by Addison Cole
He kissed the top of her head. “I love you, too, pumpkin. I have you to thank for most of my gray hair.”
“Good thing you’re such a silver fox,” their mother said, and the girls all agreed.
“Y’all are going to make my head swell,” Cade said, leaning down to kiss Marilynn.
Reed realized he’d been staring at Grace as she chatted with her sisters, and when he shook his head to break the spell, he noticed Pepper watching him.
Cade must have noticed because he said, “What is it, princess?”
“I was just thinking how rare of a breed Reed is,” Pepper said.
“He’s not a horse,” Morgyn said.
“He might be hung like one,” Sable said under her breath, earning a harsh glare from her father.
Brindle choked on her juice.
Grace turned flushed cheeks toward Reed. Her confirming smile was not missed by her sisters, who went wide-eyed seconds before falling into hysterics. Reed stifled a chuckle.
Pepper rolled her eyes. “I meant that he treated Grace like a diamond before he even had a penny, with flowers and protecting her reputation.”
“Aw, isn’t that the sweetest and truest thing anyone could say?” Marilynn put her hand over her heart. “I wish you were here so I could hug you, honey.”
“Me too,” Grace said. “I miss you, Pep, and you, Axsel.”
As Reed took in Grace’s family, he was glad he’d made the call and invited Frank last night. Even though Frank had already settled in for the night and wasn’t able to make it, Reed had heard deep appreciation in his voice. Reed wanted Grace to meet him and had invited Frank to come over to his house at eleven thirty, after they visited with Grace’s family. Reed still wasn’t sure where Frank should fit into his life or of his own emotions toward him. But as he listened to Grace and her family discussing ideas for their wedding, Cade came to Reed’s side and said, “Welcome to my estrogen-filled family, son,” and he realized he could never have too many people who cared for them.
“Thanks, Cade. Maybe someday Grace and I will give you a few grandsons to even things out.”
“Did I hear something about grandbabies?” Marilynn’s smile lit up her whole face. “Sophie’s baby shower is tomorrow. I bet Lindsay and Nana would be happy to make it a double!”
“What?” Grace spun around with a confused, though delighted, expression. “Babies?”
“Now you’ve done it,” Cade said for Reed’s ears only.
“Someday, baby.” Reed reached for Grace and drew her into his arms. “I said someday.”
“Someday,” slid off her tongue in a whisper with a hefty amount of relief. “We can’t live in separate states when we have kids.”
Worry washed over her beautiful face, bringing Reed’s lips to hers in a tender kiss. “We’ll figure everything out. There’s no rush. First we build the foundation and get married, and then I’m taking you on an amazing honeymoon. Then we’ll figure out the rest.”
“You make it sound so easy and doable,” she said with a sweet smile.
“Loving you is easy, baby. That makes anything doable.”
“Sorry, sis, but I seriously think I just fell in love with your fiancé,” Amber said.
“Me, too,” Sable said. “And I don’t do love.”
“Yeah, put me on that love list,” Axsel teased. “Dang, bro. You really know how to make ’em fall.”
“Oh, heck no.” Grace threw her arms around Reed. “First of all, Axsel, he’s straight. And the rest of you? Keep your paws off my man, or you will see me turn wild.”
Reed buried his face in her neck as her family went wide-eyed in shock. “Baby, that was the sexiest thing I’ve ever seen.”
Grace’s phone rang. “That’s probably Sophie. I promised to come by after we meet Frank to help decorate for the shower.” She dug her phone from her pocket and glanced at the screen. All the joy drained from her face. She turned the phone toward Reed, and he saw Satchel’s name.
“Tell Soph to come over,” Morgyn called after Grace, who was walking into the living room to take the call.
Brindle waved a croissant and said, “And tell her to bring that hot husband of hers!”
“It’s not Sophie,” Reed said. “It’s work.” His gut twisted in irritation over the casting director not handling his own responsibilities and Grace being drawn into what seemed like every little thing these last few days. Not that he minded Grace doing her job, and apparently hand-holding was part of her job. He was proud of her for her dedication to the production, even when she was supposed to have time off. But she’d claimed to have little downtime, and he was beginning to wonder if even that was an understatement.
GRACE WAS NOT a crier, despite the tears she’d shed over the past few days, when it seemed years of emotions had come bubbling up. But as she ended the call with Satchel after agreeing to return to the city as soon as she could pack her bags, she was powerless to stop tears from falling. She sank down to the arm of the couch, trying to regain control as she thought of leaving Reed and her family, missing out on meeting Frank, and missing Sophie’s baby shower. But the unfairness of it all was too much, and she could do little more than bury her face in her hands and weep.
“Baby? What happened?” Reed pulled her into his arms.
“I have to—” Sobs stole her voice as he caressed her back, telling her that whatever was going on, it would be okay. No! It won’t! She heard the words in her head, but every time she opened her mouth, more sobs came. And then suddenly everyone was in the living room witnessing her meltdown, including Axsel and Pepper because her father had carried the laptop with him.
Great. Just freaking perfect.
“What’s going on?” Sable asked, glaring at Reed. “Who needs to get their butt kicked?”
Embarrassment set in for her loss of control, and that quickly morphed to anger, because Grace Montgomery did not lose control.
She straightened her spine and swiped at her tears. “Nobody’s,” Grace seethed, fire and ice filling her up like a well. “I’m going to do it myself.”
“What happened?” Reed asked.
“Keagen, the lead in the play, threatened to walk off because of some crap that’s going on.” She eyed her parents. “Sorry, but…”
“It’s okay, honey,” her mother said. “But why are you crying?”
“Because I have to go back.” Tears burned her eyes again. Darn it. She blinked them away and said, “I have to leave now and get him to continue in the role and placate the investors, who are going to pull funding if we lose him. We have a meeting at eight o’clock tonight.”
“You’re leaving now?” several of them said at once, but it was Reed’s voice that clawed at her heart.
It was all she could do to nod as her family all converged on her at once, hugging, saying goodbye, and telling her they understood. Their support made her as thankful as it did sad, and the whole situation made her angry.
After so many hugs she felt depleted, her family walked them out to the truck.
Her father took her by the shoulders and said, “Chin up, Gracie Jean. I know you’re sad and angry, but they called you because you’re the head honcho, and we’re all very proud of you.”
He kissed her forehead and stepped back, allowing her mother to hug her one last time. She smiled the encouraging smile Grace remembered from the day they’d said goodbye when she went away to college. Why was this suddenly so hard? She’d come and gone dozens of times, usually anxiously awaiting her departure and the madness of her life in the city.
“We’ll be right here when you come back, honey,” her mother said.
“Will you video Sophie’s shower?” Grace pleaded. “I want to see everything. All the decorations, every gift, her face as she opens each one…”
“Of course, honey,” her mother said. “Now go, before you’re late. And remember, you’re not leaving us behind. We’re always with you.”
Chapter Twenty-Eight
GRAC
E THREW HER clothes into her suitcase, not bothering to fold them. She was shaking too much to even try. “I can’t believe this!” She threw a pair of jeans so hard the suitcase jiggled. “We were supposed to have another week!” She gunned a shirt at the suitcase. “Stupid!” Throw. “Self-absorbed.” Throw. “Actors!”
She went to the closet and yanked her dresses off the hangers. Once she arrived in the city she’d have to go straight to the meeting, so she stripped off her jeans and put on her expensive black slacks and silk blouse. As she shoved her feet into her heels, she heard her sisters’ voices telling her she wore city clothes and Phoenix saying no one would ever think Grace was from Oak Falls.
Great. Now she was pissed about having to dress for a meeting in the city. She bit back a stream of curses, thinking of all the loose ends she was leaving behind.
“Please tell Frank I really wanted to meet him. I have to call Nana and the girls and let them know they’re on their own for the rest of the auditions, and I promised Nat I’d go over her final draft one last time. I’ll call her and do it over Skype. And Sophie. Oh gosh. I have to call Sophie. She’s going to be so upset.”
Tears filled her eyes again. She picked up a pair of high-heeled boots and threw them toward the suitcase. They bounced off the bed, landing on the floor with a clunk.
“I’ve got them.” Reed bent to retrieve the boots, and she plopped down onto the edge of the bed.
“I’m sorry. I just hate this.”
“It’s going to be okay, Grace.” He put her boots in the suitcase. “I’ll call Frank and tell him I can’t make it. I’ll go with you.”
“No! That poor man is leaving Monday. He came all this way from…wherever he lives. He needs you more than I do.”
Reed sat down and lifted her onto his lap. “We’ll get through this. Don’t worry.”
He was so calm and understanding, it made her angrier. “Why aren’t you mad? This ruins everything. We were supposed to have more time together. And I wanted to meet Frank and go to Sophie’s shower and spend more time with my family…”
For once in her life, she didn’t want everyone to understand or tell her it was okay. She wanted to stay, and for someone else to handle the issues and investors. That was the attitude of a weak person, not a professional producer, and that upset her even more. Was she not allowed to feel what a normal person would feel? She was so confused, had kept her life and feelings in check for so long, she didn’t even know what was right anymore. But she knew one thing for sure. Pissing and moaning wouldn’t handle the situation any faster. And she needed to handle it quickly—for the sake of the play, and to return home to Reed and spend whatever time they had left of next week together.
She forced herself to sit up a little taller and pull herself together, but one look at Reed, and that weak girl inside her crumbled again.
“Come here.” He embraced her again and said, “Why aren’t I angrier? Because this is your job, and I’m not a kid who doesn’t get it. We both have lives, roots, commitments. This is a bump in the road, babe. Yeah, it royally sucks, but you know what?” He lifted her left hand and kissed her fingers. “You’re going to be my wife, and I’m going to be your husband, and there’s nothing we can’t get through.”
He pushed his hands into her hair the way she loved and held her gaze. Oh, how her heart softened and her sadness eased with his touch.
“We’re going to be fine,” he said confidently. “I promise.”
He lowered his lips to hers, filling her with love and pushing away those other awful feelings. He took the kiss deeper, made it sweeter, then rough and demanding, and then easing once again, claiming all of her attention.
Their lips parted with a series of tender kisses. She felt a hundred times lighter, wishing she could stay within the warm safety of his embrace, lost in him, instead of giving in to the clock ticking away in her head.
“Okay?” he asked softly.
She nodded, hating the way thoughts of her long drive ahead pressed in on her. Any traffic would make her late to the meeting, and she still had to figure out the best way to handle the situation with Keagen.
Reed’s lips tipped up in a sexy smile. “I see the gears of your brain churning. I’ll pack your stuff, since you clearly want to break something in the process,” he said teasingly. “You can get started on that list of yours.”
They finished packing, and Grace called Nana, who promised to call the girls. She decided to call Sophie from the road, since she’d need her comfort anyway.
They packed her car, and she stood beside it clinging to Reed, their hearts pounding furiously against each other.
She buried her face in his chest and said, “I want to be five years old again just for ten minutes.”
He tipped her face up, his sad eyes cutting straight to her heart. “Why?”
“Because then I could throw a tantrum and get my way so I can stay.”
“Aw, baby.” He crushed her to him. “I love you, and we’ll see each other soon. Don’t worry about us. We’re solid, babe. We’ll always be together. You just concentrate on handling the things you need to.”
“Tell Frank I’m sorry?” Her entire body ached with sadness.
“Of course.”
She pushed up on her toes, and he met her halfway in another soul-drenching kiss. She clung to his back, soaking in his strength as their union turned fierce and hungry.
“Wish I could stay,” she said between frantic kisses.
“Me too. Love you.” Kiss, kiss, nip, kiss. “Call me the second you get there.” Kiss, kiss, grope, kiss. “And at any rest stops.” Kisssssssss.
By the time they finally parted, she felt flushed.
“Better go,” she managed. “I can’t be late.”
He opened her car door, and she sank down to the seat, then popped back up, tugging him down by his shirt for another passionate kiss. Frustratingly aware of the minutes ticking by and the urgency of her trip, she reluctantly pressed her hand to his chest, the dreadful weight of their separation looming between them.
Neither of them spoke as she settled in behind the wheel. He hooked her seat belt, gazing into her eyes, his big body taking up the space between her and the steering wheel.
He pressed his lips to hers one more time and whispered, “Go get ’em, Gracie.”
Fighting against tears as he climbed from the car and closed the door, she started the engine and feigned a smile. Don’t cry. Don’t cry. Don’t cry.
He blew her a kiss, and she pretended to catch it and press it to her lips.
She watched him in the rearview mirror as she drove away. He followed her into the street, his hands in his pockets, broad shoulders rounded in sadness. Frank was due there in ten minutes. She hoped her leaving wouldn’t affect their visit. With one last glance in the rearview, she turned the corner as tears slid down her cheeks.
REED STOOD IN the middle of the road feeling like he had years ago, when he’d told Grace she was doing the right thing by going away to college but he’d wanted to beg her to stay. He wasn’t that stupid kid anymore. Why was his mind doing this to him? He had commitments, had to work out the subcontractors for the Majestic, order supplies so they’d arrive right after settlement, and most importantly, he had only a couple days to spend with Frank. It wasn’t like he could up and leave.
Frank was leaving Monday. Maybe Reed could postpone his other meetings and drive up then. Monday felt a lifetime away.
Frank’s car ambled down the street, and Reed stepped to the curb. Frank had enough on his plate; he didn’t need to see Reed’s distress. Forcing a smile and a wave, Reed vowed not to make the man’s life any more difficult than it already was.
“How’s it going?” Reed asked as Frank stepped from the car, looking a little less disheveled than he had the last time he’d seen him. He had about a day’s worth of scruff and his clothes were wrinkled, but there was a renewed spark in his eyes.
“Not as well as it is for you.” He reached into the
car and grabbed a bouquet of orchids and handed them to Reed. “Congratulations again. These are for you and Grace.”
Another pang of longing stroked through him with the sight of the orchids. Reed didn’t quite have it in him to tell Frank she wouldn’t be joining them. Instead, he said, “Thank you. These are her favorites.”
“They were your mother’s, too.” Frank said as they headed for the house.
Reed’s legs stopped working. “They were?”
Frank nodded. “That’s how she chose our apartment. There were orchids in the rental office, and she took it as a sign.”
If Reed hadn’t believed in signs before, he sure did now. It was as if his mother was thanking him for sticking around to see Frank. “Want to go inside?”
“Actually, I spend a lot of time indoors. Would you mind if we sat on the steps for a bit?” Frank glanced at the house. “You are definitely your mother’s son. She would have loved a house like this.”
As they sat down, Reed caught sight of Frank’s scars. In an effort to distract himself from thoughts of Grace, he asked, “If you don’t mind me asking, how did you get those scars?”
Frank ran his fingers over his mangled skin, and a small smile lifted his lips. “Protecting your mother. She loved children. One summer she volunteered at the refreshment stand at a local pool on the weekends. I went with her because, well, I didn’t want to miss out on the time with her.”
He tossed Reed a knowing smile, and Reed’s mind sprinted back to Grace, looking like a million bucks in her fancy clothes. How had she remained single for all these years? Were the men in New York blind and deaf? She was the most fascinating woman he’d ever known. And now his gut twisted with longing again.
“Your mother and I were behind the counter,” Frank explained, bringing Reed’s mind back to their conversation. “I was cooking burgers and hot dogs and she was handing out candy and chips. Somebody tossed a plastic ball over the counter, and she leaned back so it wouldn’t hit her face and lost her footing. She was going to fall right on the hot grill. I put my arm out”—he extended his arm to the side—“and caught her before she hit it.”