Need You Now (Love in Unknown)

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Need You Now (Love in Unknown) Page 15

by Lunsford, Taylor M.


  “And what makes you think that it’ll work out now?” Micah asked after several minutes of silence.

  “We’ve both changed in the last ten years. I’m in a different place now. Caine’s grown up a lot.” Mel lifted her chin. “I’m done with school. Caine’s become a really great guy. He could be the one. We’ve always felt connected and I want to see what happens.”

  Micah scowled at his food, brooding. She knew his pride was stinging a bit and his protective side wasn’t ready to get over the fact that his little sister was dating his best friend. She turned her attention to her mother. More than anything, Emma looked hurt, just as Mel knew she would be. Growing up, Mel had shared everything with her. Keeping her first boyfriend a secret must have come as a shock and dragging her father into the secret made it a million times worse.

  The smile Emma mustered up was forced, but Mel appreciated the effort. “Did you have a good time on your date last night? Everyone's trying to guess where he took you."

  “They’ll never guess.” She took another bite of her dinner then sipped her tea. "He took me out to Race's Drive-In. We had a picnic and watched the first Star Wars movie."

  Emma frowned. "Star Wars? That's not really a date movie, is it?"

  Out of the corner of her eye, Mel saw her brother soften a bit. "It's the first movie Dad took us to at the drive-in. One of Mel's favorites."

  “Oh. Well, isn't that sweet." Emma patted Mel's hand. "He's a good boy, in spite of his family. I remember how much Micah and Gage missed him when he went away to school. But I never suspected you cared for him that way."

  “Girls like me never stood a chance with guys like him, especially back then. Better to keep it a secret than let everyone know what a hopeless case I was."

  Emma shook her head in maternal disapproval. “I hope he’s worthy of you, sweetheart.”

  Micah nodded. "He better be. Otherwise Gage and I will beat him until he's nothing but a walking bruise."

  Mel ignored her brother. "He's very good to me, Mama. Trust me."

  “Why don't you invite him to go on a picnic with us next weekend?" Emma suggested. "I haven't seen much of him since he moved back to town, and I'm sure it will do your brother good to see the two of you together."

  “We’ll see, Mama.” Mel didn't know if that was a good idea. From the look on her brother's face, she knew he wouldn't accept this new relationship easily. He'd never seen her date anyone, let alone his best friend. It would be hard, but he'd have to deal.

  She tried to talk to him while they did dishes. "I really am sorry I didn't tell you. I just... Back then, I needed something that was just mine. Didn't want big brother to come swooping in to save the day."

  “Mel, I get needing to stand on your own two feet. But it's been ten years. That's a long time to keep a secret from your family." Micah loaded dishes into the dishwasher with a bit more force than necessary.

  “I don't have a good excuse, except that after it was over, I didn't want to think about it. Hurt too much." Mel put the salt and pepper back into the spice cabinet, keeping her back to her brother.

  She heard him snort derisively. "He should have told me. Back then, he should have told me. I asked him to watch out for you and instead he goes behind my back?"

  Mel turned around, glaring at her brother. His temper was flaring in his eyes again. "It was as much my idea as it was his. I don't want you laying into him for something that happened ten years ago."

  Micah didn't flinch; his eyes didn't waver. His jaw tightened. He had control of his anger, but her brother still seemed more pissed off by this than she’d expected. "Best Friend Code, Rule Nine, Subsection C. The female adherent to the code won't interfere in disputes between the male adherents. This is between me and Caine and I'll handle it the way I see fit.”

  She couldn't help groaning. If things went the way she thought they would, she’d need to stock up on a lot more ice packs and band-aids. Men.

  #

  Caine couldn’t say he was surprised by the pounding on his door Monday evening.

  He and Gage had been watching the baseball game and eating pizzas when his phone rang.

  “I could be wrong, but I think my brother is probably heading over to your place for a…discussion.” Mel sounded a little breathless and a lot agitated. “Things at dinner went as well as could be expected, but he just left here with a bug up his ass. Looked like he turned the truck your way.”

  Caine bit back a curse. He'd hoped that they didn't have to do this, but he knew it was inevitable. No Texas brother worth his salt would let this go without at least making his opinion known. "Thanks for the heads up."

  “Please, Caine. Both of you try to remember that you're adults and that throwing punches never helped anyone, okay?"

  He knew as well as she did that he and Micah would handle things their way, no matter what she asked. But he could still try to reassure her. "I’ll try my best. It'll be all right. I promise that whatever happens, Micah and I will get past it tonight."

  Now, with Mel's brother banging on the door, he said a silent prayer that he could keep that promise. Caine opened the door for Micah, unsurprised to see a glower on his best friend's face. "Micah. What a surprise. You want to come in for a beer?"

  “A beer?” Micah pushed his way in, his temper almost as dark as his hair. "Yeah, sure. Or, we could talk about how you dated my baby sister behind my back after Dad and I asked you to watch out for her."

  Caine sighed and led the way to the living room where Gage relaxed on the couch. "You always get straight to the point, don't you?"

  “When it comes to my family? Damn straight, I do. So what's your excuse?" Micah crossed his arms across his chest, unmovable, determined.

  Caine held up his hands. "No excuse. We were young and I... Hell, I don't know. I guess I didn't want anything interfering with what I had with Mel."

  “Interfering?" Micah's dry laugh told Caine just how pissed he really was. "Gee, Maddox, I wonder why we would interfere. Maybe it’s because my sister was barely eighteen. Or it's possible we'd have come up there and kicked your ass because she'd never had a boyfriend. Jesus, Caine. She wasn't ready to handle a guy like you back then."

  Ten years didn't make a difference. Not to a brother like Micah. He'd always been fiercely protective of his little sister. Then again, they all were. Guilt and temper duked it out inside Caine. He knew he'd messed up, but he couldn't regret what he had with Mel. "That's a load of shit, and you know it. Mel's never been like other girls. We've all known that since she was little. I was a selfish ass back then, but I’ve always tried to do what's in her best interest."

  “Her best interest?" Micah's face contorted. "Your job was to protect her from guys like you, not to screw her and break her heart."

  Gage vaulted the couch to stand between them, a restraining hand on Micah's shoulder. "Out of line, Micah. You know Caine wouldn't treat Mel like that, no matter what his reputation was back then."

  The baker tried to shake his friend's hand off but Caine saw Gage’s grip tighten. "Back off, Gage. This is between me and Caine."

  “It's between all of us." Gage's voice took on a hard edge. Caine knew he'd put his brother in an impossible situation. He'd known it back then, too.

  “I didn't break her heart. She broke up with me. Hell, I came back from my vacation that summer wanting to commit, give us a real chance. We’d probably be married by now if I had my way.”

  Shit. Caine couldn’t believe he’d just said that.

  He saw it all, almost in slow motion. Since walking through the door, Micah'd barely had control over his temper. Caine had seen Ethan Carr do the same thing on a number of occasions after dealing with difficult customers or having to listen to local politics. Before Caine could move, Micah shook free of Gage's hold and his fist collided with Caine's face—a clean, solid punch to the jaw.

  Pain blinded Caine for a moment, spots dancing behind his eyes. He shook his head a little, trying to de-scramble his thou
ghts. Coming back into focus, he clenched his own fists, then unclenched them to gingerly touch his jaw. "I let you have that punch for free. Try it again, I won't let you off."

  “She was only eighteen! Jesus, were you that much of an idiot?" Micah shook out his hand, obviously in pain, too. "No wonder she broke up with you. You were her first boyfriend and she wasn't even out of college. Neither of you were ready for that kind of commitment back then."

  Caine knew Micah was right. Of course he did. Ten years ago, he'd been impulsive, caught between the heady feeling of being with a girl who fascinated him and the invincible high of living the life of a trust fund baby. Looking back, he was more than a little in love with her back then. He still was. He couldn't regret that, even if it lost him his best friend. "Maybe you're right. Can't go back and time and find out. All I can do is move forward with Mel. We're taking things slowly for her sake.”

  “She tell you about Andrew?" Micah's jaw tightened and relaxed, the frown still etched deeply on his face. Even with his own jaw on fire, Caine respected the hell out of his friend. He took care of his sister, even when she was too stubborn to appreciate it. Hell, that protectiveness was what had landed Caine in this mess in the first place. If Micah and Ethan hadn't asked him to take care of Mel, he never would have seen her as anything more than his best friend's little sister.

  “Yeah, she did." Mel’s vulnerability as she’d told him flashed before him again. He briefly entertained the thought of Micah going with him up to North Carolina to beat the crap out of Dr. Dickhead, but he doubted that would sit well with Mel. "She trusts me. You used to trust me too, remember?"

  Micah nodded, some of the tension easing out of his body. "Hard to trust a guy who seduced my baby sister behind my back."

  “Like it or not, it was ten years ago, man." Caine snorted. Some of his guilt eased a little. He was putting up a front, but Micah had gotten the anger out of his system. "Last time I checked we weren't in one of Mel's historical romance novels. 'Seduced' her? We were in a normal relationship. Just like we are now."

  “Normal? With Mel?" Micah's laugh was full of brotherly affection. "Yeah, right. Listen, you hurt her or try to turn her into one of those robot bimbos you used to date, that punch will seem like a mosquito bite."

  “I won't hurt her. Ever. I'm going to give her some time, but I do love her. If things go as planned, I'll spend the rest of my life letting her know that she's the best thing that ever happened to me."

  He waited, holding his breath. If his friend threw another punch, he'd have to return it and he didn't want to do that. Micah had been the brother of his heart for most of his life. He didn't want to start their relationship as potential brothers-in-law with a fistfight.

  “Why didn't you say anything? To me or Dad? Hell, Mom didn't even know."

  “She asked me not to, Micah. For the first time, she got to be on her own." The guilt for not telling his friend beat out the throbbing of his jaw. "Y'all always took such good care of her. Protected her. I guess I thought that if she wanted to exert her independence by not telling you about us, what was the harm? After I graduated, we'd come home and tell everyone and your parents would be thrilled. I thought your dad would be pissed at first, but I never expected him to be as angry as he was. He read me the riot act and I never saw it coming. Dumb, right?”

  “Not dumb," Gage put in. "Naive. A bit selfish, maybe. But not dumb."

  Gage. His brother and Mel's best friend. He'd always known he had his support, but having him there backing him with Micah felt good. Micah's eyes flicked to Gage. "You knew?"

  Gage nodded, his face grim. "I wanted to tell you, but Mel forbid it. Best Friend Code, man. She wouldn't budge."

  “Best Friend Code?" Caine frowned. He'd always wondered why his brother had never said a word to the Carrs about his relationship with Mel.

  Micah snorted. "Something we came up with not long after you left. The Three Musketeers had to protect each other. So we came up with rules. First rule: Always keep a promise to your Best Friend. That's the one she invoked, wasn't it?"

  “She’s the genius, remember?"

  “Maybe I should punch you, too." Micah's mouth tilted up in a half smile.

  Gage shrugged, leaning against the back of the couch. "You could. But then I'd have to arrest you for assaulting a police officer."

  “Oh, so you get punched and he gets arrested, but I get punched and you just stand there?" Caine shook his head. "Some brother you are."

  He held out his hand and Micah shook it. Tightening his grip, Caine looked his friend dead in the eyes. "Friends?”

  “We’ll see. How about that beer?”

  Chapter 13

  Mel leaned against the cabinet in the old kitchen cum staff lounge at Unknown Family Clinic and took a long drink of water.

  “Anna, did you start blackmailing people to get them to come in?”

  The older woman smiled as she pulled two cartons of yogurt out of the ancient refrigerator and handed one to Mel. “Honey, I’m good, but I’m not that good.”

  Mel opened the yogurt and dug around in the drawer beside her hip until she found a spoon. “Then did my mother and Jemma start some sort of campaign? Today we’ve already seen double the number of patients we saw all last week.”

  “Oh, honey.” Anna laughed, taking a seat at the small butcher block table. “You don’t know, do you?”

  “Know what?” Mel took quick bites of her yogurt. She had exactly two minute before her next appointment.

  Anna sat there, looking like the cat who ate the canary. “I think you’ll find out soon. Your two o’clock is Claudia McGarry. I’ve never known that woman to keep quiet about anything.”

  Frowning, Mel scarfed down the rest of the yogurt and hurried into the waiting room. A sour expression on her face, Sandra held out a file. Mel took the file and scanned the small room until she found the elderly woman whose name matched the file. “Hi, Mrs. McGarry. You want to come with me back to one of the exam rooms?”

  Mrs. McGarry nodded, one boney hand clutching the top of her parrot-headed cane. As soon as they entered the only ground floor exam room, Mrs. McGarry took a seat on the exam table and fixed Mel with a mischievous look. “That little snot at the front desk certainly doesn’t like you. If looks could kill, girly.”

  “Oh.” Mel had to work very hard to keep her professionally neutral face on. “Well. There are a number of people in this town who aren’t too pleased to have me back.”

  “Your mother certainly isn’t one of them.” Claudia McGarry, though old enough to be Mel’s grandmother, spent a great deal of time with Emma Carr on various committees and clubs over the years. “She’s so proud of you.”

  “The feeling’s mutual,” Mel said, helping Mrs. McGarry out of her sweater.

  Mrs. McGarry took several deep breaths as Mel used her stethoscope to listen to the steady thump-thump of her heart. “I must say, I’m glad to see that Maddox boy with such a nice, local girl.”

  “You mean the mayor?” Mel took out a pen and made a few notes in the chart.

  “Don’t play coy with me, missy.” Mrs. McGarry let out a cackle. “You and Caine Maddox make quite the couple. Everyone around here just loves that boy. Both of the Maddox boys grew up right thanks to those parents of yours.”

  Mel felt a smile tug at her lips. “What’s the scuttlebutt, Mrs. McG? You and Mama the only ones happy about me and Caine?”

  “Well, all of those silly women who hang around the baseball games to swoon over our esteemed mayor and police chief aren’t too happy that Caine’s off the market, but everyone else is pleased as punch.”

  Fastening a blood pressure cuff around Mrs. McGarry’s thin arm, Mel raised an eyebrow. “Really?”

  Mrs. McGarry sat still, but a grin caused the wrinkles on her face to bunch up underneath her eyes. “Really. For years, we’ve worried that Caine would end up like his father, married to some piece of plastic from Houston or Dallas. He’s never showed much interest in a local
girl until now.”

  “I thought people in town didn’t like having me here.” Mel used her flashlight to check the responsiveness of her patient’s pupils. “Up until this week, it’s looked like a ghost town around here.”

  “Oh, tush.” Mrs. McGarry waved her hand dismissively. “It’s not like they didn’t like you, dear, they just didn’t know what to make of you. You’re a good girl and a very smart girl. You’re something new around here. New scares a lot of people and they needed time to get used to you. I haven’t seen that waiting room so full since before Doc Booth qualified for his senior discount at the movie theater.”

  Mel continued with her exam, a small smile on her face. So that’s what happened. You start dating the favorite son and people who thought you were a freak suddenly realize you’re more normal than they thought. She knew she should be annoyed by this fact, but she was too tired to care. Caine was busy with stuff with his uncle’s firm and with town business, so she hadn’t seen him in the last few days. That didn’t stop Merna’s Matches from posting about their comings and goings and the fact that she received a small flower or chocolate delivery at the office every day, much to Sandra’s chagrin.

  It also didn’t stop him from calling her when he got home each night. Usually, she was already curled up in bed with a book when her phone would sing “As Time Goes By.” She’d answer and they’d talk. Most nights he was too tired to do more than talk about his day, but last night, he’d been feeling a little playful. Phone sex, while not nearly as enjoyable as real sex, could still wear a girl out. Combined with back to back patients, she didn’t have the energy to be irritated by the fact that her social life was what was helping her professional life.

  She could only be grateful for it. Caine opened the door, but she would be the one to keep it open. Loyal patients like Mrs. McGarry would be the ones to keep it open. For the first time since she left town as a scared seventeen-year-old, she felt like she had found her place in a group. She was the town doctor who happened to be dating the town mayor and the town was okay with that. Life might not be so bad.

 

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