Read When I Fall in Love (Christiansen Family) Online

Authors: Susan May Warren

Tags: #FICTION / Christian / Romance, #FICTION / Romance / Contemporary

When I Fall in Love (Christiansen Family) (8 page)

BOOK: When I Fall in Love (Christiansen Family)
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“Leave Mom out of it.”

“No, I won’t. Because they built something here, and you’re walking away from it and humiliating her in the process.”

Owen rounded on him. “Yeah, well, I want my own destiny. My own identity. I don’t want this.” He gestured past Casper to what remained of Evergreen Resort, the still-charred framing of the garage, the cracked and ashy picnic shelter foundation. “I’m leaving, and I’m sorry if Mom gets hurt in the process, but I have to live my own life.” He turned his back to Casper.

Casper just barely stopped himself from reaching out, from grabbing Owen back.

Stay calm.

He put as much older and wiser brother into his tone as he could muster. “I promised Darek I’d stick around this summer, help him keep Evergreen on the map. I was counting on you to
help us. It’s not just rebuilding
 
—it’s helping people remember we’re not licked. It’s about PR, like the annual dragon boat races. We still have a boat in this year’s race, and we need you.”

Owen let out a laugh, something almost angry. “What, did Darek tell you that?”

In fact, he had. Casper turned his hat around, let the brim shade his eyes. “He asked me to organize it this year. I was counting on you to paddle. We didn’t even enter last year, with the fire consuming the county, and we have a comeback story waiting for us. Have you totally forgotten our three years as champions? C’mon
 
—it’ll be the Christiansen brothers, paddling home to victory.”

He tried to interject memory in his voice, the golden snapshot of him and Darek and Owen crossing the finish line so many years ago, paddles held high.

Yeah, that day he’d felt invincible.

Owen stared at him a long time. Then he laughed. “What happened to you, Casper? You were the one most likely to strike it rich. I used to think you were so cool
 
—a pirate searching for lost treasure. Now you’re just . . . Yeah, I’m not sure what you are. A handyman?”

A fist closed around Casper’s heart, the memory vanishing.

Owen threw his leg over his bike, grabbed his helmet. “Tell Darek that his pals on the Jude County Hotshots say hi.” He started the bike, revved it, then put down his visor.

He raised two fingers a second before he took off out of the driveway.

Casper stood there in the cloud of gravel dust, hating the grit of Owen’s words, how it settled deep.

And did nothing to douse the burning inside.

He blew out a breath and turned to head back to the cabin,
then opted for the long dock that led to the water. With his mother in town with Tiger, Dad painting inside one of the cabins, and Amelia gone photographing a wedding, the place seemed so lonely.

As if in confirmation, the wind hushed through the trees and a loon called, mourning across the lake. He sat on the end of the dock, unlacing his work boots. He dipped his feet into the cool, sun-dappled water. The refreshment eased the hot spots, the calluses.

You were the one most likely to strike it rich.

What was he doing here? Casper leaned back on his hands, lifted his face to the sun. He knew the answer
 
—at least why he’d come home. And why he’d stayed.

But . . .

He worked out the square of paper from his back pocket. Unfolded it and smoothed it. Reread it in the sunlight.

Footsteps on the dock, and he didn’t have a chance to put the printed e-mail away before a shadow crossed over him.

“I saw Owen leaving as I drove in.” Amelia sat down next to him, cross-legged. “I wanted to show him the family shots I got at the wedding. I had them printed.” She handed him an envelope.

He opened it. Pulled out an eight-by-ten of the entire family, all grouped around Darek and Ivy. Yeah, they looked happy, grinning as they assembled on the boulders along Lake Superior. His parents clasped hands, so much love in their pose.

Not a hint of the struggles of the past year, with the resort, with Owen.

And within himself. He gave the picture back to Amelia.

“What are you reading?”

“Nothing.”

She took the paper from his hand. He didn’t look at her, didn’t want to invite comment.

“Cool. You should do it.” She handed the paper back to him. “But where is Roatán?”

Casper wasn’t sure why, but his stomach tightened at her encouragement. “It’s a little island off Honduras. The lore is that pirates used to bury their treasures there.”

“Which is why your buddy Duncan invited you on the dig. Underwater exploration? Isn’t that your specialty in your major? Are you going to go?”

“I don’t know. It’s . . . There’s a lot to do here.”

“The dig doesn’t start until August. You should go. Are you kidding me
 
—five months in the Caribbean? And you’ll probably earn credits for your degree.”

Like that mattered. He schooled his voice. “I don’t know. We have more cabins to build, and I promised Darek I’d run this year’s dragon boat for him. We gotta keep the Evergreen spirit alive until we reopen.”

“I love the dragon boat festival, but do we have enough for a team?” She flipped through the photos.

“We lost Owen, but we gain Ivy. And there’s Dad and Mom, and Nathan Decker and his family, and some others who said they might be up for it.”

“You’ll figure it out. You always find a way.” She got up, shaded her eyes. “By the way, Darek didn’t rope you into anything. We both know you’re his secret weapon.”

“Why’s that?” He couldn’t help it
 
—he raised his arm and flexed. “It’s the guns, isn’t it?”

Amelia rolled her eyes. “No, silly. It’s because he can count on you to show up. We all can. Think about it. Darek and Owen are bookends
 
—dark and unpredictable. But you’re the poster boy for the Christiansen family.”

Oh, what she didn’t know. He sighed but pasted on a smile.

“I gotta get ready to go. I’m meeting a potential client in town.”

He waved his hand as she headed down the dock.

The poster boy.

He stared at the e-mail invitation. Folded it. Threw it into the water.

M
AX COULD STAND HERE FOREVER
on his private balcony of the Hokeo Resort, mesmerized by the aqua-blue water, dappled by mysterious coral shadows and shades of rippling sand, and watch as the ocean sent cascade after cascade of frothy white waves to shore in quiet applause.

The sky above stretched to the horizon, so deliciously blue he could taste it, drink in eternity in a quenchless gulp of joy. From here, four stories up, he overlooked the entire rim of Waikiki Beach and the long pier that jutted from shore, where sunbaked ten-year-olds dove from the end for tourist tips and beachcombers pressed divots in the sand, only to be
tsk
ed by the vigilant sea. Catamarans, their tall masts like church spires, moored on the sand, a lure for snorkelers longing to explore the reefs offshore.

Beyond the curve of the beach jutted the dark magnificence
of Diamond Head, the dormant volcano. From the jagged rim, a man might too easily mistake himself for an albatross and take flight, to soar over the expanse of blue ocean, the lush rainforest to the northeast, the cobble of skyscrapers of Honolulu, the snorkeling cove of Hanauma Bay, and the bodysurfing beaches on the southeastern shore of Oahu.

The delicate fragrance of plumeria, tuberose, and jasmine, the flowers of the lei that he’d received yesterday upon arrival and that bedecked the lush resort landscaping, sweetened the sultry morning air, but behind the aroma lurked the salty lure of the ocean, the scent of adventure, danger, and mystery.

In truth, the taste of peace rather than the culinary delights lured Max to Hawaii every year. Here, his life quieted, and his inevitable future felt tenable. Hawaii vanquished the bitterness that too easily coated the back of his throat. Freed him to breathe.

It distracted him with the sense that maybe his tomorrows could be rich.

He needed the distraction because Grace’s words as he’d dropped her off at her room had chased him into his sleep, all four jet-lagged hours.

You don’t have to take care of me, Max. I’ll be fine.

She probably would be. Which meant he should be relieved and not gnawed by the fear that she’d miss today’s culinary tour. He’d never seen such a vicious case of airsickness, and somehow, over the course of the six-hour flight, his annoyance turned to admiration for her tenacity. For the way she joked through her bouts of nausea. For her determination to finish the crossword puzzle even after her fifth trip to the bathroom. To play through the pain.

Yeah, she had Owen’s stubborn athlete genes, and that only made it easier to help her. After all, he owed Owen.

Clearly, however, she didn’t know about Max’s part in Owen’s injury, because when they finally got around to talking hockey and Owen, she seemed less than abreast of the details.

And he certainly wouldn’t be the one to reveal how they’d gotten into an after-game, on-ice brawl with a few players from an opposing team. How, in the middle of the fight, he’d accidentally slammed the butt of his stick into Owen’s eye socket.

Accidentally.
But the fact that he’d filled Owen’s position on the first line and ended the season with a personal scoring record stirred the guilt in his gut.

Which was why Max had helped Grace retrieve her luggage and given her a ride in his rental car to the resort. Why he’d helped her to her room and even fetched a bucket of ice, just in case the nausea continued.

He’d done his part, and she was probably right. She could take care of herself. She didn’t need a babysitter.

But Jace had failed to mention that his future sister-in-law had eyes that could make a man forget why he was flying to Hawaii in the first place.

Max leaned over the rail, searching for her in the breakfast crowd eating on the veranda. He spied a woman in a floppy beach hat that gave him pause, then decided to scan the crowd in person. He stepped off the balcony into the cool trapped air of his room, his skin prickling against the sudden change, grabbed his sunglasses and a hat, and headed downstairs.

He could live incognito in Hawaii, with his cargo shorts and printed floral shirt. A regular beach bum, although by tomorrow, he’d add a chef’s cap and apron.

Today’s activities on the school’s schedule included a morning tour of the open markets and a tasting of some of the island’s best
specialties. Kālua pork stands, fresh poke from the seafood market, sweet pineapple, malasadas, baked manapua, and maybe they’d end with a late lunch at one of the many cafés that served loco moco, another island specialty.

Max took the elevator to the open-air lobby, then headed outside to the terrace, where diners ate at teakwood tables. A long buffet of mangos, papaya, passion fruit, kiwi, Hawaiian breads, and fresh and smoked seafood gave guests a taste of Hawaiian breakfast. An omelet chef, however, stood ready at the far end, for those with a more traditional palate.

Max wandered around the terrace, searching for Grace.

“Max! I thought I saw your name on the class list.”

Max turned at the voice, smiled. “Keoni. Dude, great to see you.” He extended his hand and caught the grip of his favorite Hawaiian chef. “Are you guest teaching this week?”

Keoni wore his hair in a long black ponytail, more surfer than chef with his dark, sea-salted skin. He had probably hit the waves this morning, already found his aloha spirit. He wore his shirt open, his doggers low, and resembled nothing of his accolades as one of the island’s most decorated chefs. But only two years ago, Chef Keoni had dived headfirst into a season of
Iron Chef Hawaii
and emerged the winner.

“Absolutely. And scouting talent for this year’s Honolulu Chop competition. We’re doing a four day cook-off at Honolulu Days. You’d be perfect for it. We want more than locals
 
—we want people who love Hawaii, even if they are haoles.”

“Hey, give me three weeks, I’ll be as local as you. How’s the surf?”

“Junk. All slop. But tomorrow the waves are supposed to be bombin’. Maybe we can catch some after class.”

Max’s gaze roved around the diners as Keoni talked.

“You’d better land yourself some vittles before the tour leaves.” Keoni glanced at his dive watch. “You have about fifteen minutes before we pull out.”

“No problem.” He clamped Keoni on the shoulder. “Catch ya.”

Max stood for a moment on the veranda, watching the breakers offshore, soaking in the heat of the morning. He’d spent too long on the ice, needed the sun to sink some vitamin D into his bones, shore up his body for the next season.

Before he could stop himself, he headed back to the lobby and hit the up button for the elevator.

He’d just check on Grace, make sure she’d woken up. After all, jet lag could play tricks on a body, especially one as wrung out as Grace’s. He wasn’t babysitting, just . . . caring. Because of Owen.

He found her room at the end of the hall and knocked. Waited. Knocked again.

He finally heard her shuffling to the door. The bolt clicked and she eased the door open, blinking against the sunlight in the hallway. “Hello?”

“Aloha,” he said, probably brighter than he needed to. He schooled his voice. “Uh, you know we leave in fifteen
 
—or maybe ten
 
—minutes, right?”

She opened the door wider, rubbed her eyes. She wore a white T-shirt, and blue-painted toenails poked from the too-long hem of her yoga pants. A black eye mask mashed her hair on top of her head. If he didn’t know better, he’d peg her as hungover.

She shook her head and pressed a hand to her stomach. “Uh-oh.”

“Do you need to sit down?”

“Maybe.” She slid to the floor, bracing the door open with her foot.

He crouched on the other side of the threshold. “Are you still sick?”

“I can’t tell.” She pulled off the mask. “I don’t think so.”

“If I say the words
exotic food tour
, how does that make you feel?”

She made a face.

“Right. Okay.”

“But
 
—don’t worry about me. I’ll stay here, lay out in the sun, try to figure out why I said yes to this trip.” She closed her eyes, leaned her head against the door.

“You’re not going to leave before the fun starts, right?”

“Isn’t this the fun?” she said and chased it with a grin. Yeah, Jace had also neglected to mention the smile.

Max answered it with a smile of his own. “I’ve been on this tour a couple times before, so what do you say we opt out and I take you on your own tour? We’ll head up to the North Shore, watch the surfers, then visit the turtles on our way home. And along the way, if you’re feeling up to it, we’ll stop in at the shrimp trucks.”

Her smile dimmed. “No, Max. You’re so sweet, but . . . I’m not stupid. On the plane, when you didn’t know who I was, you offered to show me around. I realized from your offer to a stranger that you were hoping to
not
have to spend time with me, the girl waiting in Hawaii. I know this is your vacation. And I know how hard you work. So really, I’ll just sit this one out and read a book. Be free.”

Max couldn’t pinpoint why her words stuck a needle in his chest, why suddenly it seemed as if the buoyant joy of the morning evaporated. Wasn’t this what he wanted?

Clearly his mouth wasn’t listening to his brain. “Are you sure? It’s a gorgeous day.”

“Which is why you should be out enjoying it. Go on your tour, Max. Enjoy yourself. I’ll be fine.”

Absolutely. Of course she would be. And this was exactly what he’d hoped for. “Right. Okay, then. Get well.”

“I will. You have fun.”

She stood, closed the door.

Have fun.
That’s why he was here, right?

He took the elevator down, walked outside, and found the group waiting for the Hawaiian Culinary Adventures shuttle near a towering palm tree. Two women in long sundresses, their hair pulled up to expose necks the color of cream, huddled together taking vanity shots, giggling. A couple in their midfifties
 
—him with a baseball cap, her in a pair of khaki shorts and a pink T-shirt
 
—sat on the cement wall. He glanced at their name tags: Chuck and Marnee Miller.

Oops, he’d forgotten his own name tag. He looked around for Keoni. Instead he spotted the registration area, where the hostess stood behind a small table with a rack of bags, leis, and folders filled with the course schedule. She wore a sarong and a tank top with an orange lei strung around her neck. Her silky dark hair and creamy mocha skin suggested a native heritage. “Aloha,” she said, smiling.

“Hi. I’m Max
 
—”

“Sharpe. I know.” She smiled at him. “Welcome back.”

“Yeah. And . . .” He wasn’t sure why, but he leaned over to view her sheet. “Can I pick up Grace Christiansen’s registration packet too?”

“Sure.” She gave him his bag and added another lei around his neck. Then she handed him Grace’s supplies.

Maybe he’d simply take them to her quickly, before they left, so she knew what to expect.

Max took the stairs to the second floor, then jogged to her room. Paused.

What was he doing? She’d made it abundantly clear that she didn’t need him
 
—maybe even didn’t want him. His heart as well as his mouth had decided to check out of the commonsense conversation he’d been trying to have with himself.

Go on your tour, Max. Enjoy yourself. I’ll be fine.

He’d simply leave her registration information at the desk and ask them to call her room. Later. After she’d had more sleep
 

Wait. Through the door, he could hear something. Ragged breathing, even . . . crying?

“Grace?” He knocked on the door quietly, gently.

The noise stopped with a quick gasp of breath.

Oh no. “Grace, let me in.”

“No. I’m a mess and I don’t want to wreck your vacation.”

“You won’t wreck my vacation. How am I supposed to have fun when you’re back here crying? Why are you crying?”

“Because I’m so disgusted with myself. I’m
 
—”

Suddenly the door yanked open. Indeed, her eyes were red, her face chapped. Sheesh, she was
really
crying.

“Because I hate that I’m such a disaster. I don’t want to be the girl who gets so sick on the plane that she grosses out the entire cabin.”

“No one was grossed
 
—”

“Or the girl who is afraid to eat shrimp fried on a stick.”

“Actually, they grill it
 
—”

“I mean, I’m a foodie, for pete’s sake. Or I’m supposed to be, right? I love cooking and this trip is all about food adventuring. It’s just . . .” She took a long breath. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me.”

He braced his hand against the doorframe, leaned down, and
met her eyes. “Let me show you around Hawaii. Just for today. If you hate it, you can go home
 
—I’ll drive you to the airport myself.”

“I hate that you are missing your food tour. That you are here babysitting me. I want you to have fun.”

“Who says I’m not having fun?”

She cocked her head at him, shook it. “You might be the nicest person I’ve ever met, Max. No wonder Owen liked you.”

BOOK: When I Fall in Love (Christiansen Family)
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