His voice changed. Became darker. More remote. “There’d been a car accident.”
Instantly, she understood the late-night call. The tone in his words. A million memories from eight years ago surged. The first time she’d heard there’d been an accident. How many times she’d replayed it in her mind. The fear for Mack when she’d discovered it had been his best friend. And, of course, the crippling agony of guilt that she’d somehow caused Vince to be so upset and angry that he didn’t watch where he was driving....
A strangled sound emerged from her throat. Clearing it, she asked, “Was someone injured?”
The person had to be okay because they’d been calling to Mack, right? Unless, of course, there’d been more than one person on the car. Nina sat up in bed, shivering in the dark and clutching the phone in a death grip.
“She’s okay, Nina.” Mack’s voice softened. Like he knew how freaked-out she would be right now.
She got up and walked to the window overlooking the field and the orchards. Not that she could see anything in the dark, even though she hadn’t bothered to draw the blinds under the sheer curtains.
“Who?” She laid a hand on the cold window and kept it there, grounding herself in the moment and the present. “Who was it?”
“Remember Ally’s friend who was helping her with the maze?”
“The blonde.” Of course she remembered. The girl looked like she’d walked out of a high-end magazine, her hair the color of corn silk. “Rachel, I think.”
“Yeah. Rachel Wagoner. She was alone and she was okay, even though she was stuck inside the car.” He must have stepped under a shelter or back inside somewhere, because the wind that had been whistling in the background suddenly stopped. “She has a broken leg that will need some surgical repair, but nothing major. The EMTs said she was fine, and she was lucid when they put her in the ambulance. She was asking for Ally, actually.”
“They must be good friends.” Nina let go of the glass, relieved the girl was okay. Mack must have been living an old nightmare the whole time. She found the flannel robe Gram had bought her and slid her arms inside.
“I guess. The girl didn’t want her mother there, so I drove Ally up to the hospital so she can sit with Rachel when she gets out of surgery.”
That was nice of him. Then again, he was probably wishing like hell that he’d had the chance to sit with Vince that night. He’d always regretted letting his friend take his car when he was upset.
“Is that where you are now? The hospital?”
“No.” He paused. “You have FaceTime or Friend Time on your phone?”
“You want to video chat?” She tucked stay strands of hair behind her ears. “That’s fine. I can...” She stared at the phone and saw his contact info. “Hang up and I’ll call back.”
Switching on a bedside wall sconce with a floral embroidered shade, Nina pressed the button to connect via video chat. When Mack answered, it was dark all around him, though his phone emitted enough light to show his face when he turned it toward him.
“Hey.” There was a starkness to his features. Dark smudges of exhaustion beneath his eyes. Some thin scratches on his cheeks, as though he’d wrestled with a few thorn bushes. A scruff of whiskers along his jaw. “I wasn’t sure if you’d been here before.” He walked into the wind as the swooshing sound of the breeze picked up, his shoulders moving. “I drove out to Vince’s grave.”
Her chest squeezed tight. She hugged her arms around herself and dropped onto the quilt-covered chest at the end of the full-size four-poster bed.
“I’ve been there.” She hadn’t spent much time in Heartache after graduation, but she’d made that trek more than once. “My counselor in college—someone who helped me with the grief—advised me to visit. And, you know, talk to him.”
Mack shone the phone on the headstone. He must be squatting close to it because she could see Vince’s name clearly. The date of his death.
“I always liked the Zeppelin quote.” Mack traced the words from a rock song about a feather in the wind.
“Did you suggest it?” Nina asked, curious and full of emotions too entangled to name. If the night felt darkly nostalgic to her, she could only imagine the strangeness of it for Mack who’d discovered the accident.
He had to be reeling.
“God, no. I hardly spoke to his parents that year. I felt so guilty and they were grieving so hard.” He angled the phone back toward him and Nina realized he was seated on the cold, hard ground beside his friend. “His dad played guitar with Vince occasionally. I think he must have come up with it. But it always seemed apt to me. Vince was here such a short time.”
She wished she could put her arms around him right now and comfort him. She considered getting in the truck and driving out there to be with Mack, but she also didn’t want to compromise the connection she felt to him right now. He wasn’t a guy who ever talked about his feelings. She didn’t want anything to disrupt that or distract him.
“Did you ever talk to someone about it?” She cleared her throat and hoped he wouldn’t be offended. “A counselor, I mean?”
“Jenny and I both met with someone before we got married. She thought it would help us make sure we were together for the right reasons, and I was trying to...make her happy.” He held the phone far enough away that she could see one of his shoulders moving and she guessed by the rustling sound that he was swiping fall leaves away from the grave.
“So the counselor didn’t help?” She smoothed her hand over the handmade quilt on the chest beneath her, her fingers tracing the pattern of the square cut from a nightgown she’d worn when she first came to live with Gram. The fabric was soft linen and beautifully made—clothes from a different life.
“She taught me about the stages of grief. I don’t blame anyone anymore. But acceptance? I’m not sure that’s what I call my endpoint in the process. I don’t accept Vince’s death. But I’ve made a certain peace with it.” He went still again and then turned the phone to the grave, now free of leaves. “Better.”
I don’t blame anyone anymore.
“You blamed me.” It wasn’t a revelation, exactly. Plenty of other people had.
But still...
“I blamed myself, mostly. I blamed the senior class for having that party. Jenny for not hanging out with him more that night so he wouldn’t have hit on you. And yeah, I blamed you for speaking your mind and telling him he was being a loser. Looking back, the thoughts were juvenile, but we were so damn young then.”
Hearing her words—the exact words she’d said to Vince that night—still cut deep. She didn’t even speak that word, loser, anymore since it held a power like none other in her vocabulary after what had happened. But she didn’t let Mack’s use of it now wind her up. She wouldn’t go back to living in old shadows.
“I wish you would have told me.” She sat up enough to pull the quilt out from under her and lay it over her lap. “It must have been hard keeping all that blame to yourself.”
“It was tougher being mad at you when I still cared about you so much.” He turned the phone square to his face again so she could see him clearly. “And it occurred to me while I was driving Ally to the hospital that I did the same thing earlier tonight—I let my own issues get in the way of caring about you.”
She gripped her phone tighter, accidentally hitting the volume button.
“I never thought we’d overcome any of it, so this is a bonus.” Taking a deep breath, she traced his jawline on the screen, remembering what it was like to touch him for real.
“Thanks for picking up when I called. After the way we left things earlier, I wasn’t all that certain you would answer.”
For a man as stoic as Mack, that comment represented a lot of emotion. She smiled to think how different they were in that regard. She with her drama and passion for life. Him with h
is quiet, even response to it. But in the end, they were a good balance for each other.
“I can come over there,” she offered. “If you don’t want to be alone—”
“I’ll be okay. I’m going to get some sleep and then try to talk to my brother. He and Bethany are... She kicked him out.”
Remembering Bethany’s hopefulness when she’d left the fairgrounds earlier today, Nina was confused.
“She was going to try to get him to go away with her last night. I wonder what happened.”
“Someone needs to tell Scott to get his head out of his—” Mack scrambled to his feet and started walking, his image on the phone doing a bouncy vertigo sort of thing as he moved. “Nina, I know things seem to have fallen apart, but I’m not ready to give up on us yet. Will you...meet me at the fairgrounds tomorrow night, technically tonight, I guess? My sense of time is all mixed up. But I know I have to see you before I go back home.”
Her defenses—the same ones she’d ratcheted up high when he dropped her off tonight—crumbled away at the reminder that he was leaving. They only had one weekend left together.
“I can do that.” How much more damage could she and Mack do to one another’s hearts at this point? Besides, the thought of him sitting alone out there tonight by Vince’s grave squeezed any resistance out of her. Truth be told, she wanted to hold him after what he’d been through tonight. She cleared her throat and wished she could settle her emotions as easily. “I’ll be over there by four o’clock, right after my appointment with a realtor.”
“You’re getting a place of your own?” He frowned and she wondered if it made the scratches on his face hurt.
Her fingers itched to smooth over them. More than that, she wished she could kiss them and hold him while he fell asleep. No doubt about it, she was falling for Mack again even though it made no sense. Even though he’d never stay here with her. Never build a family with her.
“I’m not looking for places to live. This is for a place to work.” She’d been thinking about her career off and on ever since she’d realized she wanted to stay in Heartache. “If I’m going to really put down roots here, I need to start thinking about a business of my own.”
And she’d also need to make her peace with Mack’s mom. The older woman no longer had the power to hurt her. Nina wished she could say the same for her son.
He was quiet for a long moment. Of course, she knew he didn’t want any part of Heartache—for either of them.
But Nina couldn’t let her grandmother down. Wouldn’t sit idly by while she was forced to leave the home she loved. So as long as Gram wanted to be here, Nina did, too. Besides, she owed it to herself to figure out how to run a business by herself. How to stand on her own two feet and take responsibility for her life and her happiness. No more begging Mack to be with her, like she had eight years ago. No more relying on Olivia to fund her dreams. Those were the behaviors of the old, selfish Nina, still the knee-jerk reactions of a lonely girl hoping a parent would come back to love her.
She was smarter than that now, and she was independent enough to take whatever life doled out. So she’d decided she had to begin nailing down her plans for the future, even if those plans didn’t include Mack.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
LESS THAN A week after her own visit, Ally was back in the hospital.
Since shortly before dawn, she’d sat beside Rachel in surgical recovery. Rachel had asked the hospital not to contact her mother, and, being eighteen, apparently she had that right. As monitors beeped quietly and the medical staff wheeled patients in and out of the wide-open room separated only by curtains on metal tracks, Ally wondered what on earth had made the girl ask for her of all people.
Smoothing the blankets, she waited for Rachel to wake up. Part of her was scared Rachel was still mad at her. But that didn’t seem to fit. Until Ally had accused Ethan of flirting with her, she and Rachel had actually had fun outlining the straw maze. Rachel was smart and efficient, impressing Ally with how organized she was. Now that Ally looked back at the hours they’d spent together—knowing that Ethan hadn’t been hitting on Rachel—Ally realized that they would have never gotten the outline done if Rachel hadn’t called for help.
“She’s in here,” a nurse’s voice was saying just outside the curtain. “But you can’t stay long. We’re only allowed to admit one visitor at a time.”
The nurse opened the curtain but the only person Ally saw was Ethan. His gaze flicked to Rachel first, but then moved to Ally and...stayed there.
Tall and broad-shouldered, he’d always looked older than everyone else at school. Now, she could see a maturity that went along with his appearance. Underneath his good nature and easygoing smile, Ethan was a strong, capable guy.
“Thank you so much for coming.” Ally had texted him as soon as she’d arrived, too worried for Rachel to be concerned about whatever awkwardness or bad feelings lingered between her and Ethan. “You’re Rachel’s friend and—”
“I am.” He met her gaze levelly, and she felt like a first-class jerk for giving him a hard time about his relationship with Rachel. “But I came for you.”
She rose to her feet, shaky from the hours of worry. Even before the hell of the accident, there’d been her dad’s revelation. Ethan’s show of support now—even when she didn’t deserve it—was about the nicest thing she could imagine.
Flinging her arms around him, she hugged him tight. It wasn’t the kind of first embrace she’d imagined for them, but she needed it like nothing else. By the time Ethan’s arms went around her, she was already crying against his shoulder. Tears flowed like someone had turned on the faucets, all the stress of the past week overflowing.
“I’ve been so horrible.” She kept her voice low, knowing people in nearby curtain stalls could hear her if they cared to listen. She’d already eavesdropped on all kinds of drama going on in the lives of the faceless strangers on either side of Rachel’s tiny space.
“No, you haven’t.” Ethan eased back to look at her face, his expression so open and caring.
Easy for him when he hid no secrets.
Ally released him, knowing she needed to come clean, and the sooner the better. She wanted to smooth things over with him before Rachel woke up. Then maybe together they could figure out why the girl had asked for Ally in her delirium.
“About a week ago, I overheard Rachel say she had a date with you.” If only she could take back what had happened afterward. She realized now that she needed more outlets than just Gram. And if that meant regular therapy sessions, she was going to find a way to get them, even after she left Heartache for good. “And I didn’t handle it well.”
She shoved up her sleeves to show him the healing scratches. He’d noticed the bandages the day after, but now that she was letting them “breathe” as Gram had suggested, he could see exactly how revolting they were.
“What do you mean?” He stared blankly at the marks. For a second. Then he looked back up at her, his expression stunned. “You did that to yourself?” His voice was a shocked whisper.
She closed her eyes so she wouldn’t see his face, but it showed up even behind her eyelids.
“I’ve done it other times, too. It’s a stress thing.” A dumb, embarrassing stress thing. Yet Gram told her she could fight it. She opened her eyes again. “But I’m working on it. I mean, I’m fixing myself. So I won’t do it anymore.”
“Ally, I’m so damn sorry.” His hazel eyes were full of regret.
“You didn’t do this to me. I did.” She definitely didn’t want to unload her baggage on him.
“Does Rachel know about this?”
A voice murmured sleepily from the bed. “I do now.”
Whirling, Ally hurried over to her side with Ethan on her heels. “Hey, Rachel. How are you feeling?”
“They didn’t call my mom, did t
hey?” Wide blue eyes stared up at Ally, and she noticed some of Rachel’s blond hair was stuck to the bandage at the top of her forehead.
She had a cut on her lip and a big splint on the leg that had been surgically repaired to fix a fracture. Her leg was now propped on pillows and an IV full of fluids had been attached to one arm. Ally couldn’t even imagine what a crap relationship Rachel must have with her mother that she didn’t want her here right now.
“No. You’re eighteen. The nurse told me they can’t call her because of privacy laws.” Ally picked some of the hair out of the bandage with gentle fingers, knowing she’d want someone to take care of her if she was in the hospital.
She’d had a few someones, actually. For all her issues with her parents, her parents had been there every second. It was a weird moment to realize she should text her mom and make sure she was okay after whatever had happened between her and Dad.
“I don’t feel so well.” Rachel ran a hand over her stomach. “The meds are—ugh.” She closed her eyes again. “Ethan, I was going to tell her. But will you, like, tell her for me?”
Confused, Ally turned to him.
“Yeah. Sure. Just focus on getting better, okay?”
“Right. Um. Guys, I need the nurse. And I totally don’t want you to see me gagging, so, like—go be in love somewhere.”
Ethan scrambled away fast. He fumbled with the curtain for a second and Ally could hear him calling to someone.
“Rachel, I’ll stay with you. You can’t be alone.” She had no idea what was going on between Ethan and the girl that Ally had been so jealous of, but she knew now that her jealousy had been very wrongly placed. “I’m so sorry we argued before you left the fair—”
Rachel gestured toward the pan on the bedside tray and Ally passed it to her as Rachel’s skin turned sheet-white. Rachel threw up, but only a little, her color returning to normal as a nurse rushed in.
Ally gestured to Ethan to stay out and glimpsed a look of total gratitude on his face before she moved back to Rachel.
Harlequin Superromance September 2014 - Bundle 1 of 2: This Good ManPromises Under the Peach TreeHusband by Choice Page 49