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Authors: Sherryl Woods

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General

For the Love of Pete (21 page)

BOOK: For the Love of Pete
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He gazed deep into her eyes. "Did you hear what I was saying then?"

Shaken, she nodded. She hadn't needed words to get that particular message.

"What? Say it, so I can be sure we're on the same page about that much at least."

"That you want me."

He shoved a hand through his hair. "And that's all?" he asked with evident frustration. "You just felt the wanting?"

She nodded.

"Not the love?"

Oh, how she wanted to believe in the love, but she couldn't let herself. "No," she said softly. "Not the love."

Pete regarded her wearily. "Then, darlin', I think you might want to consider the possibility that you're tone-deaf, if all you can hear is what might tear us apart, instead of the one thing that will keep us together."

He stood up, called to Davey, then gave her another of those weary looks. "I'll take you home now. Give you some time to think."

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Jo nodded. "That's probably best," she said, though being home alone with her thoughts was the last thing she really wanted.

When Davey came up, he studied them both worriedly. "Are you guys fighting?"

Jo forced a smile. "No."

"Yes," Pete said, then ruffled his son's hair. "But we'll settle it. That's a promise."

"I hope so," Davey said, his gaze on Jo. '"Cause I want you to spend time with me and Dad next time I come."

"If I'm here, it's a date," Jo promised.

But if she had even half a grain of sense left in her head, she'd make sure to be long gone.

For the first time in the two years that he and his son had been separated, Pete regretted the boy's presence. He wanted to settle this thing with Jo before it got all blown out of proportion and she did something they'd both regret. But he knew he simply had to backburner that conversation until he got back from Richmond on Monday. It made the rest of Sunday and the trip down to Kelsey's drag out like water torture.

They were halfway down there when Davey announced, "Dad, I've been thinking."

"About?"

"Jo."

He glanced over at his son. "Oh?"

"I think she's mad at us."

"Not us, kiddo. Me."

"How come?"

"I'm not entirely sure, but I'll straighten it out."

"And she'll be there when I come back?"

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"Yes," Pete said. She would be there, no matter what he had to do to guarantee it. "You really liked her, didn't you?"

"Uh-huh."

"What did you like about her?" he asked curiously. Pete knew what he loved?her strength, her humor, her gentleness?but those weren't the things that would appeal to a six-year-old.

Davey's expression turned thoughtful. "Well, she's pretty and all that, but I liked it best that she didn't care about getting all messed up. She played with me and just had fun. Mom's always worried about her hair and stuff."

Pete sighed. He didn't want Davey to start making this kind of comparison. 'There's nothing wrong with your mom wanting to look nice."

"I know," Davey replied. "But there's nothing wrong with having fun, either."

"No," Pete agreed. "No, there's not."

He was still thinking about that when he got back home that night. Jo had brought fun back into both their lives. He wasn't going to let that go without a fight, especially not over some silly argument he didn't entirely understand. Underlying truths be damned, he thought viciously. He intended to talk to her in plain English until she got how much he loved her.

But before he could call her, he noticed that the answering machine light was blinking like crazy. He pressed the button for messages as he took off his jacket.

"We need to talk," Kelsey announced, her tone petulant. "Who is this woman that Davey was going on and on about? Call me the minute you get in."

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Pete sighed. He'd anticipated this. Kelsey hated him interfering in her social life, but she had no such qualms about involving herself in his. And it went without saying that Davey would inadvertently get her all riled up with his glowing remarks about the new woman in Pete's life.

Up till now, there hadn't been many opportunities for her to ask questions. The few women he'd dated since the divorce had merely been passing through. Because of that, he'd kept them away from his son. He hadn't wanted Davey to go through some perpetual cycle of attachment and loss the way he had as a boy.

He'd broken that rule with Jo. Though she was still cautious with him?more than cautious, if yesterday was anything to go by?he knew she was in his life to stay. He wanted her and his son to get to know each other and to get along.

Until this moment, listening to his ex-wife's tone, he'd been ecstatic at how well the weekend had gone. Jo and Davey had taken to each other at once. It had never occurred to Pete to tell Davey not to mention Jo to his mother. Even if it had, he wouldn't have done it. Teaching a kid to keep secrets from one parent or another just to keep the peace was flat-out wrong.

Based on the six messages that were more of the same and because he knew his ex-wife would only keep calling until she got the answers she wanted, he grabbed a bottle of beer from the fridge and called her back.

"What's up?" he asked, as if she hadn't already made that plain in her message.

"Who's Jo?"

"A friend."

202 202FOR THE LOVE OF PETE

"I thought you said you weren't going to parade your women in front of Davey."

He bit back a sharp retort about her parade of men through their son's life. "For starters, I don't have a lot of women in my life, so there's never going to be a parade."

She hesitated, then asked, "What's different about this one?"

Before he could answer, she gasped. "Oh my God, Jo?she's the one, isn't she? Jo's the reason our marriage fell apart. Jo, what was her name? Something Italian. D'Angelo? That's it. Is that who you were with this weekend? The woman who broke up our marriage?"

Pete was stunned by the totally unfounded accusation. "What the hell are you talking about, Kelsey? Our marriage fell apart because you were unhappy. You didn't want to stay here, and I wouldn't move."

"I didn't want to stay there because 1 knew you were still in love with someone else and that everything in that stupid place was a reminder of her. The whole town knew I was your second choice."

Pete clamped a tight lid on his temper. "You're revising history, Kelsey. I did everything I could think of to make our marriage work. I never once threw some other woman in your face."

"But she was there just the same," she insisted stubbornly. "Don't you think 1 knew all about your sweet little summer romance with that girl from Boston? The whole county knew about it. Even when we made love, I knew she was in your head. You couldn't stop talking about her. The two of you were sickening."

"And yet you couldn't wait to sleep with me," he reminded her.

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"I wasn't in that bed alone, hot stuff," she reminded him. "You didn't put up much of a fight."

Pete sighed. He hated it, but there was no denying what she said. Rehashing it again wasn't going to get them anywhere. "Kelsey, all of that happened a long time ago. It doesn't matter now."

"It does if she's the woman you introduced to our son. I won't have it, Pete," she said heatedly. "I won't allow you to humiliate me like that. It was bad enough that everyone in town knew about her, that they knew you'd only married me because of the baby."

"How am I humiliating you?" he asked, genuinely baffled by her spin on his relationship with Jo. "We've been divorced for a couple of years now. How many men have you introduced into Davey's life? Have I ever suggested that you're doing it to humiliate me? My only complaint is when you neglect him while you're courting your latest conquest."

"This is different," she insisted. "This Jo is the woman who came between us."

"I think you have that backward," he said. "The truth is that you're the woman who came between me and Jo. That was my fault, and I took responsibility for it. When you got pregnant, I married you."

"Only out of obligation," she repeated.

"Yes," he said, seeing little point in sugarcoating the truth when they both knew it. "But I wanted it to work, Kelsey. I gave it my all. You can't possibly deny that."

"Really? How many times were you thinking of her when we made love? Don't you think I knew that? You'd get this faraway, sad look in your eyes, and I always knew you wished I was her."

204 204FOR THE LOVE OF PETE

The conversation was spinning wildly out of control, and Pete was tired of it. She wouldn't believe anything he said anyway, not when she was in this bitter, accusatory mood.

"I've got to go," he said. "We'll discuss this some other time."

"I won't let you see Davey if you insist on having her around," she threatened.

It was the last straw. His temper snapped. "Don't you dare try to use that boy as a weapon," Pete retorted furiously. "Two can play at that game, Kelsey, and trust me, if I play, I'll play to win."

He hung up before she could reply to that, then threw the half-empty beer bottle across the room. It shattered against the wall, sending glass and golden liquid raining down.

"Pete?"

He turned to find Jo staring at him, her eyes wide with shock.

"I'm sorry," he said tightly. "I didn't know you were there."

"I just got here. I knocked, but when you didn't answer, I came on in. I hope that's okay."

"Yeah, sure," he said, raking a hand through his hair. "Why are you here?"

She regarded him hesitantly. "I came over because I thought we ought to talk, but if this is a bad time, that can wait. What on earth happened just now? Who were you yelling at?"

"Just a little chat with my ex-wife," he said, forcing a light note into his voice. "She knows how to push my buttons."

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"Want to talk about it?"

"Absolutely not," he said flatly. "Now come here and kiss me."

She gave him a skeptical look. "Don't you think we should clean up the mess first?" She gestured toward the puddle of beer and broken glass. "That one, and the mess I made of things yesterday morning?"

He glanced at the glass and liquid on the floor. It could wait. So could the conversation, if her being here meant she was reconsidering that stupid underlying truth garbage. There was one way to find out.

"We could mop up the mess," he agreed. "Or we could go upstairs and make love. You tell me which sounds like more fun."

"Going upstairs, definitely," she said, but she still didn't move. Nor did she accept his outstretched hand. "But I think we should talk first. About what happened yesterday morning and about what happened just now. Something tells me the latter is even more important."

"Why?"

"Because it's real life, Pete. You can't protect me from the bad stuff. And I know you're still angry about what happened yesterday. Let's get it all out in the open. We can't heal things and move on if we don't face them."

"I'm not trying to protect you from anything," he said defensively.

She gave him a disbelieving look. "Do you honestly think I don't see that you're determined not to ever let anything hurt me again? You're trying to make up for what happened seven years ago. You want to push all of that into some hole and bury it, pretend it never happened."

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"So what if I am? What's wrong with wanting you to be happy?"

"Nothing. I love you for trying, but unfortunately life simply can't be all smooth sailing. We have to be able to weather all of it."

"We're not making love, are we?" he asked, resigned.

She grinned at him. "Not just yet. You pick up the glass, and I'll get some soapy water to clean up the mess."

"You know that's the symptom, not the issue, don't you?"

"Of course, but you can tell me all about it while we work."

He laughed at the idea that he could explain it all so easily. "It's not that big a mess. It won't take that long to clean it up."

She studied him quizzically. "Is it such a big issue, then?"

He snagged her hand and pulled her into his arms, then rested his chin on her head. "It could be, if we let it turn into one."

"Then we won't let it," she said simply.

He gazed into her eyes, surprised. Her doubts of the day before seemed to have vanished. "Easy as that?"

"If we face it together," she said at once. "That's what I was going to tell you. That's the conclusion I reached."

And seeing the confidence and love shining in her eyes, Pete was almost able to convince himself that she was right. And so he sat down, pulled her onto his lap and told her about his fight with Kelsey.

Jo had never let herself think that much about Pete's ex-wife. She hadn't wanted to think about the woman

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who'd stolen him away from her. Not that Pete was blameless. They'd acknowledged that and moved on.

But Kelsey Prescott Catlett was some faceless woman who was no longer a part of his life, beyond her role as the mother of his child. That's the way Jo wanted to keep it. She could see, after listening to Pete, that it wasn't going to be that easy.

"She sounds jealous," she sajd when he was through.

"Don't be ridiculous."

"What do you think is behind her reaction?" she asked.

He considered the question, his expression thoughtful, then shrugged. "Okay, she's jealous, but that's absurd. She wanted the divorce. She's been dating ever since she got to Richmond. Why, all of a sudden, is she all bent out of shape about me having someone in my life."

"Because it's me," she said simply. "I suppose I can't really blame her. It's another one of those reality checks like the one that got to me on Sunday. We have to deal with them, Pete. They're not going to go away."

He gave her a questioning look. "But I thought you were."

"A momentary panic attack," she said.

"How'd you get over it?"

"I tried to imagine my life without you in it. I couldn't." Saying that made her vulnerable, which terrified her, but it was the truth. He needed to know it.

BOOK: For the Love of Pete
6.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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