The Calendar of New Beginnings (12 page)

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Authors: Ava Miles

Tags: #mystery, #romantic suspense, #romance anthology, #sweet romance, #contemporary romance, #women’s fiction, #contemporary women, #small town, #alpha male, #hero, #billionaire, #family life, #friendship, #sister, #best friend, #falling in love, #love story, #beach read, #bestseller, #best selling romance, #award-winning romance, #empowerment, #coming of age, #feel good, #forgiveness, #romantic comedy, #humor, #inspirational, #may my books reach billions of people and inspire their lives with love and joy, #unlimited, #Collections & Anthologies, #series, #suspense, #new adult, #sagas

BOOK: The Calendar of New Beginnings
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His sister was as close to babbling as he’d ever seen her. Good Lord, was she having another fan moment?

Lucy was watching her with a neutral expression, but he could feel her gathering herself. Talking about photography was probably the last thing Lucy wanted to do outside of the classroom. Not that Moira had any way of knowing that.

“Let’s give Lucy some time to settle in,” he said, deciding to intervene.
 

Moira’s mouth parted slightly, a sure sign she was surprised by his response. “Of course. Any time you’d like, Lucy. I’ll just join the others and let you two catch up.”

A smile flickered on Lucy’s face. “Andy’s right. I have a lot of things to see to right now, but I’m sure we can chat at some point. Good luck finding a new job, by the way.”

His sister sought his gaze once more before nodding and darting off in the direction of his family.

“You need a Jameson after that?” Lucy asked him point-blank. “I guess your sister didn’t realize how upset we both were. Me because of the situation with my eye, and you because of my mistake with your son.”

“It wasn’t that bad,” he told her, trying to be nice. “And I don’t use liquor to handle my stress.”

She tapped her finger on the table. “Well,
I
sometimes have a drink when I’ve had a moment. I’m sorry I caused Danny to ask those questions. I would never do anything—”

“I know,” he said, interrupting her. “He’s smart, and he’s curious. It’s not the first time he’s asked something like that after hearing what should have been a simple story. Kids who lose parents young often have a fascination with death.”

Whereas all he wanted to do was run as far as he could in the opposite direction. He wanted to believe Kim was in a place called heaven, but when it came down to it, he just didn’t know.

“I walked right into it with all that talk about mummies and the afterlife,” she said, picking up a cold French fry and throwing it across her plate. “So, if you won’t have a drink with me, what can I do to make up for it? Let’s see. How about we dart over to the ice cream parlor and grab a cone? We can snarf it down before we return so no one will know.”

Leave it to Lucy to suggest ice cream. A cone share had always been her go-to comforting suggestion when they were at school together.

“Mocha almond fudge and butter pecan, here we come,” he said.

“Let’s blow this joint,” she said.

She rubbed his back, giving him a full-wattage Lucy smile. He shrugged his shoulders to relieve the tension as her fingers worked some magic. Her hands were strong, something he’d never realized. But they were also gentle as they traced the knotted line of muscles running across his shoulders.

He was about to comment on her strength and skills—and tease her about picking up the latter in a Turkish bath internship overseas.

And then he noticed her eyes.
 

Suddenly he couldn’t speak.
 

The color was greener than he remembered. He stared into them, noticing the gold rings around her pupils. She continued to smile at him, kneading his trapezius. There was a light in her eyes, he realized. Even though her right eye had been injured, it hadn’t been dimmed.

How had he forgotten how beautiful they were? They contrasted with her fair skin and the spattering of freckles she’d always hated on her nose.
Good God.

Lucy

s beautiful.

He hadn’t felt this intense punch of attraction since high school. Sure, he’d felt a spark for her at her homecoming party, but this was different. This ka-pow was the kind that made everything around him seem to slow down. The fingers massaging his shoulders felt hot all of the sudden.
Oh, no. Not again.
 

He stumbled back, feeling light-headed.

She grabbed his arm and eyed him with concern. “Are you okay?”

His nod was crisp. “Yep.” Not freaking out here. Not at all.

Of course, Lucy O’Brien had always been bright and beautiful. It was a constant—like the oxygen levels in his blood.

But she hadn’t been beautiful to him for nearly twenty years, and he didn’t want to be reminded of all that. Not when he’d already decided that their friendship needed to stay that way.

“Are you sure you’re okay?” she asked, tilting her head from side to side, looking into his face. “Why don’t you sit down for a sec?”

“No,” he said, shaking it off. “Let’s grab that ice cream. Then you can tell me what our mothers are plotting.”
 

He waited for Lucy to precede him to the door. People were watching them again. They had been all night. While he wasn’t surprised, he was annoyed. Isn’t that why he’d brought Danny with him even though he had multiple willing babysitters? He was single again, and Lucy was back. The town gossips would wag their mouths anyway, but he didn’t plan to fuel their fire.

Except a very old flint and steel had sparked a fire
inside
him. For her.

His freak-out was in danger of reaching epic proportions if he didn’t rein it in. Outside, the night was warm, and he took some deep breaths to clear his head. After they ordered their ice cream cones, he started to ask for the check, but she cut him off and paid for both of them. Suddenly he felt awkward and unsure of himself. If he had paid, it might have meant something. Like they were going out.

He tried to tell himself he was overthinking things. This was only an ice cream with Lucy, his childhood best friend. He’d only left his son with his family so she could tell him about their mothers’ latest crazy stunt.

But as she led the way to one of the corner tables away from the rest of the crowd, he couldn’t suppress the growing awareness inside him. She really was beautiful. This was a hell of a time to realize it again, but he’d managed to push aside those thoughts in high school for the betterment of their friendship. He could do it again.

Andy wrapped his cone with a napkin like he was wrapping up his feelings and tucking them away. “You might have realized Danny never stops talking.”

She was studying him in that serious way of hers, like she was trying to figure out why he’d gotten all flustered back there. He scanned the room casually, trying to act cool, something he definitely didn’t feel.

“He’s different from you that way,” she said, licking her scoop with delight. “You were always a quiet kid.”

It was hard not to notice how sexy she looked eating her ice cream. “He got that from Kim.”

An awkward silence descended—as uncomfortable and unwelcome as snow after Easter.

“I really am sorry about earlier,” she said, fiddling with her napkin. “I talk to kids who’ve lost their parents all the time. You’d think… Well…those kids are used to people dying. They don’t…”

When she trailed off, he fought the lump in his throat. Suddenly he couldn’t hold back his own sadness—the grief he felt every time he had to tell his sweet little boy about things like angels and heaven when all he wanted to do was see Kim standing right in front of their son, loving him and doing normal things like taking him to school and teaching him how to ride his bike.

“They don’t what?” he asked, hearing the rasp in his own voice.

She took a deep breath, lowering the cone. “They don’t ask a lot of questions about where their parents have gone after they’ve died. At least not to me. They…it’s not right or wrong. It’s just the way it is. They’re so concerned with surviving, getting their next meal, maybe getting into a school so they can be educated. I…hate seeing anyone so young lose a parent. I don’t like that part of this world.”

Her grief was palpable, and the earlier brightness in her eyes faded to something darker. This was the Lucy he sometimes knew online—the one whose inner light was sometimes dimmed by the things she saw, the things she chronicled with her camera. Seeing this Lucy in person tore at his heart.

How many times had he raved at the injustice of losing Kim before realizing he needed to accept that bad things happened to good people? It sucked, and he didn’t understand it, but Lucy was right—it was just the way things were. Kim had gotten cancer and died. He was alone now, and his job was to raise their son in as loving and happy of an environment as possible. And he wasn’t doing a bad job, if you asked him, dammit.

“On that we agree,” he simply answered, not wanting to debate the big questions of life and death in this ice cream shop.

He was a doctor, and it was something he dealt with on an ongoing basis. He tried not to let it bleed into his off-time more than it naturally did.

“How about you spill this secret now that we’ve gotten all deep and everything?” he added, making himself take another taste of his ice cream.

She stared at her cone. “I hesitate to mention this after our conversation earlier.”

“Lucy,”
he said, gesturing with his hand.

“My mother bamboozled me into telling you this because April didn’t feel like she could. Your mom doesn’t want to stir up unhappy memories. And after tonight, I can kinda see why.”

His stomach twisted into a knot. “Just spit it out.”

“Our mothers have decided to raise money to support breast cancer,” she told him.

He narrowed his eyes. “Why would that bother me? I think that’s a great idea. If you ask me, we need more money for research and mammograms and the like.”

“I’m happy you feel that way,” she said, tracing circles on the counter with the tip of her cone. “It’s how they plan to do it that might give you pause.”

“What are they going to do? Knowing our mothers—”

“Exactly,” she said, taking a bite of her ice cream. “Ever watch the movie
Calendar Girls
?”

“Uh…yes,” he answered with a sinking feeling. Surely they didn’t…

“They asked me to take photos of them and ten other people who have lost someone to cancer.” She swiped a rivulet of ice cream cresting down her sugar cone. “Here’s the kicker. They’re going to be the humorous, risqué kind. They suggested using cantaloupes to cover their…” She gestured to her own chest, making him super uncomfortable after his earlier awareness of her.

“Cantaloupes.” And then it hit him. “Oh, no.
No.”

“Oh, yes,” she said, biting her lip. “And they’ve recruited some men too, apparently. Dr. Jeff is one of them.”

He sat back in the booth. “You’re kidding! What are they planning to do? Buy out all the cantaloupes and hot dogs in Dare Valley?”

She thrust out her cone. “That’s what
I
thought at first. And then I saw Jeff’s face when he told me his mom died of breast cancer.”

He swallowed thickly at the compassion threading her voice now. He knew that face. She could break his heart with that face.

“Everyone is dedicating their month to the person they lost,” she continued. “Your mom is dedicating her page to Kim.”

Now it all made sense. “I understand why she was afraid to tell me. We haven’t talked about her recent scare with the lump in her breast. I…couldn’t.”

She reached for his free hand. “She knows. This is her way of doing something about it all, I think. I’ve come around to the idea.”

He could see why. It was a beautiful gesture, but also the kind of kooky thing their moms normally got up to together.

“Andy,” Lucy said softly, bringing him back. “Your mom’s calling it The Calendar of New Beginnings.”

“Oh, crap,” he said, setting his cone down so he could pinch the one place guaranteed to prevent his tears from leaking: the bridge of his nose.

He’d learned about that spot while working at the hospital in the weeks after Kim’s death, when anything and everything seemed to trigger an episode. A young woman dying of cancer like Kim. Another who lay still and emaciated in her hospital bed, her family unsure if she’d ever awaken after a car accident. And then there were the ones who’d passed on. Hearing their families weep with abandon had crushed him. But a doctor couldn’t cry in front of his patients, particularly not the ones who were already hopeless and grieving, so he’d learned to pinch that pressure point and keep the tears inside until he could be alone. Later he would release all the pain he’d gathered that day, like rain in water buckets after an afternoon thunderstorm.

Lucy held his hand while he gathered himself together.

“It’s okay to cry, Andy,” she said, tightening her grip. “I won’t think any less of you.”

No, she wouldn’t, although many women might.

“I can take it,” she added softly.

He looked up and saw the soft light shining again in her beautiful green eyes. “I know you can, Lucy. I’m glad you’re doing the calendar.”

“Me too,” she said softly. “Here. It’s time to swap cones like we always used to.”

They ate each other’s ice cream as she held his hand, and just like that, the sorrow in his chest didn’t feel quite so heavy.

Chapter 8
      

It was a day of new beginnings, and a Monday to boot. In the morning, Lucy was moving into the small rental home she’d dubbed Merry Cottage, and at three o’clock in the afternoon, she would teach her first class at Emmits Merriam’s School of Journalism. She’d accomplished a lot after only a week in Dare Valley.

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