The Dark Light of Day (The Dark Light of Day 1) - Page 45

“Mama, we made you some!” she exclaimed. She grabbed my hand and dragged me back into the house. How had I slept through the noise of them making pancakes in a kitchen that shared a wall with my bedroom?

After she showed me where the plate that they had made for me was, she ran back outside with Jake. I didn’t know if I was ready to spend time with him and my daughter together, and I didn’t know what kind of game he was playing. But, I would’ve hated to see the look of disappointment on my little girl’s face, so I went along with it.

And the pancakes were so damn good.

***

By the time I’d finished eating and put a swimsuit on under my shorts and tank top, Georgia and Jake were waiting for me in a blue boat tied to the seawall. “Hurry, Mama! Jake is gonna take us to catch big fishies.”

I had drunk two cups of coffee by then and was fully awake. I saw now that my daughter was decked out head-to-toe in pink fishing gear. She was wearing a pink visor that said “Fisher Girl.” Her shirt looked like a miniature version of the collared shirts worn by fishing guides. And though I’d braided her hair the night before, it was now in a bun at the base of her neck...in the same style as Jake’s hair.

I gave him the evil eye and he just shrugged. “I went to pick up some stuff and they had the cutest shit for little girls.” He quickly realized his error. “I mean stuff.”

“Mama says shit all the time,” Georgia said.

“Thanks, baby.” My three year old had just thrown me under the bus, and Jake couldn’t have looked more amused by it. “I like your bun,” I told her as Jake offered me his hand and helped me into the boat.

“Daddy did it for me.”

My stomach dropped.

Jake stepped up to her and whispered in her ear. She smiled even brighter and corrected herself. “I mean, Jake did it for me.”

“Oh, did he?” I laughed. “I think you missed your calling as a hair dresser, Jake.”

“Oh, I have many many talents, Bee.” He winked at me, and I blushed like a twelve year old girl.

The rest of the day played like a scene in a movie. Jake took us to a few fishing holes were he baited Georgia’s hook and then only pretended to bait ours so she caught all the fish. She’d caught three snapper, two trout, a Spanish mackerel, and a very impressive red fish.

Jake brought sandwiches for lunch and was a very attentive teacher. He taught her how to keep the tip of the rod up to reel the fish in and stood behind her with his arms around her when she had a bite so the fighting fish wouldn’t drag her little body into the water. Her excitement at each catch was clearly visible. After Jake unhooked each fish, he would ask her what its name should be before throwing it back.

By the end of the day, she had caught at least three Eltons.

When we finally made it back into the house, the sun was already setting and Georgia was sleeping on my lap, her grip still tight around her pink pole. She had missed her afternoon nap, but it was worth it. She would be talking about this day for a long time.

She didn’t even wake up when I cleaned her up, changed her into her pajamas and put her to bed.

By the time I got back outside, Jake was propped up in a patio chair with a cigarette in his mouth and a beer in his hand. “Hey,” I said, taking a seat.

“Hey,” he said back. He looked content, relaxed even.

“How did you get in this morning?” I asked him. It had been bugging me all day.

“If I tell you, that counts as a secret,” he said.

“Okay, fine. It’s a secret,” I agreed.

“I rang the doorbell. Georgia answered and let me in. You were still sleeping, so we made breakfast.” He laughed. It was so much simpler than I thought.

Jake reached out a hand to me, and I took it instinctively. Then, he pulled me from my chair and into his lap; he wrapped his arms around me. My head fell onto his chest. “Can we do all our secrets right now, Bee?” He smoothed my hair. “Let’s just get everything out there all at once. We won’t even think about the answers. We’ll just say them.”

“I don’t know if that’s the best idea.” Actually, it was a horrible fucking idea.

“You go first,” he offered. “Ask whatever, and I’ll answer.” Okay, that intrigued me. So, I started.

“Why are you here?”

“Pass, until you answer your questions.”

“This isn’t starting out well.”

“Just ask,” he pushed.

“What have you been doing since you left?”

“Same as I did before, except I got some bigger contracts, higher profile stuff. I consider myself officially retired now, though.”

“What is your new tattoo?”

He shifted and pulled his shirt to the side revealing an intricate design on the inside of his bicep. “It’s not really new,” he said. The design was the same as my necklace, except there were no initials in the design.

“It’s beautiful.” I traced the design with my fingers. “Does it mean anything?”

“Pass.”

“We aren’t going to get very far this way.” I laughed.

“No, I guess not,” he admitted. “Ask me one more. Promise I’ll answer this one.”

So I asked him the question that had been in my mind every day since he’d left.

“Did you ever think of me while you were gone?”

Jake took a deep drag of his cigarette. “Every second of every goddamned day, Bee.” He blew the smoke out into the night.

Jake lifted my chin with his fingers and pressed his soft lips to mine. My entire being reacted to him. Tingles and fire and the sweetest burning. His lips were warm and reassuring. Lips I could lose—and have lost—myself in.

I couldn’t do it again.

I pulled back.

“What’s wrong?” he asked.

“I can’t do this.”

“Why not?”

“Because I have Georgia to think of.” I stood up. “I don’t know what you want Jake. I don’t know why you’re here, I don’t want you to get to know Georgia and make her love you and then leave because I know what that feels like and I’d rather spare her that torture.”

“I don’t want to leave, Bee,” he said quietly.

“Maybe not now. But you might want to eventually, and I don’t want to put her through that.”

Jake stood and grabbed my wrist. “I don’t want to put either of you through anything.”

I was tired of beating around the bush. I was tired of the secrets.

“But what happens when you get tired of looking at those beautiful green eyes,” I asked him. “What happens when you start to resent her because you wish they were blue instead?”

“Abby, I fucking love you. What don’t you understand about that?”

The word love caught me with my mouth open, and I couldn’t close it.

“You love me?”

“Yes, I fucking love you. I’ve never stopped loving you. But it’s not just you. It’s her, too. I love you both. The second I saw her run to you in the church, I knew she was my daughter.”

“But she’s not your daughter.”

Jake grunted. “You’re not understanding me here. I know I didn’t contribute to her physically.” He paced around the deck. “That’s okay with me.”

“You could change your mind though.”

“The night I came here and she called me her daddy was the best night of my life, no matter how it ended. When she crawled up into my lap, when she wouldn’t let go of my hand... it was love at first sight.”

Suddenly, I understood. The night she crawled onto his lap, the reason why they couldn’t let go of each other. It was love at first sight. That was why he’d gotten so mad when I told him he wasn’t her father.

“So, you really think you can just forget everything that happened between us and start over from scratch?” I asked.

“No, I don’t want to start over from scratch. I want to start from now.”

“How can you want that, after what happened the day you left, after what you said to me?”

“You’re asking how I can forget that you fucked that son of a bitch?”

I cringed. But I still couldn’t tell him the truth. “Yes.”

“I don’t care.” Jake held my face and looked right into my eyes. “I don’t fucking care. I should have stayed. We should have talked about it. I left you for work after the greatest night of my life with no return date. It wasn’t fair, and neither were my accusations. You refusing to talk about what happened, and then you with him on the beach… it made me realize there might be more to the story. But, I don’t have to know it all right now. Does it make me sick to my stomach to think about him touching you? Yes. But the real question is, can we move forward from here? That answer is yes, too. For me, anyway. For four years, all I thought about was coming back to you, but my stupid pride kept me from doing it. I needed the excuse of my father dying before even attempting it. I was such a fucking coward. And you were here the whole time, raising Georgia on your own. Being so brave.”

“It hurt so much when you left, Jake. If there’s a chance that you’ll do that again, well...I can’t have my baby hurt like that, too. I won’t do that to her.” The tears started to fall again. I was going to run out of them soon.

Tags: T.M. Frazier The Dark Light of Day Romance
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