by Susan Wiggs
“Oh, that’s right,” she said with a sigh, holding up the sea-foam-colored tank suit, “this probably was my high school practice suit.” What Darcy lacked in style she’d always made up for in athletics. Since she was old enough to walk, she had played sports—swimming, snow sports, water polo, volleyball...if it involved athletics, she was happy to jump right into it.
As she held the suit up to the light, she was appalled to see the fabric had worn through in a couple of key places, including the butt. “Great,” she muttered. “Just great.” She opened the closet and found a plain black tank suit there. It was several sizes too large, but the only other one she could find was a scandalous wisp of fabric. Some would call it a bikini. Darcy called it ridiculous. In the borrowed bikini, yellow with bows on it, she felt conspicuous, but the thing fit like a glove. An extremely skimpy glove.
She hid beneath her cover-up—a hand-me-down from one of the sisters, several years old, frumpy but serviceable—and a pair of sandals that had seen better days. Then she ran a comb through her hair and put on a big, floppy hat, grabbed her tube of sunscreen and her sunglasses.
“Ready for the beach,” she said, joining Logan in the kitchen. “What can I do to help?”
He was putting fresh sprigs of rosemary and sage and pats of butter under the turkey skin while intermittently consulting a video cooking lesson on an iPad.
“Jamie Oliver?” she asked.
“Taught me everything I know,” he said without looking away from the screen. “Love this guy.”
“Have you always been interested in cooking?”
“It’s a relatively new project. I took it up when I became a single dad. I knew I needed to learn how to make something besides quesadillas and microwave burritos. I never wanted to be the dad who raises his kid on takeout and junk food.”
“That’s nice. I need a job.”
“Peel the potatoes?”
“I think I can handle that.”
Working alongside him in the kitchen felt strangely...domestic. And freakishly pleasant. In general, she didn’t enjoy cooking, and lately she didn’t enjoy men, so the pleasantness of the moment startled her.
“You didn’t tell me you were divorced,” he said.
She thought he might have sounded slightly accusing, as if this was something she had a duty to share with him. But that was ridiculous. She’d only met him the one time, at the end of summer. It wasn’t as if she needed to share her life story with him.
But now here she was, in his house—his family’s house—and he’d asked her a direct question. He was just being friendly, she told herself. He had no idea that it was her least favorite question. It was like being asked, “So, how’d you get that giant hideous scar?”
“Yes,” she said simply, knowing she was now expected to elaborate. “I was married for five years.”
He cut an onion into quarters using swift, confident strokes with a sharp knife; then he added the pieces to the roasting pan. “Just asking,” he said. “Didn’t mean to pry.”
“Oh, you weren’t prying,” she told him hastily. It was comforting in a perverse way, knowing the two of them were both divorced. It was like meeting another shipwreck survivor who understood just what the other had endured.
She remembered seeing Logan’s ex at the end of summer, and wondered where he was in the recovery process. She could still picture the look of longing in Logan’s eyes when he’d handed his son over to the ex. And why not? The mother of his child was blonde and beautiful, with a glowing smile. Yikes, Logan might even still be in love with her.
“I wanted to make sure the coast was clear,” he said to Darcy.
“The coast?”
“For when I start hitting on you.”
She swallowed hard. Maybe she was wrong about his ex. “You’re going to start hitting on me?”
He plucked a pinch of salt from a small bowl. “Yeah,” he said. “I might.”
Her chest tightened. She remembered the never-again vow she’d made after her marriage. “How will I know if you’re hitting on me?” she asked, her light teasing tone masking apprehension.
He grinned. “You’ll be the first to know. Anyway, I’m glad you didn’t think I was prying. Prying comes later.”
“I can hardly wait,” she said.
He hoisted the turkey into the pan. “This,” he said, “is going to make you glad I’m single. It’s going to be the most delicious turkey you’ve ever tasted.”
“How did you end up with kitchen duty?” she asked.
“I volunteered. Later, everybody will pitch in.”
“And all hell will break loose?”
He grinned. “Pretty much.”
“So, tell me about the O’Donnell family traditions. Anything unusual?”
“Not unless you consider sibling squabbles, cranky kids and overeating unusual.”
“Oh boy. That sounds extremely familiar. Are you sure we’re not related?” She and Logan had plenty in common. On the one hand, it was kind of cool, feeling so comfortable with him, so quickly. On the other hand, this likely meant a relationship between them would never work. She and Huntley had had everything in common, yet ultimately they’d fallen apart. “What do you squabble about?”
“It’s mainly the kids who squabble these days. Although my old man’s not too pleased with me at the moment.”
“Why not?”
“I made a kind of impulsive career move. Sold my stable, lucrative, predictable, boring business for a crazy, risky, unstable one.”
“Are you talking about that ski resort in your town?”
“Yeah. Cool you remember it.”
“I think it sounds incredible. Congratulations.”
“My family thinks I’ve gone off the deep end.”
“I know the feeling. The first time I disappointed my parents was the moment I was born.”
“What, did you have a tail or something?”
“Ha-ha.”
“I’ve heard those can be removed.”
“It’s what I didn’t have that disappointed them.”
“What’s that?”
“A penis. After four girls, they were desperate for a boy.”
“You have four older sisters. And I thought I had it bad, with India and China.”
“And how is it your sisters were named after exotic foreign countries while you were named after an airport?”
“Quirky folks. I just feel lucky they didn’t call me Madagascar or Sri Lanka.”
“Yet another thing we have in common—quirky parents. Mine are English professors. My sisters and I are named after literary figures. I guess that makes them quirky but predictable.”
“Darcy. I can’t recall a Darcy from college English.”
“Hint—it’s a surname.”
He gave a short laugh. “As in Fitzwilliam Darcy? You’re named after Mr. Darcy?”
“It gets worse. My sisters are Mary, Kitty, Lydia and Lizzie. My full name is Darcy Jane.” She punctuated the list by plopping chunks of potato into a pot of cold water.
“Don’t tell me Lydia is married to a reverend...”
“Worse. A motivational speaker, who happens to be the brother of my ex.”
“And suddenly it all comes clear. You came to Florida to escape the dubious pleasures of the family Thanksgiving.”
“Exactly. It’s so much easier to get along with other people’s families.”
“Agreed. And can I just say, this dinner is going to be epic.” He slid the turkey into the oven. Then he looked around the kitchen and wiped his hands on a tea towel. “We’re finished for now. There’s nothing more to be done for about three hours. Let’s hit the beach.”
He flashed that killer smile again. Oh, why did he have to have a killer smile?
Chapter Six
Working alongside Darcy Fitzgerald in the kitchen didn’t suck. Logan freely acknowledged that. He kind of liked talking to her. He kind of liked her, as much as or maybe more than he had last summer. This
was surprising, because he rarely—make that never—felt even a spark of interest in a girl who came preapproved by his family.
Yeah, he liked her, but she wasn’t his type. Life was simpler without the complication of a divorce survivor. And she didn’t even look like his type, particularly at the moment, in the floppy hat and shapeless robe. That layered-on style made her look like a human coat tree. Still, she had a fun personality and a cute smile. She was the type of girl to have as a friend, nothing more.
“Time for the beach,” he said. “You’re going to love it.”
“Lead on, Kemosabe.”
He walked through the breezeway and held the back door for her. His folks’ place had all the perks—an infinity pool and lush gardens, a small grove of orange and calamondin trees, a tennis court, a golf course bordering one side of the yard and on the other side, a scenic path through a bird marsh leading to the beach.
“Not too shabby,” she remarked, pausing to get a phone picture of a group of roosting flamingos.
“We spend every Thanksgiving here. The setting is not exactly traditional, though.”
“Traditions are overrated,” she said.
“Yeah? Which ones?”
“The ones that throw you together with people you don’t get along with and force you to pretend to have a good time.”
“Ouch.”
“Those are the traditions I’m talking about.”
“Well, when you put it that way...”
“Sorry.” A grin flashed beneath the wide brim of the hat. “Obviously my divorce did a number on me. I’ll get over it. I take it you got through yours.”
“More or less intact. The hardest part is splitting Charlie’s time. Makes me mental.” He ground his back teeth, thinking about the past couple of months. “The worst part for me is that he’s moving with his mother and stepfather to Japan.”
“Whoa, Japan?”
“My ex’s husband is in the air force. They’re moving right after Christmas, and they’ll be away for three years.”
“Sounds challenging.”
“It’s totally screwed up, but I’m going to have to make it work. Charlie has been flying on his own back and forth between his mom and me for the past couple of years, so he’s an old hand at it.”
Having to shuttle back and forth between parents had turned Charlie into an independent traveler. But the grin that lit his face each time he saw Logan was all little boy. The fact was, every time Logan saw his little boy walk through the arrivals door at the airport, with his backpack and roll-aboard in tow, travel documents in a packet around his neck, he nearly lost it. Yet for Charlie’s sake, he held himself together, told the kid he was proud of him. The Unaccompanied Minor guide could barely keep up with him as Charlie ran to fill his father’s arms. Logan never tired of feeling that rush of love and relief washing over him the moment they were reunited.
“If he’s an old hand, you’ve got nothing to worry about.”
“But an overseas flight? I’m nervous as hell about how he’ll handle it.”
“Is Charlie nervous?”
“Good question.”
“I bet he’ll surprise you. I was a great adventurer as a kid, always up for anything.”
Logan found it easy to picture her as a kid, with pigtails and scraped knees. Then he thought about his son. “Charlie’s supercautious sometimes. Last summer, there was zip-lining at Camp Kioga, but he wouldn’t hear of it. Not even when every other kid went for it.”
“I’m no expert, but I bet fear of the unknown is common in kids. Come to think of it, it’s common in adults, too.”
“You’d love zip-lining,” he said.
“How do you know?”
“Just a hunch.”
She smiled and ducked her head. Her smile did something funny to his insides. Then, as they reached the end of the path leading to the beach, she said, “Well, this is a great place to come home to. He’s a lucky kid.”
“That’s a nice thing to say. I hope he feels lucky.”
“Why wouldn’t he? Look where we are.” They stepped onto the sun-warmed sand together. He heard her catch her breath as she clapped a hand atop her head to keep her hat from sailing away in the breeze.
“Amazing,” she said, surveying the expanse of brown-sugar sand. The area was bordered by private cabanas. Closer to the surf, the sand was dotted with umbrellas and family groups. Kids played in the waves, and barefoot couples strolled along together. “So this was your childhood playground? It’s fantastic here.”
Their first stop would be at the O’Donnell cabana—yes, the O’Donnells had been homeowners at Paradise Cove for so long that they had their own cabana, something available only to longtime residents. It bore the traditional canvas stripes and the interior was roomy, like an old-fashioned salon with potted tropical plants and a ceiling fan, upholstered chaises and a small fridge stocked with drinks. On the side, the surfboards were lined up according to size.
In the distance, Charlie and his cousins were boogie-boarding in the waves. “Charlie’s the one in the red trunks,” he said, pointing him out to Darcy.
“I remember him from last summer.”
“Dad!” yelled Charlie. “Yo, Dad!” He jumped up and down, waved his board and rushed into the surf, his cousins surrounding him.
“Looks like he’s having a great time.”
Logan nodded. Charlie moved with a lithe athleticism that reminded Logan he wasn’t a little boy anymore. Every time he saw his son after an absence of any length, he marveled at how much his boy had grown and changed. Not just the inches and pounds, but the attitude, as well. Thanks to the Japanese lessons he’d been taking, he had the rudiments of a new language, a taste for seaweedy snacks and real ramen. He’d told Logan he was excited about living overseas, taking train rides and field trips to pagodas and temples. It’s lucky, Logan told himself, his mantra these days. There were perks for Charlie in having two separate families. The chance to experience life in a foreign country with his mom. The chance to go surfing at Thanksgiving with his dad.
Still, the custody arrangement frustrated the hell out of Logan. Even just a couple of months made a difference. Charlie’s haircut was different. He wore clothes Logan had never seen.
“He’s getting to see the world,” Logan said to Darcy. “It’s hard, though, feeling like I’m missing out on my son’s life.”
“You’re not missing out now,” she said. “He’s right here, and he’s having the time of his life.”
“Good point. Let’s go over and say hi to everyone.” Around the cabana, his parents, sisters and brothers-in-law were arranged on chaises and canvas sling beach chairs, drinks in hand.
“They look like a fashion layout in a travel magazine,” remarked Darcy.
“Yeah? They were, once,” he said. “We were.”
“Really?”
“Town & Country, 2002. My mother’s finest moment.”
She laughed aloud, as if he was joking. He wasn’t joking. Appearing in the pages of a glossy lifestyles magazine had been a peak experience for Marion O’Donnell. More than anything, his parents valued appearances. They wanted the world to see them as the best at everything—a success in business, driving the best cars, sending their kids to the best schools, the unequaled best at being a family.
To this day, they had no idea how much pressure that put on a kid.
Logan was a grown-up now. He was past all that and he’d never point the finger of blame. But sometimes he admitted there were several unexamined reasons he’d been so screwed up.
“Did that mess with your head?” Darcy asked. “Having to look like a magazine family all the time?”
She was reading his mind. “Hell yeah, it did.”
“Why do parents do that?”
“Not sure. I’m trying my best not to repeat the pattern with my own kid.” He paused and regarded Charlie, who had abandoned his boogie board and was now staggering around with a red plastic bucket on his head. “I don’t thi
nk my kid struggles with perfectionism.”
“Good for you. And him.”
“Come on. Let’s let everyone know you’re here and then go for a swim. Er, do you like swimming?”
She lit up with a smile. “Yes, I do. I do indeed.”
He wasn’t sure why she found that funny. “Hey,” he called out, approaching the cabana, “Look who I found skulking around the house.”
India squealed and jumped up to hug Darcy. Yes, his sister was a squealer. And it didn’t seem to matter how old she got, she squealed whenever she was excited. “You made it! I’m so glad.”
To his relief, Darcy did not squeal back. “Thanks for having me,” she said, addressing Logan’s folks. “Your place is beautiful. I really appreciate being here.”
“We’re so pleased you could come.” His mother’s smile was a beacon of welcome. She clearly approved of Darcy Fitzgerald, Logan could tell. He always knew when his mom was merely being polite or when she was genuinely pleased. Darcy was the type his mother liked—a girl from a “good” family, whatever that meant—educated, classy. A girl most likely to turn into a woman like Marion O’Donnell.
Logan sometimes took a perverse pleasure in bringing home women who didn’t exactly fit the O’Donnell mold. He’d had one girlfriend with more piercings than a pincushion, and purple hair to boot. Another was multiethnic, with rainbow hair and tribal tattoos, and the most recent was a performance artist who worked in edible paints. He had loved each one, but ultimately, one or the other pulled back. Something wasn’t right or didn’t match up; somehow their hearts just weren’t in sync.
At the moment, there was no one.
It was not for lack of trying. God knew, he loved women. He loved the companionship, the rush of emotion, the sex. He wanted to be in love. Through the years, he’d watched his friends pairing up, moving in together, moving on... And sometimes in the deepest, quietest part of the night, he felt a gaping hollow of loneliness. He tried not to want more than he had—good friends and family, and above all, Charlie.
Still, the biggest lesson he’d learned from being a dad was that he was a family man, through and through. It felt like a special kind of hell sometimes, going it alone, because he wanted to commit himself fully to someone. He wanted a family. More kids, for sure—brothers and sisters for Charlie.