Authors: Crystal B. Bright
“Boy, you had better walk around that bed and give your friend a hug.” Elizabeth swatted Gunnar on his backside, propelling him to move around the bed.
Keeping his face hard, he stepped up to her. At the last moment, she turned to him and held out her arms, a loud, long, audible sigh punctuating her move.
Great, she wanted this even less than him. A small part of him felt a little disheartened at her attitude. What did he expect? They hadn’t parted on amicable terms. She’d called him a coward.
He embraced her. At once, her honey scent wafted up to his nose. The sweet aroma had him thinking of licking her from her head to her toes.
Her body had still retained some of its softness, although he found her back to be hard as well as her arms. He rested his hand on her waist, dangerously close to her ass that he wanted to touch, to squeeze.
At that moment, he felt a subtle throbbing below his belt. It had been quite a long time since he’d held a woman. At this rate, if he continued holding her, she would know just how long it had been.
Gunnar released his embrace and resumed his spot on the other side of the bed. He hoped he didn’t look like he’d run, but in his mind he’d probably sprinted.
“Good to see you again.” He didn’t smile, still trying to wrap his mind around the surreal events.
“Nice to see you visiting your
mother
, Gunny.” Eboni did smile, showing all her teeth.
The expression that he’d likened to a hungry shark along with the childhood nickname disarmed him. “Haven’t heard that name in years.” A smile threatened to peek through, but he kept it suppressed.
A tickle ran over his belly as soon as she smiled. A woman scorned shouldn’t be this friendly to the man who’d burned her.
He couldn’t think of that. He would be spending time with his mother, not Eboni, a decision his body detested him for making.
He gazed down at his mother. “Why are you here?”
“Caught the vapors.” Elizabeth waved her hand with its manicured fingernails in front of her face.
“Don’t give me that. What happened?”
When his mother slowed to answer, Eboni quickly piped in.
“She fainted at Press ’N Curl.” Eboni glanced down at Elizabeth. “I brought her here. They’ve been running tests but haven’t said what they’ve found yet.”
Gunnar nodded at her. “When was the last time you went to a doctor’s appointment?”
His mother huffed. “Doctors are for sick people. I’m not sick. I probably didn’t eat enough that morning. I’m trying to lose these stubborn five pounds to fit into a gorgeous gold sequin dress I made.”
Gunnar ran his hand over his face. “Ma,
you
made the dress for yourself. Why didn’t you make it the right size?”
Her eyes widened as she glared at him. “I did make it the right size. I can’t help it if the materials shrank when I sewed it.”
He bit the inside of his cheek to keep from laughing. “Right. The materials shrank.”
“You know nothing about making clothes, not like your brother, Thane. He had a gift.”
“A gift? Yeah, like dodging me. I’ve been trying to call him since yesterday and he’s not answering.” Gunnar wanted to call his baby brother a brat, but that was rule number two with his mother. No name-calling.
“Leave him alone. He’s busy. He’ll be starting spring training soon.” Elizabeth turned to Eboni. “Baseball. America’s favorite pastime.”
Eboni nodded. “I’ve seen him play. He’s very talented.”
Gunnar glared at Eboni. A pang of jealousy punched him in the gut. It shouldn’t have. Gunnar had no plans of getting back together with Eboni. Two stubborn people together never worked.
“Gideon has time to answer his phone, and he’s about to play in the Super Bowl.” Gunnar smiled at his brother’s accomplishment.
“I’m glad you’re here.” Elizabeth nodded.
“I’m happy to be with you, too, Ma. Now you have one of your sons and your
daughter
here.” He nodded toward Eboni. “Did I miss a reunion somewhere?”
“You and your brothers weren’t here. Eboni has been like a daughter to me. She could have been a real daughter-
in-law
had someone done the right thing.”
Gunnar groaned and leaned his head back. “Not now.” Arguing about past mistakes topped his list of things to avoid after he hopped a red-eye flight from Vegas to Virginia.
“I’ve taken great care of Queen Elizabeth since you, um, left.” Eboni kept her stare on Gunnar almost in a challenging way, like she wanted him to defend his actions. “I’ve worked side by side with her at the salon.”
“Thank you. I appreciate it.” Gunnar meant that. With him, Gideon, and Thane being gone, it comforted him to know someone trustworthy watched out for his mother.
“I don’t need anyone watching out for me. I’m fine.” Elizabeth patted Gunnar and Eboni’s hands.
As she said that, her hospital room door opened and a petite Indian woman in a white doctor’s coat walked into the room.
“How are you feeling today, Ms. Sommerville?” she asked as she looked through a file.
“I feel as good as I look, Dr. Patel.” Gunnar’s mother pursed her lips. “Hand me my clothes and shoes and let me go home to my family.” She sat up taller.
“You’ll go home eventually, but not right now.” The doctor’s face became somber. “You have a ninety-percent blockage in your left artery. Because of it, you weren’t getting enough oxygen, which is why you fainted.”
Gunnar felt blood rush from his head. He kept his legs locked to keep standing. “What’s going to happen now? Medication?”
“We’re going to install a stent in the artery to open it up and see if that corrects the problem. She has a second artery that has a fifty-percent blockage, but that’s not as bad as the other, so we’re not going to do anything with that one yet. We’ll watch it and see how it goes. One thing that should make you happy is you have a very strong heart.”
Gunnar glanced at his mother, who now remained quiet. The joy dropped from her face. She chewed her lower lip, ruining her lipstick and staining her teeth. For the first time in his life, Queen Elizabeth Sommerville looked scared. Seeing her fear both worried him and pissed him off.
He held his mother’s hand and kept his grip tight. “When will you do the procedure?”
“Tomorrow morning. After we install the stent, she’ll stay in the hospital for a few days so that we can watch her, and then we’ll let her go home.” The doctor walked closer to Elizabeth. “No working at all. You rest and relax, understand?”
Elizabeth nodded.
Her silence worried Gunnar, who had never known his mother to be at a loss for words.
“For now, I would say get comfortable. Have your family bring you books or magazines, pajamas, and a change of clothing for when you go home. The nurses and care partners will check up on you all day today. I understand your family and friends all call you Queen Elizabeth.”
That brought a smile to Elizabeth’s face.
Dr. Patel continued. “We’ll treat you like royalty. We promise. Any questions?”
“No.” Elizabeth’s voice broke. “No, I understand. Thank you for everything.”
The doctor walked out of the room and closed the door.
Eboni broke the tension. “I’ll tell everyone at the salon what’s going on and that you’ll be out for a while.”
Elizabeth nodded and held Eboni’s hand.
“I’m here, Ma. Whatever you need, I’ll do it for you.” Gunnar curved his mother’s hand up to his mouth and kissed the back of it.
“Good, because there is something I need you to do.” She cleared her throat.
“Anything. Name it.” His mother had given him the kind of life that other disadvantaged kids could only wish for on a million stars in the sky.
“I need you to watch over the businesses. Right now, it’s only the salon and the flower shop since I have the boutique closed for the winter. If I’m still incapacitated by March or April, you’ll have to reopen the boutique in time for the spring school dances.”
Gunnar glanced at Eboni, who now had a hard time looking at either one of them. “You got it.”
“Eboni will continue to manage the salon. She can show you how things run. The keys to the shop and my car are in my purse. Take my purse home with you. These people are nice, but I don’t know them.” Elizabeth’s smile broadened. “I’ll be fine, son.”
Gunnar chuckled. “I’m supposed to be reassuring
you
.”
“By being here, you’ve shown me that I did a great job raising you.” She pulled at his hand to bring his face down to her. She kissed his cheek.
“I’ll call Gid and Thane, unless you want to do that?” He gazed at his mother. For the first time, he saw her looking weak, almost defeated.
“No, you call them. You’ll keep a level head when relaying the news.”
Gunnar nodded. “Yes, ma’am.”
“Now, take my things, except for my makeup bag.” Elizabeth smiled and it made Gunnar and Eboni laugh. “Bring back my black-and-white Chanel suit, the black Yves Saint Laurent pumps, and the pearls.”
“All I understood in that request was the pearls.” Gunnar constantly had to remind his mother he had no fashion sense.
“I’ll get them.” Eboni kissed Elizabeth’s forehead.
In this situation, Gunnar appreciated Eboni’s help. Otherwise, he would keep his distance from her.
“I’ll stay with you, Ma.” Gunnar looked at the chair Eboni had previously occupied and the small couch under the window that overlooked the hospital’s helipad.
“I love you, but you need a shower and a shave and probably some good sleep.”
Gunnar ran his hand over his chin and felt the scruff his mother must have noticed. “Ma, I--”
“Don’t argue.” Elizabeth brought her blanket up to her chin.
“Did you just interrupt me?” Gunnar put his hands to his hips and cocked his head.
His mother laughed. “You’re cute. Go. Call your brothers. Get a shower. Get some sleep. I’ll be fine.”
Gunnar squeezed his mother’s hand. “I’ll go and make myself presentable for you. But I will be back earlier than tomorrow morning. I didn’t come all this way not to see you.”
She released his hand. “Love you both.”
Gunnar glanced at Eboni. At one time, she’d had his heart. Then she’d refused to take a leap with him. His mother seemed to rely on her a lot. For that, he appreciated her loyalty.
After giving his mother a kiss on her forehead, Gunnar grabbed his bag. He held the door open for Eboni and then headed to the elevator. He pressed the down button and waited in silence until the elevator doors opened. He’d hoped there would be a crowd of other people in the elevator. No such luck.
Silence enveloped them on the ride down. He kept his gaze on the lit numbers over the sliding doors.
“Your mom is strong,” Eboni began.
Gunnar brought his attention to her.
“She’ll be fine.” She brought her hand up as though she wanted to pat his shoulder but stopped herself.
“I know.” No one had to tell him about the strength in Queen Elizabeth Sommerville.
The woman stared down monsters and didn’t blink. He’d seen that firsthand. Surviving a marriage with that dick after she’d adopted him and his brothers had confirmed his mother’s might.
The longer the elevator ride continued, the more Gunnar realized he missed a lifetime with her in the last ten years. Did she get married? Did she have children? Was she even involved in a relationship now?
When the elevator opened at the lobby, Gunnar held the door open as Eboni strolled by him. He headed to the front of the building but stopped when he realized she continued to the parking garage.
“Do you have a car here?” Eboni waited by the entryway to the parking garage.
Gunnar winced. “Took a cab.” He took a step toward her. “I suppose you’re not going by my mother’s house, are you?”
He watched her shoulders bunch around her ears as though the sound of his voice irritated her. At that moment, his stomach lurched and he hated to even see her adverse reaction.
“Do you need a ride?” Eboni asked.
“I don’t have a vehicle until I get my mom’s car.” Gunnar hoisted the strap of his bag onto his shoulder.
“I suppose if I don’t take you, you’ll tell your mother on me.” She fished through her cavernous purse.
“If it’s a big deal, just forget it. Just thought--”
Eboni expelled a deep sigh. “I’ll take you to your mother’s house. I have to go there anyway.” She held up her car keys and jingled them in front of her face.
Gunnar thought about the ramifications of being in a confined space with Eboni, truly the one that had gotten away. Since starting his sport, a lot of fans, female celebrities, and starlets had thrown themselves at him. Every time, he’d refused their advances, telling them that he had to keep his focus. That didn’t stop the women from still offering him favors. He turned those down as well. One thing for sure, Eboni wouldn’t be offering him anything other than this car ride.
“Are you going to come with me?” She crossed her arms over her chest.
After he’d hugged her earlier, Gunnar couldn’t stop imagining her body.
He took a deep breath before answering. “Sure. Let’s go.”
He’d been strong for ten years. A twenty-minute drive shouldn’t kill him…he hoped.
* * * *
Eboni still couldn’t believe she’d allowed Gunnar Wells to get in her car. Of course, in her compact Smart Car, he looked like she’d stuffed a silverback gorilla into a tin can.
“You can push the seat back, well, a little.” Eboni glanced over at him, careful not to stare at him too long.
“It is pushed back as far as it can go.” His knees looked shoved under his chin.
“I would tell you to lean the seat back, but, well, you can’t.” She shrugged.
“We’re not too far from the house.”
Eboni nodded and kept her stare on the road until she heard Gunnar laughing. She turned to him.
“You have a thing about small cars, don’t you?”
She blinked, not knowing what he meant.
“Remember in high school, you drove that little Plymouth Horizon?”
Wow. She hadn’t thought about that car in years. It shocked her that Gunnar had even remembered it, which made her smile. “You remember ol’ Bee Bee?” She’d called her car Bee Bee for its distinctive yellow paint job with black accents.