And Babies Make Five / At Long Last, a Bride: And Babies Make Five. Judy Duarte
monopolize his time.
“Thanks for your giving me your opinion,” she said.
“Anytime. If there’s anything that’s a given about me, it’s that you can count on me to have an opinion.”
She smiled as she walked him to the door.
“For what it’s worth,” he said, as he reached for the brass knob, “I actually liked the farm print best.”
“But you said it was boyish.”
“I figured you for bunnies, so I told you what I thought you wanted to hear.”
“Why’s that?”
He studied her a moment, as though trying to decide whether to level with her or not, then he winked. “Because you have the prettiest smile I’ve ever seen.”
She couldn’t tell if he was teasing or serious or both. And when he reached for the doorknob to let himself out, she was more intrigued by him than ever.
Chapter Five
After their little talk last night, Samantha decided that she really ought to avoid Hector, especially since she was finding herself more drawn to him, more intrigued by what he had to say. More attracted, she realized. How crazy was that?
After all, he couldn’t possibly be interested in dating a woman with a ready-made family, especially when one plus one equaled five. So after a long, restless night that had her dreaming about all kinds of scenarios—including three darling little babies and a tall, dark and handsome daddy—she decided to keep to herself from now on.
And she would have done just that, if Hector hadn’t rung her doorbell again early the next morning.
She’d been up for hours, or so it seemed, yet she hadn’t expected anyone to stop by. When she’d swung open the door, her breath had caught when she’d spotted him standing on the stoop in a pair of khaki slacks and a pale blue golf shirt. She remembered that he had always packed his golf bag into the back of his trunk every Saturday morning before taking off for the bulk of the day. And that she’d seen his clubs in his foyer yesterday.
So why had he stopped by her house before heading to the country club?
“I’m on my way to the grocery store to pick up a few cleaning supplies and wondered if you needed anything.”
“Do you always dress so nicely when you’re scrubbing counters and mopping floors?” she asked.
He slipped her a crooked smile, and her heart slammed against her chest. “I have a woman who comes to work for me on Saturdays, and she told me last week that I was out of window spray and cleanser. But I forgot to pick it up, so I’m off to get it now, before she arrives.”
Her gaze traveled the length of him, then back to those intoxicating brown eyes. “What time do you play today?”
His grin brightened. “In an hour. So it’ll be a quick trip to the market. How’d you know that I was playing golf?”
“Just a lucky guess.”
“So,” he said, nodding toward his car, which was idling in the drive, “do you need anything while I’m at the market?”
“No, I’m okay. But thanks for asking.”
“No problem.”
As he headed to his vehicle, she turned to go back into the house, then thought of something she’d forgotten to pick up yesterday.
“Wait a minute,” she said. “I’m going to empty out the closet in the room that’s going to be the nursery, and I’ve already run out of boxes. Would you mind asking if they have any to spare?”
“Will do.”
He took off, and she went back inside. When he returned with more boxes than she needed, he asked if she wanted any help.
“No, thanks,” she said, even though she hated to deal with the heavy boxes. “Go on and play golf. I’ll be okay.”
But she wasn’t exactly okay. She was feeling way too many yearnings for her handsome neighbor. And she really needed to get her mind off Hector and back on nesting.
The next morning, when he spotted her sweeping the stoop, he crossed the lawn, took the broom away from her and finished the work himself.
If truth be told, she was glad that he had. It was getting harder and harder to do some of the simplest things.
But she had to stop relying on her neighbor to do them for her.
Three days later, when her doorbell rang, she didn’t need to peer out the peephole to see who it was. Hector, it seemed, had taken her on as some kind of pro bono case.
And in the past week and a half, he’d taken her recycling bins to the curb on trash-collection days, which was especially surprising since he wasn’t home very much and rarely had items that needed to be recycled—at least, not that she was aware of.
His kindness touched her, of course. And so did his boyish smile, the unruly hank of hair that flopped onto his forehead and the heart-spinning scent of his woodsy cologne. Just being near Hector had her thinking all kinds of wild and crazy things, some of them not the least bit neighborly.
She liked having him come around—maybe too much. What would happen if she got a little too used to his visits? What if …?
Well, there were a lot of things that could complicate her peaceful life, and she wasn’t sure that she was in any position to deal with any more than what she was already up against. And for that reason, she needed to get him, her heart and her zinging hormones back under control.
So when she swung open the door and found a smiling Hector on her stoop again, she invited him into the living room, intending to have a little heart-to-heart.
“I was just thinking,” he said. “This is a big house, and you probably shouldn’t be doing anything strenuous.”
“I’m not. The big stuff, like the moving, is over. And the Salvation Army will eventually come and take all those boxes in the garage.”
“I’m talking about scrubbing and cleaning and vacuuming. After I saw you sweeping the stoop yesterday, I called Margo, the woman who works for me. She has a free day each week, so if you’re interested, I can give you her number.”
He was concerned about her doing too much? And he was offering his cleaning lady?
Samantha wondered if Peter would be that worried about her, if he’d been alive and known they were expecting triplets.
Probably, but Hector …
She pointed to the sofa. “Why don’t you sit down for a minute.”
He complied, folding his long, lean and masculine body into the seat and stretching his arm across the backrest. “What’s the matter?”
“I really appreciate your thoughtfulness, Hector. But I guess it just seems …”
“Weird?”
“No. Not that. It’s just …”
“Unusual?”
“Yes, that’s what I’m getting at. I mean, you’re just a neighbor. And, well, you didn’t even like my husband.”
“I wasn’t fond of him, if that’s what you mean. But I’m sorry that he died. Sorry that you lost him.”
“Thanks. I’m sorry, too.”
His sympathy surprised her, yet it seemed to make it all better. Or maybe it made it worse. She struggled with her reactions to him, both physical and emotional. But she’d be darned if she knew what to do with them, other than put a stop to their budding friendship—or whatever it was—before things took a complicated turn.
“I’m