It was another three hours before they could get their communications gear up and running again. Everyone was exhausted. They were sixty miles away from the wreck and the transponder they’d pinned on it had stopped working. Best-case scenario—the storm hadn’t moved the wreck, and they could get back to work. Worst-case scenario—the wreck had been moved by the storm, and they’d have to work at finding it all over again.
Right now he had to be content knowing Bella was safe, his ship and crew had survived the storm, and he had unfinished business with the McCormack family. He tried the satellite phone to reach Bella.
“Bella.” The line crackled, but she knew it was Tuck’s voice. “Are you okay?”
“I’m fine. What about you?”
“Good…made it…transponder gone…Rapid…” There was so much noise as the signal was fractured, and he sounded like a robot that was falling apart. She could only catch every few words or so.
“What? I can barely hear you. When can I come back out?”
“…send for you…wait…have to go…” The call cut off. It was only normal. Chances were it was still stormy, and his satellite reception would be spotty.
Still, she was relieved. Tuck was safe. The Discovery had survived the storm, which meant all their hard work would still pay off in the cargo they’d already brought up.
She waited for him to send for her. Days turned into a week. She’d gotten an email from the ship saying they’d lost the transponder signal in the storm, and the floats had been ripped away and found bobbing in the sea. All communication from Tucker was short and to the point. No extended answers. Clearly they were trying to get things put back together and reorient themselves.
The storm had moved the Rapid, pulling it down over the rim of the underwater ridge into deep water. To find it, they’d have to start their search all over again, deeper this time. If any of it had survived the drop.
What bothered her worse than the news of losing the Rapid were the multiplex containers that kept showing up at Fontanel & Company. She should have been happy having so much that was salvaged from the wreck, and that it all didn’t go down again in another hurricane. But each time she opened one she thought of Tuck and wondered why, when he’d been so adamant about being part of her life because of the baby, he wasn’t here now.
He still hadn’t sent for her. True, they weren’t bringing anything new to the surface since they’d lost the wreck, and she had all the work she could handle just processing the artifacts in the multiplex containers. But as weeks became a month, she wondered where they stood. He’d sent an email asking how she and the baby were doing and letting her know he still wanted to talk about their future together, but nothing else. She’d told him the crystal ball was still on the ship and asked to have it sent to her. It never arrived.
At two months of non-stop work and hardly any communication, she was pissed off. Anger slowly replaced the hurt that had lodged itself in her chest. How hard could it be to call, send a damn email, or text message? Was he even still out on the boat? She didn’t know. Suspicions began to creep in, prickly, sour thoughts that made her stomach turn. What if he’d decided he didn’t want to be a father after all? What if he’d come to a realization out in the storm that life was too short to be burdened by a relationship and a young family?
Even as her heart shrank, her belly began to expand. There was a baby coming, and she refused to let the negativity she was tempted to wallow in impact her child. If she meant anything to Tuck, and she suspected she was fooling herself to think so, he’d be back. Someday. So she waited and went about her life as best as she could.
Chapter Fourteen
William Tucker McCormack peered up at the imposing dark-glass facade of the McCormack Group building in downtown Manhattan. In a few hours, all if it would be his. The thought should have made him happy. It didn’t. In fact he was eager to get the deal done and over with and get back to New Orleans to start a life with Bella and the baby.
Since the storm, he’d been pushing himself harder than ever to buy out the McCormack Group and see the defeated look on his half brother’s face when he told him he was going to dismantle MCG and sell it off piece by piece. There wasn’t a damned thing Tucker wanted that had anything to do with his father, or brother. Getting rid of the company was the last thing he needed to feel like he could separate himself from the family who never wanted to acknowledge his existence, to claim his future as a man free of his past.
As far as Phillip and the board of the McCormack Group knew, it was another company buying them out. Tuck had used a shell company and adroitly kept his name out of the paperwork, letting his lawyers handle everything until he was ready to reveal himself. He wanted to see Phillip’s face as the asshole realized who was taking everything from him. He wanted to see his reaction when he realized far from getting rid of the bastard son, their mistreatment of him and his mother had only made him stronger.
He took a deep breath of the city air, laced with the fumes of taxi exhaust, sea brine, and hot dogs being sold on the corner and promised himself a long vacation on his sailing ship with Bella and his child. Five minutes later, he walked past the dark double doors of the boardroom of the McCormack Group. A wall of windows looked over an impressive view of Wall Street and the Hudson, but his attention zeroed in on the lone figure silhouetted against the light streaming in.
Phillip looked no different, only older, than Tuck remembered. More like their father. The slight touch of silver at his temples, the deep blue eyes, and hard features that told the world he bowed to no one. His gut tightened, memories trying to writhe their way up, but he stomped them down, focusing himself on his prey.
“Who let you in here?”
“My attorney.”
“Your attor—who are you?”
Tuck angled his head slightly and pulled at the cuff of his Brioni shirt. “Hello, big brother.”
The color drained from Phillip’s face, leaving him looking pasty and sweating, his shoulders sagged slightly. “It can’t be.”
“Oh, it most certainly can. And FYI, I met—and exceeded—the provisions of the trust fund several years ago. And as frosting on the cake, I just bought out the McCormack Group lock, stock, and barrel.”
Phillip spread his feet aggressively, balancing his fingertips on the polished surface of the boardroom table. He gave Tuck a direct, cold look and asked, his tone mocking. “What are you going to do with a company of this size?”
Tuck leaned forward, flattening his palms on top of the polished table and leaned in for the kill. “Oh, I don’t want it. I’m going to dismantle it and sell it off piece by piece.”
Phillip frowned. “But why? You’ll lose your ass and your money.”
Tucker smiled mirthlessly. “Because, dickhead, it was never about the money.”
“But you’ll destroy MCG,” he said. “The stocks will be worthless.” Reality dawned on him, and he blanched further. “You’ll ruin us.”
“Oh, you mean ruin your side of the family? Different when the shoe’s on the other foot, isn’t it? You didn’t give a shit what your actions did to a grieving woman with a child to support, did you? You didn’t think what it was like to wonder where your next meal was coming from, or how long you’d be able to afford heat in winter, or if you’d even have a place to sleep that night. Somehow I think you’ll find a way to get by, even if you all have to go get actual jobs. At least Belladonna Dupré seemed to think you could manage.”
The nauseated look on Phillip’s face faded a bit as color returned swiftly to his cheeks, and his dark blue eyes grew sharp. “Bella? How the hell do you know Bella?”
Tuck’s grin got even bigger. He was sure he was showing all his teeth in a shark’s smile. “She’s going to be my wife.”
Phillip sank into the chair at the head of the long table. Sitting back, he picked the Mont Blanc pen up from the table next to the stack of papers he’d signed and twirled the pen around his fingers. “Please don’t tell me yo
u went to all the effort to look her up and screw her just to get back at me. That would be the height of pathetic.”
Phillip’s feeble attempt to goad him showed how desperate his brother was…and how much Tuck had grown. He didn’t need his father or his family’s approval. He was his own man, and Phillip’s jabs no longer hit home. “As a matter of fact, we met by accident working on the same job. She almost refused to work with me because I reminded her too much of you.”
“Heartbroken?”
“Nauseated. Whatever you did to her made her loathe you.”
Phillip shrugged, as if Bella meant nothing. Tuck bristled, his hands closing into fists. “Bella was a little too bookish for my taste, and obsessive. She ever find that little boat of hers that she never stopped talking about?”
“Yes.”
“And did she find her sunken treasure?” he said, a mocking tone in his voice as he made quotation marks with his fingers around the words sunken treasure.
Tuck brushed off the instant urge to punch him in the face and instead chose to turn it back on him. “I helped her do so.”
Phillip’s expression changed, his brows knitting together and he stood up, the sharp, poisonous look still in his eyes. “So you left her to come here to take me on?”
“And when I get back we have a wedding and a baby shower to plan.” At this point not strictly true, but it would be as soon as he went back to New Orleans. The words came out, intended to wound Phillip, but the minute he’d said it aloud Tuck realized he meant them. He’d resisted the idea of marriage for so long, and love for even longer, that he hadn’t even seen the desire for both of them creep up on him.
“Bella is pregnant?”
“She is. We’re both thrilled.” Again a supposition he’d turn into reality as soon as he was able. She had a shitload of things to forgive him for, her pregnancy was one them. He’d fix things with her. He loved her more than he thought he’d ever loved anyone. Pregnant or not, he wanted to marry her. He’d figure things out. Make them work. He had to.
“Don’t worry, you won’t be expected to clear time in your schedule for either one. You’re not invited.” His composure slipped a little. What if, after all this time away setting up the necessary paperwork and money to orchestrate this takeover, Bella wanted nothing to do with him? She was stubborn and opinionated and had a streak of pride a mile wide. Could she, hell would she, forgive him? God, he hoped so.
“You’re still an idiot, you know that?”
Tuck tried to shove the worries about Bella aside. This was his moment to throw things down with Phillip, and he couldn’t let it slip by. “Bitter much? It’s a good look for you. Now your outsides match your insides, dickhead.”
Phillip put his hands on his hips, spoiling the line of the black Brooks Brothers jacket. “You still don’t get it do you?” His handsome face, so similar to their father’s, twisted with distaste. “You had it all. The girl. A life of freedom to do whatever the hell you wanted with it. All without being encumbered by all of this.” He jerked his chin to indicate the corporate boardroom walls around them. “And you blew it”—he snapped his fingers and gave a mirthless laugh—”just like that. You left her when she was probably her most vulnerable to come here and orchestrate a takeover. That had to take some time, a month at least, maybe more. Women like Bella don’t forget shit like that. And from experience, I can tell you she’s not the type to forgive or forget. You might have won the battle, William, but you lost the war.”
Tuck’s gut took a dive to the vicinity of his polished shoes. Yeah, he’d screwed up. Big time. He knew that. Now.
He’d let his drive to fix his past overshadow his future and potentially lost out on something far more valuable—a family of his own. A wife. A child. A home he could come back to no matter how far the adventures in his life took him.
The triumphant gleam in Phillip’s eye only rubbed salt in the wound, making the sting that much sharper. He’d crafted one of the most brilliant hostile takeovers in decades and gotten credit for finding the Rapid. And it made no difference at all. He wasn’t getting the satisfaction he’d imagined, and by being so damned one track about this takeover, he’d ignored his own instincts. He should’ve listened to the little nagging doubts he’d shoved aside. He should never have left Bella alone. All he really wanted was to go back home to New Orleans.
Home…the thought struck him. He’d never had a place he really thought of as home until now. And it wasn’t a place, it was a person—a woman with green eyes like the sea on a summer’s day, whose bright smile and sassy mouth could make all the pain, all the angst, fade away with just a kiss of her soft lips.
He glanced at the corporate boardroom, the epicenter of power for the McCormack family, cold and pristine…and realized he didn’t want it, not one bit of it. Tuck picked up the papers Phillip had just signed, the papers that gave him control of every aspect of the McCormack Group, and tore them in half. The sheets fluttered down to the smooth slate gray carpeting.
Phillip narrowed his eyes. “What’s your game, William?”
“It’s Tucker, and this is no game.”
Phillip sneered at him, crossing his arms. “You really have lost your mind.”
Tuck smiled. “No, I think, I’ve actually found it. You can keep the company, Phillip. I don’t need it. And I don’t need you or anyone else in the family. In fact, I might even change my name.”
Phillip’s brow furrowed with confusion, but Tuck didn’t stay to find out why. He didn’t care. All he wanted to do was get on the next flight back to New Orleans so he could begin to make things right with Bella.
It was dusk and the shadows collected in the corners and crevices of her family home. Bella never knew how tired she could be until she’d hit the first trimester of her pregnancy. What was it about babies that had the ability to siphon off both your energy and your brain? She brushed her teeth to get ready for bed. It didn’t matter that she’d skipped dinner; her stomach was too touchy to want to eat. Right now she needed sleep more than food.
She was drifting off when there was a knock at the front door. Min was still at work at the shop so there was no one but her to hear the echo of the heavy iron knocker as it reverberated on the marble in the entryway. When she had a home of her own, she’d have wood floors and soft rugs. She sighed, flipped off her blankets, and padded down the stairs.
The marble tiles were cool against her bare feet. She opened the door a crack and peered out to see Tucker standing there in a business suit, shirt, and a blue power tie worthy of Wall Street. Bella’s fingers tightened around the door as her uneven heartbeat increased and her breathing became ragged. “Tucker?”
“Forgotten me already?” His mouth tipped up in a halfhearted smile. A fragile smile.
For a second Bella was too stunned to breathe. He looked so good. So different from the man, the lover, she’d known on the Discovery. Perhaps this was the real him, the McCormack him. Dressed in his powerbroker suit, she didn’t know him at all. “What are you doing here?”
He frowned. “I came back for you like I said I would.”
“Yes, two damned months ago. What the hell do you want?”
Tuck glanced up and down the street. “Can I come in? Might be easier if we talked inside.”
She rubbed her forehead with shaking fingers, trying to ease the ache that was building behind her eyes. “Yeah, of course, come in.” She closed the door, slid off the chain latch, and opened it wide so he could enter. Turning, she left him to close it and walked ahead to the living room. Curling up on the old, familiar couch, she tucked her feet beneath her. Lord, she was crazy happy to see him, but she wasn’t going to make this easy on him. He had a lot of explaining to do, and she’d give him enough rope to hang himself before she asked him politely to leave. He had no right to disappear for months on end without a word. He had no right to make her believe he loved her.
Bella gave him a cool look as he took a nearby chair. “Well?”
&n
bsp; God, she was beautiful.
How in such a short time had he forgotten the silky texture of her hair, how it gleamed in the low light of evening, or how dark the lashes were that framed those pale green eyes? There were subtle changes, things he didn’t think were memory lapse. Her frame looked slightly thinner, but her breasts were larger. He avoided the temptation of touching her.
“How are you?”
“How am I?” She gave him an incredulous look. “I’m three months pregnant, morning sick, afternoon sick, and just for fun, evening sick, too. My ankles are swollen, and all I want to eat are pickles. My lover disappeared for months on end without so much as a damn word, and Aunt Min is worried sick about me. That’s how the hell I am, Tucker. Not that you have a right to know any of that.”
“It’s good to see you.” He faltered. There was an awkwardness between them that had never been there before. Tuck chalked it up to her being hurt and him feeling like a dick for hurting her. He’d told her on the satellite call from the ship he’d be going to New York. He’d gotten caught up in the whirlwind of making the takeover happen and getting the artifacts back to her and had no personal time at all.
“I’m sorry, Bella, I know it took longer than I intended, but—”
“How long did you intend to abandon me? No more than a month? Six weeks? Until our baby turned eighteen? I want to know what the hell your plan was. I want to know—” Her voice broke. “How could you leave me alone, wondering what the hell happened to you?”
“I’m sorry.”
When the cold look in her eyes refused to thaw, and she didn’t respond, he realized he was in way deeper shit than he’d anticipated. He tried again. “I was taking care of some personal business so I could come back to you.”
“Were you? Well, it would have been fucking nice if you’d let me know!” she yelled, chucking a pillow from the couch at him. “Did you forget how to pick up a phone? Did you lose the use of both your thumbs and become unable to text? Tell me, Tuck, if I was so important to you—if our child was so important to you—then why didn’t you come sooner? Why the hell did you leave me alone?”
Her Sworn Enemy (Men of the Zodiac) Page 16