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Miracle Baby (Harlequin American Romance) Page 4
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“And how would you stack up?”
“Pretty well except for the fact I don’t know how to knit.” Maggie stared off into the distance, surprised how clearly she recalled everything about that craft shop. “I’ve wanted to learn ever since.”
The thump of Rory’s hand on the table pulled her back to the present. “Well, see? There you go. You’ve got yourself a wish.”
“A wish?”
“That’s right. Wanting to do something can most definitely qualify as a wish.”
He popped the last bite of waffle into his mouth as she took in his strong jawline, the spots in his cheeks where dimples formed when he smiled and the faint lines that graced the outer corners of his eyes. There was something about Rory O’Brien that made her relax. Something that made her think she could actually do more than just exist through the day, as she had since Jack and Natalie…
Jack and Natalie.
Reality hit like a splash of ice water and she sat up in panic. Somehow, some way, time had passed without so much as a thought or a memory…
“Maggie? You okay?”
She yanked open her purse, fished around inside until she found a twenty-dollar bill and thrust it in his direction, his look of surprise barely registering. “I have to go back. Now.”
“Now? Why?”
“Because I’m fooling myself with this whole baby-step nonsense. It’s either got to be one or the other,” she said as tears welled in her eyes.
“One or the other? I don’t understand.”
“It’s been an hour, Rory. A whole hour.”
“Oh, I’m sorry. I didn’t know you had somewhere to be.” He waved aside the money as he scooted out from the booth. “Did you forget an appointment?”
“No. I forgot them.”
Chapter Four
It took every ounce of willpower not to bust her door down and pull her into his arms, her gut-wrenching sobs on the other side twisting his stomach into knots. But she’d been adamant he leave.
Her pleas to be alone were still running in a continuous loop in his mind, warring with the urge to play knight in shining armor. For the life of him Rory couldn’t understand what he’d done to change her beautiful, albeit tentative, smile into a look of complete and utter sadness the likes of which he never wanted to see on her face again.
He racked his brain for anything that could offer an explanation for the sudden shift in Maggie’s mood, but he came up empty. One minute she’d been wistfully happy and the next…
“I forgot them.”
Leaning his head against the oak panel, he closed his eyes against an image of the woman whose sobs seeped through the gap beneath the door. All he’d wanted to do when he invited her to breakfast was give her a distraction and him some extra time with the woman whose face had drifted in and out of his dreams all night long. Yet somehow he’d made things worse for her.
“I forgot them.”
He sucked in a breath as her words came back to him yet again, the pain with which they were spoken mirrored by the agony in her eyes. Maggie was in a bad place and it was killing him not to be able to help.
Unable to handle her sobs any longer, he wandered down the hallway and into the room where they’d sat together just two hours earlier. How could they have gone from something resembling banter to this?
The key to that was in the silver cradle and the scar on Maggie’s arm. That much he knew. It was just the what, how and why that had him in the dark—crucial pieces in the puzzle that was Maggie Monroe.
He grabbed his tool belt from the lumber pile where he’d left it, and secured it around his waist. As he lifted the hammer from its holder, he glanced down at the package that was responsible for placing the woman down the hall in the center of his thoughts.
He sat down beside the box and removed its lid. Light reflected off the silver ball, making it shimmer against the pillow of red velvet that lined the box.
A soft whistle escaped his lips.
Doug Rigsby sure knew how to pick a beautiful gift. But as pretty as the ornament was, the notion behind it made it even more special.
“Wishes,” Rory whispered. “Who doesn’t like to make wishes?”
The question was barely out before he found an answer.
Maggie.
But why? Wishes were like dreams. They gave a person hope—something to reach toward. She knew the importance of hope. It had turned her life around once already. So why couldn’t she see its power now?
When he’d been no more than six years old he’d wished for his own tool set. When he’d been a teenager he’d wished for a truck while all his male classmates dreamed of Mustangs. And even when he’d been stuck behind a desk in corporate hell, the notion of one day being able to do what he truly wanted had kept him going.
Wishes made life’s steps lighter. So why did Maggie dislike the notion of making a wish? Especially when she obviously had some.
Such as learning to knit.
“Learning to knit,” he said aloud. “She wants to learn to knit.”
Maybe it wasn’t the wish itself that Maggie shied away from so much as the fear of it not coming true.
Feeling the corners of his mouth beginning to inch upward, he pulled his cell phone from the back pocket of his jeans and scrolled through his saved numbers, stopping on a familiar name.
ONE BY ONE SHE PLACED each tissue-wrapped ornament into the box, her tear-induced hiccups nearly drowning out the slight rustle they made as the stack grew higher and higher. She’d tried, she really had. But it was simply too hard.
She wanted to move forward, wanted to make her family proud, but not this way. Not by layering new memories over the top of treasured ones.
Besides, Christmas was about family. And without Jack and Natalie, she had no family.
Wiping her hand over her burning eyes, she surveyed the room one last time. She had them all—the first Christmas ornament she’d shared with Jack after their wedding, the Snoopy computer ornament she’d given him after he landed his dream job, the miniature craft-basket ornament he’d given her on their second Christmas together and the assortment of homemade ones they’d brought from their respective childhoods.
It was hard to believe it was only a year ago they’d last hung them. Especially when she had trouble remembering certain particulars, such as which carols had been playing in the background, and the kind of flavored hot chocolate Jack had liked best.
“Peppermint,” she whispered with a slight smile. Suddenly, the previous year slipped away and images flooded her mind of the day they’d tugged their tree through the door and set about the task of decorating it for the family of three they’d become.
More determined than ever to keep from clouding her past with the present, Maggie grabbed hold of the tape gun beside her foot and ran it across the top of the box. It didn’t matter that the tree her uncle had left for her was bare. She was the only one there, wasn’t she? And besides, the solitary star she’d managed to secure to the top was kind of pretty all on its own.
Like a wishing star shining in the night sky.
A wishing star.
Scooting the box to the side, she rocked back on her heels and looked up at the delicate star on the very top of the tree. For as long as she could remember she’d loved making wishes. On birthday candles, on pennies thrown into fountains, on shooting stars…
Those wishes had brought her Jack. And when the time was right, Natalie.
Now, Maggie had no more wishes left. Unless wishing for another day with them could truly happen.
But what if Rory was right? What if wishes could also apply to smaller things? Things a person wanted to do or accomplish? And if he was right, perhaps her desire to make her family proud could be a wish—one she’d realized, at least on a small scale, just a few hours earlier when she’d eaten her first real meal in more months than she could count.
Breakfast isn’t enough, Maggie.
Shaking her head at the voice in her head, she blinke
d against the brightness of the star. “It’s a step, Jack. And for now it has to be enough.”
A strange sound made her turn just in time to see a mint-green envelope appear beneath the door and slide across the hardwood in her direction.
“What on earth?” she mumbled as she grabbed hold of it. The sight of her name written in a masculine scrawl made her breath hitch. Turning the envelope over, she allowed her fingers to linger on the sealed flap for just a moment before giving in to curiosity.
Carefully, she slid the matching green paper from the envelope and unfolded it, to find a nine-word sentence that caught her by surprise.
Redeemable for one FREE knitting lesson in your home.
She rubbed her right and then her left eye before reading the words once again.
Redeemable for one FREE knitting lesson in your home.
“A knitting lesson?” she whispered. “What on—”
A soft knock made her look up, the green stationery clutched in her hand. “Yes?” she called in confusion.
“Maggie? It’s Delilah.”
Delilah?
“I met you, or rather, met you again, earlier this morning. I was the crazy woman who badgered your eating companion.”
Maggie rose to her feet and approached the door, a multitude of questions swirling in her thoughts. Yanking it open, she came face-to-face with the woman from the diner. “Wow. H-hi. Wow. This is certainly a surprise.”
Delilah’s graying head bobbed ever so slightly as a smile revealed the faintest hint of a dimple in her left cheek. “I imagine it is. But I’ve never been known for my predictability. Except with my cooking, of course.”
There was something about this woman that called to Maggie, something so open, so real it was hard to ignore. Maybe it was the happiness she exuded via the laugh lines that framed her friendly eyes. Maybe it was the way she’d stopped at every booth that morning, treating each and every customer as if they were part of her family. Maybe it was the way she had noted Maggie’s lack of weight, yet hadn’t hounded her with unwanted advice and disapproving comments.
“Breakfast. This morning. It was delicious. It helped me—” Maggie shifted from foot to foot as she searched for just the right words “—take a step I needed to take.”
If her words were cryptic, the woman didn’t let on. “I’m glad. And I hope you’ll come back again. And bring that big galoot with you.”
“Big galoot?”
“Rory.” Maggie couldn’t help but laugh as the woman continued. “From the time he first marched into my diner with a plastic hammer in one hand and a block of wood in the other, he had me captivated. Why, that young man had the most flawless manners of any child I’d ever seen, and boy, could he talk your ear off. There he’d be, pouring syrup over his pancakes and chatting up a storm while Reardon simply sat there, listening. Two peas in a pod they were. Though how they came from the same pod was always a mystery. Woo-wee, those boys were different. Different as night and day. While Rory was always making things with his hands, Reardon was lost in the pages of a book. While Rory had an appetite that never quit, Reardon would push his food around his plate, hoping no one would notice he hadn’t eaten. But I noticed. I always noticed those boys. Except when it…” Delilah suddenly went quiet. “Would you listen to me go? Seems I’ve got a little chatterbox in me, too.”
“It helps drown out the silence.”
Delilah cocked her head and studied Maggie as understanding dawned in her pale green eyes. “The silence is painful at times, isn’t it?”
Maggie swallowed with difficulty. “It can be,” she whispered.
“Then how about we set that off to the side for a little bit and try something new.”
She felt her brows furrow. “Something new? I don’t understand.”
Lifting a basket into the air, Delilah jutted her chin in the direction of Maggie’s left hand. “I’m here so you can redeem that.”
“I don’t—” She stopped, looked down at the paper still clutched in her hand. “You mean this is from you?”
The woman shook her head.
“Then how did you know—wait!” Maggie felt a flutter in her chest as the pieces fell into place. “Rory sent you, didn’t he?”
“He said you’ve always wanted to learn to knit. And since I love to knit almost as much as I love to cook, he thought I could help you with—”
“With my wish,” she finished, her words barely audible amid the sudden acceleration of her heart.
Realizing Delilah’s gaze was still locked on her face, Maggie forced her mind away from the swirling emotions in the pit of her stomach and back to the woman in front of her. “You don’t have to do this. Really. I know you must be busy at the diner.”
“That’s what employees are for, dear. And besides, how often does a person get to play fairy godmother in their lifetime?”
Fairy godmother…
“Though, technically, I think that title belongs more to Rory than it does me.”
Rory…
“So, would you like to bring some chairs out into the hallway or would you prefer to work inside?”
The woman’s words finally registered, as did Maggie’s lack of hostess skills. “Oh. Oh, I’m sorry. Please…please come in.” Stepping to the side to allow the woman entry into her suite, she rushed to offer an explanation for their less than tidy surroundings. “You’ll have to excuse the boxes. I was just—”
“Decorating?” The woman stopped in the center of the living room and smiled up at the bare branches of the tree. “I finished mine just last night. And I did a good job, if I do say so myself. Though if I don’t quit buying new ornaments every year, I may need a third tree.”
“A third tree?” Maggie echoed.
“A third tree. I love decorating. I love the way it transforms the house into this magical place where hope is as ever-present as the pine needles I’ll be sweeping up on a daily basis over the next four or five weeks.”
“Hope?”
Delilah nodded. “For something better. Richer.”
Maggie felt her shoulders slump. Maybe that’s why she couldn’t decorate. Because she’d already had better. In fact, she’d had the best.
Forcing her thoughts from the realization that threatened to zap her energy, she motioned toward the sofa. “Can I get you an apple? Or a glass of water?”
“That would be wonderful, but only if you join me.”
“Oh, I’m fine. I had a really big breakfast.”
Delilah tsked softly under her breath. “That was hours ago, dear. Besides, once we start knitting you’ll lose all track of time. Trust me on this.”
Maggie considered protesting, but opted instead to retrieve two apples and two glasses of water from the kitchen before claiming a spot on the sofa beside the woman. “It was really nice of you to come here.”
“I’d do anything for Rory. Especially something that means as much to him as this apparently does.”
She felt her face flush. “I didn’t ask him to do this.”
The woman set the basket between them and began pulling items from it onto her lap. “I know. In fact, Rory made that perfectly clear when we talked earlier. But he wanted to do this. For you.”
“But I—”
Delilah’s plump hand closed over hers and squeezed. “You want to learn to knit, yes?” Maggie nodded.
“Then let’s learn, shall we?”
Blinking against the familiar tears that were there for unfamiliar reasons, she nodded once again.
And so she learned. About yarn, and knitting needles, and the proper way to hold her hands…
Little by little she surrendered to the process—to the feel of the yarn at her fingertips, to the thrill of learning something new, to the excitement that came with watching each step turn into something real.
“Is this what I’d do to make a scarf?” she asked as she looked up from the rectangle taking shape in her lap.
“Yes, it is.” Delilah reached into the basket,
extracted a few more skeins of yarn and set them on the coffee table in front of the sofa. “I brought along some extra yarn so you could try whenever you want.”
Maggie set down her knitting. “I can’t take that. You’ve already done so much.”
Delilah’s hand closed over hers once again. “It’s part of the lesson.”
“Part of the lesson?”
The woman nodded, her eyes shining. “Rory wanted me to teach you. And he wanted you to be able to start creating whatever it is you always imagined knitting.” Releasing Maggie’s hand, Delilah reached into the basket once again. “See this book? It’s one of the best step-by-step guides out there. But if you have a problem or don’t understand something, call me. Or better yet, stop by the diner. Maybe we can work you up to a whole order of waffles.”
Maggie couldn’t help but laugh. “Even if I had been eating over the past ten months I’m not sure I could ever consume that much.”
Delilah’s eyes led Maggie’s to the silver framed photograph she’d set on the corner table just that morning. “Is that when you lost them? Ten months ago?”
“Ten months and twenty-three days ago,” she said, her voice cracking. “And I’m not sure the pain will ever stop.”
For a moment, the woman said nothing, Maggie’s words hovering above them like a wet blanket that threatened to smother the companionable atmosphere. But finally Delilah spoke, her words catching Maggie by surprise.
“And I suspect it won’t. But in time you’ll find a place to put that pain, so you can let the joy take over.”
“Joy?” She shook her head. “There isn’t any joy.”
“You looked happy when you were at the diner this morning. You and Rory talked over your food like you were old friends.”
She closed her eyes against the memory, the reminder of her betrayal akin to a slap across the face. “And it was wrong.”
Delilah gasped. “What was wrong?”
“All of it. The laughing. The dreaming. The forgetting.”
“Laughing isn’t wrong if it’s done out of happiness. Dreaming is essential because it gives us wings, and forgetting…well, there’s a difference between living and forgetting.”