Читать книгу For His Son's Sake - Ellen Marsh Tanner - Страница 10
Chapter Three
Оглавление“I’m telling you, Delia, he’s a different kid around her. Totally open, friendly, eager to please. It’s almost a kind of hero worship. Everything she says and does is ‘supercool’ to him. I don’t understand it.”
“Do you think she reminds him of his mother?”
Ross tucked the receiver under his chin and pulled the pizza from the oven. Setting it on the counter, he envisioned Penelope, tall and darkly elegant, accompanying him to the opening night of the London symphony in a clinging Halston dress. Then Kenzie Daniels in shorts and a T-shirt, pulling dead fish out of a freezer. If he wasn’t so busy brooding, he would have smiled at the comparison.
“Not a chance.”
“Maybe she reminds him of somebody else. A housekeeper or nanny?”
Ross had met both women at Penelope’s funeral. One had been extremely old, the other dumpy and dark. “No way.”
“Maybe she just has a natural way with kids.”
“Meaning I don’t?”
He could actually hear Delia hesitating over the phone line. He gripped the receiver hard, dreading her answer. Bad enough that Delia had taken it upon herself to call and check up on them, and even worse that Angus had told her all about Kenzie the moment he’d answered the phone. Gushed on and on about her, actually, so that Delia had asked Ross for clarification when it was his turn to talk.
Now he was going to have to listen to things he didn’t want to hear and to admit things he didn’t want to acknowledge.
“He misses his mother, Ross. And maybe, in a way, he’s blaming you for her loss.”
His heart cramped. “Now wait a minute—”
“It’s totally unfounded, I know. But he’s a little boy, Ross. Kids tend to look at things differently. They really don’t know how to weigh what’s fair and what’s not. And you took him away from his home, his grandparents—”
“Who are even more cold and unloving than I am.” He tried to sound as if he was making fun of himself, but his voice was flat. He’d never felt less like joking.
“Give him time, Ross. And you, too. It’s only been a few months! He’ll warm up to you once he gets to know you better. After all, you’ve been a stranger to him all his life, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Penelope said unkind things about you to him when you first sued for visitation rights.”
Which had happened just before she’d died. Did Angus blame him in some way for that? Ross wondered suddenly. But who could have known that Penelope would be killed in a plane crash while locked in a bitter legal dispute over the son she had never acknowledged to Ross?
For God’s sake, some strange lump was forming in Ross’s throat as he wondered if his chances with Angus were doomed. He closed his eyes only to feel them stinging. Were those tears? It was definitely time to get a grip.
“Is that your closing statement, counselor?”
But Delia wasn’t about to let him off the hook. “Please, Ross.”
“Okay, okay.” Damn! Now he’d burned himself on the pizza tray. Cursing inwardly, he held his thumb under the faucet. “Look, gotta run. Supper’s ready.”
“Just remember what I said. And relax, will you? Stop trying so hard.”
“Always have to get in the last word, don’t you?” he countered, but this time he succeeded in sounding as though he didn’t mind.
Delia chuckled. No doubt she was relieved that he’d chosen to lighten up—though in reality Ross’s heart couldn’t have been heavier. He wished she’d never called him, wished she’d refrained from overstepping professional lines to discuss such personal matters with him. “Gotta run,” he said again, and was relieved that this time his voice didn’t waver. “I’ll check in with you at the office tomorrow.”
“Not until Thursday, Ross. You promised.”
“Okay, okay.”
He hung up to find Angus lying on his stomach in front of the TV watching cartoons. Handing him a slice of pizza, Ross gestured toward the characters cavorting on the screen. “Who are they?”
“That’s Johnny Savage and his friend, Major Stanton.”
“Oh? What do they do?”
“Fight aliens. Most of the time they’re humanoid. But that one’s an octopus. He’s a bad guy. His men squirt ink on people to capture them.”
“I see,” said Ross, who didn’t. What had happened to the simple cartoons of his childhood? Elmer Fudd hunting wascally wabbits? The Road Runner foiling Wile E. Coyote?
His brother’s words came back to haunt him. What makes you think you can raise a seven-year-old?
Ignorance, obviously. Would he ever get the hang of this parenting thing? Not just learning how to look after a kid, feed him, clothe him, keep him from harm, but find common ground for a relationship? And did he have it in him after all this time to embrace a whole new culture?
Ross wasn’t sure.
And at the moment he felt very much alone.
“So,” he said with forced gaiety when the cartoon ended. “Given some thought to what you’d like for your birthday? I need ideas, you know.”
Angus’s eyes widened. “Is it Wednesday already?”
“Day after tomorrow.”
“And you—you want to give me a present?”
“Why not?”
“I heard you telling someone on the phone that you’d already gotten me something.”
“When was that?”
“The morning we left to come here.”
That must have been Delia, calling to remind Ross about Angus’s birthday; offering to buy a gift and send it to their beach house in the event he had forgotten.
But Ross had already bought the model train set Angus had fallen in love with at the toy store last month. Because of its size he’d brought along only the engine for Angus to unwrap on Wednesday, plus a few other things he hoped the boy would like.
Now he frowned, wondering if he should remind Angus not to eavesdrop on telephone calls between grown-ups. Surely this was a good time to drive the message home?
But the memory of how the boy had withdrawn from him in Kenzie Daniels’s aviary earlier that day stopped him cold. Back then he’d only mentioned his dislike of pelicans, not chastised the boy for bad behavior. Still, he didn’t want to be the cause of the boy’s frustrated tears again. The thought made him ache inside.
“So obviously you know you’ll be getting presents on Wednesday,” he said instead. “So much for a surprise. But you also get one birthday wish.”
“A wish? What kind of wish?”
“The best kind. You can ask for anything you like. Within reason, of course. Something special you’ve been wanting very badly.”
“For real?”
The boy’s eagerness tore at Ross’s heart. If only it was always this easy. “Sure. My mother started the tradition when I was just a bit younger than you. Each year my brother Alex and I were allowed to make one birthday wish, which Mom did her best to fulfill. She always said it was better than blowing out candles and just hoping it’d come true.”
“That never happens,” Angus agreed.
“I know.”
“Did your dad help make those wishes come true?”
My dad was the wish, Ross thought, then cleared his throat. “He sure did. So go ahead and tell me. What would you like?”
Angus’s eyes widened. “I can wish for anything?”
“As I said, within reason.”
“Can we go out to dinner?”
“On Wednesday night? Is that your wish?”
Angus nodded.
“Sure we can. Is that all you want?”
“Um, well…” Angus looked down at his sneakers. “Can we take Kenzie along?”
“What?”
He must have spoken sharply, because Angus’s face fell.
“You said I could have a wish,” he mumbled. “And I want to have dinner with Kenzie.”
Ross set his plate aside and drew in a deep breath. The last thing he wanted was to encourage further contact with a beautiful-but-lawyer-hating woman his son seemed to be unnaturally drawn to. “Are you sure that’s what you want?”
Angus nodded.
“Not that inflatable kayak at the hardware store across the street?”
Angus shook his head.
“Or that fishing trip on Pamlico Sound?”
“No, thank you.” He was still mumbling and he wouldn’t look at Ross.
“Or that train set you saw at Garrison’s Toy Store?”
He saw the struggle on his son’s face and realized he was being unfair.
“Angus, wait a minute—”
“No, I told you what I wanted. I want to have dinner with you and with Kenzie.”
Those weren’t Penelope’s vivid blue eyes staring back at him all at once. They were Ross’s own, and they were too darned determined. The tilt of that chin was all too familiar, as well.
“Okay, okay. We’ll invite her to dinner.” Ross took a deep breath and struggled to make his tone lighter. “Got a restaurant in mind?”
Angus brightened. “There’s one on the sound near the place where we turned to go to the lighthouse. It has a deck on the water. Can we go there?”
“Did you happen to notice the name?”
Disappointed, Angus shook his head.
“Would you recognize it if we drove by again?”
“I think so. Does that mean we can eat there?”
“If we can find it.”
“Can we look now?”
Ross glanced out of the windows. The sun had set, but there was plenty of daylight left. He drew another deep breath. Anything to make the boy smile again. “Come on.”
Following Angus down the steps, he couldn’t help thinking how unfair it was that the one thing that seemed to make Angus happy was the one thing he would have preferred to deny him: more time in the company of one MacKenzie Daniels.
For God’s sake, he didn’t want Angus getting emotionally attached to someone he’d never see again once they returned to New York! And he himself definitely didn’t want a woman cluttering up his life, not even for the week and a half that remained of his vacation. After Penelope, it was the last thing he wanted, ever. Never mind that Kenzie Daniels seemed to be everything Penelope had never been: sweet, unassuming, very kind and generous. Not to mention funny and warm and such a natural with kids that he couldn’t help envying her that ease.
In the car, he cleared his throat. “Mind if I ask why you want to invite Ms. Daniels so badly?”
“Because I like her.”
“I agree she’s nice, but you shouldn’t get so intimate with strangers, son.”
“What’s intimate?”
“Eh…make friends with them so fast. We don’t know anything about her.”
“But we do! She can fly kites and she rescues birds and has two greyhounds and draws cartoons!”
How to argue with that kind of logic? Ross took a stab at it. “You know a lot about Marty, don’t you?” Marty was the handyman at Ross’s apartment building.
“Yeah.”
“And you think he’s nice, too. But you’ve never asked me to invite him to supper.”
“That’s different.”
Lord, the boy was stubborn. “In what way?”
“He’s nice to me, but he’s not a friend. I mean, it’s different with Kenzie. She doesn’t work for you and doesn’t have to like me if she doesn’t want to…and…and…”
He was clearly struggling to find the right words. Ross racked his brains to do the same, desperate to keep the line of communication open. This was the first time Angus had ever tried sharing his feelings with him.
“I think I see what you mean,” he said slowly. “Marty’s nice, but he’s really just doing his job.”
Angus looked relieved. “Yeah. But Kenzie doesn’t need to be nice to me. She just is. She didn’t yell when my kite landed on her, and then she showed me how to fly it.”
Ross’s eyes left the road to settle on his son. “You hit her with your kite?”
Angus blushed. “I didn’t mean to. It fell on her. Well, next to her. But I think it scared her. She was sleeping on her towel.”
“Oh.” So that was it. Nothing like a disaster to break the ice between strangers. The fact that she hadn’t berated him had obviously made a big impression on Angus. And his gratitude had strengthened into liking the more time he spent with her. Ross had to admit that, to a seven-year-old, Kenzie Daniels must seem very exotic and interesting—much more interesting than having a dour old lawyer for a father.
Ross’s spirits sank at the thought. Angus certainly hadn’t indicated any interest in his father’s career the first time he had been shown Ross’s office in Queens, where he had been introduced to Delia and the others in the practice. Granted, the run-down warehouse that served as headquarters for Calder & Hayes LLC wasn’t much to look at. Not like the glass-fronted high-rise on Madison Avenue, where Ross had practiced corporate law for eight years. Where he had been a full partner, highly paid and widely respected, and had lived only a few blocks away in an elegant town house he shared with Penelope, surrounded by the stores, restaurants and the theater and museum districts she had loved to haunt.
And now? What had the bitter battle for Angus—blown out of all proportion first by Penelope and then by the bloodthirsty English tabloids—cost him? He was no longer a high-powered attorney in a prestigious Manhattan firm, but a partner in a tiny law office that no one in midtown Manhattan had ever heard of, doing more pro bono work than not because most of his clients were the indigent and homeless of the city who couldn’t afford to pay. Nowadays he supposed he was barely one step above being a public defender—something Penelope had thought utterly amusing when she’d found out.
“My, my, how far the mighty have fallen,” she had said to him at her bitchiest best. That had been at their last meeting, back in February, after Ross had shown up at her parents’ elegant London town house to demand one last time that Penelope bring the boy back from wherever it was she had hidden him, to be reasonable, to at least allow father and son to meet, for God’s sake! But Penelope wasn’t interested in talking about Angus. She had wanted to hear all the sordid details about his downfall, how Ross’s senior partners had asked him to step down, that the publicity—the firm had an office in London—was damaging their image, how it wouldn’t do for the firm to become entangled in a custody battle between Ross and the daughter of Sir Edmund Archer.
“Hey! Hey, stop! There it is!”
Jerked from his black thoughts, Ross hit the brakes too hard. A horn blared behind him. “Sorry. Where?”
Angus pointed. The Boathouse. A two-story restaurant set back against the sound, the parking lot filled with cars. The wide front porch was packed with people waiting to be seated.
“You sure know how to pick ’em,” Ross said with a crooked smile. “Come on. Let’s see if we can get reservations for Wednesday night.”
They could. And Ross had to admit that the dining room was cheery with its cypress-paneled walls and nautical decorations. The food didn’t look bad, either.
“I want to sit at the window,” Angus whispered. “Can you ask?”
The hostess, writing down their names, overheard and smiled. “I’ll be sure and save the best table for you. You can watch the sun go down over the sound.”
Angus smiled back at her shyly. “Thanks.”
No doubt about it, the kid was opening up. Maybe Delia had been right. All he needed was to give it time.
“Nice choice,” Ross said, giving in to his feelings and tousling Angus’s hair in the doorway.
For once the boy didn’t draw away. “Really?”
“Really. Kenzie’ll love it.”
That earned him a shy smile all his own. Side by side they went back to the car, Ross feeling swellheaded with pride. Maybe he was starting to get the hang of this thing after all.
And if Angus’s happiness meant being nice to Kenzie Daniels, well, he could do that, too. At least long enough to give the boy a birthday dinner he’d remember.
“I don’t believe it!” Kenzie gritted her teeth and pounded her fist on the steering wheel. If the dump truck ahead of her slowed down any further they’d both be crawling. She’d been following him since Nags Head, unable to pass because of all the oncoming traffic. Usually Saturdays were the worst time to try and navigate Highway 12, but this was midweek, for crying out loud.
She downshifted as the dump truck slowed to veer around two cyclists, then glanced at her watch. Ross and Angus were picking her up in an hour and she was still twenty miles from home.
Nothing like a hissy fit to sour her mood even further, she thought. She was already tired and cranky after a morning spent in the Norfolk Messenger offices, summoned to a meeting that couldn’t wait until tomorrow, when she’d already planned to show up anyway. At least Maureen, her editor, had felt bad about springing the planning session on her without warning and had taken her to lunch—though they’d ended up waiting seemingly forever for their food.
Then the long drive back, with Kenzie starting to feel a little pressured about the time. The situation had worsened when her pickup had stalled just north of the Oregon Inlet bridge, the needle on the temperature gauge buried on Hot.
The radiator, of course. She’d been nursing the old one longer than she should have with a gallon of coolant she kept in the bed. The tow truck had taken too long, the radiator hadn’t been in stock, and she had whiled away the afternoon at the convenience store across the street reading pulp magazines and wondering how she was going to afford the repairs until a replacement part was shipped down from Elizabeth City.
Now she was stuck behind a slow-moving vehicle and about to succumb to a screaming bout of road rage. Didn’t the driver ahead of her know she had a date—with two good-looking guys, no less? Couldn’t he pull over and let her by?
Angus had sounded so grown-up when he’d called to ask her to dinner. Surprised and flattered, she’d accepted at once. Then she remembered that Ross would be there, too. “Are you sure your dad doesn’t mind?”
“Oh, no. He said you should come.”
Yeah, sure. Kenzie could picture him agreeing with that stoic lawyer’s look that Angus was too young and unsophisticated to read. Still, she was surprised at how much she was looking forward to the evening. She had a number of friends among Buxton’s permanent residents and went out with them often. But she’d never been invited to celebrate a seven-year-old English charmer’s birthday. Not at the Boathouse, which, after all, was outrageously expensive.
“Eight. Angus is eight as of today,” Kenzie reminded herself. She had spent most of yesterday working on his present. She couldn’t wait to see what he thought of it. No doubt Ross would find it silly. Like most of the lawyers Kenzie knew, he probably had no sense of humor.
The dump truck put on its blinker, downshifted, and turned into a construction site. Honking and waving her thanks, Kenzie sped away.
She fed the dogs and the birds in record time, then leaped into the shower. After wrapping her wet hair in a towel, she dried herself off and padded into the bedroom. No time to obsess over what to wear. She seized a dress from the closet and pulled it on, whipped out the blow dryer, then raced to put on her makeup.
“Kenzie!”
Crud! She hadn’t even heard the car drive up, and here she was still barefoot and lacking mascara. “Come on in! Be careful not to let the dogs out!”
The screen door slammed. Angus’s light footsteps sounded, followed by his father’s.
“Where are you, Kenzie?”
“In the bedroom. I’ll be out in a minute. There’s juice in the fridge. Help yourselves if you’re thirsty.”
She slipped on her watch, fastened a thin gold chain around her neck, spritzed on a trace of perfume. Her sandals were by the kitchen door. Barefoot, she waltzed out to fetch them.
“Oh, my,” she said.
Ross and Angus were at the counter, Ross pouring orange juice into a glass. They turned at the sound of her voice. She stared.
“Angus! You look super!”
He was wearing a new set of shorts and a collared shirt, obviously purchased from a local surf shop. The cargo shorts were sage in color, the Hawaiian shirt a riot of palm trees, hibiscus and exotic birds. His shoes were also new, the slouchy kind of sneakers worn by surfers and skateboarders. His still-damp hair was neatly combed.
“Do you really like it?”
“Way cool. I’m glad I dressed up, too.”
She had put on a knee-length sundress with spaghetti straps in periwinkle-blue—her favorite color. She wore her blond hair down. Her only jewelry was the delicate gold chain that nestled in the hollow of her tanned throat.
Shifting her focus from Angus to his father, she felt her cheeks grow warm. Like him or not, you had to admit that Ross Calder was one good-looking man. Angus must have talked him into buying something new, as well, because the fine white muslin shirt he wore was bright and crisp. The sleeves were rolled back in a casually masculine way and the open collar revealed an even more masculine expanse of muscled chest. Kenzie wasn’t sure how a pair of ordinary khaki pants could look so sexy, but Ross Calder definitely pulled it off.
She struggled to regain her composure as she slipped on her sandals. Reminded herself that, good-looking though he might be, he was still a member of that greedy, grasping, heartless class of professionals who lived for the thrill of making money, of working a judge and jury until their clients went free whether they knew them to be guilty or not.
Like her father.
Whom she had loved desperately as a little girl but who had betrayed her in the end, and who had turned everyone in her family but her mother against her when Kenzie had courageously exposed him for the man he was.
Even after all this time the pain of it clawed at her.
“Kenzie?”
She had to swallow before she could answer. “Yes, Angus?”
“You look really, really pretty.”
She gave a strangled laugh of gratitude and relief and pulled him impulsively into her arms. “Happy birthday, you little goof-ball! How does it feel to be eight?”
“I feel very grown-up, thank you.”
Was it her imagination, or did he look a little disappointed when she let him go? She hugged him again for good measure. Funny, but she’d forgotten how good it felt to hug a kid.
Straightening, she found herself eye-to-eye with Ross. He was wearing his lawyer’s look again, revealing absolutely nothing of what he was thinking.
Her chin tipped. “Thanks for inviting me.”
“It was Angus’s idea.”
“Oh.” Her heart sank.
“And he’s right. You do look really, really pretty.”
Heat flooded her cheeks. “Thank you.”
“My pleasure.”
The way he said it made a shiver flee down her spine. Confused and breathless, she gathered up her purse, sunglasses and a padded envelope from the kitchen table.
Angus’s eyes lit up. “What’s that?”
“Your present, of course. As if you didn’t know.”
“It’s not very big.”
“There are a couple of saying here in America, Angus. Maybe you have them in England, too— Good things come in small packages. And curiosity killed the cat.”
“My grannie always used to say that to me.”
“She probably had good reason to.”
Outside, Angus gallantly held open the car door for her.
“But you’re the birthday boy. You should sit up front.”
He dimpled. “But you’re the guest of honor.”
Returning his smile, she slid in next to Ross. It was the closest she’d ever been to him. He must have showered and put on aftershave recently, because he had a decidedly pleasant smell about him. Clean and…and sexy. Muscles rippled in his arm as he switched on the ignition. “Seat belts, Angus, Kenzie.”
She reached for the strap, glad to have an excuse to wriggle away from him. For some reason she found herself completely unnerved by his presence. Maybe it was the intimacy of their outing together; after all, it was easier dealing with him in the familiarity of her own home. Or maybe it was the fact that he looked so drop-dead handsome tonight. Either way, something about him was doing odd things to her inside.
Angus leaned forward as far as his belt would allow. “Will your birds be okay while you’re gone?”
“They prefer peace and quiet.”
“Did you let the pelican go?”
“This morning.”
“Oh. Too bad. I wish I’d seen it.”
“That’s okay,” she said brightly. “Maybe next time.”
“Will you be letting something else go before next Saturday? That’s when we leave.”
“The blue heron might be well enough by then.”
“Oh, good!” He leaned forward to address his father. “Can we watch Kenzie let it go?”
“We’ll see.”
“It’s a pretty neat experience,” Kenzie said. “Before I let the birds go I band them with a number so people will know who they are if they’re ever caught again. To band them, I have to put their heads in a coffee can.”
Angus’s eyes went wide. “How come?”
“It may seem cruel, but when you stuff them down inside a can they instantly relax. Then you can slide the band on their feet without a struggle.”
“Maybe they’re frozen with terror, not relaxed,” Ross said.
“Actually, research shows that their heart rates slow dramatically. So they really are relaxed.”
Angus bounced up and down in his seat. “I want to watch!”
“We’ll see,” Ross said again, but he sounded a lot more positive this time.
“Ever been to the Boathouse, Kenzie?” Angus demanded in the next breath.
“Only once, when I first moved here.”
“How long ago was that?”
“A little over a year.”
“Where did you grow up?”
“In Washington, D.C.”
“Washington!” Angus leaned forward to eye his father. “Have you ever been there?”
“A few times.”
“Is it nice? Would I like it?”
“You’d probably enjoy the museums and the zoo. Tell you what. I’ll be going there on business in October. Maybe you can come along.”
Angus’s face fell. “I’ll be in school then.”
“Second or third grade?” Kenzie asked.
“I—I don’t know. We had forms in my old school, not grades.”
“You’ll be in third grade here in America, son.”
Had Ross noticed the slight tremor in his son’s voice? Kenzie certainly had. Her heart ached, picturing Angus facing his first day at a strange new school with a new teacher and new classmates. She hoped he’d had the chance to meet a few of them already, managed to make friends with them. That he’d been taken on a tour of his new classroom so the place wouldn’t seem so strange and scary come September.
Did Ross know enough about parenting to arrange those things?
“Do you and Angus live alone?” she asked impulsively.
“At the moment, yes.”
What in heck did that mean?
She waited for an explanation, but none came. Instead Ross switched on his turn signal and pulled into the parking lot.
Kenzie mulled over the comment as she got out of the car. Was Ross planning to get married again? Angus had never mentioned a stepmother-to-be. Not that she cared, of course. She only hoped the woman would be the warm and loving person Angus—and his father—needed so badly.
They were seated at a booth with a huge picture window overlooking the sound. Angus sat down beside her, Ross opposite them. A waitress brought menus, requested drink orders.
“Can we have cocktails?” Angus asked eagerly. “It’s my birthday,” he added importantly.
“Why, sure you can, honey. How about a Shirley Temple? On the house. You’re the best-lookin’ birthday boy we’ve had in here all summer.”
Kenzie had to smile. Obviously she wasn’t the only female to fall instantly for the freckle-faced charmer with his proper British accent.
“You’ll have to have the same,” the waitress added to her and Ross. “We’re a dry county.”
“They don’t serve alcohol,” Kenzie explained after the woman had gone. “No hard alcohol. Just beer and wine. It’s not uncommon here in the South.”
Ross nodded. “Blue laws. I’ve heard of them. But if you ask me, it’s barbaric.”
Tonight she was inclined to agree with him. She didn’t care much for either beer or wine but she would very much have liked a cocktail to calm her nerves. For some reason Ross Calder was taking up too much room as he sat across the table from her. The booth was too small, too…intimate. Her gaze always seemed to be falling on him no matter where she tried to look. His face, his blue eyes, his unsmiling but strangely disturbing mouth. What on earth was the matter with her?
“Can I see what’s in the package now, Kenzie?”
“Gladly.” Anything to distract her.
But Ross had spied the waitress making her way toward them. “Let’s order dinner first, okay?”
Angus pretended to pout, then shyly volunteered to try the locally harvested clams. Kenzie ordered swordfish while Ross requested prime rib.
“Rare, please,” he told the waitress. “We lawyers have a yen for fresh blood.”
Even though he wasn’t looking at her, Kenzie knew which way he’d aimed that barb. It was so unexpected that she didn’t know whether to laugh or throw something at him. Honestly, she’d never let a guy unnerve her like this before!
Casting a glance at him she found him watching her, his blue eyes twinkling. So he had been teasing. Good grief, did he know how devastating he could be when he wanted to? She looked away quickly, her pulses humming and the heat rising to her cheeks.
“Can I open my present now, Kenzie?”
“Please,” she said, grateful for the distraction.
She watched with bated breath as Angus tore open the envelope. She’d had no idea what to give him, and the shopping was so limited in Buxton and Avon that nothing had inspired her. So she’d drawn him a picture, a cartoon she’d painted in a wash of watercolors. It showed the moment of their meeting, with Angus, dressed in a kilt to acknowledge his Scottish fore-bears, reeling in a kite that was about to land on the unsuspecting Kenzie’s head.
She had drawn herself as a somewhat gawky creature in a blue bathing suit, surrounded by all kinds of birds. Zoom and Jazz stood watch in the dunes.
She needn’t have worried. Angus whooped aloud when he saw it. “That’s me! Look, it’s me, and I have on a kilt at the beach! And there’s your dogs and your pelican and the seagulls and herons!”
“Do you like it?”
“I love it! I’m going to hang it in my room.”
“We’ll have to get it framed first.” Ross was looking at her almost wonderingly. “It’s very good.”
To Kenzie’s annoyance, little fingers of pleasure seemed to dance up her spine. The last thing she sought was approval from this man, especially when she’d been thinking violent thoughts about him just a moment ago. “Thanks.”
“How come you made yourself look so silly?” Angus demanded.
“Silly?”
“Yes. All skinny and your conk so big?”
“My—conk?”
“Your nose.”
She shrugged. “Guess that’s how I see myself.”
“But you’re beautiful, Kenzie!”
“Don’t be silly.”
“But you are! Isn’t she?” he demanded, turning to his father.
Ross’s eyes held hers. “Yes, she is.”
No doubt about it, something in Ross Calder’s voice was making her tingle all over. “Thanks,” she said lamely, then pointed quickly to the envelope. “Look inside. There’s something else.”
It was a picture book called Pirates of the Outer Banks. On the cover, a menacing Blackbeard shook his cutlass at them. “Blackbeard used to hide out on Ocracoke, the island south of ours,” Kenzie explained. “So did Anne Bonney, the lady pirate. They supposedly buried their treasure there, but it’s never been found.”
Angus leafed eagerly through the pages. Then he frowned. “But, Kenzie, I can’t read this! I’m not very good yet.”
“No problem. I bought it mainly for your father. So he could read aloud to you.”
Startled, Ross looked at her.
Yes, read to Angus, Kenzie silently urged him. It’s one of the most wonderful things a parent can do with a child. Don’t tell me it’s never occurred to you to try!
“Can we go to Okie Coke and look for the treasure ourselves?”
Kenzie laughed. “It’s pronounced Ocracoke, sweetie. And, yes, you can. It’s a short ferry ride from Hatteras Village.”
“A ferry ride! Can we go, Dad? Please?”
Dad. Kenzie suddenly realized that she’d never heard Angus address his father that way before. She cast a swift glance at Ross and her heart squeezed when she saw the startled pleasure in his eyes.
“I don’t see why not.”
“Will you come, too, Kenzie?”
“Um—”
“You’ve spilled some Shirley Temple on your sleeve, son,” Ross interrupted. “Go wash it off, please.”
“Okay.” He slid meekly out of his chair.
The moment they were alone, Ross turned to her. “Ms. Daniels.”
Even a blind man could have sensed the change in him. She steeled herself for whatever was coming. “Mr. Calder?”
“I appreciate everything you’ve done for Angus, not only this evening, but also the other day. You’ve been kind to him and made him laugh, and I’m truly very grateful.”
“But?”
Ross took a deep breath. “But I’d rather not encourage further contact between the two of you after this evening.” Or with me, he thought silently.
Even though Kenzie had suspected this was coming, she was surprised at the stab of disappointment she felt. “I hope you don’t think I’ve done anything to encourage—”
“Oh, I’m not suggesting as much. And while I’m glad Angus seems to be moving beyond the loss of his mother I don’t believe it’s at all healthy for him to grow attached to you.” He said this without looking at her, knowing better than to allow those big blue eyes to weaken his resolve.
“No, it isn’t,” Kenzie agreed in a whisper.
“So surely you can understand my request?”
She nodded, her own eyes downcast.
“Kenzie.” His hand was on her arm, sending warmth shooting through her. “Look at me.”
She lifted her eyes and the crooked smile on his face threatened to undo her.
“Let’s enjoy tonight, okay? For Angus’s sake?”
She didn’t like the feeling that was coming over her. A thank-goodness-she-was-sitting-down-because-her-knees-were-givingout sort of giddiness that had absolutely nothing to do with the way he was looking at her or with the feel of his big, warm hand on her skin. Nothing at all.
She struggled to say something that would put her back on even footing. Before she fell completely. “For Angus’s sake, gladly. Just make sure you keep that in mind yourself, Counselor.”
He leaned back, breaking the contact between them. “That sounds like a reprimand.”
“In a way, it is,” she admitted reluctantly.
He leaned back even farther, striving to look casual although he was feeling anything but. Asking her to stay out of their lives after tonight had been much harder than he’d thought, though for the life of him he didn’t know why. “So you have some criticism to offer concerning my behavior toward Angus?”
“Toward Angus, no. Toward me.”
“You?”
“If you want this to be a pleasant evening, you’re going to have to stop behaving so disapprovingly of me.”
“Disapproving!” Ross sounded genuinely startled. Had he been trying too hard to build a fence between Kenzie and Angus—and himself—tonight? But how could that be? His tactfulness was well-known in the courtroom and it shouldn’t have failed him here.
“Oh, you’ve been nice enough, I’ll admit. But I have this feeling that deep down you didn’t want me to come. That I’m here tonight only because Angus insisted on inviting me.”
He sucked in his breath at the stab of guilty pain he felt. “Ouch. You’re very direct, Ms. Daniels, you know that? What a shame you never studied law.”
“Did I get all the red off?” Angus had appeared at Kenzie’s side, holding out a scrubbed sleeve for her inspection.
“It looks fine.” She dabbed it dry with her napkin, then stood up.
He regarded her curiously. “Where are you going?”
“The ladies’ room,” she said as she left the table.
Once there, she took deep, calming breaths as she leaned against the sink. Thank goodness Ross hadn’t noticed her reaction to his casual words. Although Ross had been teasing her, the things he’d said had totally unraveled her composure.
“You plead your case very well, MacKenzie. Too bad you never studied law.”
Similar words had been spoken by her father, but in a tone Ross Calder hadn’t used with her—a tone which she’d never heard anyone use with her until that final, hateful confrontation outside the stately double doors leading to Burton Daniels III’s law office in downtown Washington, D.C.
It was the last thing he had ever said to his daughter, after the reporters and news cameras had gone. Although he had been the leading candidate for his party’s run for the presidency, he had just announced his withdrawal from the Republican race, citing his wife’s recent hospitalization as the major cause.
But thanks to Kenzie, everyone in America knew the real reason behind his decision: those questionable campaign funds he’d received from a European businessman whose bank on Grand Cayman Island had consequently become the target of an international investigation. No one in the States had been aware of any connection between the millionaire Belgian banker and the powerful D.C. attorney—until an unassuming political cartoon in the tiny Maryland publication Eastern Shore Weekly had raised the question.
The repercussions were only just beginning when Burton Daniels III announced his withdrawal from the Republican race, and no one doubted there’d be more to come.
As indeed there had been. A subpoena to appear before Congress, a Justice Department investigation, a hefty fine and six months’ jail time for Daniels’s campaign manager.
But what had whetted the nation’s interest more than the sullying of Burton Daniels’s once prestigious name had been the fact that Daniels’s own daughter had drawn the cartoon that had proved his downfall—her first ever published work. Strange, the wags had whispered among themselves, how Mrs. Burton Daniels’s hospitalization for chest pains had coincided with the publication of her daughter’s revealing cartoon and her husband’s subsequent withdrawal from the Republican race.
Still, much had changed since then. Surgery to install a pacemaker had set Kenzie’s mother to rights, and relocation to the isolated Outer Banks had helped Kenzie escape the unending media frenzy. Luckily she had found steady cartooning work at the Norfolk Messenger, because she’d not have been fit for any other career after fleeing Washington and giving up her nearly completed doctorate in early childhood education.
On the other hand, she and her father had never reconciled. He hadn’t spoken to her or acknowledged her existence in more than a year. And he had seen to it that none of her brothers, their wives or their children had said anything to her, either.
And of course Brent Ellis had called off their engagement the moment the scandal broke. Kenzie had clearly heard her father’s words echoing behind the pathetic little speech he had made, and she could well imagine the things her father had said when informing Brent that marrying his daughter meant no chance of keeping his partnership in the Daniels family law firm—which, in true Beltway fashion, had barely been tarnished by the sorry chain of events.
Career or love? Brent hadn’t hesitated in making his choice.
“C’mon, girl, get a grip,” Kenzie told her pale reflection in the mirror. True, Ross’s not-unkindly-meant words had unwittingly awakened memories she preferred to keep buried, but that didn’t mean she was going to ruin Angus’s birthday by hiding out in the ladies’ room. While she had no idea what had triggered her emotional meltdown, she wasn’t about to let either Ross or Angus suspect. So when she returned to the table she made sure that her head was held high and that her smile was warm and carefree.