by Marie Force
In light of that, he shouldn’t have been surprised when she showed up one day at McCarthy’s just as he was starting work on the gift shop roof. He watched Ned’s cab pull into the lot. Roseanne emerged and took a good look around the marina.
Mac suppressed a groan and wished there was somewhere to hide. But she spotted him on the roof and let out a happy shriek. Teetering on spike heels, she came rushing toward him as every guy on the dock stopped what he was doing to stare at her. Wanting to reach her before she got to the pier and broke her neck on those heels, Mac descended quickly from the roof.
They met in the parking lot where Roseanne launched herself into his arms.
Mac had no choice but to catch her.
Gripping a handful of his hair, she wrapped her legs around his hips and planted a huge kiss on him.
He heard the whistles and catcalls, but all Mac could think about while she kissed him senseless was getting rid of her as fast as he could.
“Maddie,” Daisy whispered. “Mrs. McCarthy wants to see you in the office.”
“Did she say why?”
Wide-eyed, Daisy shook her head. “Good luck,” Daisy called after her as Maddie took the stairs from the third floor to Mrs. McCarthy’s lobby office.
Outside the door, Maddie steeled herself and knocked briskly. “You wanted to see me?”
Linda looked up from a spreadsheet on the desk. “Maddie, hi.” She waved her in. “Close the door.”
Maddie took the seat Linda offered.
“Can I get you anything? Some coffee or tea?”
Surprised by the friendly reception, Maddie said, “Um, no. Thank you.”
“I heard an interesting rumor when I was in town the other day.”
Not more rumors! “Oh?”
“Is it true that the Beachcomber is trying to lure you away from us?”
“Libby made me an offer, but I haven’t given her an answer.”
Linda folded her hands on the desktop. “Ethel is retiring at the end of the summer. I’d like you to replace her. As a management position, it’s full-time, year-round, with benefits and two weeks’ paid vacation.” She rattled off a salary that shocked Maddie. It was even more than Libby had offered.
“Why me? You have other people on the housekeeping staff who’ve been here longer.”
“Sylvia and Betty wouldn’t want the hassle at this point in their lives, and the others aren’t qualified. Besides, you’re the one I want.”
“Why?” Maddie asked, shocked by this sudden shift in Linda’s attitude toward her.
“For one thing, I owe you an apology. I’m appalled by what my son Evan was involved in and by what those boys did to you. I can’t deny that I’ve treated you unfairly because I believed what people said about you. I’m ashamed to admit that.” Linda paused and then looked at Maddie. “I’m not asking you to forgive me, but I do hope you’ll consider the job.”
“I’ll think about it.”
Linda nodded. “Good.”
Maddie got up to leave.
“Maddie.”
She turned back.
“I’ve never seen Mac so low. He’s working himself to death trying to keep his mind off what happened with you.”
Maddie’s stomach churned. “I thought you didn’t approve of our relationship.”
“I was wrong about that, too. He’s heartbroken, and I can’t bear to see him this way. I was probably as angry at him about those letters as you were, so I understand where you’re coming from.”
“But?”
“He loves you—and your son. He truly does. Is there any way you can find it in your heart to forgive him?”
Maddie’s heart fluttered painfully. For weeks, she’d agonized over the situation. While she still didn’t appreciate that he’d kept something so important from her, she had to acknowledge the letters had changed her life.
“Does he know you’re offering me a new job?”
Linda shook her head. “No one knows about that but you and me.” She paused before she added, “But if you want to discuss it with him, he’s at the marina.”
“You think he’d be happy to see me?”
“He’d be thrilled.”
For the first time since she walked away from him, Maddie felt a glimmer of hope. Without taking another second to consider the implications, she darted from Mrs. McCarthy’s office and out the hotel’s front door. She was halfway down the hill when a curvy, dark-haired woman launched herself into Mac’s arms and kissed him passionately.
Frozen in place, Maddie watched them long enough to see Mac return the woman’s kiss.
Maddie turned away, trudged up the hill and went back to work.
“What are you doing here?” Mac asked as he extricated himself from Roseanne’s embrace and lowered her to rickety heels.
“I missed you so much. I couldn’t wait another day to see you.” She combed her fingers through his hair. “You look much better. Nice tan.”
“I’ve been working outside for a change.”
“This is such a. . . cute. . . place. Very eclectic.”
Mac laughed to himself, imagining her reaction if she knew how much the cute little business was worth. “I wish I’d known you were coming. I’m really busy.”
Her face fell. “You’re not happy to see me.”
“It’s not that.”
“Then what?”
Mac glanced at the hotel and then at Roseanne, trying to find the words.
“You’ve got someone else.”
He sighed and ran a hand though his hair. “It’s complicated.”
“Actually, it’s quite simple—do you have someone else or don’t you?”
“I do.” Even though he wasn’t with Maddie anymore, his heart belonged to her, and he couldn’t lead Roseanne on.
“Well, that didn’t take long. Are you planning to tell Connor and Tony you’re not coming back?”
“I haven’t decided what I’m doing yet. They’ll be the first to know.”
“And were you going to tell me?”
“I told you before I left—”
“That we were taking a break. You never said we were over.”
“I thought you understood—”
“Will you ask that old man who brought me to take me back to the ferry?”
“I’ll take you.”
She folded her arms and looked away. “I’d rather go with him.”
“Roseanne. . .”
“Will you ask him or shall I?”
When had his life gotten so damned complicated? Mac went over to where his father, Ned and Luke leaned against pilings, watching the show. “Ned, Roseanne can’t stay. Would you mind giving her a ride into town?”
“Boy, ya sure can pick ’em.” Ned chortled.
“Will you take her?” Mac asked through gritted teeth.
“With pleasure.”
“I’m sorry,” Mac said to Roseanne as he helped her into the cab.
She whipped a packet of envelopes out of her oversize purse and shoved it at him. “Here’s your mail. Have a nice life.”
As Ned’s car left the parking lot, Big Mac put a hand on Mac’s shoulder. “Are you all right, son?”
“Yeah.” Mac hated that she’d come so far to be disappointed, but he took comfort in knowing he’d been perfectly clear about where things stood between them before he left Miami.
“Why don’t you come home for dinner tonight?”
Since he had nothing better to do, Mac agreed.
Mac picked at the plate of shrimp scampi, remembering Maddie refusing to order it at Dominic’s because it had too much garlic. They’d had so little time together, but they’d created memories that might have to sustain him for a lifetime. That thought destroyed what was left of his appetite.
“Not hungry, Mac?”
“I’m sorry, Mom.” Mac wiped his mouth and put down his fork. “It’s really good.”
Studying him, she took a sip of wine. “Anything exciting happen today?”
<
br /> Big Mac chuckled. “Other than Roseanne showing up and shocking the heck out of him?”
Linda froze. “She was here? On the island?”
“Yep,” Big Mac said.
“When?”
“Around two or so, wasn’t it, son?”
Mac shrugged. “I guess.”
“Oh, God,” Linda whispered.
“What, hon?” Big Mac asked, his brows knitted with concern.
“Maddie.”
“What about her?” Mac asked, suddenly on full alert.
“She went to the marina to see you. Right around then. You didn’t talk to her?”
“I never saw her.” Mac groaned, remembering Roseanne’s enthusiastic greeting. He pushed back from the table. “Why was she coming?”
“I think she might be ready to talk to you. About what happened.”
“Oh no,” Big Mac said, stricken. “Roseanne was quite happy to see him.”
“I’ve got to go,” Mac said. “I’m sorry, Mom. Thanks for dinner.”
Linda tipped her face to receive his kiss. “Go, honey. Find her.”
Mac cursed his crappy luck. What were the odds of Maddie finally deciding to come talk to him just as Roseanne wrapped herself around him? Banging his fist on the steering wheel, he let out a string of swears.
He pulled into Tiffany’s driveway for the first time in weeks, his heart racing with hope and fear. What would he do if she wouldn’t let him explain?
Maddie was sitting at the top of the stairs. Startled by his sudden appearance, she stood up to go inside.
“Wait!” Mac leapt from the truck and ran up the stairs. “Listen to me! She means nothing to me! She never did.”
“I know what I saw.”
“You saw her jump on me and kiss me. I had no idea she was coming. I didn’t want her there, and I certainly didn’t want to kiss her.” Mac took hold of Maddie’s arm to keep her from walking away. “The only one I want to kiss is you, and you know that. I told her I’m involved with someone else and sent her back to Miami on the first boat.”
Maddie’s beautiful eyes widened with surprise. “You said that even though we broke up?”
“That hasn’t changed how I feel about you. Nothing could.” He skimmed his fingers over her arm, gratified when she shivered. “I miss you. I miss everything about you.”
Her eyes fluttered closed.
He caressed her cheek, reveling in the soft skin he’d yearned for, and rested his forehead against hers. “You’re the only one I want, Maddie,” he whispered. “The only one I’ll ever want. I’m sorry I hurt you. I never meant for that to happen.”
She leaned into him. “I know that now.”
“Marry me, Maddie. I can’t live without you and Thomas.”
“Mac. . .”
“Just say yes.”
She studied him just long enough for Mac to realize his whole life had led to her and this moment.
“Yes.”
Shocked, he stared at her. “Really?”
“I have conditions.”
“Whatever you want.”
“You don’t want to hear them?”
“Later.” Even though he was dying to kiss her, he only held her, drowning in the scent of summer flowers and the feel of silky hair. Overwhelmed with relief, he swallowed the huge lump in his throat. “There’s something I need to show you. Can you and Thomas come with me? Is he asleep?”
“Not yet. He’s still chattering in his crib.”
“So will you come?”
“Okay.”
Mac loaded them into the truck and headed to the south end of the island, past Dominic’s and the Hydrangea House Bed & Breakfast, taking a right onto Sweet Meadow Farm Road.
Sitting between them in his backward-facing car seat, Thomas gripped Mac’s finger so tightly that Mac wondered if the baby was afraid to let go.
“Where are we going?” Maddie asked.
“You’ll see.” The paved road changed to gravel about halfway down. I’ll need to get a plow for the truck before it snows, Mac thought. He took the final turn, and the house came into view. “What do you think?”
“Oh, it’s beautiful! Whose is it?”
“Ours.”
She gasped. “It is not! Don’t make jokes like that, Mac!”
“Who’s joking?” He laughed at her as he parked. “Come check it out.” Before he got out, he reached under the seat for an envelope that he stashed in his back pocket.
Maddie got Thomas out of his car seat and met Mac in front of the truck.
As he wrapped his hand around hers, he felt a tremble go through her.
“What do you think?”
“You can’t be serious. This isn’t a house. It’s a mansion!”
“It’s got everything I wanted—lots of land, a good view and room for our family to grow.” He appreciated the dazzling glow the sunset had cast upon the property. “All that matters now is if it has everything you want.”
She looked at him as if he had three heads.
“What?”
“Are you seriously asking me that? Does it have two bedrooms?”
“Um, five actually.”
“Then I’m sold.”
“You haven’t even seen the inside yet.”
Tears spilled down her cheeks. “We’re really going to live here?”
Mac put his arm around her and kissed her forehead. “We really are.”
“It’s a palace,” she whispered. “I just never imagined. . .” She looked up at him. “You can afford something like this?”
“My father’s friend Ned gave me a sweet deal.”
“Still, it has to be a fortune.”
“I can handle it, honey. My business in Miami does really well. They’ll have to buy me out, and I have a condo to sell there.”
“I can’t imagine having that kind of money.”
“Well, you do now.”
She shook her head. “It’s yours.”
“Everything I have is ours. Everything.” He tipped her chin up and kissed her while Thomas squirmed between them. “You got that?”
“It’ll take some getting used to.”
“We’ve got nothing but time. Want to see the inside?”
She nodded, her eyes sparkling now with excitement, and Mac had never loved her more.
When he took her inside and gave her the tour, there were more tears.
“I was thinking,” he said, directing her to the deck that overlooked the ocean, “that the yard would be the perfect place to tie the knot. What do you say?”
“Oh yes! Absolutely.”
“I want to do it as soon as we can, okay?”
“About that. . .” She glanced up at him, her expression wary. “My mother is due home in a couple of weeks. I’d like to wait for her, if that’s all right with you.”
“Of course it is. Whatever you want.”
“Will you always be such an accommodating husband?”
“Maybe not always, but it’ll always matter to me that you’re happy.”
She bent to put Thomas down on the carpet and linked her arms around Mac’s neck. “I feel like I’m dreaming,” she said, drawing him into a kiss. “I missed you so much.”
“Me, too. I thought I’d go crazy without you.” Mac wanted to lose himself in the kiss, but he held back. “Hold that thought for a second, will you?”
Moaning in protest, Maddie released him.
“So, um, there’s something I have to tell you, and you might get mad at me for not telling you sooner, but I had a really good reason—”
“What’ve you done now?”
Mac withdrew the envelope from his back pocket and handed it to her.
“What’s this?”
“Open it.”
Giving him that wary look she did so well, she withdrew the papers from the envelope and scanned them.
He was about to explain when she gasped, and her hand flew up to cover her mouth.
“Before you freak out, will you l
isten to me?”
She couldn’t seem to speak, so she nodded.
“A couple of days after we ran into him on the ferry, he found me in the diner when I was there with Thomas. He said he’d asked around and knew we weren’t married and that we hadn’t been together long. He’d figured out that Thomas was probably his.”
“Oh God,” she whispered. The stricken look on her face broke his heart and confirmed he’d done the right thing by not telling her when it happened. “Oh my God!”
Mac rested his hands on her shoulders. “All he cared about was that we’d come after him for money.”
“I’ve never wanted his money!”
“And I told him that, but he wanted assurances. I said we’d sign something releasing him from financial obligation if he’d sign away his rights to Thomas so I can adopt him.”
She wrenched free of Mac’s hold and began to pace the big, empty room.
From the floor, Thomas watched them with that big-eyed solemn expression of his.
“This happened weeks ago! When were you going to tell me?”
“As soon as I had the signed papers from him, which Roseanne delivered to me with my mail. I was going to bring them to you tonight.”
“Why didn’t you tell me the day it happened? We’re right back to you keeping things from me!”
Mac forced himself to stay calm. “If I’d told you that he knew about Thomas, you wouldn’t have been able to breathe or sleep or eat for the two weeks it took him to get these papers to me.”
“Is this how it’s going to be?” She threw up her hands. “You’re going to take care of everything and leave me out of it?”
“Stuff like this? Absolutely.”
“That’s not how I want to live, Mac. That’s not the kind of marriage I want.”
“This is me, Maddie. It’s who I am. I see something that’ll make you sick with worry, and I make it go away. I love you too much to watch you suffer like that, and you would’ve suffered over this.” He went to her, slid an arm around her waist and brought her in close to him. “You would’ve suffered.”