Gansett Island Boxed Set Books 1-16 (Gansett Island Series)
Page 179
“Sit over where?”
“On the other side of the booth,” Carolina said between gritted teeth. Sometimes she wondered if he was intentionally obtuse or just trying to aggravate her. She suspected it was far more of the latter than the former.
“But you’re over here, and I missed you so much last night. I could hardly sleep without you.”
“I’m sure you slept just fine.”
He shook his head. “I’m exhausted. In fact, I need you to take me home to your place and put me down for a nap.”
“It’s two o’clock!”
“So?”
Ned Saunders came through the door with his fiancée Francine Chester. They stopped short at the sight of Seamus sitting close to Carolina with his arm around her. Ned and Francine waved to them and slid into another booth, leaning in to whisper to each other.
Carolina burned with embarrassment, knowing they were talking about her and Seamus. “Can we please leave?”
“Are you ashamed to be seen with me, Caro?”
He seemed so wounded that Carolina instantly regretted her reaction to Ned and Francine seeing them together. “No.”
“Really? Sort of seems that you are.”
“It’s not that.”
“Then what is it?”
“Let’s go. We’ll talk about it at home.”
Reluctantly, Seamus slid out of the booth and held out a hand to help her.
Carolina let him guide her from the booth and then dropped his hand. As she paid the check and exchanged a few words with Rebecca, who owned the diner, she felt the eyes of Seamus and the other patrons on her. The minute they walked out the door, the news about them would spread through the island like an out-of-control wildfire.
Her stomach began to ache when she imagined Joe hearing the gossip and how he might react to it.
When they were outside, Seamus followed her to her car.
Carolina turned to him and looked up to find him studying her intently. “What?”
“I could ask you the same thing.”
“I, um, are you coming over?”
“Do you want me to?”
“You know I do.”
He smiled, but it didn’t reach his eyes, and he seemed more sad than amused. She hated herself for doing that to him.
“Aren’t you working today?”
“I’m off until tomorrow morning.”
Her entire body tingled at the idea of having him to herself for that many hours. “Oh.”
“Is that a good ‘oh’ or a bad ‘oh’?”
“Good,” she said, suddenly aching for him as his grin stretched across his handsome face. He was so very, very gorgeous and so incredibly sexy and apparently all hers. That part she still couldn’t believe. “Very good.”
“Go. I’ll be right behind you.”
Carolina wasn’t sure how exactly she managed to drive home, knowing he was following her, knowing what would happen as soon as they reached her house. Even though she’d once been married—happily married—it all felt new to her because it had been so long since she’d been involved with anyone. And she’d never been with such an intensely focused man.
Her heart beat erratically as she went into the house and went through the motions of putting a kettle on to boil. Tea, she thought, would calm her. But then his hands were on her hips, drawing her back against him, and all thoughts of tea and calm were forgotten. His lips were soft and smooth against her neck as he pressed his erection into the cleft of her bottom.
“I missed you so much last night. I can’t stand being away from you.”
They’d spent seven straight nights together, and Carolina had thought one night apart would be good for them. “I hated it, too.”
Her words seemed to do something to him, and his hands moved over her with an urgency that reminded her of the first night they’d spent together last fall.
Feeling shameless and needy, Carolina bit back a moan. How did he do this to her with just a few well-placed caresses? How did he make her forget entirely about her concerns and reservations? When he touched her this way, there was no room for thoughts of anything other than more of him. Part of her suspected he knew she was powerless to resist him and used it to his advantage.
From behind her, he unbuttoned her jeans and pushed them and her panties down to right above her knees.
“Seamus, wait! Someone could walk in—”
“We’ll hear them.” His breath was hot against her ear as he slid his erection between her cheeks, arousing and stirring her. When had he freed himself? How did he do this to her every time?
Reaching around her, he shut off the stove and then turned them around. He shocked the hell out of her when he bent her over the kitchen table.
Carolina knew she should put a stop to this, but then his hands were under her top, squeezing her nipples, and it was all she could do to breathe as he entered her from behind.
“Ah, Christ,” he muttered. “If there’s anything better than this, I haven’t found it yet.”
Since she completely agreed, Carolina had no choice but to hold on to the table and go along for the ride, helpless to resist him as always.
“Mmm,” he said against her ear, sending goose bumps down her spine. “So hot, so wet, so tight.”
He loved to tell her exactly what he was feeling when they made love, which was at times embarrassing and at other times hugely arousing.
“You like hearing that, huh?”
“How can you tell?”
“You just got even wetter.”
Carolina wanted to die on the spot. She was so far out of her league with this man who wasn’t afraid to lay it all on the line, to say what he thought and how he felt. Nothing had prepared her for him or the way he made her feel by taking her hard and fast on the kitchen table in the middle of the day.
His fingers kneaded her bottom as he drove into her, making her cry out from the impact and the overwhelming sensations he drew from her body every time they were together.
“Yes, love, tell me you love it as much as I do.” He flexed his hips. “Tell me.”
“Yes, yes, I love it.”
He reached around to stroke the hard bundle of nerves that throbbed for him as he continued to pump into her. “Tell me you love me.”
“I love you, Seamus. I love you.” The words were no sooner out of her mouth then she was coming hard and crying out from the sheer joy of being loved by him.
“I love you, too,” he said, as he pushed into her one last time and let go with a cry of completion. After a long pause, he added, “More than anything.” He rested on top of her, breathing hard and pulsing with aftershocks. Keeping his arms around her, he was careful not to rest too heavily upon her.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered.
“For what, love?”
“For making you feel like I was ashamed to be seen with you in town. I’m not ashamed. It’s… It’s all so new. I need some time to get used to it.”
He withdrew from her and helped her to stand, steadying her when her legs wobbled under her. “You take all the time you need. I’m not going anywhere.”
“Promise?”
With his arms around her, he touched his lips to her forehead. “Ah, love, where would I go when everything I want is right here?”
Carolina relaxed against him and closed her eyes, filled with the certainty that while others might not understand what she was doing with him, she could no longer picture a life without him.
Now if she could just get through dinner with the McCarthys, she’d be well on her way to starting that five-alarm Gansett scandal that Linda predicted. May as well get it over with, because she had no plans to let him go.
Chapter 4
Adam stashed his stuff in his old room and then left the house to walk down the hill to the marina in search of his dad and Mac. The first one he saw, though, was Luke Harris, co-owner of the marina and a longtime friend.
“Look at what the cat drug in from the big city,
” Luke joked as he hugged Adam. “Good to see you, man.”
“You, too. How’s everything going around here?” The marina seemed completely full and hopping with people, dogs, bikes, scooters and other forms of chaos occurring on and around the main pier. Adam was relieved to see business as usual.
“Not bad. How about you?”
“I’ll be better when I see the boys. How do they seem to you?”
“Mac acts like nothing happened. From what I hear, Evan is working around the clock to get the music studio open. Your dad is a bit more sentimental than usual.”
“More sentimental?”
Luke laughed at that. “You heard me right. He was profoundly affected by what happened.” Luke sighed and shook his head. “It was a very long day for all of us, but somehow it was worse for him because he couldn’t go out and look for them. The fog was so thick…”
“He must’ve been beside himself.” Adam ached for his sweet dad, who would’ve been tortured by having to wait hours for word about his boys.
“That’s putting it mildly. I had to get between him and the Chris Craft a couple of times that day.” Luke referred to the classic boat he’d restored for Big Mac years ago. “He’s been pissed at me ever since.”
“I know it’s hard, but try not to take it personally.”
“I’m trying.”
The way he said the two words told Adam a lot about how difficult it had been for Luke, who viewed Big Mac as the father he’d never had. “How’s Syd?”
Luke’s entire demeanor softened. “She’s great.”
Adam gave him a nudge as they walked toward the restaurant. “Marriage seems to agree with you, old man.”
“I rather like it.”
Adam stopped abruptly and turned to Luke. “You didn’t mention anything about Grant.”
Luke glanced down at the parking lot. “He’s not doing too well. Something’s not right, but he’s all locked up. We’ve all tried to get through to him, but he’s not talking.”
“I saw him earlier, and I have to agree.”
“Maybe having you around will get him talking. You two have always been close.”
“When we were younger, but not as much now,” Adam said, filled with regret to realize it was true. He’d been so focused on his work that he’d let a lot of important relationships slide while he focused on others that turned out to be less important than he’d thought.
They stepped into the marina restaurant where Grant’s fiancée, Stephanie, appeared to be doing battle with the cash register.
“Adam! Is that really you? You’re just the man we need right now! Come. Quickly.”
Luke sent him a sympathetic smile and gestured for Adam to proceed to the counter.
“Hello to you, too, Steph.” He returned the quick hug she gave him. “What seems to be the problem?”
“This stupid thing keeps rebooting itself right in the middle of transactions. Tell me there’s something you can do.”
“If you give me a minute to look at it, I should be able to tell you.” He reached into the pocket of his cargo shorts and withdrew the glasses that had become necessary for twelve-hour days in front of computers and slid them on.
“Very sexy in a nerdy sort of way,” Stephanie said after careful assessment.
“Gee, thanks. You still want my help?”
“Sorry. I just have no time for this. I need to get back to my restaurant, but I can’t leave them in the lurch. And I need to check on Grant.”
As Adam clicked around behind the scenes on the computer’s hard drive, he said, “I saw him a little while ago.”
“Was he up?”
“Just.”
Her deep sigh said it all.
“What gives?”
“Hell if I know. He’s not talking. He tosses and turns all night. When he does sleep, usually during the day, he wakes up sweating and breathing hard like he’s been running a marathon or something. He’s not working or writing or getting anything done. It’s all very unlike him.”
“So you’re worried?”
“I’m very worried, but I don’t know what to do. Everyone says to give him time, but it’s been a week, and he’s still a mess. Physically he seems fine, so I don’t think it’s that.”
“My mom thinks something happened out there that he can’t bring himself to talk about.”
“Like what?”
“I don’t know, but it had to be pretty traumatic. Too bad there isn’t a shrink on this island. Seems like we might need one.”
“If he won’t talk to me, what makes you think he’d talk to a shrink?”
“Maybe it’s something he doesn’t want to tell you or any of us because he doesn’t want us to know about it.” With a few more keystrokes, he had cleared the cache on the register’s computer and freed up enough memory to get it running again. “There you go.”
Stephanie’s eyes bugged. “What did you do?”
Amused by her reaction, he tugged off his glasses. “Do you honestly care?”
“No, I absolutely don’t care. I only care that it’s working again. Thank you so much!”
“My pleasure. Hey, so before you run off, let me know what I can do to help with Grant. I’ll keep trying to get him to talk to me, but if there’s something else I can do, call me, will you?”
“I will. Thanks, Adam. I’ll take whatever help I can get at this point. Mac and Evan don’t want to talk about it either, so they aren’t much help, and Dan is in pretty rough shape. The ribs are giving him a lot of grief. Janey is so pregnant and hormonal, your mom drives him crazy, and your dad can’t talk about any of it without weeping, which makes it harder on Grant.” She threw her hands into the air. “You might be exactly what we need.”
“I won’t leave until he’s better. I promise.”
She surprised him when she hugged him again. “Sorry to be so blunt about your family.”
Adam laughed and patted her back. “You’re not telling me anything I don’t already know, and I’m happy to do what I can to help.”
“I have to go, but let me give you my cell number so we can keep in touch.”
They programmed numbers into each other’s phones and were swapping them back when Mac and Big Mac came into the restaurant, both of them grinning widely.
“What’s this we hear about a visitor?” Mac asked.
Their father made a beeline for Adam, enveloping him in a bear hug that brought tears to Adam’s eyes. His father had worn the same aftershave all of Adam’s life, and it was one of the many familiar scents of home.
“So nice to see you, son,” Big Mac said, stepping back to take a close look at Adam. “You look tired. Have you been sleeping?”
“Not so well in the last week.”
“Me either.”
Big Mac looked a little haggard around the edges, but with his usual aviator sunglasses in place over his eyes, Adam couldn’t gauge the true extent of his father’s exhaustion.
Mac playfully nudged their father out of the way so he could hug Adam. “Hey, little brother.” Mac messed up his hair the way he always did, and as usual, it aggravated Adam. “Good of you to come check on us.”
“I’ve got to run,” Stephanie said to them. “See you all later.”
“Bye, Steph.”
“Buy you some chowder, son?” Big Mac asked, gesturing to a free table.
“I won’t say no to that. I haven’t eaten in hours. The boat was kinda barfy today.”
“Imagine it would be with the wind whipping the way it is,” Big Mac said as he signaled to one of the young women behind the counter to bring them three bowls of chowder.
“Coming right up, Mr. McCarthy.”
“Thank you, sweetheart.” Big Mac removed his shades and propped them on the top of his wiry gray hair.
Adam bit back a gasp when he got a good look at his dad’s eyes, which were red and ravaged.
“Don’t look at me like that,” Big Mac growled. “I can’t help that I’ve been a freaking
wreck over this whole thing.”
Mac got up from the table and pushed his chair in. “I’m going home to have lunch with Maddie and the kids. I’ll be back in an hour.”
“What’s up with him?” Adam asked his dad when they were alone.
“He can’t stand to see me like this, and I can’t seem to make it stop.” Blinking back tears, Big Mac stared at something over Adam’s shoulder. “It was a very long day. I can’t get past it, no matter how hard I try. All I think about is what could’ve happened.”
Undone by his father’s tears, Adam rested his hand on Big Mac’s forearm, which was already as tan in May as some people would be in August. “Everyone’s safe, Dad. Don’t drive yourself crazy with what-ifs.”
“You’re right, and so is your mother and Janey and Mac. Easier said than done, though.” He shrugged. “Anyway, here’s our chowder. Tell me what’s new in New York.”
“Ah, well,” Adam said with a short laugh. “There’s a story that’ll give you something else to think about.” For his dear old dad’s sake, he gladly told the ugly tale one more time.
Stephanie left the marina and drove a little too fast on the way into town. Lately she was perpetually rushed, jetting from one job to the other with hardly any time for anything other than work. She’d known it would be chaotic opening her own restaurant while continuing to work for the McCarthys, but the boat accident had added a layer of stress she hadn’t planned on.
While she wanted to put Grant first, her schedule would be beastly until Race Week concluded and the crowds subsided a bit until Memorial Day weekend, when the season began in earnest. If she could just get through the next few days, she’d be able to focus on Grant and trying to get him to talk to her about whatever was troubling him.
Rather than stop at home, she placed a call to him from the car.
“Hey, babe,” he said as he always did.
She could tell he was making an effort to keep things normal between them, but nothing had been normal since that horrible day last week when she’d spent eight hours thinking about how she’d ever live without him. “Hi, there. How’re you feeling today?”
“Fine.”