Closing Costs (17 page)

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Authors: Liz Crowe

BOOK: Closing Costs
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"Mommy won't get out of bed Uncle Jack. Can you come?"

"Okay, Hang on I'm coming." Sara steeled herself.

"Sara, listen, I met Shannon at... well, at the club, you know, downtown? We got to talking, ah, afterward. She'd just set a sales record at her pharma company. I talked her into changing careers."

"She's your reason for needing time to sort things out, isn't she Jack?" Sara hated the sound of her voice, the intense feeling of raw, painful jealousy surging through her soul. "How long? Huh? I mean you've been going to the club for about six months now."

"Jesus, Sara." She could picture him, running his long fingers through his hair, like he did whenever he got stressed. "Yes, okay. Yes. She is, but that's just part of it. You aren't sure either. That whole scene with the collar was for my benefit not yours. That's why I turned it down. You had a weak moment and thought you needed to prove something."

"No, Jack I didn't. And I'm glad you said no. Proves what I've believed for the last eight years. You don't love me. You love Katie, I get that. But you won't ever truly love me."

"Believe what you want Sara. Shannon has potential; I won't kid you. She's sharp, smart, an incredible salesperson, a lot like a woman I met at the door of an empty condo – after she'd been fucked by a nearly married man."

"You are an asshole Jack Gordon."

"Yeah. Maybe. But one thing Shannon isn't – is you. You're just too fucking stubborn to let me love you. So maybe I need to move on. Listen I gotta go. My family needs me."

"I'll tell Shannon you said hi."

"Don't be childish." His voice stayed low, making her scalp tingle. "I mean it. Don't assume you know what my issues are. You will never understand me."

"Huh, ya think? Good luck. Sincerely, give the best to your sister and her kids. Jason and I will handle the hearing. Bye."

She hung up, tears running down her face. Jason stuck his head around the corner, sympathy in his eyes. "Okay, I'll see you downtown at noon?"

She nodded, wiped her eyes and turned on the computer. Jack's Skype account flared to life as the screen booted up. He'd left it on. She frowned. They usually talked by phone, or exchanged texts. Who would he be... she swallowed hard and clicked the conversation window labeled "Shannon."

"Don't read it. Don't read it. You are asking for trouble you don't want
," the voice in her head chided her.

A fresh message dinged into his inbox.
"Hey babe. Hope you're ok. Met Sara. She seems nice. Call me if you need to talk. I'm here, like we talked about. Let me be the emotional support you need."

The yell felt ripped from her soul. Her hand lit on the nearest thing, Jack's heavy business card holder and she flung it across the room, hitting an expensive, framed watercolor, sending them both crashing to the floor. "Fucking asshole!" She jumped when Jack's secretary appeared, took one look at Sara's face, Jack's monitor, and the mess on the floor and walked out. She sat, chest heaving, unable to focus. Furious with him, with herself for being such a difficult bitch, and with the grasping cunt who thought she could be his therapist, no doubt between her young, cellulite free thighs. The Skype sound pierced her fog of misery.

Jack, with an answer.
"Thanks. I still don't know where I'm at, you know. But I do know I've enjoyed getting to know you --- inside and out,"
the asinine little devil-horned emoticon made her ears buzz. A headache pounded her temples. She watched as they carried on a not-so-subtle sexy conversation, nausea rising at every exchange.

Dear God, what have I done? I pushed him away, straight into that woman's arms. Practically introduced them, helped unzip his…oh fuck.

She looked up when Jason snapped the computer screen off. He leaned on Jack's desk and studied her. "He loves you, you stubborn bitch."

"He's got a really funny way of showing it."

"You won't meet him halfway Sara."

"But I did. And he rejected me."

"He told me about that." Sara rolled her eyes. Did she have no secrets? "You sort of blindsided him with it and he reacted, but wanted to take it back, trust me."

"Then why didn't he?"

"Because he's as bad as you are, dear." Jason patted her knee. "You two will either end up together, or involved in some kind of mutual homicide. I have the office pool on it you know. Odds lately are on homicide...you know, since," He jerked his head to the hallway as Shannon breezed by. Sara flipped him off, and stood.

"Find the files," she pointed to the computer. "I can't take it anymore."

 

 

Chapter Twenty-Two

 

A Year Later

Dear God I hate soccer.

Sara sat, shivering under an umbrella on a late May afternoon as rain pelted down and the small forms of her daughter and teammates sloshed through mud. "Really, playing under these conditions should be against some sort of safety law." She muttered under her breath.

"Oh Sara, don't be so negative." One of the soccer moms laughed at her. Sara frowned at her, but let her face soften into a smile. The woman had been the only team mom who had truly been nice to her. Not that she cared. She caught the eye of the coach, blushed, and looked away.

"Who's the new eye candy over there?" She leaned in to ask her new friend. "Seriously Lila, did we get a new coach or something?" The guy was quite the vision, Sara had to admit. Tall, dark skinned with long black hair currently tied back, his fit body hard to disguise under team colored shorts and a warm up jacket. She sighed, shifted in her seat. It had been a year since Jack returned from Germany, sister and family in tow.

Sara had paid her respects to Maureen – she truly liked the woman. She'd been vacant-eyed, lost looking and clung to her brother as if for dear life. Jack had found them a house, gotten the kids settled and in school, and, it seemed, deepened his dalliance with office slut Shannon into a "relationship."

But Sara stayed aloof. She had to, or risk losing her mind. She'd taken over a lot of the soccer duties, against her will, but knew Katie loved it and had determined to step up and be a better parent. The yawning void labeled "Jack" ached like a sore tooth, every day. Between them, they'd passed so close, so many times but managed to miss a real partnership, so she resigned herself to a life without him. Let Shannon have him. She'd already experienced his full self – they'd met at that stupid club that he never took her to – Sara was certain they must share some kind of deeper connection.

She sighed and let herself admire the hot coach across the way.

"He's the DOC." Lila said, breaking her reverie.

"Jargon alert dear. What the hell does that mean?"

"Director of Coaching. Kind of the boss of coaches. He's taking over our team, apparently."

"Oh." Sara bit her lip and crossed her legs. She'd gone out on a few dates, shared a few groping moments with some men, but mostly felt sorry for herself. She'd lost not just one, but two amazing men thanks to her own annoying obstinacy. She'd shut Jack and Craig out, and finally, they got her message loud and clear. So she sat alone, most nights, staring out the window and pondering her squandered opportunities.

The crowd murmured, the women noticeably primping as the sun finally broke through the grey overcast. Sara sighed and put her umbrella down, and saw the reason for the commotion. Jack strode across the grass, impressive as always in his dark blue suit, expensive shoes and mega-watt smile. She observed him and the crowd's reaction and grumbled to herself. He shook hands, hugged women, and stood behind her, hands on her shoulders. His lips brushed her ear.

"How's she doing?"

"Fine." She moved her shoulders so he'd get the hint. He did. Once the game finished, Katie ran over and jumped into his arms. Sara stood, a little apart from the adoring Jack Gordon crowd. She started when a hand touched her arm.

"Oh, um sorry," she sidestepped the dark handsome man who stood too close all of a sudden. "Hi." She blushed, tucked a stray hair behind her ear.

"You are Katie's mom, no?" He closed the gap between them.

"Uh, yes. I am. And you are..."

He chuckled and moved in front of her, stuck his hand out. "Sorry. I'm Mateo. Mateo Garza at your service."

"Huh, really?" She blushed again at her own boldness. He grinned, and she suddenly had a burning need to let his hair loose, run her fingers through it. She glanced over his shoulder and caught Jack's bright blue stare. She gave him a look she hoped relayed a "what?" message and refocused on the adorable, exotic young man who looked like he could eat her alive, and that she'd love every minute of it.

 

 

As he approached forty-five Jack had no real reason to be unhappy. A job he loved, more than enough money in the bank, the respect of his peers, a beautiful girl he considered his daughter and as much time with her as he wanted. To top it off, a ready, willing, and able submissive in his life and his bed.
Yeah. Perfect.

But, when he got a load of the smarmy Italian stallion blatantly flirting with Sara not two yards away, his vision darkened and he had to clench the hand not holding onto Katie into a tight fist. It righted him, the pain in his hand. Reminded him he had zero say in Sara's life anymore. They'd managed to misunderstand and miscommunicate themselves into some kind of bizarre, loveless, co-parenting arrangement that he, for one, despised even though he had no reason to be unhappy.

Right
.

He ignored her all the way to the car, letting Kate's babbling recital of her two goals fill his head. A hand on his shoulder stopped the process across the grass. He arranged his face into neutral and turned, knowing who stood there as if she'd announced herself already. Sara Jane Thornton – the woman who'd haunted his dreams, his whole life really, for nearly a decade. Beautiful, talented, sexy, killer manager, and the most frustrating female in the known universe, stood there, appraising him like he was a zoo exhibit. He returned her glare.

Kate tugged his sleeve. "Uncle Jack, can we do Washtenaw Dairy? Since we won? Like you said?" He smiled down at her. Evidence of the gorgeous woman she would someday be already glowed from her like a beacon. Deep green eyes and sharp, distinctive features with a brain and smart mouth to match, he grinned and crouched down to meet her gaze.

"A promise is a promise." He rose, trying to ignore the deep freeze coming from the woman who was the girl's mother. "Joining us Sara?" He put a hand in his pocket, tried to calm the visceral fury at the sight of the soccer coach tool still watching her ass.

"Sure. Why not? Meet you there." She turned, waved at the guy and smiled sweetly at him before climbing into her car without another word. Jack ground his teeth, shot what he hoped was a withering glare at the guy, who merely raised a hand before turning away.

By the time he pulled alongside the Ann Arbor institution that was Washtenaw Dairy, he'd calmed somewhat, forcing visions of Shannon through his brain, trying to remind himself he was in a place he liked, with her. It didn't work. He smacked the steering wheel then jumped when Kate spoke.

"Uncle Jack? What's wrong?" He put a hand on her face.

"Nothing, princess. Nothing at all. Let's go ruin our dinner together." He climbed out.

He watched, ate his ice cream, heard very little of what was said. His entire focus on Sara, her lips, her hair; the little quirks he remembered, like biting her lip, rubbing the back of her neck. "Huh?" He looked down at Kate. Anger marred her face.

"Uncle Jack, aren't you listening?"

"No, sorry," he grinned and pulled the girl onto his lap, loving her warmth, the unconditional love that poured off her in waves.

"I said I wanna spend the night at Morgan's. She said Aunt Mo would take us ice skating later." Jack took a breath. Kate had gotten very close to his sister and her kids in the past year. He loved it but sometimes it surprised him, how well they all fit together.

"Sure thing. Want me to drop you there now?"

She sighed and snuggled into his neck. He gripped her tighter, sudden emotion making his chest ache. Sara watched them, silently.

"That's perfect really. I have a date tonight anyway." He kissed her head.

"Shannon again? I don't like her. But she does make good pancakes." Sara rolled her eyes and sipped the last of her milkshake. Jack tried not to smirk.

"No, Shannon and I are taking a little break." He startled himself with this. But suddenly it was exactly what he wanted. Sara narrowed her eyes at him.

"Okay. Good. You should take Mommy on a date. She never goes out." Kate jumped down and started kicking her soccer ball around the sidewalk. Jack stared at Sara who avoided his eyes.

"That's sort of the idea." He kept his voice low. She scoffed and tossed her cup into a nearby bin.

"No, thanks, I um, already have a date tonight."

He raised an eyebrow, every inner alarm he had clanging around in his brain, bringing a headache that pounded his temples. "Really?"

"Really. Why, that such a surprise?"

"No." He leaned forward and grabbed her hand. The spark hit them both at the same moment. She caught her breath.

Mine
.

Jack shut his eyes then opened them. Her stare still had the power to rattle the shit out of him. "Not a surprise. Cancel it. Go out with me."

She jerked her hand away. "You don't have control over me. Not anymore, remember?"

"It's not like that Sara. It isn't something you stop having. It just is." He leaned back. "And I need to talk to you. No, scratch that. I want to buy you dinner, some place fancy, you pick. I'll even let you split the tab with me. Let's just…talk." He hoped she didn't catch the desperation in his voice. He'd felt a lot of things about this woman in the course of his life with her. But today the compulsion tugged at his subconscious harder than ever, as if they'd never been apart. She smiled and he tried not to leap across the table and kiss her.

Jesus. Shannon – Remember Shannon?
He couldn't even picture her face at the moment. The whole "taking a break" thing; he made a mental note to fill her in on later, to be fair.

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