Brooke Nichols had grown up in a family where random
announcements and dramatic proclamations were a way of life.
Girls, your mother has kicked me out of the
house… again.
How would you two like to blow off school today and
drive to SeaWorld?
Mom, Dad, Brooke, check it out! I decided to shave my
head.
In contrast to her parents' and older sister, Meg's, more
colorful news, Brooke had always announced academic success,
such as the journalism scholarship to the University of
Texas, or updates about her job, which was currently writing
for the Community Lifestyles section of the Katy
Chronicle. None of her declarations had ever caught
anyone off guard. But tonight Brooke had something to share
that was both life changing and unexpected.
At least, I didn't see it coming, Brooke
mused as she approached the front door of her parents' most
recent rental home. She'd barely set foot on the porch when
her mom emerged from the house, the screen door clattering
behind her.
"There's the birthday girl!" Didi Nichols enthused.
The slim woman with her long, wheat-blond hair was barefoot
beneath a baby-doll dress, her only makeup a bright pink
smear of lip gloss. When people saw Didi out with Meg, they
assumed mother and daughter were sisters. When they saw Didi
with curvier, dark-haired Brooke, they didn't suspect any
relation at all. "Come in, come in. Get out of this
heat."
Although it was only mid-May, with months of summer still
ahead, temperatures in south Texas had been climbing all
week. Inside the house, the air conditioner hummed through
the ceiling vents, causing a lavender-and-yellow Happy
Birthday banner to flutter overhead. Brooke half chuckled at
the whimsical acknowledgment of her thirtieth year.
Following her daughter's gaze upward, Didi grinned. "You
know me, I never throw anything away. That old thing
probably dates back to one of Meg's preteen surprise
parties."
While Brooke used to make her parents swear they wouldn't
ambush her with a party—she'd found adolescent social
occasions awkward enough when she was
prepared—Meg loved the unexpected and dropped
heavy hints every year that she would welcome another
surprise party. Which, ironically, led to them never being
much of a surprise.
"Your sister was so sorry she couldn't make it,"
Didi said. "With that course she's taking during the
day, she's back to waitressing nights, and Saturdays are big
business."
After trying and rejecting cosmetology classes and an
apprenticeship to a dessert chef, Meg was now training to be
a private investigator.
Brooke nodded. "Giff wishes he could be here, too, but
he flew to San Francisco first thing this morning." She
caught herself absently fidgeting with the flawless
diamond-solitaire ring. Even though she and Gifford Baker
had never discussed engagement before last night, much less
window-shopped for jewelry, he'd managed to find a ring that
fit perfectly—which was so like him.
Didi pursed her lips. "Maybe it would have been better
if we'd scheduled this for another time instead of on your
actual birthday. Not much of a celebration with just me and
Dad, is it? Do you remember that blowout we had for my
fiftieth?"
"Yeah, that was…pretty unforgettable." Brooke
managed not to wince at the memory of crowded chaos. When
the police had shown up with a noise complaint, one of
Didi's "free-spirited" friends had flashed him in an
attempt to earn his goodwill. "Trust me, I'm fine with
just the three of us. I have something I want to tell you
and Dad anyway."
Didi's dark eyes widened with concern. She obviously hadn't
noticed the engagement ring. "That sounds serious,
dear."
Ver y. Rest-of-her-life serious.
Brooke had spent years carefully laying out what she wanted
her future to be like, what kind of family she would build.
Her own children would enjoy a comforting, stable
life. Giff—intelligent, reliable and, as a bonus,
movie star handsome—could give her everything she'd
ever wanted.
She felt a smile tug at her lips as she envisioned her
long-cherished dreams coming true. "Don't worry, Mom,
it's—"
But her mother was moving toward the kitchen. "Everett?
Come in here, honey! Brooke has something she needs to
discuss with us."
A moment later Everett Nichols loped into the room, his
long-legged stride unhampered by the apron he wore. He
passed by his wife to squash his daughter in a bear hug.
"Hope you're hungry, baby. I'm trying something new in
honor of your birthday."
Brooke's parents had met in Vegas, where Didi had dealt
blackjack and Everett had been trying to work his way up in
a resort kitchen despite his lack of formal training. A
potentially brilliant chef plagued by moments of outrageous
failure, he refused to play it safe with flavors. When his
criticism of the head chef's "predictable palate"
cost him his job, Everett had gone to a nearby casino to
drown his sorrows. According to family legend, his gaze had
locked with Didi's and they were married within seventy-two
hours.
In high school and college, Brooke's friends had giggled
over the "passion" of it, how romantic it was that
her parents had shared such a whirlwind courtship. Of
course, none of her friends had lived through her parents'
subsequent marriage, marked as it was with its
passionate arguments. And reconciliations. And
spontaneous decisions like sinking all the money into a
family restaurant that hadn't lasted three months, or
abruptly moving the family to Colorado while Brooke was in
elementary school and then to Texas in the middle of her
eighth-grade year.
Brooke's shoulders straightened as if a burden had been
lifted. When Giff had asked her last night to be his wife,
she'd experienced a twinge—a whisper, really—of
doubt. They'd been dating exclusively since the night, not
that long ago, they'd been introduced at a charity St.
Patrick's Day gala. And while she appreciated his brilliance
as a technologies consultant, his work ethic and his
devotion to his mother, who was recovering from breast
cancer, Brooke had occasionally taken stock of her feelings
and wondered if there should be…more. Now, looking at
her two impetuous parents and thinking about how different
her own marriage with Giff would be, Brooke knew without a
doubt she'd been right to accept his proposal.
In our case, maybe less really is more.
Prompted by the way his wife was nervously twisting her
hands, Everett asked, "Brooke, is everything all right?"
"Couldn't be better." She beamed at them and held
out her left hand. "Mom, Dad, I'm getting married!"
From the passenger seat came a sudden chirp. Someone must
have left a voice mail earlier. Steering one-handed, Jake
McBride kept his eyes on the freeway while digging through
maps, CD cases and the balled-up paper bag that had held his
lunch a few hours ago. His stomach rumbled. All right,
more than a few.
Finally he retrieved the phone. He'd spent a good part of
the day driving through the boonies, where reception was
questionable, so it was unsurprising that he'd missed a
call. Without glancing at the small glowing screen—how
many accidents had he seen on the job caused by people
looking at their phones or scrolling through iPod
menus?—he held the cell to his ear and fumbled with
buttons until a computerized female voice told him he had
two new messages.
"Hoskins here," began the first recording. The most
recent addition at the fire station, Ben Hoskins didn't have
much experience yet, but he was a quick learner and an
affable guy. "Don't know how late you'll roll in, but
we're looking at an urgent Bravo Echo Echo Romeo down at
Buck's tonight. Could use your expertise."
Jake shook his head, chuckling under his breath at the
rookie's invitation to join the guys for a beer. More
enticing than the prospect of a drink was the fact that
Buck's had the best jalapeño burger in the state.
Still, after four days out of town, Jake needed to shower,
unpack and catch a night's sleep in his own bed, so maybe
he'd pass on Buck's.
After years in the army, the concept of having his own bed
and a permanent address to go with it was still rather new.
Following his return to the States and honorable discharge,
Jake had bought a place on the rural outskirts of Katy,
about half an hour from where he'd grown up in Houston. His
small, unassuming house was comfortable enough, but coming
back from these trips and walking through the front door
never gave him that emotional "aha!" moment. There
was no soothing rush of home other guys in his
Company had often reminisced about.
One could argue that Jake's stint in the military, the
string of temporary assignments and lodgings, had
contributed to his footloose tendency, but the truth was,
he'd always been restless. He had endless childhood memories
of his mother imploring him to "settle down,"
"sit down" or "quiet down." Especially if
Jake's father had been sleeping off his latest overindulgence.
Pushing aside the recollection of his parents, Jake pressed
a button and listened to the second phone message.
"Hey." Giff's voice, as familiar as a brother's,
provoked a stab of guilt. How long had it been since they'd
met for a game of racquetball or a platter of burritos at
Jake's favorite Mexican restaurant, Comida Buena? "I
know you were away on one of your walkabouts this weekend."
Jake grinned at his friend's phrasing.
"I'm actually on the West Coast myself, lending a hand
with a product rollout, but I get back on Wednesday. You
free for dinner that night? I have news that I want to give
in person. Nothing bad," Giff added hastily. With a
self-conscious laugh, he said, "Just the opposite. I've
got to run, but give me a call tomorrow if you get a
chance."
Intrigued, Jake tossed the cell phone back onto the
passenger seat. He appreciated the assurance that everything
was okay since Jake's first thought had been of Grace Baker.
Giff's mom had fought a rocky battle with breast cancer
during Jake's last tour. If his friend had something to
celebrate, it could help restore Jake's faith in the
universe. He'd seen tragic things happen to decent people,
young people.
As a kid, the son of a disabled and bitter former policeman
who increasingly prioritized booze over his wife and child,
Jake had fatalistically accepted that his life
sucked, but he'd believed in some sort of cosmic balance.
Surely people born into better neighborhoods and sober
families had no worries. Then one spring day in fourth
grade, he'd encountered Gifford Baker—the only child
of wealthy, loving parents—who was about to get his
ass kicked in the field behind the school. By the time they
were sophomores, Giff was six feet and spent every morning
in the weight room. But such was not the case in fourth
grade when three bullies had cornered him. He'd already
taken one blow to the face when Jake crested the hill.
Jake hadn't known Giff, only known of him. Every class had
been required to write a thank-you note to Mr. Baker's
corporation for the money donated to air-condition the
gymnasium. It wasn't affection that propelled Jake to the
other boy's defense, but an overwhelming sense of
wrongness. If even people like Gifford Baker had
crappy stuff happen to them, what hope was there for anyone
else?
In the weeks following Jake's impromptu rescue, the boys
became best friends. On their high school football team,
Jake played fullback to Giff's running back, blocking and
protecting as necessary. They'd roomed together for a year
at Texas A&M until Giff took a semester off when his
father died. Jake had never been brave enough to ask, but he
couldn't help wondering if Giff ever resented that it had
been his father—a philanthropist who'd adored
his family—instead of, say, an embittered alcoholic
whose wife cried nightly and whose son spent as little time
home as possible.
Nothing bad, Giff had promised this time. Just
the opposite.
Something good, then. Even without knowing what it was, Jake
was happy for his friend already. He looked forward to
getting the details in a couple of days. Who deserved
"good" more than Gifford Baker?
"Okay, now that she's gone…" Megan
Nichols began conspiratorially.
Brooke blinked. "Who? Kresley?" Her friend and
editor, Kresley Flynn, had just excused herself to the
ladies' room—which she'd been doing more frequently as
her pregnancy progressed.
"Yeah." Meg scooted closer, temporarily taking
Kres-ley's chair so that Brooke could better hear her over
the rockabilly band playing in the next room. Buck's Bar and
Grill was foremost a restaurant, but a side room off of the
main dining area offered darts, pool and a dance floor not
much bigger than a cracker. "I didn't want to say
anything in front of her that sounded unsupportive—I
mean, family solidarity here—but I have to ask, are
you sure about this? The engagement?"
"Am I sure?" Brooke echoed, nonplussed. Her big
sister's motto was to leap first and look…eventually.
If she got around to feeling like it. Meg was the last
person Brooke would have expected to question her
decision. Maybe getting engaged after just two months of
dating would seem quick to some, but two months was
practically a decade in Nichols years. "Why wouldn't I
be?"
"Well." Meg smiled hesitantly, the expression in her
big brown eyes pitying. "I admit Giff is a great-looking
guy. That's undeniable. But his being easy on the eyes
aside, don't you sometimes find him a bit dull?"
An undignified bark of laughter escaped Brooke. So that was
Megan's big concern? "Meg, the last guy you went out
with for more than a week swallowed swords and juggled fire
at the Texas Renaissance Festival. Compared to that,
anyone's bound to seem dull. Giff isn't boring, he's
dependable."