by Marie Force
While Alex talked to David, Jenny visited with Jared, comparing notes on people they’d known at school and who they kept in touch with.
“So what are you doing out here?” he asked.
“I’m the lighthouse keeper at the Southeast Light.”
“Wow, that’s cool. How’d you get that gig?”
“Saw an ad and applied. I was in need of a change of pace, and the move has been good for me. What about you?”
“I have a house out here. David rents my garage apartment.”
“So you’re here for the summer?”
“I’m taking a little time off after a particularly rough breakup.”
“Ouch, I’m sorry. That sucks.”
“Sure does.”
“You should come out to the lighthouse sometime. I’ll give you a tour.”
“I’d love to. I’ll definitely take you up on that.”
David, Daisy and Jared stayed for another half hour, drinking the beers Alex had provided, before Marion began to visibly tire.
Daisy kissed the older woman’s cheek. “I’ll see you tomorrow, Marion.”
“I’ll look forward to it.”
“I can’t thank you enough for coming by every evening,” Alex said quietly to Daisy. “I’m sure you have other things you need to be doing.”
“I’m very happy to give her an hour of my day.” Daisy patted Alex’s arm. “I’ve begun to look forward to seeing her, too.”
“Thank you again,” Alex said gruffly.
“It’s my pleasure.” Daisy looked at Jenny. “Will I see you guys at Blaine and Tiffany’s shower?”
“I haven’t told Alex about it yet, but I’ll be there.”
“Not sure I want to hear about this,” Alex said, making the others laugh.
“Looking forward to it.” Daisy leaned in to hug Jenny, whispering, “Good going, girlfriend. He’s adorable.”
Jenny smiled at Daisy. “I agree.”
“It was good to see you again, Jenny,” Jared said. “I’ll be by to check out your lighthouse.”
“Any time.”
They waved to their friends as they drove off, and then Alex turned to his mother, his face set in a grim expression Jenny hadn’t seen before. “Come on, Mom. Let’s get ready for bed.”
“Could I help?” Jenny asked.
“No, thanks.”
“Why not?” Marion asked. “I like her. She’s a nice girl. She can help me get ready for bed.”
“You really don’t have to,” Alex said, looking less strained than he had a few minutes earlier but no less concerned about what she was offering to do.
Jenny placed two fingers on his lips to quiet him and because she felt the need to touch him. “I know I don’t. If I didn’t want to, I wouldn’t have offered.”
“Thank you,” he said in the same gruff tone he’d used to thank Daisy.
“How about it, Marion?” Jenny held out a hand to her. “Shall we get you ready for bed?”
Marion reached up to take Jenny’s hand. “Tell me your name again.”
“It’s Jenny.”
“You’re very pretty.”
“Thank you. So are you.”
“My George thinks I’m pretty.”
“Tell me about him. What’s he like?”
“Oh, he’s so handsome. You know how handsome Alex and Paul are?”
Jenny gave Alex a saucy smile over her shoulder as he held the door for her and his mother. “I sure do.”
Alex pinched her rear playfully.
“Well, they get that from my George. He has dark hair like they have and eyes so brown they remind me of dark chocolate.”
“You know, it’s funny, I’ve thought of Alex’s eyes as dark chocolate.”
Marion’s bedroom was at the end of a long hallway. She looked around at the room as if nothing in it was familiar, and then she looked at Jenny, seeming baffled. “Who are you?”
“I’m Alex’s friend Jenny. I’m here to help you get ready for bed. What can I do to help?”
“I…I don’t know.”
“She has trouble with buttons and snaps,” Alex said from the door. “Nightgowns are in the third drawer. She needs to use the bathroom and brush her teeth, and then she has to take these pills.” He put a medicine cup and a glass of water on the desk inside the door. “Sure you don’t want me to do it?”
“We’ve got this, don’t we, Marion?”
“Of course we do.” She shooed her son from the room with a wave of her hand.
As Jenny helped her to unbutton her blouse and unhook her bra, her heart broke at the thought of her sons handling these tasks on most evenings. How difficult it must be for all of them. It took about twenty minutes to guide Marion through her nightly routine. At least once per minute, she had to remind Marion of who she was.
“He’s a very nice boy,” Marion said, taking Jenny’s hand after she tucked the older woman into bed. “My Alex.”
“Yes, he is.”
“He watches you. Every minute, his eyes are on you.”
Astounded by Marion’s moment of utter clarity, Jenny said, “Are they?”
Marion nodded. “Will you take care of him for me? I wish I could, but I can’t anymore.”
“I will. Of course I will.”
“Thank you. Jenny. Did I get your name right?”
Her uncertainty brought tears to Jenny’s eyes. “You sure did.” Jenny leaned in to kiss Marion’s lined cheek. “I’ll see you again soon, okay?”
“Okay.”
“Good night, Marion.” Jenny closed the bedroom door and took a moment to get her emotions under control before she joined Alex in the kitchen.
He stood when he saw her coming. “Everything okay?”
“Everything is fine.”
“I don’t even know how to properly thank you. That was way above and beyond… Well… Thank you.”
Jenny went to him and put her arms around him.
He hesitated for a second, as if he thought he might not deserve the comfort she offered so willingly, before he sagged against her and held her so tightly she could barely breathe. And then he raised his head and captured her mouth in a ravaging kiss, full of all the emotion he normally kept bottled up inside. It poured forth in passionate strokes of his tongue that had Jenny on tiptoes trying to get closer to him.
“Christ,” he whispered when he finally broke the kiss. “I’m all over the place tonight.”
“That’s okay. Kissing you is certainly no hardship.”
He ran his fingers through her hair and down her neck, his touch making her tremble. “You must be hungry.” He placed strategic kisses on her neck that had her wishing they were alone so she could touch him all over.
“You must be hungrier. You worked hard all day.”
“Not all day,” he said with a smile that she felt against her neck. “There was this one part, right in the middle… Mmm, pure pleasure. No hard work required.”
Jenny let her hands slide down to his backside. “There was a little bit of hard work involved. It was awfully hot out there.”
“It was some kind of hot,” he said suggestively as his lips traveled from her throat to her ear, capturing her earlobe between his teeth. “Let’s eat, and then we can pick up this conversation while we watch a movie.”
They enjoyed Mrs. Upton’s tasty lasagna, as well as salad and garlic bread that Jenny said she would only eat if he did, too.
“Sounds like you want to make out with me after dinner.”
“If you’re lucky,” she said with a nonchalant shrug.
He covered her hand with his much larger, work-roughened hand. “I’m sorry our plans for tonight got messed up.”
“Did they? I hadn’t noticed.”
“You are far too kind.”
Jenny swirled the merlot he’d opened to go with dinner around in her glass. “Do you think I’d ever blame you because you needed to be at home with your mother when we had other plans?”
“Some women
would.”
“Well, I’m not some women.”
“No, you certainly aren’t.”
“I understand what you’re dealing with, Alex. I saw my mother and her sisters go through it for years with their mother. I helped where I could. I answered the same questions over and over. My heart broke when I had to identify myself to the grandmother who’d once doted on me. I get it.”
“Was this before or after you lost Toby?”
“After.”
“I thought about that, about him and what happened, all afternoon. I wondered…” He shook his head as if he’d reconsidered the question.
“It’s okay to ask about it.”
“Are you sure?”
She nodded, but her stomach knotted with nerves. Even though she’d said it was okay, it was never an easy topic for her.
“I wondered where you were that day and how you found out.”
“I was at work in Midtown, and he called my cell phone. We texted but didn’t call each other during the day, so I took the call even though I was in a meeting and got the stink eye from my boss. It was the hardest call I’ve ever received, but I’m so glad I didn’t ignore it.”
“Did he know how bad it was?”
“Yes,” Jenny said, transported back to that horrible day and the panic she’d heard in Toby’s normally calm voice. “He knew. The plane hit below his floor.”
“God,” Alex said with a sigh.
“Where were you that day?” she asked, turning her hand so her palm was flat against his.
“I was in California visiting a friend from college. I was supposed to fly back to Boston that day, but everything was canceled for days afterward.”
“I suppose it was. The first few weeks were a bit of a blur for me. I don’t remember much about it.” She forced a smile for his benefit. “So how about that movie you promised me?”
“You got it. I’ll even let you pick.”
“Ohhh, I see a chick flick in your future.”
“You wouldn’t do that to me, would you?”
“Oh yes, I definitely would.” Their playful banter was a welcome relief after the conversation about the worst day of her life. She appreciated that he had questions and was happy to answer them, but she also appreciated that he knew when not to linger on that topic.
They worked together to clean up from dinner, and Jenny teased Alex about his poor dishwasher-loading skills.
“Don’t tell me you’re one of those who sorts the silverware.”
“Okay, I won’t tell you that,” Jenny said as she arranged the forks, knives and spoons into separate compartments.
“That’s just so wrong. Throw it all in there.” He reached for the knives, clearly intending to mess them up, and Jenny grabbed his arm to stop him.
“Don’t even think about it. I won’t be able to sleep tonight if they aren’t sorted.”
“I’m going to mess them up after you leave.”
“You wouldn’t dare.”
The gleam in his eye was positively sinister as he came toward her. “Wouldn’t I?”
Jenny dodged him and took off out of the kitchen, squealing with laughter.
He was right behind her and grabbed her around the waist. Somehow they landed in a mess of arms and legs on the sofa, their lips perfectly aligned.
“Wait,” Jenny said, turning her head before he could kiss her. “Your mother. What if she comes out?”
“She won’t. She sleeps pretty soundly.”
“Still…”
Groaning, he dropped his head to her shoulder. “Come on. You don’t expect me to actually watch the movie, do you?”
“Yes, I do,” Jenny said primly, pushing at his shoulders to dislodge him.
Alex sat up, complaining all the way. “You’re absolutely no fun.”
“I’ll remember you said that the next time we’re alone. Now what are my choices for movies?”
He sighed—deeply—and then reached for the remote.
Jenny hid a smile she knew he wouldn’t appreciate. How could any woman not be crazy about a man who wanted her the way Alex seemed to want her? And she was crazy about him. To deny that would be foolish. “This is one of my favorites,” she said when she found Notting Hill playing on one of the movie channels.
“Shoot me now,” Alex grumbled.
“‘I’m just a girl, standing before a boy, asking him to love her,’” Jenny said in breathy imitation of Julia Roberts’s famous line in the movie.
“Are you now?” Alex said, staring intently at her.
Undone by the way he looked at her, she said, “I was quoting the movie.”
He didn’t look away when he smiled and said, “Uh-huh.”
While they watched Hugh Grant bumble through the romancing of Julia’s international-movie-star character, Alex moved subtly closer to her until he was right next to her, his arm around her.
“You didn’t say no snuggling.”
“Mmm,” she said as she curled up to him.
He reclined against some pillows, his arms around her as Jenny used his chest as a pillow.
A wave of contentment flowed through her, and she realized, right in that moment, that she hadn’t felt this content since before her world imploded. “This is nice,” she said softly.
“It could be nicer.”
“This is as nice as it’s getting while your mother is here.”
“If you say so.” He didn’t try to kiss her again, but his hands were busy, moving up and down her back in a soothing pattern that made her feel relaxed and sleepy even as a buzz of desire kept her very much awake.
The movie was almost over when they heard a car door close outside.
“That’ll be Paul.”
Jenny reluctantly sat up and ran her fingers through her hair to bring order to it. “I should go.”
“You don’t have to.”
“I know I don’t, but you need to get some sleep.”
“That’s not what I need.”
“Alex…”
“Jenny…”
They were engaged in a visual standoff when Paul came in, stomping his feet on the mat inside the door. “It’s pouring out there,” Paul said. “Relief is in sight.”
Jenny had been so wrapped up in Alex that she hadn’t noticed it was raining. A flash of lightning and the rumble of thunder made her startle. “I’m going to head out.”
“Will you be okay to drive in the rain?” Alex asked.
“I’ll be fine.”
“What about the gate?”
“I’ll leave it open tonight. No one will be out there in this weather, and it’s not worth getting soaked to close it.”
“I don’t like the thought of you out there alone in this weather.”
“You’re very sweet to worry, but I’ll be fine.”
“You could stay here if you wanted to.”
Jenny leaned in to kiss his cheek, whispering, “Nice try.” She got up to collect her purse, keys and phone from the counter. “I’ll be at the store in the morning, Paul.”
“Thanks, Jenny. See you then. Hopefully we can get this computer situation resolved.”
“I hope so, too. If not, we’ll go the old-school pen-and-paper route until we work it out.”
“Sounds good.”
Alex walked with her to the porch.
Jenny stopped him before he followed her down the stairs. “No sense both of us getting wet.”
He hooked an arm around her waist. “There’s so much I could say to that.”
“You’re such a brat.”
“You love it.”
“Yes, I do.” With her hands on his shoulders, she went up on tiptoes to kiss him. “Thank you for a lovely evening.”
“Thank you. See you tomorrow?”
“Hope so.”
“Text me to let me know you got home okay.”
“I will.”
He kissed her again, lingering this time and groaning when he reluctantly released her.
Jenny dash
ed down the stairs into the pouring rain and was soaked through by the time she got into her car. The cool rain was a welcome relief from the staggering heat, but it left her shivering from the chill.
All the way home to the lighthouse, thoughts of Alex and the evening they’d spent together kept her warm and smiling. It occurred to her as she navigated dark, wet roads that she was falling fast for him. While she ought to be afraid of how strong her feelings for him had become, she wasn’t scared at all. Rather, she was exhilarated and looking forward to the next time she’d get to see him.
Chapter 17
“It’s really coming down out there,” Alex said to Paul. He locked the door and shut off the outside lights.
“Supposed to last into tomorrow night.”
“Great,” Alex said. “Right when we’re starting to get caught up a bit, we could lose an entire day to weather.”
“A day off won’t kill either of us, but the schedule we’ve been keeping just might.”
“True. How was your meeting?”
“Oh, you know, the usual bullshit. Mayor Upton has all kinds of grandiose ideas, and we spend most of our meetings keeping him in line.”
“I don’t know how you can stand to sit through those meetings.” Alex had teased Paul endlessly about his decision to run for town council in the last election, but he was proud of his brother. Not that he’d ever tell Paul that.
“How was Mom tonight?” Paul asked.
“Fine. No problems.”
“Glad to hear it.” Paul sat across from him in one of the chairs. “So you and Jenny, huh?”
“Yeah, so?”
“Do you know about her?”
“What does that mean? I know her quite well, in fact.”
Paul rolled his eyes at the double meaning he detected in his brother’s comment. “You know about her fiancé and what happened to him?”
Nodding, Alex said, “How do you know?”
“The council hired her. Hang on a minute.” Paul went into the bedroom they used as an office and returned a couple of minutes later holding papers folded in thirds. He handed them to Alex. “We asked applicants to write us a letter telling us why they wanted to be the lighthouse keeper. This was her letter. It was one of the most powerful and haunting things I’ve ever read. I’ve never forgotten it.”
With a sinking feeling in his belly, Alex took the letter from his brother. “Are you allowed to show it to me?”