The Pregnant Bride Wore White. Susan Crosby
the hall. “I usually have to get up a couple of times during the night,” she said, gesturing toward the only bathroom in the house.
He wasn’t sure why she was telling him that. “Do you need a light kept on?”
“No. I just didn’t want to startle you.”
“I appreciate the warning. I’ll keep my boxers on so I don’t startle you.”
She laughed, the pitch almost hurting his ears. He realized he hadn’t heard her laugh before. It was a good sound, a healthy one. After months of hearing only men’s voices, men who spoke only Spanish, her laugh seemed musical.
She grinned. “Feel free to be comfortable, whatever that means to you.”
“And since you’ve already seen it all…”
“That’s not true,” she said softly. “It was dark. I only…felt.”
A heavy curtain of silence dropped between them, the moment of humor gone because of a memory that could never fade. A child would be born of it.
He’d only felt, too—Keri’s long, lean body and firm breasts and smooth rear. Her mouth—God, her mouth.
As if she heard his thoughts, she pressed her fingers to her lips. He stared.
“Good night, Jake,” she said, a little breathless, then hurried down the hall.
He didn’t expect to sleep. Earlier he’d fallen asleep instantly in his own bed, but it was dark now, and quiet. No sounds of men snoring, or shouting as they slept. No witnessing violence done to others, unable to stop it without blowing his cover. He’d had to keep the bigger picture in mind.
He wished he could snap his fingers and have the memories disappear. Instead they held court in his head. After hours of pacing and prowling, he dropped onto the sofa and turned off the television, stretching out, still fully dressed, and tucking a small pillow under his head. He shoved his fingers through his hair. He needed to get it cut, take away yet another reminder of where he‘d been.
He closed his eyes but still saw too much. He probably should take the sleeping pills Donovan had gotten from Doc Saxon for him—except he needed to be able to hear the sounds around him.
He jolted as he heard a door open, then realized it was Keri. Light from the bedroom spilled into the hallway enough that he could see her glance toward the living room as she crossed to the bathroom on a whisper of sound. When she came out, she headed toward him instead of the bedroom. He closed his eyes. The last thing he wanted was to talk.
But after a few seconds he felt something being laid over him—an afghan Nana Mae had crocheted for him one Christmas. He usually kept it on the back of an overstuffed chair.
Jake felt the warmth of the blanket even before she turned away. It smelled…clean.
“Keri.” He propped himself up on an elbow.
“Oh, I’m so sorry. Did I wake you?”
“I was awake. Be glad I was.”
She frowned. “Why?”
“It’s risky, okay?”
“What? To touch you? I didn’t touch you.”
“The blanket did. Just don’t do it. For your own sake.”
“All right.”
“Have you slept?” he asked.
“Mostly, yes.”
“Even though you’re in a new place with a man you barely know and are about to give birth?”
“I’ve had nightmares for months. Tonight I didn’t.” She gave a little wave and left.
Nightmares. Were hers anything like his? Did she wake up swinging?
Unable to fall asleep, he turned on the television again, settling on a rerun of Friends. He must’ve slept a little, but as soon as the sky lightened, he grabbed his car keys and left the house, needing to get out where he could breathe. Needing not to talk to Keri until he’d given more thought to their situation, wanting to reconcile his memory of her and how he’d clung to it all this time, with the facts before him—that she was here in his hometown. And pregnant.
Primal, protective instincts were overtaking him. He needed to think more logically about everything. Which meant not making small talk first thing this morning.
He drove without a destination, then ended up at Joe’s place. Donovan would be bunking with their youngest brother.
Jake pulled up beside the house, one Joe had shared with Dixie for the better part of ten years, on and off. Off again now, though. Jake didn’t mind waking Joe up, but he would’ve thought twice about dropping in so early had Dixie still cohabited.
Joe was already up, however, walking through his garden, a mug of coffee in hand as he deadheaded flowers. His job as a landscaper started early each day.
“Got some more of that?” Jake asked, indicating the mug.
“Donny’s here. What do you think?”
Which meant there was always a pot being brewed.
Jake followed his brother into the house, then into the kitchen. “The place looks good. You painted the outside.”
“Yeah. Group project.”
“Family project.”
Joe nodded, a slight, aggrieved smile on his face. He took a mug from the cupboard, poured Jake a cup then they both leaned against the counter and sipped.
“Looks like you’re doing most of the gardens in town, Joe. It’s all photo worthy.”
“I have a crew of twenty now. We’re busy all the time. Not just residential but quite a few commercial accounts. It’s steady and profitable.”
Jake wondered at Joe’s low-key responses and tone. He used to be the liveliest brother, the most outgoing and talkative. He looked the same—his shower-wet brown hair was tied back in the ponytail he’d had since he was fourteen, and he wore a T-shirt, shorts and work boots, as usual—but something had changed.
“Think Dixie would cut my hair?” Jake asked.
“I’m sure of it, but are you sure you want her to? She’ll ask questions.”
“Doesn’t mean I have to answer them.”
Joe shifted slightly. “Thanks for having Donny tell me what was going on. I worried less. Sort of,” he added with a small smile.
“I figure Donny’s in risky situations often enough, too. I wanted more than just him to know what was happening. Who to contact. You’re the only one who came to mind. I know a lot of extra responsibility has been put on you, Joe, since Dad died.”
“I can handle it.”
“I know that, too. I just wanted you to know I appreciate it.”
“Me, too,” Donovan said, coming into the kitchen and heading straight for the coffeepot. “I don’t say it often enough.”
“True.” Turning to Jake, Joe said, “Speaking of extra responsibility and what you’ve been doing these past months, I don’t know how Keri fits in. Where she fits in.”
Jake hoped by talking about it, some of the memories would fade. He was tired of living with them all the time. “Keri and I were kidnapped together, along with the man she’d been private nurse to for several months.”
“Kidnapped? And this is the first I’m hearing about it?”
“I’m telling you now, Joe. Hidalgo Escobar, Keri’s patient, had been on the waiting list for a liver transplant for months.”
“In Venezuela?”
“Yes. I was on an