And failed.
Early one afternoon, Nancy came by the shop with a friend. They were on their way to a movie, or so Nancy claimed.
Nancy smiled a little-sister smile and cheerfully asked Steve if he’d give Sandy an estimate on repairing her fender.
Sandy was petite. Cute. A little fragile.
It didn’t take Steve long to figure out that this Sandy was the same one Nancy had wanted him to meet. The widow. The woman who’d save him from Meg’s clutches.
“Pleased to meet you,” Steve said, wiping his greasy hands on the pink cloth he had tucked in his hip pocket.
Nancy smiled innocently, looking pleased with herself.
“I’ll have a written estimate for you by the time you two get back here.”
“You don’t have to work late again, do you?” Nancy asked, not even attempting to be coy.
Steve could already see what was coming. His conniving sister was about to wrangle a dinner invitation out of him. One that meant he’d be stuck entertaining Sandy.
“I’m afraid I’m tied up this evening,” he said stiffly.
“Oh, darn. I was hoping you could take Sandy and me to dinner.”
“Sorry,” he said. “Now, if you’ll excuse me … “
“It was a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Conlan.”
“The pleasure was mine,” he said and turned away.
Unfortunately, it didn’t end with Sandy. His sister had several other friends with dented fenders or cracked windshields. They all seemed to need estimates in the days that followed.
“The next time a woman comes in and asks for me, I’m unavailable,” he told his crew. Steve made sure that on her next visit Nancy would know he didn’t have time for her matchmaking games. He told her as much when she stopped by—alone—a couple of days later.
“I was only trying to help.”
“Thanks, but no thanks.” He sat at his desk, making his way through the piles of paperwork stacked in front of him.
Nancy expelled a sigh. “You aren’t seeing Meg again, are you?”
His hand tightened around the pen. “That’s none of your business.”
“Yes, it is! A woman like that could ruin your life.”
In some ways she already had, but Nancy wouldn’t understand. Whenever he met another woman, Steve found himself comparing her to Meg. Invariably everyone else fell short. Far short. He was miserable without her.
Nancy left, and Steve leaned back in his chair, studying the phone. All it would take was one call. He wouldn’t have to mention the incident with the police. He could even make a joke of it, maybe buy her a pair of flannel pajamas. The kind that went from her neck to her feet. They’d both laugh, say how sorry they were and put an end to this stalemate.
Then he’d take her in his arms, hold her and kiss her. This was the part he dwelled on most. The reconciliation.
“Steve.” Gary Wilcox stuck his head in the office door.
Steve jerked his attention away from the phone.
“There’s someone here to see you. A woman.”
Impatience made Steve’s blood boil. “What did I say earlier? I gave specific instructions to tell any of my sister’s friends that I’m unavailable.”
“But—”
“Is that so hard to understand?”
“Nope,” Gary said without emotion. “I don’t have a problem doing that, if it’s what you really want, but I kinda had the feeling this one’s special.”
Knowing his foreman had cast an appreciative eye at the widow, Steve suspected it was Sandy who’d dropped by unannounced. “You talk to her.”
“Me?”
“Yeah, you.”
“What am I supposed to say?”
Steve rubbed a hand down his tired face. Did he have to do everything himself? “I don’t know, just say whatever seems appropriate. I promise you Nancy won’t be sending any more eligible women to the shop.”
“Nancy didn’t send this one.”
The pen slipped from Steve’s hands and rolled across the desk. “Who did?”
“She didn’t say. All I got was her name. Meg Remington. I seem to recall hearing it mentioned a time or two—generally when you were upset.”
Steve pushed back his chair and slowly stood. His heart reacted with a swift, furious pace. “Meg’s here?”
“That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you for the last five minutes.”
Steve sank back into the chair. “Send her in.”
A mischievous grin danced across Gary’s mouth. “That’s what I thought you’d say.”
Steve stood, then sat back down and busied himself with things on his desk. He wanted Meg to think he was busy. The minute she walked into the room, he’d set everything aside.
A full five minutes passed and still she didn’t show up. Steve came out of his office and ran into Gary, who frowned and shook his head. “She’s gone.”
“Gone?”
Gary nodded. “The only thing I can figure out is that she must’ve overheard you say you weren’t available and left.”
Steve muttered a four-letter word and hurried out. He wasn’t sure where he’d find her, but he wasn’t going to let her walk out of his life.
She wasn’t at the bookstore and he didn’t see her car at home. He tried the grocery store, too, for good measure. Without success.
It wasn’t until nearly seven that he drove to her house again. That he was willing to confront her daughter was a sign of how desperate he’d become.
He stood on her front porch and rang the doorbell. Waiting for someone to answer, he buried his hands deep in his pockets. A preventive action, he realized, to keep from reaching for her the instant she appeared.
“Just a minute,” he heard her call.