Authors: Nora Roberts
"I think I noticed that."
Jack took her hand, studied it. Not delicate like Bailey's, he mused, but narrow, competent. Strong. "He's got a lot to offer. Class again, money, fancy house. I guess you'd call it security."
Intrigued, she watched his face. "I guess you would."
He hadn't meant to get started on this, he realized. But however fast certain things could move, he'd decided life was too short to waste time.
"My old man was a bum," he said abruptly. "My mother served drinks to drunks when she felt like working. I worked my way thorough college hauling bricks and mixing mortar for a mason, which led me to a useless degree in English lit with a minor in anthropology. Don't ask me why, it seemed like the thing to do at the time. I've got a few thousand socked away for dry spells. You get dry spells in my line of work. I rent a couple of rooms by the month." He waited a beat, but she said nothing. "Not what you'd call security."
"Nope."
"Is that what you want? Security?"
She thought about it. "Nope."
He dragged his hand through his hair. "You know how those two stones looked when you and Bailey put them together? They looked spectacular, sure, all that fire and power in one spot. But mostly, they just looked right." He met her eyes, tried to see inside her. "Sometimes, it's just right."
"And when it is, you don't have to look for the reasons."
"Maybe not. I don't know what I'm doing here. I don't know why this is. I've lived my life alone, and liked it that way. Do you understand that?"
She enjoyed the irritation in his voice, and smirked. "Yeah, I understand that.
The lone wolf. You want to howl at the moon tonight, or what?"
"Don't get smart with me when I'm trying to explain myself."
He took a quick circle around the patio. There was a hammock swinging between two big trees, and somewhere in those dripping green leaves a bird was singing its heart out.
His life, Jack mused, had never been that simple, that calm, or that pretty. He didn't have anything to offer but what he was, and what he had inside himself for her.
She'd have to decide if that was enough to build on.
"The point is, I don't want to keep living my life alone." His head snapped up, and his bruised eye glared out from under the arched, scarred brow. "Do you understand that?"
"Why wouldn't I?" Her smirk remained firmly in place. "You're sloppy in love with me, pal."
"Keep it up, just keep it up." He hissed out a breath, eased a hand onto his aching side. "My feelings aren't the issue, and maybe yours aren't, either.
Things happen to people's emotions under intense circumstances."
"Now he's being philosophical again. Must be that minor in anthropology."
He closed his eyes, prayed for patience. "I'm trying to lay out my cards here.
You come from a different place than I do, and maybe you don't want to head where I'm heading. Maybe you want to slow down some now, take it in more careful steps. More traditional."
Now she snorted. "Is that how I strike you? The traditional type?"
His frown only deepened. "Maybe not, but it doesn't change the fact that a week ago you were cruising along in your own lane just fine. You've got a right to ask questions, look for reasons. A couple of days with me—"
"I'm not asking questions or looking for reasons, Jack," she said, interrupting him. "I stopped cruising in my own lane the day I met you, and I'm glad of it."
Oh, hell, she thought, and braced. "It stands for Magdalen Juliette."
A cough of laughter escaped him. It was the last thing he'd expected. "You're kidding."
"It stands for Magdalen Juliette," she repeated between clenched teeth. "And the only people who know that are my family, Bailey and Grace. In other words, only people I love and trust, which now includes you."
"Magdalen Juliette," he repeated, rolling it around on his tongue. "Quite a handle, sugar."
"It's M.J. Legally M.J., because that's what I wanted. And if you ever call me any form of Magdalen Juliette other than M.J., I will personally and with great pleasure skin you alive."
She would, too, he thought with a quick, crooked grin. "If you don't want me using it, why did you tell me?"
She took a step toward him. "I told you that, and I'm telling you this, because my name is M. J. O'Leary, and I know what I want."
His eyes flared and burned away the grin. "You're sure of that?"
"The second stone's knowledge. And I know. Do you?"
"Yeah." His breathing took a hitch. "It's a big step."
"The biggest."
"Okay." His palms were sweaty in his pockets, so he pulled them free. "You go first."
Her grin flashed. "No, you."
"No way. I said it first last time. Fair's fair."
She supposed it was. Angling her head, she took a good long look at him. Yes, she thought. She knew. "Okay. Let's get married."
Relishing the swift kick of joy, he tucked his thumbs in his pockets. "Aren't you supposed to ask? You know, propose? A guy's entitled to a little romance at big moments."
"You're pushing your luck." Then she laughed and locked her arms around his neck. "But what the hell—will you marry me, Jack?"
"Sure, why not?"
And when she laughed again, he caught her against his sore and battered body.
Perfect fit.