According to Mac, Collum McCulloch owned a small farm north of Ardnoch. But the family had insisted for centuries that they used to own land south of Ardnoch that bordered Adair land. It wasn’t a huge piece of property, but it was coastal.
It was Adair land now, and Lachlan’s members had homes on it.
The farm still existed northwest of the village, and it was where I planned to go.
Taking a quick shower and throwing on the nearest clean clothes I could find (not having on-site laundry was a pain!), I jumped into my SUV in investigation mode.
I thought on what a great day I’d had with my dad and how afterward when I returned to the trailer, I’d begun to feel anxious about it. Dad and I were cut from the same cloth. I noticed things about his personality that I recognized in myself. For instance, he had to know about my affair with Lachlan, but he didn’t lecture me about it. In fact, he didn’t even mention it. That was so like me. If I thought someone might be sensitive about something, I left well enough alone until they wanted to talk about it.
As we drove and he talked about his life with Lachlan and all the traveling they’d done, my wanderlust envied him. Mom had always been perplexed by my desire to journey to different places, but now I realized I’d inherited it from Mac. I just hadn’t been able to afford to do it.
Our taste in music was the same. When I turned on my car, I switched the radio to a rock channel and throughout the day, I’d hear him murmuring the lyrics to the songs I loved too.
While he peppered me with questions about school and work and friends and past boyfriends and everything he’d missed, there were also moments when I stopped the car to take photographs of the scenery, and Mac stood at my side in easy silence. Comfortable silences that existed between fathers and daughters who’d been in each other’s lives from the moment she first opened her eyes.
We had it. In spite of all the crap between us … we had that easiness.
And it scared me.
It didn’t make sense. The whole point of coming here was to see if I could salvage my relationship with my father. Yet now that I knew it was possible, I was anxious.
It worried me because that bond between us could break my heart all over again if Mac decided he wasn’t interested in maintaining a relationship with me. While my gut said he wouldn’t do that to me again, that he was enjoying reconnecting just as much as I was, I couldn’t quite rid myself of the fear, though I was determined not to give into it.
Then I remembered a particular part of my conversation with Mac yesterday that had moved me.
“So …” I’d studied Mac as we stood at the side of the road in among hills and valleys. I’d caught sight of a stag on the hills not far from the road, and the majestic beast had allowed me a few shots before he took off. It was then I found myself wondering whether I was allowed to ask Mac about his love life. I was curious. And he had asked about mine. “There’s never been anyone special in your life? A girlfriend you thought about settling down with?”
My father had shrugged, apparently not uncomfortable with the question. “Not really, no.”
“In all your forty-four years, you haven’t been in love?”
He raised an eyebrow. “There’s a distinct difference between those two questions.”
Aha! So he had been in love, just not with someone he dated. “What happened?”
“A number of things. I suppose fear got in the way.”
Surprised, I replied, “I can’t imagine you being afraid of anything.”
“Does reality disappoint you?”
“No,” I promised him. “I just … I’m sad that was the reason. And continually blown away by your honesty.” Not a lot of men, especially not a lot of men perceived as tough-guy bodyguards, would admit to feeling fear over anything, let alone love.
Mac searched my face. “Everything you’ve told me about yourself, everything I can see for myself … I bet you’ve never run away from anything because you were frightened.”
I considered this. “I guess … and I’m not saying this to hurt you because that’s not my intention. This is just the truth. When you left, the pain was … I imagine it was a lot like grief.”
He flinched and I continued, ignoring my guilt for inflicting damage, because Mac wanted the truth. “And I realized that terrible things happen, things that hurt so bad, it’s almost debilitating, but in the end, you get through it. Time, if not a healing agent, is kind of a numbing agent. Almost everything is survivable. Sad, frightening things happen in life, but I truly believe there’s nothing more frightening than fear itself.” I smiled at him. “Coming here proves that. Because I was scared out of my mind to do this, to meet with you, and I’m so glad I did.”