Caitlyn's mother convinced her to come home and spend the night with them, and too tired to hang on to her independence for one second longer, Caitlyn agreed. She needed the distance. She didn't think she could stand to see Matt or hear Emily's cry. It would hurt too much. So she packed a bag and let her mother drive her home. To her credit, Marilyn said next to nothing on the way there, just reaffirming her support. Back at the house, Caitlyn excused herself, climbed the stairs to her old bedroom, and collapsed on the bed. She slept for five straight hours, waking up a little after nine o'clock that night. For a moment, she was disoriented by her surroundings and the darkening light. She found herself reaching for Matt, listening for the baby, only to realize that neither one of them was there. All she could do was wrap her arms around herself and hope that the chill would eventually go away. "Caitlyn, are you awake?" Marilyn pushed open the door to the bedroom. "I thought I heard you stirring." "And I thought I was being quiet." "I still have a mother's ears." Marilyn sat down on the end of Caitlyn's bed. "I'm glad you called me today." "Thanks for coming." "Thanks for asking." Caitlyn picked at the top sheet, wondering if the lectures would now begin, the endless suggestions on how she could repair her body, fix her little problem, but her mother remained oddly quiet. Finally, she looked over at her. "Well?" "I was going to ask you the same thing." "I had all sorts of tests, Mom. I even had a second opinion. There is no miracle cure. I simply can't have a baby." "There's nothing simple about what you just said. I only wish you had told me sooner. Why did you keep it a secret?" "I told myself I didn't want you to try to fix me, and I knew you would try. Just like you fixed everything else about me, my hair, my eyes, my teeth, my body." "Caitlyn—" "No, wait, let me finish. That isn't really why I didn't tell you. Just what I told myself. The other reasons included not wanting to hurt you, not wanting to tell you that you couldn't have grandchildren." "You're more important than grandchildren." "Well, that wasn't really why I didn't tell you, either." "Good heavens. Are you going to make me guess?" Her exasperation drew a reluctant smile from Caitlyn. "I couldn't accept it, Mom. I knew if I said it out loud, if I told people, it would be real, and I didn't want it to be real, so I pretended it wasn't there." "And you sent Brian away." Marilyn nodded her head as it all became clear to her. "It was easier with Brian gone. There wasn't any wedding to plan, no future to think about, at least not one that included children. I didn't have to deal with any of it. But that changed when a man knocked on my door one night and told me there was a baby in the hallway." "Matt." "Matt," Caitlyn echoed. "His sister had dropped the baby off, asking for help. It's a long story, but he wasn't sure where she was or if she was coming back. I knew I should keep my distance. But one look at that baby and I was gone. I fell in love with Emily, head over heels in love." She shook her head at the hopelessness of it all. "Are you sure Emily is the only one you fell in love with?" "Of course." Caitlyn looked away from her mother's sharp gaze. "We've come this far, Caitlyn. Don't you think you could tell me the whole truth, especially if I promise not to point out why Matt is completely unacceptable." Caitlyn looked at her mother in surprise. Was that a teasing note in her voice? Was there a smile trying to fight past her cool expression? "Is something funny?" Caitlyn asked suspiciously. "No. Nothing is funny. Tell me about Matt." "He's my neighbor." "And he's very good looking in that rugged, dangerous, bad boy sort of way." "Mother! What do you know about bad boys?" "I've been around the block a few times. And I'm not blind. I did notice that Matt is a very attractive man and that the two of you couldn't keep your eyes off each other. At the time I still had hopes that you and Brian would get back together. I realize now I never had a chance. Neither did Brian." "Brian is a good man," Caitlyn said, the truth of that situation becoming stunningly clear. "But I can't marry him to make you and Dad happy, or even to make Brian happy. It wouldn't be fair. I'm not in love with him. And I'm not the same girl he loved." "No, I don't suppose you are." "As for Matt. .." She let out a long weary sigh. "Maybe it's love. I don't know. We weren't living in reality. Emily was just borrowed. It was a mistake to start thinking that Matt and Emily and I were a family. I kept telling myself to remember it would all end. But every moment was so wonderful that I didn't want to back away. I knew I was heading straight off a cliff, but I couldn't stop myself." "That's the way love is, Caitlyn. It's madness. It's wonder It's cra/y and beautiful and dangerous. all at the same time." Caitlyn had never heard her mother speak with such passion. "Is that the way you feel about Dad?" "All the time. Love will change your life forever, and it's no use pretending it will go away just because you want it to." "But it is over. Mom. Whatever we had is gone. Matt has the family he missed all those years, and now I'll go back to being his neighbor. There won't be any reason to cross the hall, no crying baby, no mystery to solve, no nothing." "How about love? That's a good reason to cross the hall. Are you so sure Matt didn't fall in love with you the same way you fell for him?" Caitlyn knew Matt had feelings toward her, but she also knew they were tied up with Emily. "I think he liked the way we made up a family, because he'd missed that in his life. But without Emily, I don't know who we are to each other." "Maybe you should find out." "I thought you said Matt was completely unacceptable." Marilyn smiled. "Believe it or not, I'm going to let you figure this one out on your own." "You're awfully calm about all this," Caitlyn said suspiciously. "Why?" "Don't you think one of us should be calm? I figure right now it should probably be me." "I'm still sorry there won't be any grandchildren for you." "Oh, Caitlyn. It's you I feel bad for. I know how much you love children. But there are other options. Maybe as time passes, you'll be able to consider them." "Adoption?" "Why not? You fell in love with Emily. And she wasn't yours. She wasn't Matt's, either, but that didn't stop the two of you from making a family. Why couldn't you do it again?" "That was different. Matt had no choice in that situation, but now he does have a choice. What man wouldn't prefer a baby of his genes, his blood?" "The only one who can answer that is Matt." "I can't deal with it right now. Everything has happened too fast. It's too much. I need a break." "You can stay here tonight, Caitlyn. But tomorrow you should go home, because whether Matt is across the hall or across town, it won't change how you feel about him. And as much as I would like to fix this for you, I'm afraid the only person who can fix this is you."
* * *
Late Friday morning Sarah walked into Jonathan's office with Emily in her arms. Already, she had changed, her face a rosy pink, her eyes alight, her posture optimistic. The reunion with Emily and her brother had done amazing things for her confidence. Jonathan almost didn't recognize the lost soul who had broken into his church only a week earlier. "Hi," she said simply. "Hi yourself. You look like you had a good night." "Emily still cried, but Matt sat up with both of us, and he told me that she's been crying with him, too. Then he took me up on the roof of his building, and Emily quieted right down. She likes being outside." "No one should have to take care of a baby alone. I'm glad you don't have to anymore." "I don't want to get in Matt's way. I want to be able to make it on my own. That's why I've decided to take that spot in the transitional home, if it's still okay." He smiled warmly at her. "It's still okay. They'll help you with baby-sitting and job hunting, and you'll have other women to talk to who've been in your shoes." "That will be nice," Sarah replied, but her tone, the expression in her eyes, told him she'd already moved on to something else in her head. But what? He couldn't read her anymore. She'd gone from someone who was hurt and helpless to a woman who was slowly taking control of her life. He wondered if there would be any room left for him in that life. Not that it should matter. He'd done his job. Only now he realized just how personal that job had been. "Can I still come and see you?" Sarah asked him. He felt his pulse jump. "Do you want to?" "Yes." Their eyes met, and he saw an awareness there that had begun to grow in the past few days. "You've been a good friend to me," she added. "I'd like to be a friend to you now." "I'm not sure that I can be friends with you." The light in her eyes vanished. "Oh, I guess not." "Not because you're not worthy. That's not it." He took a big breath and stepped over the line he'd been straddling for the past week. "It's because I'd like to be more than your friend." "You would?" The light came back on along with a slow wondering smile. "Yes." "I would, too." "Really?" He paused, trying to keep a lid on the joy that was racing through him. "I don't want to take advantage of you, Sarah. I don't want you to confuse gratitude with anything else. That's why I didn't say anything before." "I am grateful to you, Jonathan. I can't help that. But I like you as a man, not just as a minister. In fact, the whole minister thing kind of scares me, because I've never been very holy. And maybe a holy man should have a woman who has lived a better life than I have." "It's not where you've been, it's where you're going." "Where we're going?" she asked hopefully. He nodded but there was still a worry in his heart. "I don't know where I'll end up, though, Sarah. If we don't see a miracle at Sunday service, I may be transferred somewhere else. I don't want to take you away from your brother." "Maybe there will be a miracle on Sunday. I'm beginning to believe anything is possible." Emily woke up and stretched in Sarah's arms. "Isn't she beautiful, Jonathan? Sometimes I look at her, and I am completely awed." "I know the feeling. I've been in awe since I found you in my church. I thank God he sent you to me." "Would it be wrong to ask if I can kiss you?" "You don't ever have to ask." He met her halfway, his mouth closing over hers with a sigh of satisfaction. In a few days he might not have a church to serve, but if he could keep Sarah in his life, he wouldn't need anyone else. For she had taught him to see the people instead of the crowd, the human faces of each individual instead of the masses he'd once longed to preach to. He knew his calling now, for he'd finally seen the trees instead of the forest.
twenty-three
Friday before work Matt dropped Sarah off at the church, where she planned to spend the day. He had a feeling he'd be losing his sister again—and to a minister, no less. Who would have thought someone in his dysfunctional family would end up with a man of the cloth? The Lord certainly worked in mysterious ways, he thought with amazement. But now that he had Sarah and Emily back in his life, he wouldn't let them go too far. He had a family again. He could hardly believe it. Unfortunately, as he tried to get excited about digging into a new story, his mind kept returning to Caitlyn, to the awful pain he'd seen in her eyes. He'd hurt her. He'd let her get close to Emily. Even after learning that she couldn't have children, he'd still encouraged the attachment, because he liked having her attached, and not just to Emily, but to him. Now what? It was the same question Caitlyn had asked him. Could they have a relationship without Emily? Caitlyn thought he'd only wanted her because he needed a mother figure for his niece. But did she want him if he didn't come with a baby in his arms? Had the attraction been Emily or himself? The answer eluded him. Or maybe he was just afraid to find it. He'd never really thought long and hard about whether or not he wanted children. Having kids had always been on the distant horizon, after he found Sarah, after he got his career going, after he found the right woman. But suddenly all those things had fallen into place, and here he was, faced with the possibility of loving a woman who couldn't have children. Taking care of Emily had turned him into more of a family man than he would have ever imagined, and he knew he didn't want to spend his life without ever holding a baby again. But did the child really have to have his blood? His lines were less than stellar. And there were children in the world who needed homes, babies like Emily, kids like Sarah who'd gone to a foster home for a while. Maybe those kids needed him. Maybe they needed Caitlyn, too. Maybe they all needed each other. He leaned back in his chair, knowing that coming to work had been a pointless exercise. He couldn't concentrate. For the first time his personal life was more important than his professional one. He'd always defined himself as a newspaperman. Now he found himself wanting the other titles, the titles that belonged to men with wives and children. Matt looked up, jolted out of his reverie as David stopped by his cubicle, his tie loose around his neck, his shirtsleeves rolled up to his forearms. "I'm glad to see you back at work." "If you can call it that." "I gave you several leads." Matt shrugged. "Nothing that exciting." "So make it exciting. Dig up some dirt for me. Rattle some cages. Do what you do best." Matt ran a hand through his hair. "I'm not sure what that is anymore." "She really turned you inside out, didn't she?" "Who are you talking about?" "You know damn well who I'm talking about—Caitlyn, the babe with the blond hair and the great—" "Don't say it. Don't even think it." "A little possessive, aren't you?" Matt tried to brush off the comment as completely incorrect, but it wasn't. He couldn't imagine Caitlyn with another man. Which reminded him that Brian was still lurking in the wings. If Caitlyn went running to Brian ... well, he didn't want to think about that. She deserved someone better. She deserved him. "Yo, Matt, where did you go?" Matt started as he realized David was trying to get his attention. "What did you say?" "Look, why don't you go home, get your head together? You're no good to me this way." "What way?" "Crazy in love," David said with a wide grin. "Never thought I'd live to see the day when you'd crumble." "I have not crumbled." "You're completely gone." "Well, it may not matter. I'm not sure Caitlyn wants me." "Are you nuts? The woman couldn't take her eyes off you the other night. I thought you were going to set the room on fire there were so many sparks between you." "That's when I had a baby for her to love. Now, I don't." "So have your own baby." "She can't. Caitlyn can't have children." David's smile disappeared. "Oh, man, that's rough." "She loves kids, too. She'd be a fantastic mother." "Maybe she could adopt." "Maybe." He stood up. "You're right about one thing, I'm good for nothing today. I'll be back Monday." Matt was about to leave when a coworker stopped by his cubicle. "Our firebug struck again, Chelsea Street. Someone saw a woman leaving the area. Connie is checking it out." Matt's body stiffened as a sudden, terrifying possibility occurred to him. Chelsea Street was right around the corner from his building. "What did the woman look like?" David sent him a curious look. "Hey, isn't Chelsea Street by your place?" "Do you know what the woman looked like?" Matt repeated. "No description yet." Matt grabbed his keys. "Give me the address." The reporter rattled off the numbers, and Matt's anxiety heightened as he realized how close it was to his home. Please don't let it be a woman with a straw hat and a watering can, he muttered silently as he ran down to his car. Although he had the sinking feeling that this was yet another downturn in the rollercoaster he called his life.