Holiday Wishes (14 page)

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Authors: Nora Roberts

BOOK: Holiday Wishes
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Chapter 9

Control came easily to Mac—or at least it had for the past seven years. He used all the control at his disposal to keep his foul mood and bubbling temper from the boys.

They were so excited about her coming, he thought bitterly. Wanted to make certain all the lights were lit, the cookies were out, the decorative bell was hung on Zark's collar.

They were in love with her, too, he realized. And that made it a hell of a mess.

He should have known better. He
had
known better. Somehow he'd let it happen anyway. Let himself slip, let himself fall. And he'd dragged his kids along with him.

Well, he'd have to fix it, wouldn't he? Mac got himself a beer, tipped the bottle back. He was good at fixing things.

“Ladies like wine,” Zack informed him. “Like Aunt Mira does.”

He remembered Nell had sipped white wine at Mira's party. “I don't have any,” he muttered.

Because his father looked unhappy, Zack hugged Mac's leg. “You can buy some before she comes over next time.”

Reaching down, Mac cupped his son's upturned face. The love was so strong, so vital, Mac could all but feel it grip him by the throat. “Always got an answer, don't you, pal?”

“You like her, don't you, Dad?”

“Yeah, she's nice.”

“And she likes us, too, right?”

“Hey, who wouldn't like the Taylor guys?” He sat at the kitchen table, pulled Zack into his lap. He'd discovered when his sons were infants that there was nothing more magical than holding your own child. “Most of the time
I
even like you.”

That made Zack giggle and cuddle closer. “She has to live all by herself, though.” Zack began to play with the buttons of his father's shirt. A sure sign, Mac knew, that he was leading up to something.

“Lots of people live alone.”

“We've got a big house, and two whole rooms nobody sleeps in except when Grandma and Pop come to visit.”

His radar was humming. Mac tugged on his son's ear. “Zack, what are you getting at?”

“Nothing.” Lip poked out, Zack toyed with another button. “I was just wondering what it would be like if she came and lived here.” He peeked up under his lashes. “So she wouldn't be lonely.”

“Nobody said she was lonely,” Mac pointed out. “And I think you should—”

The doorbell rang, sending the dog into a fit of excited barking and jingling. Zeke flew into the kitchen, dancing from foot to foot. “She's here! She's here!”

“I got the picture.” Mac ruffled Zack's hair, set him on his feet. “Well, let her in. It's cold out.”

“I'll do it!”


I'll
do it!”

The twins had a fierce race through the house to the front door. They hit it together, fought over the knob, then all but dragged Nell over the threshold once they'd yanked the door open.

“You took so long,” Zeke complained. “We've been waiting forever. I put on Christmas music. Hear? And we've got the tree lit and everything.”

“So I see.” It was a lovely room, one she tried not to resent having only now been invited into.

She knew Mac had built most of the house himself. He'd told her that much. He'd created an open, homey space, with lots of wood, a glass-fronted fireplace where stockings were already hung. The tree, a six-foot blue spruce, was wildly decorated and placed with pride in front of the wide front window.

“It's terrific.” Letting the boys pull her along, Nell crossed over to give the tree a closer look. “Really wonderful. It makes the little one in my apartment look scrawny.”

“You can share ours.” Zack looked up at her, his heart in his eyes. “We can get you a stocking and everything, and have your name put on it.”

“They do it at the mall,” Zeke told her. “We'll get you a big one.”

Now they were pulling at her heart, as well as her hands. Filled with the emotion of the moment, she crouched down to hug them to her. “You guys are the best.” She laughed as Zark pushed in for attention. “You, too.” Her arms full of kids and dog, she looked up to smile at Mac as he stepped in from the kitchen. “Hi. Sorry I took so long. Some of the kids hung around, wanting to go over every mistake and triumph of the concert.”

She shouldn't look so right, so perfect, snuggling his boys under the tree. “I didn't hear any mistakes.”

“They were there. But we'll work on them.”

She scooted back, sitting on a hassock and taking both boys with her. As if, Mac thought, she meant to keep them.

“We don't have any wine,” Zack informed her solemnly. “But we have milk and juice and sodas and beer. Lots of other things. Or . . .” He cast a crafty look in his father's direction. “Somebody could make hot cocoa.”

“One of my specialties.” Nell stood to shrug out of her coat. “Where's the kitchen?”

“I'll make it,” Mac muttered.

“I'll help.” Baffled by his sudden distance, she walked to him. “Or don't you like women in your kitchen?”

“We don't get many around here. You looked good up onstage.”

“Thanks. It felt good being there.”

He looked past her, into the wide, anticipation-filled eyes of his children. “Why don't you two go change into your pajamas? The cocoa'll be finished by the time you are.”

“We'll be faster,” Zeke vowed, and shot toward the stairs.

“Only if you throw your clothes on the floor. And don't.” He turned back into the kitchen.

“Will they hang them up, or push them under the bed?” Nell asked.

“Zack'll hang them up and they'll fall on the floor. Zeke'll push them under the bed.”

She laughed, watching him get out milk and cocoa. “I meant to tell you, a few days ago they came in with Kim to rehearsal. They'd switched sweaters—you know, the color code. I really impressed them when I knew who was who anyway.”

He paused in the act of measuring cocoa into a pan. “How did you?”

“I guess I didn't think about it. They're each their own person. Facial expressions. You know how Zeke's eyes narrow and Zack looks under his lashes when they're pleased about something. Inflections in the voice.” She opened a cupboard at random, looking for mugs. “Posture. There are all sorts of little clues if you pay attention and look closely enough. Ah, found them.” Pleased with herself, she took out four mugs and set them on the counter. She tilted her head when she saw him studying her. Analytically, she thought. As if she were something to be measured and fit into place. “Is something wrong?”

“I wanted to talk to you.” He busied himself with heating the cocoa.

“So you said.” She found she needed to steady herself with a hand on the counter. “Mac, am I misreading something, or are you pulling back?”

“I don't know that I'd call it that.”

Something was going to hurt. Nell braced for it. “What would you call it?” she said, as calmly as she could.

“I'm a little concerned about the boys. About the fallout when you move on. They're getting too involved.” Why did that sound so stupid? he wondered. Why did he feel so stupid?


They
are?”

“I think we've been sending the wrong signals, and it would be best for them if we backed off.” He concentrated on the cocoa as if it were a nuclear experiment. “We've gone out a few times, and we've . . .”

“Slept together,” she finished, cool now. It was the last defense.

He looked around, sharply. But he could still hear the stomping of little feet in the room overhead. “Yeah. We've slept together, and it was great. The thing is, kids pick up on more things than most people think. And they get ideas. They get attached.”

“And you don't want them to get attached to me.” Yes, she realized. It was going to hurt. “You don't want to get attached.”

“I just think it would be a mistake to take it any further.”

“Clear enough. The No Trespassing signs are back up, and I'm out.”

“It's not like that, Nell.” He set the spoon down, took a step toward her. But there was a line he couldn't quite cross. A line he'd created himself. If he didn't make certain they both stayed on their own sides of it, the life he'd so carefully built could crumble. “I've got things under control here, and I need to keep them that way. I'm all they've got. They're all I've got. I can't mess that up.”

“No explanations necessary.” Her voice had thickened. In a moment, she knew, it would begin to shake. “You made it clear from the beginning. Crystal-clear. Funny, the first time you invite me into your home, it's to toss me out.”

“I'm not tossing you out, I'm trying to realign things.”

“Oh, go to hell, and keep your realignments for your houses.” She sprinted out of the kitchen.

“Nell, don't go like this.” But by the time he reached the living room, she was grabbing her coat, and his boys were racing down the stairs.

“Where are you going, Miss Davis? You haven't—” Both boys stopped, shocked by the tears streaming down her face.

“I'm sorry.” It was too late to hide them, so she kept heading for the door. “I have to do something. I'm sorry.”

And she was gone, with Mac standing impotently in the living room and both boys staring at him. A dozen excuses spun around in his head. Even as he tried to grab one, Zack burst into tears.

“She went away. You made her cry, and she went away.”

“I didn't mean to. She—” He moved to gather his sons up and was met with a solid wall of resistance.

“You ruined everything.” A tear spilled out of Zeke's eyes, heated by temper. “We did everything we were supposed to, and you ruined it.”

“She'll never come back.” Zack sat on the bottom step and sobbed. “She'll never be the mom now.”

“What?” At his wits' end, Mac dragged his hand through his hair. “What are you two talking about?”

“You ruined it,” Zeke said again.

“Look, Miss Davis and I had a . . . disagreement. People have disagreements. It's not the end of the world.” He wished it didn't feel like the end of his world.

“Santa sent her.” Zack rubbed his eyes with his fists. “He sent her, just like we asked him. And now she's gone.”

“What do you mean, Santa sent her?” Determined, Mac sat on the steps. He pulled a reluctant Zack into his lap and tugged Zeke down to join them. “Miss Davis came from New York to teach music, not from the North Pole.”

“We know that.” Temper set aside, Zeke sought comfort, turning his face into his father's chest. “She came because we sent Santa a letter, months and months ago, so we'd be early and he'd have time.”

“Have time for what?”

“To pick out the mom.” On a shuddering sigh, Zack sniffed and looked up at his father. “We wanted someone nice, who smelled good and liked dogs and had yellow hair. And we asked, and she came. And you were supposed to marry her and make her the mom.”

Mac let out a long breath and prayed for wisdom. “Why didn't you tell me you were thinking about having a mother?”

“Not
a
mom,” Zeke told him. “
The
mom. Miss Davis is the mom, but she's gone now. We love her, and she won't like us anymore because you made her cry.”

“Of course she'll still like you.” She'd hate him, but she wouldn't take it out on the boys. “But you two are old enough to know you don't get moms from Santa.”

“He sent her, just like we asked him. We didn't ask for anything else but the bikes.” Zack burrowed into his lap. “We didn't ask for any toys or any games. Just the mom. Make her come back, Dad. Fix it. You always fix it.”

“It doesn't work like that, pal. People aren't broken toys or old houses. Santa didn't send her, she moved here for a job.”

“He did too send her.” With surprising dignity, Zack pushed off his father's lap. “Maybe you don't want her, but we do.”

His sons walked up the stairs, a united front that closed him out. Mac was left with emptiness in the pit of his stomach and the smell of burned cocoa.

Chapter 10

She should get out of town for a few days, Nell thought. Go somewhere. Go anywhere. There was nothing more pathetic than sitting alone on Christmas Eve and watching other people bustle along the street outside your window.

She'd turned down every holiday party invitation, made excuses that sounded hollow even to her. She was brooding, she admitted, and it was entirely unlike her. But then again, she'd never had a broken heart to nurse before.

With Bob it had been wounded pride. And that had healed itself with embarrassing speed.

Now she was left with bleeding emotions at the time of year when love was most important.

She missed him. Oh, she hated to know that she missed him. That slow, hesitant smile, the quiet voice, the gentleness of him. In New York, at least, she could have lost herself in the crowds, in the rush. But here, everywhere she looked was another reminder.

Go somewhere, Nell. Just get in the car and drive.

She ached to see the children. Wondered if they'd taken their sleds out in the fresh snow that had fallen yesterday. Were they counting the hours until Christmas, plotting to stay awake until they heard reindeer on the roof?

She had presents for them, wrapped and under her tree. She'd send them via Kim or Mira, she thought, and was miserable all over again because she wouldn't see their faces as they tore off the wrappings.

They're not your children, she reminded herself. On that point Mac had always been clear. Sharing himself had been difficult enough. Sharing his children had stopped him dead.

She would go away, she decided, and forced herself to move. She would pack a bag, toss it in the car and drive until she felt like stopping. She'd take a couple of days. Hell, she'd take a week. She couldn't bear to stay here alone through the holidays.

For the next ten minutes, she tossed things into a suitcase without any plan or sense of order. Now that the decision was made, she only wanted to move quickly. She closed the lid on the suitcase, carried it into the living room and started for her coat.

The knock on her door had her clenching her teeth. If one more well-meaning neighbor stopped by to wish her Merry Christmas and invite her to dinner, she was going to scream.

She opened the door and felt the fresh wound stab through her. “Well, Macauley . . . Out wishing your tenants happy holidays?”

“Can I come in?”

“Why?”

“Nell.” There was a wealth of patience in the word. “Please, let me come in.”

“Fine, you own the place.” She turned her back on him. “Sorry, I haven't any wassail, and I'm very low on good cheer.”

“I need to talk to you.” He'd been trying to find the right way and the right words for days.

“Really? Excuse me if I don't welcome it. The last time you needed to talk to me is still firmly etched in my mind.”

“I didn't mean to make you cry.”

“I cry easily. You should see me after a greeting-card commercial on TV.” She couldn't keep up the snide comments, and she gave in, asking the question that was uppermost in her mind. “How are the kids?”

“Barely speaking to me.” At her blank look, he gestured toward the couch. “Will you sit down? This is kind of a complicated story.”

“I'll stand. I don't have a lot of time, actually. I was just leaving.”

His gaze followed hers and landed on the suitcase. His mouth tightened. “Well, it didn't take long.”

“What didn't?”

“I guess you took them up on that offer to teach back in New York.”

“Word does travel. No, I didn't take them up. I like my job here, I like the people here, and I intend to stay. I'm just going on a holiday.”

“You're going on a holiday at five o'clock on Christmas Eve?”

“I can come and go as I please. No, don't take off your coat,” she snapped. Tears were threatening. “Just say your piece and get out. I still pay the rent here. On second thought, just leave now. Damn it, you're not going to make me cry again.”

“The boys think Santa sent you.”

“Excuse me?”

As the first tear spilled over, he moved to her, brushed it away with his thumb. “Don't cry, Nell. I hate knowing I made you cry.”

“Don't touch me.” She whirled away and fumbled a tissue out of the box.

He was discovering exactly how it felt to be sliced in two. “I'm sorry.” Slowly he lowered his hand to his side. “I know how you must feel about me now.”

“You don't know the half of it.” She blew her nose, struggled for control. “What's this about the boys and Santa?”

“They wrote a letter back in the fall, not long before they met you. They decided they wanted a mom for Christmas. Not
a
mom,” Mac explained as she turned back to stare at him. “
The
mom. They keep correcting me on that one. They had pretty specific ideas about what they wanted. She was supposed to have yellow hair and smile a lot, like kids and dogs and bake cookies. They wanted bikes, too, but that was sort of an afterthought. All they really wanted was the mom.”

“Oh.” She did sit now, lowering herself onto the arm of the sofa. “That explains a couple of things.” Steadying herself, she looked back at him. “Put you in quite a spot, didn't it? I know you love them, Mac, but starting a relationship with me to try to please your children takes things beyond parental devotion.”

“I didn't know. Damn it, do you think I'd play with their feelings, or yours, that way?”

“Not theirs,” she said hollowly. “Certainly not theirs.” He remembered how delicate she had seemed when they made love. There was more fragility now. No roses in her cheeks, he saw with a pang of distress. No light in her eyes. “I know what it's like to be hurt, Nell. I never would have hurt you deliberately. They didn't tell me about the letter until the night . . . You weren't the only one I made cry that night. I tried to explain that Santa doesn't work that way, but they've got it fixed in their heads that he sent you.”

“I'll talk to them if you want me to.”

“I don't deserve—”

“Not for you,” she said. “For them.”

He nodded, accepting. “I wondered how it would make you feel to know they wished for you.”

“Don't push me, Mac.”

He couldn't help it, and he kept his eyes on hers as he moved closer. “They wished for you for me, too. That's why they didn't tell me. You were our Christmas present.” He reached down, touched her hair. “How does that make you feel?”

“How do you think I feel?” She batted his hand away and rose to face the window. “It hurts. I fell in love with the three of you almost from the first glance, and it hurts. Go away, leave me alone.”

Somehow a fist had crept into his chest and was squeezing at his heart. “I thought you'd go away. I thought you'd leave, us alone. I wouldn't let myself believe you cared enough to stay.”

“Then you were an idiot,” she mumbled.

“I was clumsy.” He watched the tiny lights on her tree shining in her hair and gave up any thought of saving himself. “All right, I was an idiot. The worst kind, because I kept hiding from what you might feel, from what I felt. I didn't fall in love with you right away. At least I didn't know it. Not until the night of the concert. I wanted to tell you. I didn't know how to tell you. Then I heard something about the New York offer and it was the perfect excuse to push you out. I thought I was protecting the kids from getting hurt.” No, he wouldn't use them, he thought in disgust. Not even to get her back. “That was only part of it. I was protecting myself. I couldn't control the way I felt about you. It scared me.”

“Now's no different from then, Mac.”

“It could be different.” He took a chance and laid his hands on her shoulders, turned her to face him. “It took my own sons to show me that sometimes you've just got to wish. Don't leave me, Nell. Don't leave us.”

“I was never going anywhere.”

“Forgive me.” She started to turn her head away, but he cupped her cheek, held it gently. “Please. Maybe I can't fix this, but give me a chance to try. I need you in my life. We need you.”

There was such patience in his voice, such quiet strength in the hand on her face. Even as she looked at him, her heart began to heal. “I love you. All of you. I can't help it.”

Relief and gratitude flavored the kiss as he touched his lips to hers. “I love you. I don't want to help it.” Drawing her close, he cradled her head on his shoulder. “It's just been the three of us for so long, I didn't know how to make room. I think I'm figuring it out.” He eased her away again and reached into his coat pocket. “I bought you a present.”

“Mac.” Still staggered from the roller-coaster emotions, she rubbed her hands over her damp cheeks. “It isn't Christmas yet.”

“Close enough. I think if you'd open it now, I'd stop having all this tightness in my chest.”

“All right.” She dashed another tear aside. “We'll consider it a peace offering, then. I may even decide to . . .” She trailed off when the box was open in her hand. A ring, the traditional single diamond crowning a gold band.

“Marry me, Nell,” he said quietly. “Be the mom.”

She raised dazzled eyes to his. “You move awfully quickly for someone who always seems to take his time.”

“Christmas Eve.” He watched her face as he took the ring out of the box. “It seemed like the night to push my luck.”

“It was a good choice.” Smiling, she held out her hand. “A very good choice.” When the ring was on her finger, she lifted her hand to his cheek. “When?”

He should have known it would be simple. With her, it would always be simple. “New Year's Eve's only a week away. It would be a good start to a new year. A new life.”

“Yes.”

“Will you come home with me tonight? I left the kids at Mira's. We could pick them up, and you'd spend Christmas where you belong.” Before she could answer, he smiled and kissed her hand. “You're already packed.”

“So I am. It must be magic.”

“I'm beginning to believe it.” He framed her face with his hands, lowered his mouth for a long, lingering kiss. “Maybe I didn't wish for you, but you're all I want for Christmas, Nell.”

He rubbed his cheek over her hair, looked out at the colored lights gleaming on the houses below. “Did you hear something?” he murmured.

“Mmm . . .” She held him close, smiled. “Sleigh bells.”

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