“It was the most special night I can ever remember. You were beautiful, Bree. A beautiful, loving, giving, passionate woman. You’ve got spirit and humor, and I haven’t the least idea what you’ve been running from—but you don’t have to run from anything. You’ve got the strength to carry you—you just need someone to tease it out of you once in a while. And last night was not a one-night stand, so quit trying to make it sound like one.”
She was staring at him, a jumble of words jammed in the back of her throat all trying to get out at once, when there was a knock on the door.
It opened. A familiar face peered in first, a woman with faintly graying auburn hair tied back in a loose bun, a soft tentative smile and worried lines on her forehead. Behind her was another familiar face. The man was just short of six feet, with steel-and-charcoal hair and a slight paunch, and in addition to a wrinkled cotton shirt, he was wearing a scowl.
Bree lurched up from her chair. “Mom! Dad! What a surprise!” she said weakly.
Chapter Eight
“Darling! You’ve got your voice back!” Addie Penoyer’s words came out in a delighted rush, tears filling her eyes as she surged toward her daughter. “I can’t believe it!”
Bree hugged her mother back, suddenly laughing. “I couldn’t either. It just happened last night, or you know I would have called you, Mom.”
“I don’t care, as long as it
happened.
Darling, I know I should have called to tell you that we were coming, but I kept telling Burke that we just couldn’t let you stay down here alone—we had to do something…” Addie tripped just slightly over the word
alone;
Bree turned tomato-red, and behind her she heard Hart’s chair scrape back.
“Look. Mom…” Bree started uncomfortably, but Addie, staring over her shoulder at Hart, wasn’t wearing the maternally disapproving expression Bree expected. Maybe Hart had miraculously donned clothes in the past thirty seconds? Searching her mother’s face, Bree saw Addie bite her lip slightly, glance at Bree again with joy and relief in her eyes, then gulp in a little breath. She squeezed Bree’s shoulder, and then with a tentative smile offered a slim hand to Hart. “Mr.…?”
“Manning. Hart, please, Mrs. Penoyer.”
Bree pivoted around, startled to see Hart’s normally cocky demeanor destroyed. His complexion was ashen and his movements jerky as he courteously took her mother’s hand. And for some reason, he had draped a kitchen towel around his bare shoulders. The flowery pattern didn’t do a thing for him. “Mrs. Penoyer.” Hart cleared his throat. “I know how this must look to you, and I don’t want you to think…”
Addie waved a hand in midair. “My daughter is
talking
again, Mr. Mann—Hart. If you think her father and I care about anything else—”
“Agreed,” cut in an ominous tenor from the door. “Just because a man’s clothes are strewn all over my daughter’s backyard, I wouldn’t want you to think we see any reason to be the least upset.”
Another time, Bree would have been fascinated, watching Hart turn from pale ashen to dove gray. At the moment, she was too mortified. Thirty seconds of silence filled the cabin. Each one lasted about a year and a half. Nervously locking her arms under her chest, Bree turned back to her father. “Look. Dad…”
“I have every intention of marrying her, Mr. Penoyer,” Hart interjected swiftly.
Bree’s eyes whipped up. “Have you gone out of your mind?” she whispered. The situation was mortifying, embarrassing and downright awful, but it certainly wasn’t a death sentence.
You’d never know it to look at Hart, though. Gone was the arrogant playboy, the cocky grin. He looked awkward; actually, he looked a little silly, holding on to the towel that didn’t even begin to cover his chest, anyway. And he positioned himself in front of Bree as if he intended to protect her from dragons. For heaven’s sake, it was just her father.
“I don’t for a minute blame you for coming to certain conclusions, Mr. Penoyer. I realize how this must look to you,” Hart started gravely.
“You can bet your sweet petunias how it looks,” Burke agreed.
“Dad—”
“I take full responsibility—”
“Hart.”
“You’re telling me something I don’t know? A month ago, my daughter was engaged to another man—did she tell you that?”
“No.” Hart’s eyes shifted sharply to Bree’s. “But it wouldn’t have made any difference. She never belonged to him. I wouldn’t care if she’d been engaged to forty-seven men, and I really wouldn’t care if it was yesterday.”
“Listen,”
Bree said firmly. Hart’s stare was unnerving; you’d think there was suddenly no one else in the room. It was easier to whirl around in her father’s direction. “Dad, if you would relax for just a minute,” she began.
Burke ignored her. “My daughter,” he said heatedly to Hart, “has never once in her entire life given us cause to worry about her behavior—”
“Bree was not to blame,” Hart said swiftly. “I was. But just because we’ve only known each other a short time, sir, doesn’t mean that we haven’t developed feelings for each other. My intentions—”
“Oh, my God,” Bree muttered at the old-fashioned word. Hart had clearly flipped out. She stepped determinedly between the two men with a frantic glance at her mother. “Look,
both
of you. I would appreciate it if you would—”
Hart very gently lifted her to one side. “Mr. Penoyer, if I could talk with you on the porch for a moment—”
“Over my dead body,” Bree said flatly.
“I think that’s an excellent idea,” Burke told Hart, ignoring Bree, then stalked out the door. Bree tried to dart out after him but was forestalled by Hart. Actually, he came very close to shutting the door in her face…right after he’d tapped a forefinger to her nose in an affectionate gesture that he might have intended to be reassuring.
She could hear raised voices the minute both men were outside, and Hart must have had his hand on the outside door handle, because she couldn’t open it. Turning to her mother, she rolled her eyes heavenward. “I just don’t believe this.”
Addie’s eyes searched her daughter’s. “He’s the reason you’re talking again, Bree?” she asked softly.
“I…” Bree hesitated, glancing worriedly at the closed door. “Mom, if you’d just let me know you were coming—”
Turning to the cupboard, Addie brought out an empty mug and calmly poured herself a cup of coffee. “Darling, you don’t have to tell me. I knew the minute I saw the clothes in the yard. Actually, when you didn’t turn to Richard in your time of trouble, I knew that he couldn’t have been the man for you. I don’t know that this man is, Bree, but he must be something special to have you totally…change your ways.”
Bree blushed.
“I’m not saying I like it,” Addie added quietly, “but I am saying it’s your business.”
“I…” Bree was at a loss. Addie had always been the wringing-hands kind of mother, never the cool, calm lady she was projecting at the moment.
The door popped open behind Bree, and she whirled around. Burke walked in, and Bree’s jaw gently sagged. His irate mood seemed to have vanished. His smile was typical of her father, and he’d squeezed her shoulder just like that a thousand times. “Any coffee around here?” he asked his wife jovially.
Addie was already pouring him a cup. “Bree?”
“Ah…in a minute.” She offered her father a tentative smile, received one back and, carefully closing the door behind her, whisked outside.
“Hart!”
He half turned from his lazy stride toward his car. He was all bare chest in the shining sun, his smile as slow as a summer morning as she reached him at a dead pant.
“What on earth did you talk to him about?”
He reached down to place a light kiss on her nose. “Football scores.”
“Try another. You know dam well my dad was a little…out of control,” Bree said delicately. Hands on hips, she felt like tapping her bare foot impatiently, but refrained.
Hart made a sweeping motion toward the yard. She glanced back, a mistake. His suit coat was spread on the grass. One of his shoes lay nearby. The other had made it to the porch. His shirt, her blouse and skirt…she winced. “Naturally, he was a little out of control,” Hart said darkly. “If I were a father and came across a scene like that, I’d damn well kill the son of a bi—seadog.”
Unaccountably, Bree’s lips twitched. “Hart. Aren’t you forgetting that you were the son of a…uh…seadog in this particular instance?”
“Now, don’t get sassy.” Hart opened his car door.
Bree’s eyebrows shot up in alarm. “Wait a minute. You still didn’t tell me what you said to my dad. Where are you going?”
“Home. So you can have a little time with your folks. There won’t be any more fireworks, Bree, rest easy. And your father only has the weekend, which means they’ll pretty much have to turn around and drive back if he’s going to be at work on Monday morning. I’ll be over tomorrow night around nine…”
“
Wait
,” Bree said impatiently. He was going too fast, Hart style. The Galahad role he’d played for her father confused her; it was out of character—the character he’d so often portrayed. Regardless, he’d interfered in her life
again,
something he had no right to do. And as for any tomorrows and specifically tomorrow nights, Bree suddenly felt as shaky as a kitten on a too-high limb.
A faint smile slashed across Hart’s face as he reached for her. “Are you going to give me some nonsense about not being ready for a relationship right now, Bree?”
“Yes,” she said flatly.
His fingers curled around her shoulders, his body blocking out the sun. “You know what I think, honey?”
Bree was beginning to simmer. “
No.
And I really couldn’t care less—”
“I think you need someone downright wicked in your life.” His lips chased her when she tried to duck her head. They homed in and crushed hers.
The problem with Hart’s kisses was that he put everything he had into them. Passages from
The Joy of Sex,
ghosts of the best of kisses past, sultry reminders of the night before. His shoulders were sun-warmed, and he had this slinky way of sliding his arms around her that made her feel buried in warmth and strength and a crazy, sweet, fierce wildness.
Wicked
was the word. She felt drugged with it, long before his mouth lifted from hers, drugged with a luscious, lazy sleepiness that had no relationship whatsoever to the reality she’d always known.
Blue eyes stared down at her, as he slowly moved back. “Run from anything else you want to,” he said quietly. “You’ll never run from me, Bree.”
And then he was gone.
Bree drove her parents through the forests of blooming rhododendron, then took them out to dinner and settled them in the loft while she curled up in the sleeping bag downstairs for the night. They talked about flowers and they talked about politics and they talked about everything that had been happening at home. But no one said a word about Hart until the following morning when her parents were having coffee just before leaving.
Her father had settled with a newspaper in the old rocker; Bree and her mother were playing with the carder and the spinning wheel. The cabin still smelled of toast and marmalade and Bree’s homemade perfumes. Sunlight alternately whisked in the open doorway and disappeared; clouds were playing peekaboo with the sun.
Bree straightened from disentangling the wool fibers with the carder. “You want another cup of coffee, Dad?”
Her father rolled down his paper, suddenly staring at her. “Would you mind at least telling me how long you’ve known him, Bree?”
“Around two weeks.” Bree poured him a cup, then perched on the stool, waiting. She’d been expecting this—was curiously relieved it had come. She’d been glad to see her parents; she loved them and cared about them, but all three of them had been oddly uneasy around one another, laughing when there was no reason, falling into a silence where there once would have been none. Bree knew the reason for that was Hart’s spending the night, and perhaps, at another level, they were hurt because she’d gone against their wishes by coming here. She’d never done that before. That she’d hurt them hurt her, and guilt lanced through Bree like a toothache. She’d always tried so hard to be good to them.
“Around two weeks,” Burke echoed.
Addie rose from the spinning wheel nervously. “You never did say if you liked my new dress, Bree. Last Monday I went shopping with Kathleen Romberger. You remember her, don’t you? I couldn’t believe the sales we ran into—”
“You really consider that an adequate time to know someone before…
jumping
into a relationship with him?” Burke said quietly.
With sad eyes, Bree confronted her father. “Dad, I’ve done nothing I’m ashamed of,” she said simply. “No one took advantage of me, and no one ever will. Please accept that.”
The eyes of father and daughter met, a matching clear green, more the color of sea than emeralds, more the consistency of water than stone. “You were terribly unhappy a very short time ago,” Burke reminded her. “Perhaps the question I should be asking you is when you’re coming home. You’ve got your speech back, Bree—that’s why you came here, for rest and just to be alone through that rough time. But you’re yourself again. There’s no reason you can’t come home now.”
“I’m not ready yet,” she said quietly.
“Because of him.”
“No.” Bree shook her head. “There are some decisions I need to make. About the work I want to do, the direction I want to go now. Everything’s…changed,” she admitted haltingly.
“Because of a man you’ve only known a very short time,” Burke insisted quietly.
“Burke, I really think we should be packing up,” Addie intervened swiftly. “You know we’ve got almost a six-hour drive ahead of us…”
She rambled on for a minute or two. Bree, shoving her hands in her pockets, leaned back against the wall, her eyes never leaving her father’s face. When her mother had finished talking, she spoke in a quiet voice. “
Yes,
I’ve only known him a short time, but he’s got nothing to do with the changes I want to make, Dad. I took a wrong turn in the road—it’s that simple, and Gram’s death made me see it.”