“Looking for something?” Jessica asked.
“As a matter of fact, yes.” Daisy turned to Trav. “Honey, did you put the frying pan in a different place the last time you washed the dishes?”
Trav leaped forward. “Yes. I stuck it in the oven to dry since the oven was still warm.” He fetched it from the oven and handed it to her. She never would’ve thought to look there. She was very afraid to find out what else lurked in Maggie’s cabinets.
“Thank you,” she said.
He surprised her by giving her a quick hard kiss. “You’re welcome.”
She stared at him, momentarily forgetting her grilled cheese mission.
He smiled widely. “I’m a huge distraction. Let me step out of the way.”
Jessica wagged her finger. “Oh, I think I know what’s going on here.”
“You do?” Daisy asked.
Trav stood, frozen in place.
“Your Darling Husband is the secret chef around here, isn’t he? That’s why you don’t know where things are.”
“He is,” Daisy agreed immediately. “He helps out a lot. It just makes me love him more.”
“Thank you.” Trav kissed her hair. Thank goodness he didn’t kiss her on the lips again. It left her mind a complete blank. “But the grilled cheese is her specialty. I’ll leave her to it.”
He made a fast exit.
“You have him trained well,” Jessica said with a sly wink for the cameras.
“No training needed when you have a solid marriage based on mutual respect,” Daisy said, surprising even herself with that statement. She was starting to believe she was in some perfectly dreamy marriage. Lie long enough and it starts to feel like the truth. Trav played the part so well. Was this what marriage to Trav would be like? She had to admit it was kind of wonderful. It almost made her forget the man who stood silently off-camera bringing her troubled past front and center. Almost.
She focused on the task at hand and cooked up a very respectable grilled cheese on store-bought whole wheat bread.
Jessica only ate one bite.
Chapter Nine
Trav watched off-camera as the interview continued. Daisy was telling Jessica how she enjoyed making every day special, like a holiday. People actually believed this shit? They sat at Gran’s dining room table drinking tea, a plate of Milano cookies untouched in front of them. He’d done his part playing the adoring husband. They’d just finished the longest lunch of his life while the cameras rolled. He’d kept busy feeding Bryce chicken and rice while Jessica kept asking Daisy questions about “small-town life.” Daisy grew up in Clover Park, but she’d lived in the city for years and traveled a lot too. He knew she’d lived in Israel for a couple of years and spent a summer in Costa Rica. Daisy said none of this, instead letting Jessica paint her as just a small-town girl.
If she wanted to come off that way, fine. But that guy Max…not cool. Max watched Daisy the whole time, looking like a lovesick cow. Bastard. Didn’t the fact that Daisy was married with a kid register? Trav didn’t know exactly what went down between Daisy and Max, but from Daisy’s reaction to seeing him today, he knew Max must have done something really bad. Something that fifteen years later could still shake Daisy up. He couldn’t wait to kick the asshole to the curb.
“Cut,” Max said.
Jessica raised an eyebrow and turned to Max. “What’s the problem?”
“Fifteen-minute break,” Max said, rotating his hand in a gesture to the crew to break. “Daisy looks like she’s getting tired.”
“Seriously?” Jessica demanded. “She’s fine. Aren’t you fine?”
Daisy stood. “I would like to stretch my legs a bit and check on Bryce.”
“Fine,” Jessica said with a fake smile that reminded him of a kid getting underwear for a birthday present. She stood and hissed something at Max that Trav didn’t catch before she walked like she had a pole up her ass from the room.
Daisy stretched her arms over her head, arching her back. Damn, she was so hot.
“You okay, Daze?” Trav and Max asked at the same time.
Trav glared at Max. The man was slippery. He didn’t trust him one inch.
Daisy looked only at Trav, which suited him just fine. “I’m just going to take a little walk.”
“You can’t,” Trav and Max said at the same time. They stared at each other.
“Go on,” Max said. “You’re the husband.”
“Damn right,” Trav said. “Daze, it’s starting to flurry. The wind is picking up, and it promises to be a world-class blizzard. You should stay indoors.”
Daisy took a step toward the door, plainly ignoring him.
“It could mess up your hair and makeup,” Max said. “We’d have to redo it, and that would put us behind schedule.”
That got her attention.
“Okay,” Daisy said. “I’ll just check on Bryce, then.” She left.
Max watched her go. “You’re a lucky man. Hold onto that one.”
“I plan to,” Trav said with enough bite to make his position clear. “This storm is gonna be bad. If you don’t hightail it back to the city, you could get stuck on the road.”
Max lifted one shoulder up and down. “We can always take the train. Anyway, I know Jessica, and she likes to really dig deep with her interviews. Get to know the person.”
“She’s been digging deep for more than two hours already. What’s there to know? She’s a wife and mother living the small-town life, making a good home for her family.”
“That she is,” Max said quietly. “We’ll be out of your hair soon. Just a little longer.”
“I get the feeling you had something to do with getting Daisy on Mornings with Jessica,” Trav said. “What do you want from her?”
“Nothing,” Max said quickly. “Daisy’s blog caught our attention just like any newsworthy item.”
Trav narrowed his eyes. “I didn’t see it in the news.”
Max’s eyes darted to the side. “We watch trends. Excuse me. I have to check in with the office.”
Trav lifted a hand in the air. “Please do.”
Max headed off to the kitchen. Trav decided to go upstairs to see Bryce. He met Daisy already on her way down.
“Your grandmother got him to nap,” she said.
“That explains the quiet.” He turned and followed her to the kitchen.
Max sat at Gran’s table, staring at his cell.
Daisy helped herself to some water and looked out the window at the snow, which was starting to stick now. No way was he leaving the two of them in here alone. He wouldn’t let Max hurt her again. He joined her at the window and slipped an arm around her waist. She elbowed him. Dammit. He was trying to play the perfect husband.
Max spoke up. “You’ve made a nice life for yourself here, Daze. I envy you.”
Daisy turned in surprise. Trav nodded. She does have a nice life, not that it’s any of your concern, ex-husband.
“Don’t envy me,” Daisy said. “I’m living a life no different than millions of women. Do you have a family of your own?”
Max shook his head. “Never met that special someone. But you two. Wow. You look good on camera together.”
“We are a good match,” Trav said. “Daisy and I knew each other as kids. Back then—”
Gran walked in and pulled a bottle of milk from the fridge and popped it in the microwave. “Bryce woke up a little fussy. I think some milk will settle him right down.”
“Should I go up there?” Daisy asked.
“No need,” Gran said. “I’ve got this. You just keep on being the fabulous TV star.”
WAAAHH!!!!
“I should go,” Daisy said.
“I’ve got it,” Trav said. “Finish the interview.” He gave Max a dark look. “Wrap things up before the snow gets worse out there.”
“It’s fine,” Daisy said. “I’ll go.”
WAAAHHH!!!
Jessica appeared in the kitchen. “Can someone quiet down the noise fro
m upstairs?”
Daisy’s mouth formed a straight line. “It’s not noise, it’s a baby.”
“Relax, you two,” Gran said, pulling the bottle from the microwave. “I can handle the boy.”
“Good,” Jessica said. “Max, let’s get the crew and get back to work.”
“I’ll take him,” Trav said. He knew he could get Bryce calmed down quickly. Daisy could go back to her interview, and then Max and all of the Mornings with Jessica people could get the hell out of town.
“He’ll calm down faster with me,” Daisy said, turning to go.
“What do you think I do when it’s my day to have him?” Trav asked in pure exasperation.
Daisy stilled.
“Your day?” Jessica asked. She exchanged a look with Max. “Are you two separated?”
Shit.
“Of course not,” Daisy said.
Trav rallied. “I’m talking about when I have him for daddy-son day so Mom here can relax.”
Daisy smiled and nodded.
WAAAHHH!
“Coming, Bryce!” Trav hollered. He grabbed the bottle. Max gave him a mock salute as Trav walked by that made him want to slap his pretty-boy face. Then he jogged up the stairs to quiet the bellowing little man.
~ ~ ~
“Can we please continue?” Jessica asked, gesturing for them to get out of the kitchen and back to the dining room, where the cameras were set up.
Daisy twisted her wedding band around her finger. She was ready to end the interview—she could only hope to keep up the charade of perfect wife and mother for so long. And she wanted Max out of this house.
“We’ll wait for Trav and Bryce to get back,” Max said.
“I can work on Daisy in the meantime,” Jessica said, her lips forming a pout.
“Take five, Jess,” Max said.
Jessica’s ice-blue eyes flashed at him. “Five minutes. No more. I didn’t come all the way to this podunk town just to sit around waiting on other people.”
She stormed off.
“I don’t know where she thinks she’s going,” Maggie commented, watching Jessica go. She turned to Daisy. “How’s it going? I know Jessica can get some spicy confessions out of her guests. I still remember when Justine Baxter admitted she used to be a man. What a shocker!”
Daisy cringed.
“That was a big show for us,” Max said.
“But good for Justine, I say.” Maggie patted Daisy’s shoulder. “Don’t you be like that.” She glanced at Max. “Don’t worry, Daisy’s all woman.”
Daisy sputtered, unable to think of a suitable response to Maggie’s assurance that she was indeed a woman.
“I never doubted,” Max said with a huge smile.
Maggie crossed to the breadbox. “Now what happened here?” She righted the Pez dispensers and pulled out two KISS members—the Demon and the Starchild. “We’re fans,” Maggie explained. “Of both the band and the candy. I’ll be upstairs. Jorge’s got on a show about the Greek Islands. Might be our next trip!”
Silence fell after Maggie’s departure, and Daisy felt the kitchen shrink around her as Max crossed the room to her side. It was just the two of them for the first time. They had nothing to say to each other. Why couldn’t he look horribly lonely and aged? Instead age had only sharpened his appeal. He’d grown into his lanky six-foot frame and filled out with muscle that was clearly defined through his black mock turtleneck and jeans.
Why are you here? The question throbbed over and over in her mind. He must know she’d moved on. She had a son, an almost husband. Even if it wasn’t official with Trav, even if Trav didn’t love her, Max didn’t know that.
“I missed you,” Max said in the deep, husky voice that used to make her go damp just from the sound. Of course she’d been a horny eighteen-year-old the last time she’d heard it. Today, nothing.
“It’s been a long time.” She busied herself refilling her glass.
He rested his arm on the counter, barely grazing her hip. “It’s no accident that I’m here.”
Yeah, I’m getting that.
“I saw your blog and convinced Jessica that you’d be a boost to the show.”
She turned to him. “You read my blog?”
He flushed. “I Googled you. Wanted to see what you were up to. Then I couldn’t stop reading.” He smiled, showing some laugh lines around his eyes.
Good, he has wrinkles.
“You’re very entertaining. When I saw it rise in popularity, I knew we had to have you on the show.” His voice lowered back to that scraping, rough register. “Plus I’d get an excuse to see you again.”
Did he just turn that husky voice on and off to charm the pants off women? Well, it wouldn’t work on her now. The way he’d dumped her was something she’d never forget. She considered bolting, but didn’t want him to know how much he affected her. She sat at the table with her water.
“I know you must’ve been surprised to see me,” he said, pulling out a chair next to her.
She didn’t reply.
“I’m a producer now,” Max said. “Worked my way up from production assistant.”
Was she supposed to be happy for him? Proud?
“Congratulations,” she said flatly.
He laughed softly. “Lately I’ve been feeling like I want more. Settle down, have a family.”
She felt his intense stare and finally met his eyes. Those eyes. They used to look at me with total adoration. She couldn’t tear herself away. Then he hit her with a heart-wrenching bombshell.
“I just never met anyone that compared to you.”
Anger flared within her at his blatant attempt to get close to her again. She was practically married. “You left me, not the other way around.”
He exhaled sharply. “I’ll regret that for the rest of my life. You didn’t deserve the way I treated you—”
“The way you left me, you mean, after you found out I lost the baby.” Her lower lip trembled, and she looked away. The double loss of the baby and the man she’d thought was the love of her life still hurt. When she’d miscarried and gone into a deep state of grief, her only consolation had been the thought that Max would be there to help her through.
She’d told him, in the privacy of the dorm’s empty lounge, practically choking over the words.
“I lost the baby.”
Pure relief had washed over his face. His words were even worse. “I’m sorry for your loss; I think we should get a divorce.” All in the same breath.
“My loss?” she’d asked through the haze of tears. “Divorce?”
He stood stiffly. “We’re too young to be married. I’ll take care of the paperwork. I guess this is goodbye.”
Her voice came out small. “I thought we were soul mates.”
“We’ll find each other again. Promise. In ten years. When we’re twenty-eight, if neither of us is with anyone, we’ll be together. It’s just not the right time.”
She’d yanked off her engagement ring and threw it at him. “Take your stupid ring and your stupid self and get out of here! I never want to see you again!”
The next week, Daisy took off for a kibbutz in Israel. College without Max, without the baby, was meaningless. She stayed on the kibbutz, working cooperatively on a farm, for two years. Her parents had tried to convince her to return to college. She’d refused.
But that was then, this was now. Now she had Bryce.
Max took both her hands in his and held them in a warm grasp. “I didn’t come here to fight. I came here to ask your forgiveness.”
She met his eyes, read the regret, the sincerity there, and felt herself weakening. She’d never had any backbone when it came to Max.
“Daze, I am very, very sorry.”
The words were too much, far too late. She pulled her hands away. “It doesn’t matter. It’s old news.”
He pushed a lock of her hair back, stroking her temple gently. “It does matter. I hurt you. And I’m sorry.”
Daisy blinked back tea
rs. The wind picked up, roaring through the trees. The kitchen lights flickered. Mother Nature seemed to pick up on Daisy’s turmoil. She remembered everything about Max. About them. How much she’d loved him. She’d truly believed they were soul mates.
Bryce was her life now, and that meant Trav too.
“I’ve moved on,” she said softly.
He leaned toward her, his eyes searching hers. “I just need to know if you forgive me.”
She stood abruptly. “Fine. You’re forgiven.”
She’d almost made it out of the kitchen when she heard Max say quietly, “I never stopped loving you.”
She paused, her heart racing, and shook her head as if she could shake off the words. She forced herself to walk away, one foot after the other, all the way upstairs to Bryce and the man she’d promised to marry.
Chapter Ten
Daisy sat in the guest chair set up in the living room for the afternoon interview, already drooping. How many more questions could Jessica come up with? Daisy wasn’t that fascinating a person. Just a mom living the small-town life.
Jessica settled into the host chair and adjusted her mike. “Lovely lunch.”
“Glad you liked it,” Daisy said evenly, unsure if the remark was sarcastic or not. It was hard to tell with someone whose expression dialed from insanely interested to blank.
“Let’s get Trav back for this next segment,” Jessica called.
A crew member went to fetch him. Daisy shifted in her seat. Couple questions were the hardest to fake. She and Trav knew each other biblically, it was true, other than that, not much one-on-one time.
Jessica sat riveted to her cell while she waited. A few moments later, Trav appeared.
“I’m ba-ack,” he said, leaning down to give Daisy a quick peck on the lips.
She felt herself flush. Geez, you’d think she was a teenager. She really had to get her libido under control. It was just so hard to be disciplined and responsible all the time. But that’s what her mom was like. If she wanted to be a good mom, she had to at least try.
“Great!” Jessica beamed at him. None of her smiles for Daisy went beyond polite. Clearly, she favored dealing with men. Especially good-looking men. “Let’s get moving, people.”
Daisy Does It All (Clover Park, Book 2) Contemporary Romance (The Clover Park Series) Page 9