Love At Last

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Love At Last Page 15

by Claudia Connor


  “I have two cribs. I set one up in here. I thought it might be good, you know. To have options. I wasn’t sure…” Her voice faded off. “Looks like you have the magic touch.” She nodded at Patrick in his arms. “It’s probably safe to put him down.” She moved to the crib and, reaching out with a free hand, smoothed the white sheet. “This guy might settle if I laid him down, but then again, he might not, and we’d be back to two boys awake.”

  She went on talking, looking anywhere but at him, nervous energy pouring off her.

  “I’m probably ruining them both so that they’ll never fall asleep on their own, but sometimes I feel like I’m on a never-ending cycle of getting them to sleep only to have them wake each other up.”

  “Clare.” Would she just look at him?

  “All the books say to let them cry a little. That they’ll get used to it. That it’s good for twins to get used to falling asleep with a little noise.”

  “The books can be wrong.”

  “Right.” She flicked him a glance. “I guess you’d know.”

  Another moment passed. Patrick had quieted, but his eyes were open like he knew there was something going on, and he didn’t want to miss it.

  “Do you mind if I don’t put him down?” Deacon asked. “Maybe we could just sit?”

  “Okay. Sure.” She looked around. There was just the couch and a chair, and the chair held a mountain of laundry. He sensed her unease.

  Deacon took a seat on the couch. Clare looked like she was trying to decide how to get the laundry out of the chair without putting the baby down, but eventually, she sat on the other end of the couch.

  The lighting was dim, just a lamp glowing on the end table beside him. The quiet room felt loud, so crowded with emotion.

  “Can I hold both of them?” he asked, suddenly desperate to touch Parker.

  He kept Patrick’s body cradled in his right arm as Clare gently slid the second baby into his left. Good, Lord. Two babies. It was like déjà vu.

  “Hey, buddy. Hey. It’s your daddy.” The emotion he’d been trying to get a handle on since he’d walked in welled up inside him until he was afraid he might cry. Parker blinked slowly. His little lips formed an O. “They’re beautiful, Clare.”

  “Thank you.”

  He looked at her and saw the tears clinging to her lashes. Not only had she been alone, she’d thought he was married, thought he’d lied to her. “I never meant for it to end like it did. I left you a note at the front desk.”

  “I didn’t get it.”

  He nodded slowly. “I figured. I hoped. I mean when I never heard from you I hoped you hadn’t gotten it and just not called.” He didn’t say just how desperately he’d wanted to believe that. “Did you have them okay? I mean, are you okay?” So many questions.

  “I’m fine. I thought I might have a cesarean, but I didn’t. It went well. My mom was there, and my friend Jess.”

  “The Jess that made you—”

  “Yes. That Jess,” she said quickly and looked even more uncomfortable if that were possible.

  “How? I mean… We used protection. And you said were on the pill.”

  “I was. I might have missed a few days. Not missed them, exactly. Lost them.” She explained about the throwing up. “I asked the doctor, and in addition to pointing out neither birth control was foolproof, she mentioned if you don’t…disengage…condoms lose their effectiveness.”

  Disengage? Right. He did seem to remember falling asleep inside her during the night because he hadn’t wanted to move. Hadn’t been willing to break that connection.

  “I had a hard time finding the right pill. They all made me nauseous, and I’d been off and on a few during the months leading up to the wedding. I guess my body didn’t think I was serious about the whole no-pregnant thing.”

  Deacon smiled, but he didn’t take his eyes from the baby. “I guess not.”

  The babies in his arms grew restless, and he stood to walk them.

  “They’re probably hungry,” Clare said, standing to follow him. “I usually feed them at the same time, or try to. I read it’s easier that way. Not easier to feed them, but easier in the long run to get them on the same schedule.”

  “Right. I remember that.” Clare took Parker, and he shifted Patrick to his shoulder. “I’m pretty handy with a bottle. Not so much the other way.”

  “I’ve only tried bottles once. It didn’t go well.”

  “Oh. Right. Well.”

  Both babies were crying now, their frantic newborn cries.

  “My flight’s at one tomorrow. I couldn’t get away for more than one night. Maybe I can come over in the morning? Late morning? Nine? Ten? Whatever’s good for you.”

  “Either is fine,” she said over the crying.

  “Okay then. I’ll see you tomorrow.” He passed Patrick back to her. He didn’t want to leave. He’d just gotten here. But Clare was still looking at him like a stranger. And like she wanted him gone. So he would go. And then he’d be back.

  Chapter 20

  DEACON WAS BACK IN the morning at nine o’clock on the dot. He leaned against her kitchen counter, wearing jeans and a steel-gray sweater. His hair was still damp from a shower, and she knew his freshly shaven jaw would feel silky smooth under her hand. She still couldn’t believe he was here, standing in her kitchen, a barely-there smile on his face, more in the eyes than the mouth. She’d almost forgotten how he took her breath away. Had tried to forget.

  Meanwhile, she wore a baggy T-shirt and pajama pants, looked like she’d just given birth to twins, and was running on three hours of sleep.

  “Did you get everything on the menu?” she asked, noting the three paper bags he’d set on the counter.

  “A few different kinds of bagels. I wanted you to have a choice.”

  “I’m not picky, and I’m always starving.”

  “I wasn’t sure about drinks. I would have texted you but I still don’t have your number. We should probably fix that,” he said and smiled.

  She laughed softly. “Yeah, we should.” Too bad they hadn’t done so nine months ago. “I’ve got drinks. Do you want something now? Coffee? Water? Soda?”

  “Water’s fine.”

  “Okay.” She turned, grateful for something to do with her hands. “I just fed them. They dozed off.” She gestured to the crib in the adjoining room.

  He went over and stood for a long moment, just looking at them, before coming back. “How was your night?”

  “It was good. How was yours?”

  “Good.” He laughed softly, leaning back against the counter, hands in his pockets. “Honestly, I didn’t sleep much.”

  He took up a lot of room in her tiny kitchen. Not just physically, but the memories, too. She’d been attracted to him months ago. It had been exciting then, a stomach-fluttering, heart-racing exhilaration. Now she felt uncomfortably out of breath.

  She came back with two glasses of ice water and handed one to him.

  “Thank you.”

  “You’re welcome.” And weren’t they just so polite and civilized? Nervous and walking on eggshells with each other. Would it have been like this anyway? The first time they visited after saying goodbye. It might have been. Or she might have run to him, jumped in his arms, unafraid or self-conscious to say and show how much she’d missed him.

  “My mom’s dying to get her hands on the babies.”

  She choked on the sip of water she’d just taken. “You told your mom?”

  “I called to check on the girls. She asked how things were going. It was kind of hard to leave out.”

  His mom. Of course he’d told her. Of course his mother wanted to meet her grandchildren. Her children’s grandmother. A stranger who’d want to see them and hold them and—

  “The girls will be ecstatic. They haven’t been around babies much. Or at all, now that I think about it.”

  While Deacon spoke calmly, Clare felt a wave of hysteria growing inside her. She moved away from him to the sink and braced he
r hands on the edge, struggling for a deep breath. Deacon was here. In her home, just feet away from her babies. Her babies that were half his. She wasn’t ready for this. She’d been getting ready, but… This isn’t what I expected. Not how I planned it.

  It was supposed to be a phone call. There was supposed to be some distance. She would drop the bomb about the babies, then he would stumble and stutter and make excuses before saying he needed some time and would call her back. On another call, she would tell him he could keep his wife and his family and that she didn’t expect—or want—anything from him.

  But now there was no wife. He wasn’t a liar or a cheater. This man who’d tasted every inch of her body, who for months had been looking for her while she’d assumed he’d lied to her, deceived her. While she’d had his babies and not even told him she was pregnant.

  Everything was happening way too fast. She needed just a minute. Just a minute for her mind to catch up to her life. Her nerves and emotions were already frayed and fried from childbirth and lack of sleep. Now she felt like she was unraveling.

  She hadn’t considered any of this, including sharing her babies. Would he want to take them home? Would the rest of his family want time with them? A wave of nausea hit her so violently that she was dizzy. Her heart raced, and her fingers trembled where they gripped the edge of the sink. She turned on the faucet and let the cold water run over the inside of her wrist.

  “Clare? Hey.”

  She heard him move over the pulsing in her ears. And without him even touching her, she felt him behind her.

  “Clare.” He said her name just like she remembered. Just like he had when he’d been her friend and lover. A lot had happened since then. She’d been pregnant and given birth. She was a mother now. It was a lifetime ago.

  “I’m sorry.” His strong hands came down on her shoulders, and her insides trembled under his touch. “That was a lot to dump on you. Forget all that if it’s too much right now. Shit. Of course it’s too much. I’m an idiot.”

  “No. It’s okay. I’m just trying to catch up.”

  “So am I.”

  Right. Because he hadn’t known, because she hadn’t told him.

  “Hey.” His voice was gentle as he turned her to face him. He studied her for several seconds then brushed one finger under her eye. “You look tired.”

  “Thanks a lot.”

  He gave her a small smile. “You’re beautiful, but I don’t like seeing these bruises under your eyes.”

  “Goes with the territory, I guess.” Even with her eyes firmly focused on his shirt, she could feel him looking at her.

  “I remember. You must really hate me.”

  “What?” She looked up at him then. “No.” She’d tried but never quite gotten there. “I hated myself at first—well, not hated, but was disappointed. That wasn’t my usual, going to bed with someone I barely knew.”

  “I know.”

  She wondered how he knew, but there were so many questions bombarding her, that one got pushed aside. “Do you hate me? For not telling you?”

  “No. I wish I’d known. Wish I’d been there for you, been there when they were born.”

  “I’m sorry.” Did she wish he’d been there? In the delivery room? A part of her did. “I was going to tell you, I swear. But you had another family—I thought—and it made more sense to wait until they were born. Then after, I kept thinking, ‘It’ll get easier—’”

  A sob built in her chest and continued up into her throat. She told herself it was normal for pregnant women’s emotions to run hot and wild and right on the surface. But she didn’t want to break in front of Deacon. “I’m a little overwhelmed, to say the least. I—” She held her palms out at a loss. “I don’t know what I’m doing half the time.”

  Muttering another apology, Deacon pulled her against his chest. She started to resist, but it felt so good, she gave herself a second. Just one, she thought, closing her eyes.

  “You’re doing great,” he said, holding her tightly.

  “This is the first time I’ve gotten dressed in a week. Please tell me you weren’t performing intricate surgery on Fluffy during that time.” She forced herself out of his arms.

  “No.” He laughed. “Absolutely not. I was a zombie. And I like the shirt,” he said, grinning.

  She looked down at herself. It was her I’m Nacho Father T-shirt. “Thanks.” Drawing in a shaky breath, she forced her eyes up to his. A baby let out an unhappy wail—Parker, she was pretty sure. At least she was getting better at that. “I was going to bathe them.”

  “I can help. I want to,” he added, maybe expecting her to object.

  Moments later, they stood shoulder to shoulder in the tiny bathroom, his big hands holding her babies. Of course Connor had held them but just briefly and only when they were wrapped up like burritos and carefully placed in his arms.

  Deacon’s big hands expertly cradled; his low crooning voice calmed. The babies, though, not her. His voice and large body so close to hers were anything but calming. His size and scent filled the small room.

  “There you go,” he said to Parker. “There now. Oh, no. Don’t make that face. Almost done.”

  Deacon wiped a baby washcloth over Parker as he held the tiny body in the warm water with a hand under the baby’s head and neck. His movements were quick but careful and sure. He was good at this. Really good. Better than she was.

  “You make it look easy,” she said wistfully.

  “I wasn’t at first. You should’ve seen me trying to change my first diaper. I was scared to death. Scared to bathe them. Scared to dress them. My mom and sister were great. My mom would change or diaper one while I tried to follow her motions with the other. I was so bad, I alternated which baby I took so I didn’t do either of them too much damage.”

  Clare smiled. “I’m sure you didn’t damage them.”

  It was his turn to smile. “Thanks. They’re… Everything. Or they were.”

  Because now he had two more.

  “Gradually, my mom started stepping back to let me figure out how to handle both of them on my own.” They switched off, and she cuddled Parker as he bathed Patrick. “Do you have any help?”

  “My mom came up when they were born and stayed a week. She had to get back to Florida. My dad’s having some tests done.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “Yeah. He went through chemo a year ago. He’s in remission, but the doctors are worried about a scan he just had.”

  “Hopefully, it’s nothing.”

  “Yeah.”

  He repeated the motions with Patrick, washing his body and head. As he finished, Patrick scrunched his face in protest, and Deacon wrapped him quickly then held him to his chest. “There now. Don’t like to be cold, do you?”

  He followed her to the nursery, and she got out two sleepers—one white and one pale blue.

  Deacon laid Patrick in the crib and began skillfully putting on a tiny diaper. “Just like riding a bike, huh? Never thought I’d miss changing diapers.”

  She dressed one baby while he dressed the other, talking to them the entire time. She watched Deacon’s confident, competent hands wrapping and folding next to her own. She imagined him with his own daughters as babies. A man alone trying to figure things out.

  Parker turned his head, dark eyes intent on Deacon’s face. Clare stared in amazement, recalling what she’d read about babies and fathers’ voices.

  “It’s like he knows who you are,” she said softly.

  “You think so?” Deacon looked at her, his eyes bright with such wonder, wanting it to be true.

  “I do.”

  With both boys dressed and content for now, they sat on the couch, each holding one baby. Definitely a more manageable ratio.

  “Oh, before I forget.” He got out his phone. “Your number?”

  She gave it to him, and he sent her a text so she’d have his. “Do you want to see pictures of the girls?”

  “Sure.” She was kind of dying to.
>
  “I take a lot, mostly with my phone. That’s a recent picture.”

  She stared at the picture of two little girls squatting in a flower bed next to a fat orange cat. They were absolutely identical, with light brown curls that framed cherub faces with rosy cheeks and eyes the same brown as Deacon’s.

  Deacon’s girls that he hadn’t told her about. His girls with another woman. Who was she? Where was she?

  “That’s Margo. And that’s Maci,” Deacon said, pointing.

  “They’re adorable.” The kind of adorable that made strangers stop and stare.

  He moved through a few more pictures.

  “Which one was sick?”

  “Maci.” He swiped to a picture of a beautiful woman holding both girls, and her heart stopped. It was the woman from the newspaper. “That’s—”

  “My sister Allison. She moved to Maine for work not long ago, and—” He glanced up, caught the expression on her face.

  “That’s the woman I saw in the paper.” She stared at the photo, working to reconcile what she’d felt for so long with what was. “It said your family. It said your wife.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “I’m sorry, too.”

  He hadn’t been married, but still, he hadn’t told her about his girls. Hadn’t shared that essential part of himself. Because she hadn’t meant enough to him to share it with?

  “But the girls? Their mother?” She looked up at him, waiting for him to answer the question that hung between them.

  “Is not in their life. She never has been.”

  “Oh.” She wanted to ask more, but his lips were pressed in a thin line, and when he spoke, his voice was low. There was no missing the anger in it.

  He put the phone back in his pocket and took a long, steadying, maybe cleansing breath. He shifted the baby to his legs, laughed when he yawned.

  Clare watched Deacon while he watched the baby. His eyes were full of love and wonder, like he’d never seen a baby before.

  “I still can’t believe it,” he said. “It was only three years ago, but I forgot how small they are.”

  “I can’t believe you have two sets of twins.”

 

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