by Sylvia Fox
“Hi. I… this is awkward. I don’t know if you remember me, but I think, no— I’m sorry, I’m sure of it,” Mick muttered, trying to control his breathing and calm himself. “Yes, we met once before. You’re Mick. Mick Merryweather.” He extended his hand. “And I am?”
Ayla laughed softly. “I think you’re Mick Merryweather. Right?” Did he actually seem nervous? She couldn’t imagine a man like him being nervous about anything.
“Yes, yes, of course,” Mick replied. “Sorry.” He held up a bottle of purple Gatorade to his brow. “I’ve just come from a workout. I must be delirious. Yes, my name is Mick. It would be lovely to know yours. Oh, and his,” Mick motioned to Preston. “This strapping young man who almost knocked me down. Do you play rugby? That was quite a tackle!”
Preston smiled and shook his head, pulling Ayla’s arm around his head so that he could burrow into the protective cocoon of her aura.
“His name is Preston. I’m Ayla. Murray.” She reached out and shook Mick’s proffered hand. “And yes, we have ‘met’ before. A few years ago.”
The handshake lingered, neither Ayla nor Mick wanting to break it, but likewise not knowing how to proceed.
Mick broke the silence first. “I hope this isn’t too forward, but would you like to get a cup of coffee or something? I mean if you aren’t,” Mick nodded toward Preston and then held up his left hand to display his bare ring finger.
It took Ayla a moment to get Mick’s hint. Her mind was still racing a billion miles per hour, and touching his hand again after all these years had sent a jolt directly to the part of her body that remembered Mick best.
Their handshake reluctantly ended, and they moved up into the candy aisle to make way for some softball players who’d come in to get Gatorades of their own.
“Yes. I think that would be wonderful,” Ayla responded. She didn’t want to seem desperate, but she wasn’t about to let the opportunity to reunite with Mick slip through her fingers.
Mick had to see her again. Just being near her made his cock twitch in the sweaty, painful cup he’d worn for his workout. He feared what a full erection might feel like in such confinement.
“Can I give you my number? Or have yours?” Mick asked. “I’m on my way home to shower and change and I have a flight leaving in a few hours to visit my mum in England. But I’d love to see you just as soon as I get back.”
Ayla feared that Mick was coming up with an excuse not to have to see her again. He had to know Preston was his. He looked just like him. And Ayla admitted to not being married. Her son was the right age to have been the fruit borne of their union. She had to somehow ensure (God, he was handsome!) that Mick would see her again. But how?
“Here, I’ll give you my number,” Ayla said, pulling out her phone. “And you text me from your phone so I have yours?”
“Absolutely,” Mick replied, setting his bottles down on a nearby shelf. “Go ahead.”
Ayla read off her number, Mick received it and sent her a text back so she’d have his.
“When you get back from Sheffield, hopefully we can get together,” Ayla said with a smile.
Mick returned the smile, but then his expression changed.
He’d never mentioned where in England he was going. And it would be an awfully lucky guess to pull ‘Sheffield’ out of thin air. He didn’t necessarily want to confront Ayla on it. Not just yet, anyway. If things went the direction he hoped they’d go, he’d get an answer one way or another. The fact that she had a son didn’t make her any less attractive to him. A bit complicated, perhaps, but she certainly seemed like a prize that would be well worth enduring a healthy dose of “complicated” to obtain.
Ayla squeezed Preston’s hand. She wanted to die. She’d slipped and mentioned his hometown, with no good explanation, except that in a roundabout way she’d been stalking him.
“I… we came in to buy Preston a slushie. Maybe if you have a minute I can get that and he can drink it while we talk outside or somewhere a little more private?”
Mick felt uneasy about the whole Sheffield thing, but he wanted everything to proceed. To work.
He didn’t want it to be weird for Ayla’s son, though.
“Sure. Yes, of course, have him pick out whatever he wants and just put it with my stuff, okay?”
Preston picked out a cherry cola slushie, masterfully mixing the two flavors just so. He set it proudly on the counter next to Mick’s Gatorades and Ayla’s bottle of lemonade. Mick peeled a twenty-dollar bill of a roll of cash to pay for it. Ayla at that moment had four dollars in cash to her name.
They strolled outside, with Mick stealing glances at Ayla’s ass swaying to and fro as she slowly sashayed along. He’d loved her walk, and it hadn’t changed a bit.
“There’s a park just a couple blocks away,” Ayla offered. “I don’t know if you have time, we could talk there. They have a splash pad; Preston will be happy to get wet.”
Mick checked his phone. “Sure, I can make that work.” Sitting at a park, or anywhere, with Ayla Murray (He loved her name) definitely beat hanging out in an airport waiting to be called to queue up for his flight. He could still make it. This opportunity was too much to pass up. “I’ll follow you.”
As soon as she got in the car, Ayla fired off a text to Desiree, in all caps. “I AM WITH MICK. OMG OMG OMG!!!”
Desiree’s reply was instant. “Drinking and driving is a no no, girl!”
“Seriously! Come to Mojave Pointe Park, by the splash pad. Bring a towel for Preston?”
“Try to stop me!”
“Mommy, do you know that big guy? He looks like a wrestler or something. Are we really going to the park?” Preston’s questions were rapid-fire, as was his custom.
“He’s an… old friend,” Ayla explained. “I haven’t seen him in a while.”
“Oh, okay. Is he coming to the park with us?”
“Yes, just for a little bit. I have to talk to him about some stuff. Desiree is coming to watch you, okay? Your suit is packed; you can just get wet in your clothes.”
“Awesome,” Preston replied.
They pulled into the park, and Preston kicked off his shoes, peeled off his shirt, handed Ayla his slushie, and ran for the fountains.
Ayla waved to Mick as he pulled in and she sauntered over to a picnic table shaded by a tree within shouting distance of the water feature, where Preston had already found two boys near his age to play with.
Mick had guzzled his purple Gatorade on the drive to the park. He carried his green one along, wishing he had something stronger to calm his nerves.
“Is this okay?” Ayla asked, setting down her things on the table.
“You’re the expert, Ayla. I don’t have any kids,” Mick said, sitting down. “It’s sad, I drive through here quite often and I never knew there was a park here. It’s nice.”
Ayla wanted to correct him, to tell him he did “have a kid,” but she remained silent on the matter.
“It’s one pf Preston’s favorite places,” Ayla said, watching him chase one of his new friends through the grass by the fountain.
“He looks like fun. A handful, I’m sure, but I bet it’s a great age. Is he what, seven?”
“Just turned six, actually.”
“And it’s just the two of you?” Mick asked. Ayla watched Desiree get out of her car and walk toward the fountains. Desiree was tall and pretty, and Ayla was used to guys hitting on her friend whenever they went out in public together. In fact, on more than one occasion, dads who’d brought their kids to play at Mojave Pointe Park had tried to leave with Desiree’s number.
Ayla watched Mick’s face to see if he’d turn and stare at Desiree like so many guys did, but he was too busy hanging on every musical note that masqueraded as Ayla’s voice left her throat to notice the beautiful, statuesque black woman strolling across the park.
“Yes,” Ayla confessed. She glanced over at Preston, who had excitedly left the splash pad to give Desiree a big hug, soaking Ayla’s roomm
ate despite her protestations.
“That can’t be easy,” Mick said. She seemed sad, and he wanted to reach across and hold Ayla’s hands, to console her, but he was still worried about coming on too strong. Not that it concerned him much those years back when he’d come on so strong he wound up…no. He had to banish those thoughts. His cup was already too uncomfortable without having arousal to deal with. “You live here, then? Have you got family to help with your son?”
“No, not exactly.” Ayla was on the brink of tears. Mick couldn’t know it, but he was taking her down a very painful path.
Mick couldn’t stand it anymore, and he placed his large, open hands in front of hers, inviting her to hold them. She accepted without hesitation. His thumbs rubbed the backs of her hands softly and he looked into her eyes. “I’m sorry. I’m being too personal.”
“No, not at all,” Ayla explained. Tears began to fall down her cheeks, and she let them. Her heart would surely burst if she didn’t tell Mick the truth, despite her better judgement. “When I got pregnant with Preston, I was only eighteen. My parents, well, they were ashamed. And angry. Me having a baby, out of wedlock, was scandalous, in their eyes.”
Mick’s hands engulfed Ayla’s. “It may not be my place to say so, but that’s bollocks. Your son seems so happy, like such a good lad. They’re his grandparents! And your mum and dad! The whole thing breaks my heart in half, Ayla, it truly does.” Without thinking, Mick reached across and wiped the tears from Ayla’s left cheek with his right hand.
“Mick, I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I don’t know how to tell you this, and it might make you hate me or I don’t know what, but Preston is… he’s… well, he’s your son. You’re his father. You were the only one. I couldn’t find you again. I tried and tried. Please don’t hate me, and don’t be mad at him…”
Ayla’s confession came directly from her soul, a place she kept her deepest pain and all her innermost hopes and dreams.
Mick let go of her hands and stood up from the table. He stumbled two steps back from the table as if he’d been slapped.
The initial shock on his face softened just a bit as he looked over at the splash pad and watched Preston chasing Desiree with a bucket filled with water. The way he ran and smiled reminded him of someone he’d known at that age.
His little brother, Frank.
Mick began to cry.
He probably hadn’t cried in ten years. And now here he was.
He looked back at Ayla, who was sobbing, and then again to Preston. He went through the calculations in his mind, and the dates seemed to roughly line up. It would have been almost seven years ago, that night at Scald. Nine months later, plus six years…
Mick dropped to his knees on the green grass. Preston was being chased now, and it was as if he was watching Frank running down the sideline, soccer ball at his feet, joyously eluding defenders in his youth league back in Sheffield. The same loping, gangly run, all arms and legs.
In Mick’s mind’s eye, Frank was alive. His father was alive, shouting encouragement from the sideline. His mum was yelling at a referee.
They were all back home again in Sheffield— shit. He had a flight to catch. But that was the last thing he wanted to think about. His entire life had just been turned inside out and upside down. He had a family? At the very least, a son. Who knew what Ayla was, or what she wanted to, or could become, to him? She took his breath away, always had, from that first night, and still did. But in truth, he barely knew her.
But she’d had his baby.
This beautiful, sexy girl, who he’d spent so much time thinking about, and pining away for, without even knowing her name, had given him a priceless gift. A gift he didn’t know he’d received, or even wanted, but now it was all he could think about. Introducing Preston to his mum. Teaching him rugby. Taking him to Bramall Lane to see the statue of Preston’s uncle. Telling him about his grandfather. So much catching up to do.
Where to begin?
Ayla held her head in hands. The way Mick backed away from the table when she told him the truth about Preston tore her guts out. He looked like he wanted to run. To run and keep running, all the way back to Sheffield, and then to just keep running. She’d made a terrible mistake. What had she been thinking?
But suddenly he’d stopped. And he was crying, too. He was watching Preston and Desiree playing and he was weeping. Ayla couldn’t read him at all.
She was devastated. The emotional roller coaster that began at the gas station had gone horribly off the rails and ended in a fiery crash at the park, because she couldn’t contain herself. Couldn’t take things slowly, get to know him, let him get to know her. What did she really know about Mick Merryweather, anyway? Even if he wanted to be part of Preston’s life, which seemed beyond unlikely now, she barely knew him. It would be doing her son no justice to give a virtual stranger access to him.
Just like she shouldn’t have given a stranger the unfettered access she’d given that same man to her body…
She blinked through her tears to watch Mick stand up and return to the table, where she sat.
He walked around to her side and opened his arms, beckoning her to rise.
Ayla did, and Mick wrapped her up in a warm, loving embrace. Both their shoulders shook. He released and held her at arm’s length, smiling.
“It’s good. It’s so good. Thank you, Ayla.”
Her face found his chest, and she cried, anew, tears this time of joy. Of peace.
Of relief.
“I never thought… I never imagined I’d find you,” Ayla gasped.
“You’ve found me. I’ve found you. Fate found us,” Mick assured her. “I’m right here. I’m not letting you go again. Ever.”
Preston noticed his mom and the man from the gas station who’d bought him a slushie were hugging. He’d never seen his mom hug a man before, and he felt a twinge of jealousy. He rushed over, with Desiree trailing. “Preston! Preston, wait!”
But he was too quick, and he reached Ayla and Mick before she could intervene. He wrapped his wet arms around his mother’s waist, staking his claim to her.
Mick stepped back, deferring to Preston. “Go on, big man, hug your mum. I’m sorry, mate.”
Preston looked up at him defiantly, then smiled and stuck out his tongue. Mick tentatively reached out a balled fist, which Preston bumped with his own fist.
“Hey, Preston, I was thinking about going to get pizza,” Desiree suggested. “Are you hungry?”
“Sure,” he answered, keeping his hold on Ayla.
Ayla and Mick made eye contact and shared a nod and a smile.
14
“I want to take you to dinner, but I desperately need a shower,” Mick told Ayla. “If you hadn’t noticed.”
“You seem fine to me,” Ayla admitted. “But I definitely need to rinse the road off. So, yeah, let’s each go home and take showers.”
“Do you like Thai food? There’s a great place called Lotus of Siam. It’s off Sahara, a few blocks from the Strip.”
“I don’t know that I’ve ever had it, but I like Chinese, is it similar?” Ayla asked.
“You’ll love it. I live near the restaurant, in the condos at Arroyo Place. You live near here? In Henderson?”
“Just a few streets over from here.”
“I’ll send a car for you. Will an hour give you enough time?”
“Perfect,” Ayla said. “But what about your trip?”
“Ah. I’m going to reschedule. Or something. I think my mum might want to come here when I tell her the news, don’t you?”
Ayla smiled sheepishly. “Do you think she’ll like being a grandma?”
“You’ve clearly never met Bev Merryweather. Her lack of grandchildren is her favorite thing to complain about. And she’s only happy when she’s complaining.”
“I hope that doesn’t mean, in a roundabout way, that she won’t be happy anymore?”
“Or any less,” Mick laughed. “Trust me, she’ll be thrilled. Not with havi
ng to move slowly and take our time explaining everything to Preston, but she’ll be tickled.”
“So, I’ll see you in just a bit then?” Ayla asked.
“I can’t wait. Just for the record, this is the coolest thing that’s happened to me since, well, nothing comes to mind. We have a lot to catch up on. Over the best Thai food on the continent.”
Ayla and Mick hugged again, and when they broke the embrace, Ayla stood up on her tiptoes and kissed Mick on the cheek. He blushed and tilted his head to look her in the eye. He took her chin in his hand and kissed her back, softly at first, then more deeply. She withdrew, gasping.
“Um, wow. Okay. Let’s slow down before we wind up where we were last time,” she said, hands on his chest.
“Was last time so bad?” Mick asked, grinning.
“Just the opposite,” Ayla confirmed. “But maybe we ought to strive for somewhere a little more private? And you have to buy me dinner first, anyway. What kind of girl do you think I am?”
Mick licked his lips. “A delicious one. Text me your address. A car will pick you up in an hour. You can dress casual, I wear the monkey suit to work, I don’t feel like getting so dressed up tonight. If that’s okay with you?”
“Sounds good.”
Desiree had taken Preston to Chuck E. Cheese, and Ayla rushed home to get cleaned up for her date.
Mick called the airline from his SUV, canceling his flight and scheduling one to bring his mother from Sheffield to Las Vegas. He knew she’d complain, but he’d tell her he had a surprise waiting for her. She’d grumble, but in the end acquiesce.
He received Ayla’s address and scheduled a town car to pick her up and bring her to Lotus.
In the shower, he found himself singing Lovesong by The Cure. A song he hadn’t heard, much less sung, in more years than he could count. But it popped into his head as he shampooed his hair and before he knew it, he was belting it out.
However far away… I will always love you.
As he dressed, he repeated her name aloud. “Ayla. Ayla Murray. Ayla Murray. Ayla. Ayla. Ayla. Finally. My Ayla.”