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An Engagement for Two
by Marie Ferrarella
Prologue
“Hi, Mom.”
Maizie Sommers stopped short as she entered the ground-floor office of the real estate business she had lovingly nurtured and guided into a thriving enterprise over the last decade and a half. She was just returning from helping a young couple find the home of their dreams, something that always gave her an immense amount of pleasure.
The very last person she expected to see in her office, sitting in front of her desk, was her daughter, Nikki. Nikki, a pediatric physician and her only child, was responsible for Maizie initially dipping her toe into the—at that point—very unfamiliar waters of matchmaking.
She and her lifelong best friends, Cecilia Parnell and Theresa Manetti, had done so well finding a match for Nikki that they were encouraged to continue in their endeavors and find perfect matches for Cilia’s daughter and Theresa’s children.
When that worked out, they decided to continue matchmaking as an occasional hobby.
The hobby caught fire, and while all three women went on to maintain the separate businesses they had built over the years, matchmaking became very near and dear to their hearts—as was their determination to remain quietly behind the scenes. They were in it for the satisfaction, not the recognition—and certainly not the money since there was never any charge.
Maizie and her friends were quite proud of the fact that the couples they had brought together over the years never knew they were being skillfully guided to come together.
But that certainly wasn’t the first thought that entered Maizie’s mind when she saw her daughter sitting there.
“Is something wrong with Lucas or one of the children?” Maizie asked, giving her daughter a quick kiss hello.
Concerned, she dropped into the chair behind her desk, scrutinizing her daughter’s face and looking for some sort of indication as to what had brought Nikki here in the middle of the day.
“What makes you think there’s something wrong with one of them?” Nikki asked.
“Well, let me see. You’re a highly regarded pediatrician whose hours are only slightly shorter than God’s. You’re a wife and the mother of three very energetic young children. That alone uses up every moment of your day and night, and I haven’t seen you since Ellie and Addie’s party,” Maizie reminded her, mentioning the twins’ fourth birthday last month. “My guess is that only an emergency of some sort would bring you here to see me in the middle of the day.”
Nikki sat up a little straighter in the chair, although she was unconsciously knotting her fingers together. “Well, you’re wrong.”
Maizie continued to watch her daughter’s hands. “Good.”
“It’s not an emergency,” Nikki emphasized.
“Happy to hear that.” Although, Maizie thought, something was definitely wrong. Those were not the hands of a carefree, untroubled person.
“Not exactly,” Nikki amended.
“Ah.” Now they were getting to it, Maizie thought. “And what is it, exactly?” she asked her daughter.
Just then her phone rang.
Nikki looked at the landline on her mother’s desk. “You want to get that?” she asked.
“No,” Maizie answered. She didn’t want her daughter using the call as an excuse to suddenly change her mind and leave. “That’s why God created answering machines.”
Nikki appeared guilty. “I feel bad, taking up your time like this.” She looked at the phone. The call had obviously gone to voice mail. “You worked really hard to get here.”
“One delayed call isn’t going to torpedo my business, Nikki. Besides, Susanna, my assistant, is due back from lunch soon. She can call whoever it is back. You are, and always have been, my first priority,” Maizie insisted. “I’ve expanded that to include Lucas and the children, but you are still in first place. Now, what’s this all about? And why are you about to twist off your fingers?” She nodded at her daughter’s hands.
Stilling her hands, Nikki sighed. “I don’t quite know how to say this, Mom.”
“One word at a time is usually the way to do it,” Maizie encouraged. “At this point in my life I’ve heard just about everything,” she added, “so just spit it out, my love.”
“I know—” Nikki began and then she paused, at a loss how to continue.
“You know what, dear?” Maizie asked, waiting.
Nikki took a breath, then blurted it out. “That you arranged to bring Lucas and me together.”
Maizie smiled. She was surprised that it had taken Nikki so long to come to this conclusion. “I see. Well, those were just the circumstances that arranged themselves, dear.”
“That you took advantage of,” Nikki said, knowing the way her mother operated.
Maizie tried to understand what her daughter was getting at. “You’re not telling me that, after all these years of marital bliss, you’re going to get upset with me for meddling in your life, are you?”
Untangling her fingers, Nikki gripped the chair’s armrests to keep her hands apart. “No, I’m not.”
“Well, I’m glad we cleared that up.” Maizie smiled at her. “Anything else?”
Nikki still hadn’t gotten to the reason she was here. “Yes, um...”
“Go ahead, dear,” Maizie urged patiently.
“I need you to meddle again, Mom.”
“You’re looking for another husband?” Maizie asked wryly.
Nikki’s eyes widened. For a moment, she didn’t realize that her mother was kidding. “No!”
“Good, because I really do like Lucas.” Still smiling, Maizie became serious. “Talk to me, Nikki,” she encouraged. “It never used to be this hard for us to talk. What’s on your mind?”
Nikki decided to choose a roundabout approach instead of being direct. “Do you remember my friend Michelle McKenna?”
“Mikki? Of course I remember her. Lovely girl. Not the best parents,” Maizie recalled, “but a lovely girl. She was over at the house a lot when you were younger and you two went to medical school together,” she said to prove that she really did remember the girl. “What about her?”
“I want you to do for her what you did for me,” Nikki said.
Ah, now it was all beginning to make sense, Maizie thought. “Does she know you’re asking me to...matchmake?” Maizie asked tactfully.
“Oh, no, no, and I don’t want her to know,” Nikki said with feeling. “She’d never agree to it.”
Maizie was well acquainted with that sort of reaction. “Why would you want me to do it, then?”
“Because she’s a wonderful person, Mom,” Nikki cried. “And she deserves to be happy. But I’m worried she’s going to wind up alone. She’s so afraid of making her mother’s mistakes, she won’t even think about going out with anyone.”
Maizie looked at her daughter thoughtfully. She was well aware of the other young woman’s situation. Mikki’s parents had fought constantly and then went through a vicious divorce when she was a preteen. Her mother went on to marry—and divorce—three more times. She had no idea how many times Mikki’s father had gone that route. The man had dropped out of sight, from what she gathered.
What she did know was that all this had taken a heavy toll on the young woman. She’d had Mikki stay over for sleepovers as often as she could to spare her daughter’s friend from witnessing the acrimony manifested by her parents.
“Will you do it, Mom? Will you work your magi
c for Mikki?” Nikki asked her.
Maizie was more than happy to help. “Yes, of course I will. On one condition, though,” she added, eyeing her daughter.
“What?” Nikki asked.
“You tell me how you found out that I had a hand in bringing you and Lucas together.”
Nikki laughed, relieved. “You mean other than the fact that I’m brilliant, like my mother?”
Maizie smiled. “Yes, other than that.”
“Jewel figured it out and told me,” Nikki answered. Jewel was Cilia’s daughter and she, like Theresa’s two offspring, was Nikki’s friend.
“I see.” She nodded, accepting the explanation at face value. “All right then, I’m going to need some current information about Mikki—it’s been a while since I’ve seen her,” Maizie told her daughter. And then she smiled. “Don’t worry, this’ll be painless, and Mikki will never know that you came to me—unless you want her to know,” she qualified.
“Heaven forbid,” Nikki cried. Then, in a more subdued voice, she asked, “Will you let me know who you pick out?”
Maizie smiled mysteriously. She knew it would be for the best if her daughter remained in the dark until the proper meeting was arranged and pulled off.
“Oh, darling, a magician never reveals her secrets,” Maizie told her daughter with a wink.
Copyright © 2018 by Marie Rydzynski-Ferrarella
ISBN-13: 9781488093401
A Soldier in Conard County
Copyright © 2018 by Susan Civil Brown
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