Falling For Zoe (The Camerons of Tide's Way #1) (12 page)

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Authors: Skye Taylor

Tags: #Clean & Wholesome, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Fiction, #Forever Love, #Christian, #Religious, #Faith, #Inspirational, #Spirituality, #Bachelor, #Single Woman, #Hearts Desire, #Patriotic, #Series, #Cameron Family, #Tides Way, #Best Friends, #Friends To Lovers, #Pregnant, #Emotional, #Seaside Town, #House Repairs, #Neighbors, #Contractor, #Volunteer Firefighter, #Ex-Wife, #Trust Issues, #North Carolina

BOOK: Falling For Zoe (The Camerons of Tide's Way #1)
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“You are a remarkable woman, Zoe Callahan.”

Zoe grinned. “Yes, I am.”

There was that spark of sassy confidence that so attracted Jake. He’d rarely met a woman who seemed so unaware of how attractive she was, and yet could still be so self-possessed and happy with herself.

He was still marveling over the mystery of Zoe when she veered away from the lobby as they stepped off the elevator. She stopped in front of a closed door and looked back at Jake, her mouth turned down in an exaggerated pout.

“We’ll have to come back.”

“We?” Celia was his problem. In spite of Zoe’s interest and support, this was his struggle.

“Well, one of us anyway.” Zoe shrugged, ignoring Jake’s pointed
we
. “The office is usually closed when I come by after work, too. But maybe on my lunch break I could run over and ask for you.”

As they headed back toward the lobby, Jake considered her offer. Considered what it might be like to have someone who shared his fears and heartache. Wasn’t that what friends were for?

“Isn’t that a little out of your way?”

Zoe shrugged, still smiling. “I like to get out of the office on a nice day. Any excuse is as good as another.”

The automatic doors swished open, and they stepped out into the sunshine. “Well, then, considering the construction project I’m on right now is on the other side of Wilmington, I’ll take you up on it. Thanks.”

As they stepped off the curb to cross to his van, Zoe looked up at him with an oddly curious expression on her face. She was probably surprised by his sudden capitulation. He certainly was. But something else seemed to be lurking in that clear hazel gaze. His heart suddenly skipped a few beats.

Then she tripped, and his heart slammed into overdrive.

“Zoe!” Jake reached for her, but connected with nothing.

Zoe sprawled onto the pavement with a grunt. Her purse skittered ahead of her. Jake dropped to his knees beside her. “Are you okay?” It was his fault. She had been looking at him, not where she was going. “Where are you hurt?”

Zoe rolled over and sat up. “Another ruined pair of pantyhose.” She touched her knee where it had begun to ooze bright drops of blood. “Ouch.”

Jake fumbled for his handkerchief, then began blotting the wound. His heart still raged wildly in his chest, and his brain had begun processing the possible ramifications of Zoe splatting onto her belly like that.

“Help me up, Jake.” Zoe reached for his hand. “This is embarrassing.”

Jake ignored the outstretched hand and scooped her up into his arms. He strode toward his car, wondering if he should suggest she call her doctor.

“Jake? Put me down. Now it’s getting really embarrassing.”

He set her on her feet next to the van and hurried back to grab her purse. “Here.” He pressed it into her hands. He pulled his keys out of his pocket and reached past her to unlock the car. His hand shook. When his second effort to put the key into the lock failed, Zoe’s hand closed around his and took the keys away. She unlocked the door and handed them back.

“Are you sure you’re good to drive?” She looked at him quizzically.

“I’m fine to drive. You’re the one who just took a spill. What if something happened to the baby?”

“I’m mortified, if you must know. But Molly is fine.”

“But that fall—”

“I’m not a piece of porcelain, Jake. I’m just . . .” Zoe’s voice trailed off, and the look of embarrassment left her face. Her hazel eyes went dark, and she swallowed audibly.

In the next instant he was kissing her as if he might never stop. He cradled her face with both hands and angled her head, opening his mouth and running his tongue along her lips.

When she responded, his blood raged through his body, humming and singing with building excitement. He nibbled and teased. Zoe leaned into him and teased back. He forgot where he was. He forgot about the spill she’d taken. He forgot he wasn’t supposed to be kissing her.

When she crooned softly in her throat, the world came crashing back. Jake swallowed hard and drew back. Slowly he let his hands drop to his sides and stepped back. Zoe stared at him with wide, startled eyes for several long moments. Then she wordlessly folded herself into the van.

Jake shut the door and headed around to his side of the van, but had to stop halfway there to catch his breath. He’d known Zoe Callahan was a dangerously attractive woman the first day they’d met. He just hadn’t known how dangerous.

Zoe let her head fall back against the headrest, eyes shut tight. Slowly her heart eased off its frantic runaway pace, and her lungs began to function normally again. She felt totally disoriented and very close to tears.

Just a half dozen heartbeats ago, she’d been caught up in the most incredible kiss she’d ever experienced. Although their bodies had not even touched, there had been nothing but passion in Jake’s kiss this time. His hands had been warm and gentle on her face, making her feel treasured and appealing in a way she’d never felt before. And all the while his mouth had been doing things that made her ache everywhere with hungry desperation.

Then he’d backed away so quickly that if she hadn’t had one hand braced against his chest and the other clutching the top of the van’s door, she’d have fallen on her face.

She expected to hear the door open and then feel the car dip as Jake hauled his big frame into the driver’s seat. But the silence lengthened and nothing happened. Zoe opened her eyes.

Jake stood with one hand on the hood of the van gazing down at his feet.
He’s probably wondering what on earth possessed him to kiss the klutz. Maybe he’s rehearsing another apology
.
Or maybe he’s feeling all the same things I am and wondering why he stopped himself.

What is it that keeps coming between us?

Molly kicked hard. Zoe jerked her gaze down to her belly and watched as some part of Molly’s anatomy arced across the protruding surface of Zoe’s blue, jersey-covered stomach. Then the baby was still again.

Is that what’s stopping you, Jake? Another man’s baby?
Zoe pressed her palms against her eyes and gulped back a sudden sob.

Life wasn’t fair. She’d finally met the man she’d been destined to fall in love with, and she was pregnant with another man’s baby. A man she hadn’t been able to love, and who’d lost interest in her the moment he found out she was pregnant. Jake could hardly be blamed for not wanting to take on the responsibility for another man’s child
.

He can’t be blamed for not wanting me either.

Chapter 20

ZOE STIRRED, NOT wanting to let go of the dream.

Moonlight lit the beach with a soft aura of romance. Waves chuckled against the shore and sent sheets of water running up the sandy slope, but their blanket was their private little oasis in this shadowy land of enchantment.

Jake was touching her, exploring the contours of her body, his hand stopping briefly to caress the rounded bulge of baby and belly. It didn’t seem to matter that she was pregnant and her body distended with the growing baby inside. The love in Jake’s eyes was hot with passion, and he was telling her . . .

What had he been telling her?

Zoe opened her eyes. Immediately the dream retreated into wispy recollection. No beach. No moonlight. No Jake. She looked about the room and wondered what had disturbed her. It was still dark out and not time to get up yet. Maybe it was that other perk of pregnancy—several nightly trips to the toilet.

Zoe climbed out of bed, carefully flexed her skinned knee, and padded into the bathroom. Afterward, she washed her hands, filled a glass with water, and took a drink. Then she headed back to bed. Jet lay stretched across the hallway at the top of the stairs, which seemed odd because the dogs usually slept downstairs. Then Zoe noticed light seeping out from under the door of the nursery. She didn’t remember leaving the light on in there. She definitely hadn’t closed the door.

With her heart thumping erratically, she tiptoed to the door and silently pushed it open. Jet got to her feet and leaned against Zoe’s leg. Celia sat in Zoe’s rocking chair, eyes closed, humming so softly the sound was almost inaudible. Zoe’s heart lurched. The change of meds apparently wasn’t helping. Jake was going to be crushed.

“Celia?” Zoe moved slowly into the room. She didn’t want to startle the older woman. “What are you doing? It’s the middle of the night.”

Celia looked up at Zoe, her eyes misted as if she were seeing something in her memory. “Martin’s baby was crying. Martin wasn’t here to take care of her, so I came to help.” She glanced down at her arms.

That’s when Zoe noticed that Celia held Zoe’s threadbare old teddy in her arms as if it were an infant. She rocked gently, crooning to the teddy bear. Zoe vacillated between staying and talking with Celia in hopes that the present would return to her consciousness, or hurrying back to her own bedroom to call Jake. Zoe opted for calling Jake.

Within minutes, Jake was at her door, dressed in pajama bottoms and a T-shirt with his hair standing on end. “I’m sorry,” he said as he hurried through the door Zoe held open for him. “How long has she been here?”

“I don’t have any idea. I was asleep when she came in. Did Martin have any kids?”

Jake halted abruptly and glanced down at Zoe with a frown furrowing his brow. “Yeah. Marsha’s cousin, Donna. Why?”

Zoe turned toward the stairs. “Celia’s in the nursery rocking my old teddy bear. She thinks it’s Martin’s baby. And she said Martin wasn’t here to care for her.”

Jake started up the stairs to the room he’d recently painted for Zoe’s baby. Neither of them had known the room had been used as a nursery before, but apparently Celia had. “Donna is considerably older than Marsha. She was born after her father left for Korea. Martin never even knew he had a daughter.”

Jake felt a gnawing despair growing in his gut. Celia would have been just a teenager at the time, but she must have been involved in caring for the infant. Now her memories, receding ever further into the past, were of a time even before she’d married Martin’s younger brother, Richard. The new medicine wasn’t proving to be as effective as the first one had been. Things were spiraling out of control.

Celia looked up when Jake slipped into the room. She still held the bear. Her face registered momentary confusion and then cleared. “Martin! I knew you’d come home as soon as you knew Donna needed you.”

Jake knelt in front of his mother-in-law, his heart aching with sadness. “I’m not Martin,” he said as gently as he could. “I’m Jake.”

Celia reached to touch his cheek. Her lips curved up in a smile of infinite sweetness. “Of course you are.” Almost immediately her face clouded again, and she looked around her in confusion. “Why am I here?”

“You came to check on Zoe. You were worried about her, but she’s fine, and it’s time to go home now.” Jake took the bear from Celia’s arms and handed it to Zoe. Then he put a hand under Celia’s elbow and urged her to her feet.

“Is there anything I can do?” Zoe hovered, looking worried and helpless. As helpless as he felt.

Jake shook his head. “Thanks for calling me instead of the cops when you found someone in your house in the middle of the night.” He guided Celia toward the stairs.

“The dogs never barked, so I never really thought to be afraid. I just wondered why the light was on. And of course, as soon as I saw it was Celia, who else would I call?”

“You are a remarkable woman, Zoe Callahan.” Jake followed Celia down the stairs. “I hope she didn’t ruin the rest of the night for you.”

Zoe held the door while Jake ushered Celia out into the night. “Don’t worry about it. I won’t have any problem getting back to sleep. I never do.”

“Well, good night. And thanks. I—” He hesitated, wanted to say something more, but what was there to say? He’d said thanks. And good night. But she gazed up at him with an eager, expectant look in her lovely hazel eyes. He almost kissed her, but stopped himself before impulse became action. “See you tomorrow, maybe.” Then he hurried after Celia.

JAKE STARED UP into the shadowy darkness of his bedroom, hands folded behind his head, listening to the soft sounds of Celia sleeping next door in Ava’s bedroom. Safe for now. He had roused Ava and sent her to sleep in Celia’s bed for the remainder of the night, then convinced Celia to sleep in Ava’s bed. He felt easier being close enough to hear if Celia wandered again. But what about tomorrow night? And the night after that? He couldn’t stay awake every night listening. And what about the times he got called out to a fire?

He closed his eyes. They were heavy with weariness, but sleep was far away. Visions of Parisian posters flitted through his memory, taunting him with heartbreaking choices and promises not kept.

Jake rolled over and punched his pillow to fluff it up. He pressed his face and tired eyes into the cool percale fabric, but the images didn’t go away. He rolled onto his side and bent his knees.

Abruptly he lifted his head. He couldn’t hear Celia. He slid his feet to the floor and crossed the room in three strides, passed through the bathroom, and slanted his head against the partially open door to the next room.

Total silence.

Then he thought he heard the rustle of bedclothes. He stuck his head all the way into Ava’s room and heaved a sigh of relief to see the small irregular shape of Celia facing away from him. Silently he retreated to his own room again. He stood at the window, staring across the lawn to the fence that separated his yard from Zoe’s, remembering her gentle insistence that keeping Celia safe might be a difficult decision, but it would be the loving choice if the new meds didn’t work.

And it was clear they weren’t working. Celia’s doctor had increased the dose, but even that attempt to halt the course of the disease had had little effect. Jake had been hoping for another remarkable reprieve like the first medication they’d tried almost three years ago. What could have triggered this seemingly sudden decline after nearly three relatively stable years?

The words to a familiar Psalm filtered into Jake’s head. “
The Lord is my shepherd
 . . .” he muttered the words out loud. “So lead me. Tell me what I should do. I’ve got all these questions and no answers.”

Then it occurred to Jake that perhaps tonight’s misadventure had been his answer. Perhaps the answers had been around him all along.

Two days ago, he’d come in from mowing the lawn and been assaulted by the reek of burning plastic. Dashing for the kitchen with his heart in his throat and his cell phone out ready to dial 911, he’d discovered the source of the stench with a mixture of impatience and dismay. Celia had tried to reheat a leftover serving of lasagna. But rather than putting the plastic container in the microwave as she had always done before, she’d turned on the regular oven. The plastic had melted of course. It had dripped down through the oven rack and plopped onto the bottom of the oven in big soft drops where little blue flames danced with merry abandon. Celia herself had forgotten all about the snack she’d been reheating and had wandered off to the den and
Judge Judy
.

Jake returned to his bed and flopped down wearily. He thought about the posters again—all the places Celia had dreamed of visiting lining the pale green walls of the Safe Haven Alzheimer Unit. He thought about the attentive maroon-clad staff chatting and visiting with the residents, joking with them and making them smile. He thought about the fact that Zoe had known about Safe Haven, had visited it often, and knew the people who ran it. And more importantly, he considered the phone call he’d had from the director just before quitting time yesterday to let him know that a room would become available in two weeks if he was still interested.

Jake closed his eyes and tried to will away the problem and let sleep come.

It seemed like just moments later he jerked to wakefulness again, his shirt soaked with sweat and his heart hammering. With wide, aching eyes, he stared into the dark, but instead of his familiar bedroom walls, he saw only Zoe’s frightened face. Her terrified voice echoed in his brain.

“I think the baby is coming, and it’s too soon.”

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