by Mari Carr
Precious little, he realized.
She was from Chicago. She’d moved to Baltimore for a job opportunity. She lived alone. Knew no one in the city, and she rooted for the Blackhawks and the Bears.
That was it.
“Is there someone you’d like me to call?” he asked as her crying began to slow and quiet.
She shook her head.
“A friend from work? Family?”
“No,” she whispered. “There’s no one.”
Her answer gutted him almost as much as her crying. He’d grown up with an abundance of family and friends. Hell, half the time he joked he had too many damn relatives.
To consider that she was in so much distress with no one to call for help was upsetting. It bothered him deeply.
While he didn’t know her well, he knew people. And his gut told him she was a genuinely nice person. So why was a nice person living alone with no friends and crying her heart out to a stranger because she had no one else to turn to?
For a moment, he considered calling one of his female cousins, perhaps Yvonne or Sunnie, to talk to Mia. Maybe she couldn’t confide whatever was wrong to him because he was a man.
Before he could make the offer, she seemed to have found her strength at last.
She stood straighter, finally managing to reclaim her voice. “I didn’t mean to fall apart like that. I realize I must look like an insane person.”
“No. You look like someone who needs a friend.”
“It’s why I came to the pub,” she admitted. “I got some…” She paused, and he realized she was struggling to pick her words. “Bad news today. I was almost back to my apartment when I turned and came to the bar instead. I thought maybe it would help to be around people.”
Padraig reached over and rubbed a thumb over the tracks of her tears. He forced a grin and a lighthearted voice, desperate to find some way to make her smile. “Looks like it worked.”
She laughed at his joke. It was just one quick burst of humor before she sobered up again, but it pleased him. Made him determined to produce a longer smile, a louder laugh the next time.
“Yeah. Worked wonders.” She glanced toward the bar. “I didn’t mean to keep you away from the pub so long.” She shivered, the cold finally penetrating. “Or out in this freezing air. I should let you—”
“Want to grab a cup of coffee from the Daily Grind?” he asked, pointing down the block toward the coffee shop.
“What about the bar?”
Padraig reached into the back pocket of his jeans and pulled out his cell. “My cousin is covering for me. I’m sure he won’t mind taking over the rest of the shift.” He was pretty sure Finn would mind, but he’d find a way to make it up to him. “Let me just text him and we’ll be on our way.”
She looked across the street at her apartment building. Padraig was afraid she’d insist on going home. He wasn’t comfortable leaving her alone. At least not until he found out what was wrong. Mia was in serious pain, and even if she was used to dealing with things on her own, that wasn’t the Collins way. It simply wasn’t in him to leave her alone and hurting.
He was relieved when she nodded, waiting patiently as he sent his pleading text to Finn.
Padraig didn’t bother to wait for a reply. Instead, he reached out, grasped her hand, and the two of them walked to the coffee shop.
His phone beeped just as they crossed the threshold.
All Finn said was, You owe me.
They both ordered tall Americanas, then claimed a small table in a quiet corner. This place—like Pat’s Pub—was nearly empty. Didn’t look like hot drinks were faring any better than alcohol in this weather.
Mia wrapped her hands around her cup, seeking the warmth it provided, and he followed suit.
They sat in silence for a few moments.
“I realize I’m a stranger to you,” he said at last.
Before he could continue, she interrupted. “Not really. I mean, I know we don’t talk a lot, but I’m in the pub enough that I’ve formed a pretty good picture of who you are.”
His curiosity was piqued. “Oh yeah? Like what?”
“You’ve got a good sense of humor. You’re obsessed with sports and probably skirting a line in terms of gambling addiction.”
He laughed. “That vice is pretty common in my family.”
She smiled. “I like your family. Like that so many of you work together in Pat’s Pub. You’re all really nice to each other. I mean, it feels like you actually like each other.”
He tilted his head. “We’re family. Of course we like each other. Actually, we love each other.”
“I like that you don’t have a clue how unique your family is. None of you seem to realize that.”
Her comment gave him his first real insight into her own family situation. “You’re not close to your family?”
“No,” she admitted. “Unlike you, my family tree is a lot smaller. Me and my mom. And we’ve been estranged since I was seventeen.”
Padraig didn’t have a clue how old she was, but he figured it was rude to ask. “I’m sorry to hear that.”
“Don’t be. My life got a lot simpler when I stopped trying to make my mother into something she wasn’t.”
“No dad?”
“Sperm donor. Mom got pregnant in high school. Guy basically rejected her…and me. Pretty sure my mom would have had an abortion or given me up for adoption if not for my grandma.”
Mia smiled when she mentioned her grandmother, and Padraig felt a strange sense of relief. He could tell from her expression that mercifully there’d been at least one person in Mia’s past who had wanted her, loved her.
“Mom and I lived with my grandma until I was eleven. Grandma took care of me while my mom finished high school and then went to work. Grandma was the most amazing person I’ve ever known. She used to call me Tilly Mint.”
“What’s that stand for?”
Mia shrugged. “No idea. Just a silly nickname, I guess. But I was always sorry I never asked her.”
“What happened when you were eleven?” He regretted his question. Whatever had been upsetting Mia before seemed to return.
“C-cancer,” she said, stumbling over the word. She looked down at her coffee, her eyes returning to that faraway look that told Padraig he’d lost her again.
“Mia,” he said, reaching over and giving one of her hands a light squeeze. “That must have been hard on you.”
She nodded. “My mom had basically washed her hands of me after I was born, so without Grandma, she was forced into a parenting position she didn’t want. And I didn’t help much. I missed Grandma so much and I resented my mom. I mean, she’d never made any secret of her feelings for me, so when she tried to tell me what to do, I got angry, rebellious. We butted heads nonstop until halfway through my senior year, when I moved out. I had a friend whose parents were cool with me sleeping on the couch in their basement until graduation. I worked two jobs to try to pay my own way.”
Padraig tried to imagine how frightening it must have been to have no support system at such a young age. “You haven’t talked to your mom since then?”
“No. I ran into her once when I was twenty. I was working the checkout line at the grocery store and Mom got in my line. I’m sure she wouldn’t have if she’d looked up and realized it was me working the register. I rang up the groceries at record speed, she paid, and that was it. As far as I know, she never darkened the door of that store again.”
“She didn’t even ask how you were?”
Mia shook her head. “No. But in all fairness, I didn’t ask about her, either.”
Padraig made a mental note to call his mom first thing in the morning to tell her he loved her.
Mia took a sip of her coffee and he followed suit.
“I hope you won’t think I’m a stalker, but I like coming into the pub to watch you and your family interact. I had a blast last month, sitting at the bar to watch that February Stars competition with everyone. It was fun.”<
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Padraig felt guilty for not even realizing she’d been there. Of course, in his defense, the bar had been packed on competition nights. They’d streamed the show live on all the televisions, as family members and patrons placed wagers on who would win the contest. Business had been really terrific that month, which made the sudden slowdown in March all the more brutal. There had been too many nights the past few weeks that he’d been bored out of his mind, certain it would be more exciting to watch paint dry.
“February Stars was a fun contest,” he said.
“I was glad when Hunter ultimately won. He was my favorite the whole time.”
“Yeah. He was my cousin Ailis’s favorite too.” Ailis and Hunter had fallen in love during the contest and were in the midst of planning a future together. She was the second of Padraig’s pile of cousins to be bitten by the love bug. His oldest cousin, Caitlyn, was currently head over heels with Lucas Whiting, the richest guy in Baltimore.
“Let me guess. You were a Rory fan?”
Padraig grinned. “Not sure there were too many guys who weren’t in her camp. My brother is half in love with her, even though he won’t admit it. And there’s no denying her voice is out of this world.”
“Doesn’t hurt that she’s gorgeous, either,” Mia teased.
“She is?” he joked. “I hadn’t noticed.”
Mia rolled her eyes. “So Ailis and Hunter…they’re a thing now?”
Padraig nodded. “Yep. They’re a thing.” He figured he knew the answer to his next question, but he asked it anyway. “What about you? You have a thing for anybody?”
“No. I haven’t dated anyone since moving to Baltimore.”
“And in Chicago?”
She shrugged. “I had a couple boyfriends but nothing super serious. You may find this hard to believe, but I have trust issues. Can’t begin to understand where those stem from.”
He chuckled at her sarcasm. “Me, either,” he said, piling on. “I mean, your upbringing was so stellar.”
“Right?” she said, eyes wide with feigned agreement. “What about you? Anything serious between you and the woman you asked out over the phone last week?”
He gave her a curious glance, and she flushed a little.
“Sorry,” she muttered. “I wasn’t really eavesdropping. It’s just, when you eat alone, it’s hard not to hear the conversations going on around you.”
“The woman’s name is Brooke and we’ve gone out a few times. She’s really nice.”
“Cool.”
“You know, I have some single cousins and a bachelor brother if you want me to set you up.” As soon as he made the offer, Padraig began trying to decide which relative he’d choose for the blind date. In truth, he suspected all his cousins and Colm would enjoy dating Mia.
She shook her head, the sadness returning to her face. “No. That’s okay. I don’t think…it’s not a good time for…” Her voice grew thicker with each word, until she finally gave up speaking.
“Every time I think I’ve distracted you, it comes back, doesn’t it?”
Mia closed her eyes wearily. “It keeps sneaking up on me, blindsiding me. I forget for a minute or two and then boom. I’m body-slammed back down to the ground.”
He hated to press her, to keep questioning. It was obvious she didn’t want to talk about whatever it was that was attacking her.
“Want me to keep distracting you?”
She smiled. “I’d like that.”
“So tell me about your job.”
* * *
Want to keep reading? Wild Devotion is available now.
About the Author
Writing a book was number one on Mari Carr’s bucket list and on her thirty-fourth birthday, she set out to see that goal achieved. Too many years later, her computer is jammed full of stories — novels, novellas, short stories and dead-ends, and she has nearly a hundred published works, including her popular Wild Irish and Compass books, along with the Trinity Masters series she writes with Lila Dubois.
Virginia native Mari Carr is a New York Times and USA TODAY bestseller of contemporary erotic romance novels. With over one million copies of her books sold, Mari was the winner of the Romance Writers of America’s Passionate Plume award for her novella, Erotic Research.
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Find Mari Carr on the web at
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