Read Falling for Mr. Wrong Online
Authors: Inara Scott
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #fling, #Series, #Contemporary, #reunited, #Romance, #babysitter, #mountain climbing
Marie shifted Oscar to her other shoulder. She walked around and thrust the envelope into Kelsey’s unguarded hand, then gave her a gentle smile. “Maybe it’s time you learned.”
Chapter Three
Ross stood in front of the large office window, cell phone to his ear, taking in the incredible view of distant mountain peaks cutting a jagged line across the cloudless sky. He’d only been in Colorado for twelve hours, and still hadn’t adjusted to looking out a window and seeing mountains instead of skyscrapers, or feeling an endless canopy of blue sky stretching over him instead of buildings looming all around.
He waited for his sister Melissa’s answering machine to pick up before he started speaking. “Hey, ’Lis, it’s Ross. Hope little Lizzie slept well last night. I’m just calling to say that I arrived in Denver and the kids are fine. Jenna got off to China this morning without a hitch. If you see Mom this morning can you tell her I called? I’ll call back later this week.”
As he hung up, it occurred to him that it was almost eleven on the East Coast, and his niece Lizzie, who had been born a scant six weeks before, was probably going down for her midmorning nap. It would be hard to remember that he now had two time zones between him and the rest of his family.
Add it to the list of things to adjust to…
Feeling at home in Denver would take time, he knew. After all, it had only been three days ago that Jenna had phoned him, panicked and teary because she’d been asked to fly to China to deal with an unhappy client who couldn’t get their software to work. Tying up his affairs so he could fly out two days later had been intense, to say the least. But what alternative had he had? They had talked about sending the kids back to New York for the month, but Ross hadn’t liked the idea. The move to Denver had been hard enough as it was; he refused to put the kids through it twice.
His phone dinged a moment later. It was an e-mail from his brother Brit.
How’s the Mile High City? You know you’ve got to get a babysitter when you hit the bars tonight, right?
Ross rolled his eyes. He hated typing on the tiny phone screen, so he sat down at Jenna’s desk and turned on her desktop computer. After clicking through to his e-mail account, he typed a quick response.
Really? I had no idea! By the way, I’m sure you were concerned, so I’ll let you know that the kids are fine and Colorado is beautiful. You and Tori and Paddy should come out for a visit sometime.
Of course, he knew Brit was joking—mostly. But deep down, Ross suspected that his brother still saw him as if he were back in high school, quarterback of the football team and dating his way through the cheerleading squad. The brothers had always had a not-entirely-friendly sibling rivalry, fueled by the fact that they were only a year apart in school, and always seemed drawn to the same girls. Brit, who had taken on a mantle of responsibility at a young age, thought Ross was an irresponsible playboy, while Ross thought his brother took life way too seriously.
Then, at the end of senior year, Ross’s girlfriend Jenna had turned up pregnant. They’d married a few weeks after graduation, just before Jenna started to show. The baby had died a few hours after he was born. He’d had severe genetic abnormalities that would have made life next to impossible, but it had still broken both of their hearts. Ross’s father had gently suggested divorcing a few months later, but Ross couldn’t imagine leaving the woman who had carried his child. Jenna had miscarried another child a couple of years later, but Ross never told anyone about that. He was twenty-two when Luke was born, and they’d celebrated it like the miracle it was.
Now he was a divorced father of three, and hadn’t been out on a date in almost a year. He wasn’t sure Brit had ever noticed, but he certainly had.
He flipped through the rest of his e-mails, pausing at the one Jenna had sent from the airport that morning.
Just to remind you—the nanny should be there by nine. Her name is Hope and I think she will get along great with the kids. You should probably stick around for a few hours to make sure they’re doing okay, but then you can leave them to get to know each other. You’ll have to explain my leaving when she arrives. I completely forgot to call the company to let them know I wouldn’t be there.
Thanks again for coming on such short notice. I really appreciate it. Will check in when I get to Beijing.
—Jenna
Typical Jenna. Always rushing around doing one hundred things at the last minute, yet managing to carry it off in an endearingly hapless way.
They’d been divorced for almost three years, but he still counted her as one of his closest friends. That, in fact, was part of the reason he dreaded dating. He’d been aware that his marriage had problems, but he’d never considered the possibility that Jenna might actually
leave
him. And if he’d misjudged the woman he’d known since high school, how could he trust his judgment about anyone else? What if he got involved with someone dangerous? What if she went
Fatal Attraction
on him and boiled a bunny on his stove? Or, on a slightly more realistic note, what if he had her over for dinner and the kids started to like her, and then she took off and broke their hearts? What if they liked her and he didn’t, and then he had to break up with her and the kids hated him and they never recovered from it?
“Daddy, when are you coming to make my breakfast? I’m hungry.”
He turned around to the face that always made him smile. Julia, with her messy pigtails, deep blue eyes, and practiced pout, had him wrapped around her little finger, and they both knew it.
“I told you I’d be there in a few minutes, pumpkin. I’m just checking my e-mail.”
She bounced into the room on the tips of her toes. She always seemed to be bouncing. Or running. He’d have to get her into some sports, soon, or her energy would drive them all crazy. Without blinking she grabbed the mouse started clicking on messages. “Did Mommy e-mail us? Where is she now? Did her plane land yet? Is she in China?”
“She’s still in the air,” Ross said. He didn’t want to believe his daughter actually knew how to navigate an e-mail program at the age of six, but on the off chance she did he removed the mouse from her hand before she sent an errant e-mail to every one of his contacts.
“Are you sure you should be using Mommy’s computer?” Julia fixed him with a suspicious eye. “She doesn’t let us use her computer.”
“But you’re kids,” Ross pointed out. “I’m a grown-up. And it’s just until I find the power cord for my laptop. I think it’s in my other suitcase.”
He’d gotten in the night before clutching his hastily packed suitcases, with no idea where anything was. Jenna had been a wreck when he arrived, red-eyed from crying and desperate to get everything set for her journey the next morning. He’d spent the rest of the night trying to help her get packed, instead of unpacking himself. She’d been marginally more composed when she left early in the morning, but not much. She’d never been apart from the kids for such a long time. Although they’d shared custody ever since the divorce, they lived so close neither had had to go more than a few days at a time without seeing the children.
Julia squinted at him. “Really?”
Ross hauled his daughter into his lap. “You don’t believe I’m a grown-up, do you?”
“You always take us for pizza and ice cream. Mommy says we have to brush our teeth extra when we are at her house.”
He touched the tip of her nose, smiling at the dig, which he knew wasn’t intended to be mean.
“Your mother forgets that pizza represents four important food groups,” he explained solemnly. “Carbohydrate, vegetable, dairy, and grease. Just like Gramma Phoebe makes for you when you sleep over at her house.”
Her moods as changeable as the New York sky, Julia’s eyes filled with sudden tears. “I miss Gramma, Daddy. And Aunt Tori, and Melissa and Delia. I want to go back home. When are we going back home?”
Ross kicked himself for bringing up his mother. “Honey, we talked about this.” He turned Julia so she could look more squarely into his face. “This
is
home now. I know it’s different, but we’ll make lots of new friends here. And you’ve got a big new bedroom and a house with a yard and a park right down the street. And Gramma and Grandpa will come visit you and you can show them all around your new house.”
Julia stuck out her bottom lip. “I liked our old house. My new room is too big and I get scared sleeping by myself.”
“Forget it,” a flat, cynical voice from the door advised. “He doesn’t care. Neither does Mom. All they care about are their jobs.”
“Luke.” Ross injected a note of warning as he turned to look at his oldest son. At eleven, Luke hadn’t quite hit his growth spurt yet, but he was already well above the height of most of his peers, with long skinny legs and arms, and knees that seemed wider than his waist. His blue eyes, and the dark hair that fell in his face and covered the tops of his circular, wire-rimmed glasses, were pure Bencher, though Ross attributed the boy’s sensitive soul to Jenna. “Your mom loves you like crazy and you know it. She had no choice about this China thing.”
“We didn’t have to move here. Her job in New York was just fine.”
“Your mom hasn’t had steady work for years. This was an important step up for her.”
“Whatever.” Luke turned away and started toward the stairs.
Ross set Julia down and followed Luke out the door. “Hang on,” he called.
Luke had taken the move hard, and Ross understood why. Leaving the friends he’d known since preschool and restarting in a new town was difficult enough, but being a shy middle school boy made it even harder. Still, Luke’s moods were affecting all of the kids. Jenna had warned him that things had been rocky since they arrived. Luke was apparently determined to make everyone just as miserable as he was.
Ross stopped at the bottom of the stairs, glancing back to make sure Julia was occupied. She was happily clicking away on the computer, and he spared a brief prayer that she wouldn’t delete his entire in-box before turning his attention back to Luke. “Look, I know you’re upset, but for Julia’s sake, can’t you try to fake it a little?”
Luke crossed his thin arms over his chest. “You want me to pretend to be happy? It’s the
summer
, Dad. I’m supposed to be hanging out with my friends. Instead I’m stuck in this stupid town with nothing to do.”
“I think you’ll be able to find something to do.” Ross gestured back at the window in the office. “This is Colorado. It’s like a big playground everywhere you look. There are mountains here. People ride skateboards and bikes all over the place. They climb rocks.”
“Well, that’s great.” Luke’s scowl deepened. “You do remember we’re from New York City, right? I don’t do mountains and rocks. I do baseball. And subways.”
Ross decided not to mention that Luke had often complained about being bored by his baseball games, or that he’d always hated riding the subway. “So we’ll get you into a camp, or a class or something. You’ll learn.” He forced a note of optimism. “It will be fun.”
Luke pushed back his flop of hair, the one that reminded Ross of his brother Joe, and adjusted his glasses. “We don’t fit in here. The guy at the grocery store totally laughed at Mom the other day. He said she had a funny accent. ”
Ross sighed and put a hand on Luke’s shoulder. “Son, I’m not going to lie to you and say this will be easy. But it’s good to challenge yourself and do something different. We’re all going to have to stretch a little.”
“Right.” Luke shook off his hand. “Stretch. Whatever.”
Ross thought about following him but didn’t have the heart. What could he say, anyway? That it wasn’t going to be hard? That he’d instantly find friends? Of course that wasn’t true. Luke would have to work to rebuild his circle of friends, just as Ross would have to work to rebuild his business and his community. Hell, he was living in his ex-wife’s house, for pity’s sake. They were all making sacrifices.
But that was hardly something he could explain to his son.
He sighed. If there was something divorce taught you, it was that there were no magic wands a parent could wave to fix things for their kids. Luke would have to figure this one out on his own.
They all would.
…
Kelsey pulled up in front of the house and turned off the engine of her ancient Subaru Legacy. A long driveway led to a wide porch flanked by a long row of windows. The home appeared relatively new, but careful landscaping had maintained a crescent of trees around it, providing welcome shade from the hot Colorado sun. A three-car garage faced the street, while on the other side, Kelsey could imagine there were incredible views of the mountains. Centennial, a fast-growing suburb close to Denver, had great schools, new houses, and tons of kids. Which meant, of course, that Kelsey had never been anywhere near it, and had immediately gotten lost in the winding promenades and cul-de-sacs.
Which explained why she was now five minutes late.
“Sorry, Marie,” she muttered. “Mary Poppins I am not.”
The engine rattled for a few minutes before cutting off abruptly, shaking the large coffee she had balanced on the dashboard. She took a deep breath and rechecked the sticky note on which Marie had written the names and ages of the kids, the mom’s name, and the address.
I can’t believe I’m doing this.
She should have been focusing on her training right now, not working for Marie. In a month she would be bound for Nepal, where she would spend three weeks traveling and acclimating to the altitude before starting the trek up Annapurna. She’d started saving on the day they returned from their last attempt, and had cleared her calendar so she could spend these last few weeks ensuring that her body was in absolute peak condition. Of course, Marie knew that, sneaky woman that she was. She knew Kelsey didn’t have any other commitments right now.