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SEALed with a Ring (18 page)
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Authors:
Mary Margret Daughtridge
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SEALed with a Ring
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Chapter 30
SHE COULD HAVE ACCEPTED HIS PROPOSAL (IF YOU COULD call it that) a little more gracefully, JJ admitted to her self as she guided the Lexus into the Caruthers lot. She had found David in the kitchen cooking breakfast for Lucas. She called him into the dim family room where the blinds hadn't yet been opened, and said, "Take it or leave it? You win. I'll take it."
He had cupped her shoulders with his strong, warm hands and gazed into her face a long time, an odd look of pain tightening the corners of his eyes. "For real?"
She was ashamed of herself. Grudging acceptance was no acceptance at all. Around a strange lump in her throat, she whispered, "For real."
He
had smiled then—a sort of covered smile that wa
s really more teasing light in his eyes than movement of his face. "A marriage deal should be
sealed
," the corner of his eyebrow twitched, proving the pun was inten tional, "with a kiss."
He had taken her mouth with gentle ruthlessness, courting, seducing, tempting, each stroke of his tongue both threat of possession and promise of fulfillment.
Her breath hitched even at the memory.
The man took pride in his work—she'd grant him that.
The phone chat with Bronwyn had convinced her to accede to his demands. They weren't unreasonable, and she didn't find him repulsive. Her pride would take a beating if her heart got involved before he moved on, but that was no reason to jeopardize the well-being of those who depended on her.
Still, she hadn't expected to feel something close to lighthearted once the die was cast. Her body hummed, and she felt hope. Maybe the irrational feeling she al ways had around him, that everything was going to be all right, had finally melted away all her natural leeriness.
Regardless, going into Caruthers after being thor oughly kissed made for a novel experience.
The false summer that had made time feel suspended in the past few weeks had been washed away by the previous night's rain. The sky this morning was deep robin's egg blue, and the air was impossibly clear. All across the lot, glass and chrome and multiple colors of metal sparkled as if the whole place smiled. Overhead the blue triangle flags snapped with jaunty energy.
The salesman of the month's parking place at the door was empty, which surprised her a little. "Red" Attenborough won the coveted space two months out of three, and he didn't do it by waiting for sales to come to him. To cover the busiest times as well as give them some days off, the salesmen worked a complex rotation. Maybe she misre membered who was supposed to be in early today.
Employees and a few customers called out greetings. She answered with a wave. She stopped at the concierge desk. "Where's Red this morning?"
"He traded with Robert. Robert's son has a soccer game this afternoon."
JJ nodded, her mind already on the next thing. "All right. Get out the sunglasses, Kelly. We're going to need them today."
That night, back in his tiny garage apartment in Virginia Beach, David methodically filled a suitcase. He'd re turned only to replenish his wardrobe. He'd be back in North Carolina in the morning. He was getting married
You said take it or leave it. You win. I'll take it. That'
s what JJ had said when she came downstairs the morning after the scene in the pool.
He ought to feel more triumphant than he did.
It pays
to be a winner. Wasn't that what instructors yelled a
t trainee SEALs over and over?
David added more T-shirts to the clothes he was packing. He'd need enough for the ten days until his medical leave ran out and he'd have to return to base. A ten-day marriage. He counted on his fingers, glad no one was there to see him resort to that. Not ten, five. They wouldn't be married until Saturday.
He and JJ had presented their plan to marry to Lucas. To JJ's surprise, but not to his, Lucas had been delighted but had nixed their idea of a quick trip to a justice of the peace.
"Weddings are about bringing together a man and woman to make a new family," Lucas had said. "Dave, don't you want your brothers and sister to be with you? They'll have time off from their schools over Thanksgiving, won't they? Plenty of room. You should invite them here."
So what had been a thirty-minute deal they could have taken care of that very day, since North Carolina had no waiting period, was now going to take three days by the time they had Thanksgiving dinner, an engagement party Friday night, and the wedding on Saturday. David doubted if there was a chance in hell he'd get near JJ in all that time.
David went to his closet. He would need his sport coat. He only had one, an all-purpose navy that hadn't been worn in a year or more. Thinking it ought to go to the cleaners, he quickly checked the pockets. And pulled out a woman's thong.
With a car logo in the crucial spot.
Whoa
. Talk about hot.
The name of the car tickled at the back of his mind, but he couldn't retrieve it.
How the heck had that gotten in his pocket? It must represent a good time, and yet something about it made him uncomfortable. He tossed it on the bed and returned to his packing.
He stopped counting out sock pairs when he uncov ered the shoe box he'd shoved into the drawer after he'd gotten back from his mother's funeral. It contained per sonal items removed from his mother's house since it was going to be sold.
Not much in it, nothing he needed, so he'd forgotten it. Now he opened it. There was the watch his stepfather had given him, some old coins, some of his stepfather's arrowhead collection. And in a tiny, square, velvet covered box, a ring.
He took out the ring, replaced the lid of the shoe box, and returned it to his sock drawer. His gaze fell on the thong. Who knew where it had come from? He reopened the box and tossed it in.
"Pass the ketchup," Lucas told Ham. They were eating French fries at Hardee's. Hardee's had a twofer coupon for seniors.
Ham shoved the little cup closer to Lucas's hand. "You're making a mistake." Ham gave Lucas a squinty eyed look.
"The French fries need ketchup."
"That's not what the hell I'm talking about. You're ridin' high 'cause you think you're winning. You let JJ go through with this, you're gonna lose. Big time."
"I'm not doing it to win."
"Why then?"
"JJ has got to change while she still can. Young people think old people resist change because they're set in their ways. Fossils frozen in rocks who can't see that the world has moved on. That's not it."
"Then what is it?"
"Energy. Change requires energy. The time comes when it takes more energy than you can muster. Young people? Young people don't even know that they have energy. They think that's just the way it is. I look at JJ. Her train is ready to leave the station, and she's not on it. I gotta do this."
"Hey, JJ, how was lunch?" Kelly called from the con cierge desk.
JJ pulled down her sunglasses to give Kelly a dry look. "The Rotary Club sends their regards."
"Did you manage to leave behind any sunglasses?"
"In the ladies' room."
Kelly reached under the counter. "I have two things for you. First…" She passed JJ a sheaf of papers. "They finally located the model Mrs. Babcock was looking for. And second…" She handed over a paper back book with a magnificent masculine torso on the cover. "The girls in accounting finished Star-Spangle
d
Heart. Do you want to read it next, or should I send i
t to the detail shop?"
JJ sighed. She allowed herself a moment of longing. Reading romances was something she shared with most of her female employees, though there was rarely time anymore. "Is it good?"
"Not as good as
Twilight's Last Gleaming.
But still good."
JJ passed the colorfully jacketed book back. "Better send it to them. I don't know when I'll get a chance to read it."
In her office, JJ stowed her purse in a desk drawer, checked her makeup in the bathroom, and phoned Lauren Babcock.
"Good news, Lauren. We've located the make and model you're looking for, and it's actually at a dealer ship in Virginia Beach. You can pick it up tomorrow."
They chatted for a minute about logistics before JJ said, "There's another reason I called. I'm getting mar ried the Saturday after Thanksgiving."
Lauren was satisfyingly intrigued. "You are? Who? How? Did you get back together with what's his name?"
"Not him." JJ was enjoying drawing the moment out. She'd had to listen to people's surprise over and over as she made her bombshell announcement. It was fun to be telling someone who would see the wacky humor of the situation.
"Well then, who?"
"To a SEAL, actually. We're having a very small home wedding—family and a few friends. I know it's short notice, but I'd like for you to come."
The long, stunned pause on the other end was ev erything she wished for. The laughter, when it came, was even more. "You're getting married. To a SEAL. When I told you you needed to marry a SEAL… shoot! I thought my advice was like the old country granny's recipe for rabbit stew. 'Well,' said the granny, 'first, you catch a rabbit.'
"I should have known if I told you to get a SEAL, you'd… just… do it! I can see you walking into some commander's office and saying, 'I'd like to choose a SEAL. Send me in a selection please.'"
When Lauren had sobered, JJ asked her, "So will you come for Thanksgiving?"
"I appreciate your wanting me. As it happens, I'm spend ing Thanksgiving with my grandson. I've been invited to join Jax and Pickett and Tyler for Thanksgiving."
"Does this mean Jax has forgiven you?"
"That would be too much to hope for. It will be a long time before I earn his trust." Lauren sighed philosophi cally. "God hasn't given me any of those things I wailed and stamped my feet and demanded He give me after Danielle died, but the more I practice my serenity, the more I see He has given me much better."
There was a long pause. JJ was getting ready to wind up the call when, in an oddly shy and serious tone, Lauren went on. "JJ, you haven't told me why you're bent on avoiding a fairy-tale marriage—and I'm not asking. One of our AA slogans is 'Mind your own business.'
"Goodness knows, I'm the last person in this world to pass out relationship advice, but listen. Don't go by my experience or Danielle's. There is such a thing as love that survives marriage. Some marriages are easy; some are hard. Marriages to SEALs can be very hard. But you can't judge them by that. The issue is not how hard they are, but whether they are worth it. Don't turn down love."
Chapter 31
"HARRIS AND I WANT TO TALK TO YOU." DAVID'S SISTER, Eleanor, spoke from the doorway of the bedroom David had been assigned in Lucas's house. Her round blue eyes were grim, the soft line of her lips spoiled by tight grooves at the corners.
Behind her stood her twin, Harris. Both were already dressed for the wedding. Elle's simple blue dress brought out her blue eyes and fair skin. Everything about Elle was round. Round face, round cheeks, and a pleasing roundness to her figure. David saw a resemblance to their mother he'd never noticed before.
Harris wore a brown tweed sport coat, a little baggy at the elbows. Being fraternal, the twins looked no more alike than any brother and sister. Neither looked at all like dark-haired, olive-skinned David, a circumstance that had made people ask more than once if one of them was adopted.
David stopped tying his own tie to wave them in.
"We don't believe you're in love," Elle stated flatly once they were inside. "We think you're only doing this for us."
David caught Harris's eye. "You've seen JJ," he grinned man to man. "Does it look like I'm sacrificing myself?"
"Deal with
me," Elle snapped. "Stop making joke
s and skipping away. I don't understand what's going on here."
"What's to understand? Men and women get married all the time."
"Yeah, well
you don't. You've never acted seriou
s about anybody. Mom was afraid you would never settle down. She thought it was her fault."
"Her fault? No. It was because I was too much like my da—" David caught himself before the wrong word slipped out. "My father, Carl," he amended. David was the child of his mother's first marriage. Try as he would, he'd never been able to be like the gentle, thoughtful man who was David's stepfather and the only "dad" he'd ever known.
Elle gave him one of those
I am female, and so I under
stand things forever beyond your ken
looks. "She thought it was because she sent you to military school," she ex plained, carefully spacing her words. "She was afraid you felt squeezed out of the family when Riley came along, and so you turned your back on us. And that's why you never brought any girls home for us to meet. You showed no signs of wanting a family of your own."
Squeezed out
was exactly how he had felt, but you'd think enough years had passed for his eyes not to get hot and wet when that time was mentioned. He'd been a wild kid, skipping school, into mischief, with too few outlets for his energy. When Riley with his special needs was born, his mother had been overwhelmed by a baby who screamed if you put him down, screamed if you picked him up, screamed if you changed his diapers or dressed him, and often screamed for no reason at all.
The strain on the family had to be relieved some where. The twins, Eleanor and Harris, were too young to leave home. They still needed their mother. David was a problem, and so he had to go. He, at least, was old enough to take care of himself. He'd long since accepted responsibility for being sent away.
"Nah. Mom and Dad did the right thing. Who knows what kind of a juvenile delinquent I would have turned into?" He pressed the bridge of his nose.
"Headache?"
"Trigeminal neuralgia. Maybe. It's atypical."
"Bad?"
"It's okay. It makes my eyes water."
"Can I get you anything for the pain?" Elle asked.
"I took some aspirin."
"Then can we please get back to the subject? You're marrying her for her money, and there's only one reason you would do that. We can't let you—" Elle stabbed her chest with a forefinger. "I won't let you—sacrifice yourself for us."
The backs of his eyes burned again. When had she turned from a little girl into a lovely woman capable of fiercely protecting her own? David suspected Harris would be happy not to look too closely at whatever fate was keeping him in med school.
David and JJ had a story prepared about meeting a year ago, falling in love but not being ready to commit— not until his brush with death had shown them both his mortality. They'd been given a second chance and this time were determined to take it.
He didn't want to lie to Elle—she deserved better than that.
"Mom was wrong to think I turned my back on fam ily life. I was just…" he struggled for a word that would encompass what it meant to be a SEAL—the joyful absorption that dimmed everything else in comparison. He couldn't think of one. He shrugged. "Just… busy, you know? Even though I haven't been around much, I care about you guys. I'll never be half the man Dad was, but I did learn one important thing from him. A man looks after his family."
Elle's eyes narrowed. "I was right. You
are
marrying a woman for her money—for us."
"For me. I'm already sleeping better. No matter what happens to me, Riley is secure. He will be cared for the rest of his life, and you and Harris will finish your educations."
"But you don't love her!"
"She's beautiful, smart, and kind—better than I de serve. I'm happy with my choice."
"Then what's the matter with her that she's got to buy herself a husband?" Harris asked.
"Nothing." He gave Harris a warning look. "And you'd better not ever imply anything is."
"I'm not. I'm just saying… why aren't guys throwing themselves at her feet?"
"Because I'm damn lucky, that's why."
"Hmm." Elle tilted her head. "You
want
to marry her."
"I told you I did."
Elle nodded slowly, a little smile playing around her mouth. "So you did." She hugged him and patted his cheek.
The gesture made something go all mushy all around his heart. Starting when she was a baby, Elle had always liked to pat cheeks, and she'd never outgrown it. All of a sudden he remembered how he'd sprawl on the sofa watching TV. Elle would be playing on the floor with Harris and, for no reason David could see, would leave Harris and scramble onto the sofa beside him, crawl into his lap, and pat his face. When she had his attention, she'd say, "Lub you, Dabid." She wouldn't leave him alone until he said "lub you" back.
He tightened his arms and kissed the top of her head. "Lub you, Elle."
She smiled a little mistily. "Lub Harris, too?"
He grabbed Harris's shoulder and shook it affection ately. Unlike Elle, Harris had never seemed to like hugs. "Love Harris, too. Now you two get out of here and let me finish dressing."
"I wouldn't worry. The maid of honor still isn't here."
David smothered his impatience. He was ready to have the ceremony done with, but every time he turned around, this wedding business got more complicated. Lucas had been right about one thing though. He'd in sisted on waiting until the Thanksgiving break so that David's brothers and sister could come. And David was glad. "Okay, tell everyone I'll be down in a minute."
Great-aunt Althea snagged JJ's hand and peered up at her through dirty bifocals. Althea was Lucas's sister, older by almost ten years. In her cracked, old-lady voice she snorted, "You aren't acting much like a bride, Jane Jessup. Aren't you afraid of bad luck if the groom sees your dress before the ceremony? Or has he already seen too much of you, making your wedding night an anticlimax?"
Aunt Althea cackled at her poor-taste pun. She was just trying to stir something up. It was what she did. Anytime she thought things were getting a little dull, she'd see if she couldn't make someone uncomfortable enough to start a scene. And God knows, this wedding was dull.
Trying to look on the bright side, JJ had hoped the delay while they waited for the maid of honor to arrive would give the sprinkling of guests assembled in the formal living room of her grandfather's house a chance to mingle and grow more comfortable with each other. It hadn't worked that way. They stood around in tight little knots, even though she had broken with tradition and come downstairs in her borrowed wedding dress to play the role of hostess.
As JJ sank down on the brocade sofa beside the old lady, she wracked her brain for a topic that would keep her entertained. She didn't want to talk about herself. That was the crux of the problem.
JJ didn't like to lie. Even in sticky situations, rather than manipulating, she preferred to tell the truth and live with the consequences. She had found being absolutely up front about her reasons and requirements to be a more efficient way of having events turn out the way she wanted.
She been forced over and over to lie as people in evitably asked when she and David had met, why they were marrying so suddenly, why not a large wedding. But until she had her hands firmly on the business, until she was the legal head, not just the de facto one, no one could know.
If the banks lost confidence in Caruthers' leadership, the effects would be disastrous in today's economy. If they thought Caruthers might close its doors and sell out, they would start calling in loans, which could precipitate a chain of events that would make it a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy.
She just wanted the wedding over with, which was the reason for a gathering limited to family and closest friends.
"Oh, stop being rude just to get a rise out of me, you old bat. That's none of your business."
Aunt Althea laughed gustily. Far from being offended when someone called her on her outrageousness, she ap peared to enjoy it.
"These days, pregnancy doesn't seem to make young people hurry up a marriage," she allowed. Unfortunately, since she spoke at the top of her lungs, everyone had heard her. There was a moment of silence while every one assembled pointedly didn't look at her.
The last time JJ had seen David, he had been on the other side of the room talking to his friend and fellow SEAL, Garth, and yet he seemed to appear at JJ's side. He perched on the arm of the sofa. With casual posses siveness, he dropped a kiss on the top of her head. "Are you giving my bride a hard time?" he challenged the old lady in his warm, soothing voice.
"I'm just saying—getting married in such an all-fired hurry—willing to show herself in her wedding dress be fore the wedding, she doesn't care very much how the marriage turns out."
"Dress?" He looked confused. "What's wrong with it?"
He looked so adorably, helplessly masculine, JJ couldn't help smiling up at him and patting him on the thigh. "She means letting you see the dress is supposed to be bad luck."
He gave her an intimate smile and trapped her hand. "What kind of bad luck?"
"It might jinx the marriage."
"Gotta see it sooner or later. Hard to see how it makes much difference when." He lifted her hand to his lips. "Fate brought us together. One dress won't take us apart."
JJ heard her best friend, Bronwyn, at the front door and hurriedly excused herself from Aunt Althea. The scalloped-lace, trailing skirt of the late-sixties wed ding gown belled behind JJ on the oriental carpet of the broad entry.
"Oh, Bronwyn, you're here!" she exclaimed folding her friend, damp trench coat and all, in her arms.
"Am I in time? The plane was late taking off in Baltimore, and Ham here kept having to detour around flooded streets."
JJ extended her hand to Ham, who was standing in the doorway behind Bronwyn. "Thank you for going to the airport to pick her up. I knew if anyone could get her here," she told the ex-Marine, "it would be you. I wish you would change your mind and stay for the wedding."
Ham looked down. "I cain't do that. Ain't dressed. Wouldn't be right." He slapped his grimy ball cap against his legs. "Well, you have your maid of honor now, so I guess you're ready to get married. I'll shove off." His gray eyes, set in a permanent fisherman's squint, softened. "You look beautiful, JJ. You be happy now."
A gust of damp air blew in the door as he let himself out.
Bronwyn stared at the closing door in consternation. "Are you sure this isn't a hurricane?"
"It's just a tropical depression, and, really, there's not much wind. Was the turbulence bad?" Bronwyn, for all her cool-headedness under stress in the ER, was a white knuckle flyer. "I'm sorry you had to fly in this weather."
"Don't be silly. I would have come no matter what." Her chestnut brown eyes misted as she looked at her friend. "Oh, Jay, you do look beautiful. This dress is exquisite. Where did it come from? I thought you were going to wear a suit."
"My friend, Mary Cole Sessoms, convinced me I couldn't let the wedding look like I was ashamed. This is the wedding dress she wore in 1967."
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