“I never had a dog,” Jolene said. “I wanted one but Dad said we’d have to leave him alone all day, and that didn’t seem right.”
“I never had one, either.” Her aunt hadn’t been keen on pets, although Rachel had longed for a dog.
“Too messy?” Jolene guessed.
“Too messy,” she confirmed, and offered her step-daughter a tentative smile.
Jolene cuddled the small dog as though that required her undivided attention.
“Rachel,” she whispered after several minutes. “Don’t move to Portland.”
“You want me to go someplace else?” She frowned, a little confused.
“No.”
“Another town farther away?”
“No,” Jolene repeated emphatically. “I don’t want you to move at all.”
Rachel didn’t say anything, afraid she might be reading more into this than warranted. “Are you asking me to stay in Cedar Cove?”
“I…I don’t know.”
That wasn’t the answer she’d hoped to hear.
“All I can say is I don’t know what my dad will do when he finds out you’re leaving the area.”
Rachel realized her decision would be hard on Bruce, but she didn’t feel she had any choice.
“I…don’t want you to go, either,” Jolene said.
Perhaps that was a start.
Twenty-Seven
Is Thursday still your day off? Gloria texted Chad. It was less intimidating than phoning.
She didn’t have long to wait for a reply. Yes.
She bit her lip and texted back. Could you come over?
Now?
Anytime.
His reply was almost instantaneous. On my way.
Gloria hoped, prayed, she was doing the right thing.
Forty minutes later her doorbell chimed. Nervously wiping her palms on her maternity-front pants, she opened the door.
“Everything okay?” Chad immediately asked.
“Yes.”
“You wanted to see me?”
She nodded, realizing she’d left him standing outside, and let him into her apartment.
Chad walked in and looked around as if this was the first time he’d ever been there. “What’s up?”
“I need some help,” she said.
“Okay.”
Gloria had gotten in touch with him on impulse. She did need help, which she knew Mack or Roy would’ve been happy to provide. But she couldn’t resist asking Chad, although she was afraid it might be too late for them.
“What do you need?”
“I…purchased a crib.”
His gaze met hers. “So did I.”
“Oh.” That shouldn’t have surprised her. They’d more or less agreed to share custody of the baby. Returning to the matter at hand, she continued. “Have you assembled yours yet?”
“No. Have you?”
“Well, I tried, and frankly, I found it rather confusing. I was wondering if you’d mind helping.” It was an excuse to see him again, to end this tension between them. If they were going to share custody, then they needed to feel comfortable with each other. Adversity and mistrust weren’t in the baby’s best interests. Or theirs…
“That’s why you asked me over?”
She nodded. Yes, it was an excuse but she’d wanted to see him again.
Everything had changed after their…nap. That was a week ago. Nothing had happened that afternoon, nothing physical, and yet it had made a difference, at least for Gloria. Now, whenever she crawled into bed and closed her eyes, she could feel Chad lying beside her and it comforted her, calmed her. She wanted that closeness again, that feeling of being protected and cherished. Everything before had been about the powerful physical attraction between them. But they’d experienced something else that afternoon—tenderness toward each other and love for their unborn child. Gloria had felt a bond with Chad, a feeling of wholeness that she’d lost with the death of her parents. She had a blood relationship with the McAfees and they’d welcomed her into their lives. What she didn’t have were the memories, the shared times, the laughter and private moments that connected the members of a family.
“Where’s the crib?” he asked, giving her an odd look.
Caught up in her thoughts, she’d been staring off into space. Startled, she led him down the hall and escorted him into the second bedroom, which she planned to turn into the nursery.
He paused halfway into the room. “You’ve bought quite a lot of stuff already.”
Gloria rested her hand on the changing table. “Corrie saw this on sale and phoned me from the store. I bought it sight unseen, and then Mack and his brother-in-law picked it up for me and brought it to the apartment.” The change table was white wood with six drawers, three on each side. There was a brightly colored pad on top.
“I want to paint the room a light shade of blue.” Mack had volunteered to do that for her. She’d thanked him and declined. She wanted Chad to offer.
He didn’t.
Chad looked at the two ends of the crib that leaned against the outside wall. She’d taken everything out of the cardboard packaging, which she’d put in the recycling bin.
“The assembly directions are in several different languages,” she said, handing him the printed sheets. “I suspect the English version might be a bit difficult to follow.”
“In other words, English isn’t their first language.”