch of guys trying to hurt each other?”
“I can see where you might think that. When I played, I learned teamwork.”
Nicholas's gaze skimmed down his length. “I'm too small to play football.”
“The game isn't for everyone. There are other sports if you want to do something like that. Soccer doesn't depend on size. Have you thought of that?”
His son shook his head. “I'm not very coordinated.”
“I could work with you if you want to practice handling a ball.” Zachary placed his hand on his son's shoulder. “But you don't have to. It's your call. Just know I'll help you any way you want.”
Nicholas flashed him a huge grin.
In that second a bond formed between him and his son. Emotions he'd guarded welled up into his throat, sealing words insideâwords he wasn't good at saying.
“Breakfast is served.” Jordan stood at the screen door.
Zachary swallowed several times and breathed in the coffee-laced air. “You fixed coffee, too?” The wobble in his voice hung suspended for a few seconds between them.
“Sure. I know how you like it. I pitched yours.” She winced. “I'm gonna have to teach you how to brew a good cup.”
She'd always been a good cook. “I may take you up on that.” Zachary rose, brushing his hand down his jeans.
Nicholas did the same thing, dust flying everywhere. Zachary needed to sweep his steps. His son began coughing. Jordan started toward him but stopped halfway there and remained still.
“Did you bring apple juice?” Nicholas asked after sucking in several deep breaths.
“Your dad still had some left from yesterday. I poured you a glass. It's on the table.”
Nicholas hurried into the house while Zachary said, “Housekeeping has never been my forte.”
“To tell you the truth it isn't mine, either. Give me something to cook and I'm happy. Give me a dust rag and I find a way to get out of it.”
Zachary swiped a hand across his forehead. “Whew, I'm relieved. It's bad enough I don't cook well, but I hated to fall short in every area.”
Jordan paused in the foyer. “This isn't a competition.”
“I know but I've spent a good part of my life competingâfirst on the football field and then in the rodeo ring.”
“What did you two talk about?”
He grinned and winked at her. “How you and I met.”
A faint blush tinted her cheeks, again reminding him of their first encounter. “Did you mention I fell flat on my bottom in front of a stadium full of people?”
“Sort of, but I took full blame for the accident.”
“Oh, that is so reassuring.” Jordan marched past him.
He admired how cute she was when she blushed. Putting the brakes on the directions his thoughts were going, he shook his head then proceeded into the kitchen a few steps behind her. Friendsâthat was all they could be now.
“Where have you guys been? I'm starving.”
“Did you wash your hands?” Jordan asked as she sat across from her son.
Zachary diverted his path to the sink and made sure he did exactly what Jordan had asked Nicholas. He had to set a good example for his son.
“Yes, I did. I know how important good hygiene is. So many of our germs are spread by hand contact. That's why they stress washing so much during flu season.”
Zachary listened to his son launch into the health risk when people didn't follow that simple rule, even quoting a medical source. That was when he knew he was in over his head and drowning.
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Two days later on Saturday afternoon Jordan turned into the ranch to pick up her son after he'd spent another night
at Zachary's. When Nicholas had returned home after the first time, all he could talk about was how neat it was to own a ranch. He had her take him to the library and he got every book he could find on the subject of horses. As she pulled up next to Zachary's Ford F-150 truck near the barn, she wondered how the joint grocery store trip went last evening. He had wanted Nicholas to go with him so he got all their son's favorite food.
As Jana strolled with Alexa toward an SUV, Jordan climbed from her Camaro and waved. With quick steps she covered the area between them. “I'm glad I caught you before you left.”
Alexa grinned. “I hear you're taking the plunge and homeschooling Nicholas.”
“Yeah, and I'm suddenly freaking out. What if I don't do a good job? What was I thinking that I could teach my child? I haven't had any training at all. This week was my first, and I felt so out of my comfort zone.”
“You aren't alone. Ian told me he felt the same way when he first started. Probably still does.”
“But he has you. You're almost through with your education degree.”
Alexa leaned close as Jana climbed into the front seat of the SUV. “I have my doubts at least once a week. It's a big decision to become solely responsible for a child's education. The fact you don't take it lightly means you'll do fine.”