MM03 - Saturday Mornings (16 page)

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Authors: Peggy Webb

Tags: #the Donovans of the Delta, #the Mississippi McGills series, #bad boy heroes, #humor, #romantic comedy, #small-town romance, #Southern authors, #romance ebooks, #romance, #Peggy Webb backlist, #Peggy Webb romance, #classic romance, #comedy, #contemporary romance

BOOK: MM03 - Saturday Mornings
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If he had continued kissing her without saying a word, she would have fallen into bed with him and damned the consequences. But he was asking her. What now?

She tipped her head back and looked straight into his eyes. Lying was hard looking into those brilliant blue eyes, but she wasn't about to be the victim again. His or anybody else's.

“Now, Andrew, I say you're dealing with a different woman. A wiser woman. I'm not gullible enough to fall into your bed just to satisfy your male ego.”

He crammed his fists into his pockets and clamped down on his control. “Have I already been tried and found guilty, or are you wise enough to give me a hearing?”

“Talk, Andrew. But the minute you touch me again, I'll send you out the door.”

“It takes two to touch, my love.”

“It only takes one to maul.”

Andrew reined in his impatience. Margaret Leigh was a woman suffering great pain. Everything in her life had been turned upside-down by Bertha Adams's revelation. He'd have to remember that.

“This is not about touching.” He pulled his hands out of his pockets and held them out to her, palms up. “I promise that I won't touch you again, Margaret Leigh. I will never touch you again unless you want me to, unless you ask me to.”

“Don't hold your breath.”

“Waiting with bated breath is not my style, Margaret Leigh.” He got her robe off the chair and handed it to her. “Put this on. You distract me in that slip.”

She took the robe, and their fingertips touched. She jerked her hand back, and he smiled. While she got into her robe, he crossed the room and straddled one of Tess's Victorian chairs. Margaret Leigh smiled at the picture he made; a big, virile male dwarfing the tiny, fragile chair.

“That smile is a good start, Margaret Leigh.”

She sat on the edge of the bed, catching the ends of her robe and covering her legs the way she'd been taught. Andrew was enchanted. He'd never imagined that one day he would fall in love and want to settle down. And even if he had, he would never have imagined he'd fall for a woman like Margaret Leigh, a very proper lady with starch in her collar and fire in her veins. He laced his hands together on the carved back of the chair and smiled at her.

“Do you remember the night we went dancing, pretty one?”

How could she ever forget? She took her time answering, not wanting to make any more mistakes with Andrew McGill.

“Yes. I remember.”

“I think that's when I fell in love with you.”

“Ohhh.” She covered her mouth, and her cheeks went rosy.

Andrew considered that a good sign.

“It was the blue taffeta dress, I think. I fell in love with that dress first, and then I fell in love with you.”

“You don't have to say things like that to make me feel better. I'm a grown woman. I know that men and women sleep together without being in love with each other.”

“I told you: this is not about making love. It's about being in love.” He smiled at her again, and she almost believed him. “It took me a long time to discover that I loved you, Margaret Leigh.”

She sat very still, not trusting herself to speak. She wanted desperately to believe him, but she also wanted to protect herself from any more pain. It had taken her twenty years to find out Bertha Adams had been lying. She couldn't bear to think of spending twenty years, or even twenty days, with Andrew, believing in his love, only to discover it had all been a lie.

“That's why I followed you to Chicago. You are my love, Margaret Leigh. The woman I want to spend the rest of my life with.”

“I'm thirty-two years old, Andrew. And more than half my life has already been a lie.”

“Bertha loves you, you know. She asked me to tell you that.” He paused, waiting for a response. Getting none, he continued. “Our life will not be built on lies. It will be built on love and trust and friendship and commitment.”

She felt tears burn the back of her throat, and she swallowed hard. With her hands clenched tightly together, she faced him.

“How can I ever believe you? How can I know the truth from lies again?”

He started to rise, then sank back into the chair. He had promised not to touch her until she asked. And he would keep that promise.

“I’ll make you believe, Margaret Leigh.”

“Tess believed. Three times men pledged their love at the altar, till death do us part they all said. It wasn't true. Not any of the three times.”

“I wish love came with guarantees, but it doesn't. Do you know anything in life that does?”

“Refrigerators.”

He smiled. “Yes, but will they sing love songs and cuddle in front the fire and take long walks in the woods?”

“I think scientists are working on it.” She sobered. “Andrew, make me believe you love me.”

“I will. I’ll take you dancing. We'll dance on the streets if you want to.” His face lit up as if he were a little boy watching his first launch to the moon. “We’ll go to Orchestra Hall to hear the Chicago Symphony. We'll picnic in Jackson Park and stroll down Michigan Avenue. You love animals. We’ll go to the zoo.”

He stood up, waving his arms with enthusiasm as he talked of his courtship plans. “Tess has an open fireplace. We'll pop corn and rent movies and sing silly songs and tell foolish jokes. Or we’ll just sit on the sofa with our feet touching and read good books.” He gave her his most beguiling smile. “I’ll do anything for you, Margaret Leigh.”

“You mean that, don't you?”

He crossed to the bed and stood close enough to touch her. She could smell the scent of pines that was so much a part of him, and she could see the faint shadow of a beard because it was late and he had probably come to Chicago without taking the time to shave. She could see the shadings of gold in his hair and the way his eyes lit at the center when he was excited.

“I pledge my life on it, Margaret Leigh.” He reached for her face, and when his hand was so close she could feel its warmth, he pulled back, keeping his promise. “I love you.”

She wanted so desperately to believe him. But she didn't. She couldn't. Not yet anyhow.

“If you love me, Andrew,” she paused, closing here eyes and praying for courage, “if you love me, go home.”

He seemed to have stopped breathing. The animation faded from his face, and it became as cold and still as a corpse. Her heart beat frantically, and she wanted to reach out to him and pull him down to her breast and tell him she was sorry, she didn't mean a word she'd said. But the words hung between them, heavy and ugly, and she couldn't take them back.

He straightened up.

“Do you mean that, Margaret Leigh?”

“Yes. If you love me, you'll go home.”

“Did I imagine your response to my touch, pretty one?” His voice was soft and deadly. “Did I only dream the way your body turns to fire when I kiss you?”

“It was no dream.” She twisted her hands together. “You elicit a passionate response from me.”

“But not love?”

She looked down at the carpet, saying nothing.

“Look at me, Margaret Leigh. Look at me and tell me that you can never love me.”

She couldn't. She caught her lower lip between her teeth as her gaze swung up to his. “You said you would do anything, Andrew.”

“I made a promise, and I'll keep it.” He turned from her and strode across the room. In the doorway he stopped. Looking back, he said, “I'll keep that promise, but not forever. I won't stay away from you forever.”

Her heart beat so hard, she could hear the hammering. “Andrew,” she whispered. But he was already gone.

“I need time,” she said. “I can't possibly take on another life until I've straightened out my own. I don't even know who my father is.”

But there was no one to hear her.

Margaret Leigh was sitting on the end of the bed when Tess came back to the apartment.

“He's already gone?” Tess flopped on the bed, plumped some pillows behind her back, and rested against the headboard. “I'm disappointed. He looked like the kind of man who wouldn't take no for an answer.”

“I sent him back to Tupelo.” Margaret Leigh scooted up to the headboard and leaned back beside her sister.

“And he went? Good Lord, and all this time I was thinking how much he reminded me of Flannigan. Flannigan would never have gone away.” Tess seemed to have forgotten that he had done just that.

Margaret Leigh wasn't about to remind her. She was happy to change the subject.

“How does he remind you of Flannigan?” Margaret Leigh momentarily forgot her own problems. Mick Flannigan had been Tess's first husband, the love of her life, she'd said the day of her wedding. In the ten years since their divorce, she'd never heard Tess mention him, until tonight.

“They both have a wild streak. I’ll bet you anything Andrew McGill sunbathes naked.”

“That's exactly what I thought when I first saw him.” Margaret Leigh's cheeks colored at the memory.

“Don't you think that's absolutely delicious?”

“I thought it was wicked.”

“Hell, Maggy. Aunt Bertha knew less about men than any woman I've ever known. Everything she ever told us turned out to be wrong.” Tess was on her favorite subject, men. Relaxed and comfortable, she forgot to be cautious. “Shoot, she probably never had more than one man, and look what a mess she made.”

Margaret Leigh drew in her breath, and Tess was immediately contrite. “I'm sorry. I forgot how upset you are by this whole mess.”

Margaret Leigh closed her eyes a moment. “Don't be sorry. And don't think you have to pussyfoot around the subject of my illegitimacy. I'm a grown woman. It's time I faced the truth like one.”

“That's a good start.” Tess reached over and squeezed her hand.

“Tess, I have to talk to Aunt... oh, shoot, she's my mother and I don't even know what to call her.”

“Stick with Aunt Bertha. That's sensible.”

“You've always been able to take charge of things. Will you come home with me? Will you help me get through this?”

“Give me two days to straighten things out at the club, then I'll leave with you.”

 

 

Chapter Ten

While Andrew's plane was delayed due to fog at Chicago's OHare International Airport, he brooded. Love wasn't easy. Heck, he'd known Margaret Leigh wouldn't just fall into his arms, but he'd never dreamed she'd send him away. He was an easy-going, likable sort of guy with his share of charm—or so he'd been told. Where was all that famous McGill charm when he needed it most? For that matter, where was his good sense when he needed it most? He'd had no business promising Margaret Leigh
anything.
He'd just have to think of a new plan. That was all.
Real
courtship was new to him. But he'd learn, and he'd learn fast. He didn't intend to be without the woman he loved forever.

o0o

At ten a.m. Tess's intercom buzzed. It took Margaret Leigh a moment to remember that she was in Chicago and Andrew wasn't. She'd asked him to go the night before.

She got off the sofa bed and padded into the bedroom to wake Tess.

“Tess.” There was no response. Tess was spilled across the bed like a box of paints, her hair a splash of red on the pillow, silk gown a pool of purple, and one high-heeled slipper, hanging precariously from her toe, a bright sparkle of gold sequins.

Margaret Leigh approached and shook her gently by the shoulder. “Tess. Wake up. Somebody's at your door.”

Tess snuggled closer to her pillow, her breath rising and falling evenly in sleep. Margaret Leigh had forgotten that it took a ten-piece brass band to wake her sister.

She went back into the den and fiddled with the intercom. She finally found the right button.

“Who is it?”

“Special delivery for apartment ten.”

Somebody was sending Tess flowers. Fans, especially men, were always sending Tess flowers.

“You can come up.”

When he arrived at the door, the delivery man was almost hidden behind a huge bouquet of pink roses.

“Flowers for Miss Jones.”

“She's asleep. Can I sign?”

“Right here.”

Margaret Leigh signed for the flowers and carried them back into the apartment. They were fragile and beautiful and fragrant. They filled the whole place with romance.

Tess appeared in the doorway, standing lopsided because she was still wearing only one slipper. She yawned and stretched like a satisfied lioness.

“Was that somebody at the door?”

“Flowers for you.”

Tess buried her face in the roses and inhaled. Then she slipped the card from its envelope. “
You can send me to Tupelo, but you can't send me away
,” she read aloud. She looked at her sister, quirking one eyebrow upward. “Shall I go on? These are for you.” She turned the envelope over and read the name, confirming what she already knew. “Miss Margaret Leigh Jones.”

Margaret Leigh ran across the room and took the card. Her hand shook as she read it. “
My heart is with you in Chicago, and it will be with you wherever you are. All my love, Andrew
.” She looked up at Tess. “He sent flowers.”

“I can see that. Men in love often do.”

“Do you think he really loves me, Tess?”

“He'd be a fool not to.”

“Nobody has ever sent me roses.”

Margaret Leigh pressed her face against the flower petals to hide her tears.

Margaret Leigh received a fresh bouquet of roses every day for the next three days. And when she and Tess arrived in Tupelo, a bouquet was waiting for her at her house on Allen Street.

“Did you tell him we were coming home, Tess?”

“No. I believe in letting love take its natural course. He must have inside sources.”

They both looked at Aunt Bertha, and she gave an innocent shrug.

“I told you, you can't trust men in leather jackets.” Bertha turned away before they could see her smile. “Why don't we have a nice cup of hot tea? There are many things we need to talk about, and I've always found talking easier over a friendly cup of tea.” She looked to Margaret Leigh for confirmation.

“Yes. We need to talk.” Margaret Leigh hesitated, then went to her mother and put an arm around her shoulders. “The three of us will talk... just the way a family should.”

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