Authors: Debbie Macomber
“What?” Mark said impatiently.
“My girls could do with a cousin. Don’t keep them waiting too long.”
Mark gave a strangled laugh. “We’ll get on that.”
“Yes, we will,” Leanne promised.
Her soon-to-be husband raised her palm to his lips and dropped a kiss there.
Leanne had her husband back, and her world had been set right. This time she wasn’t taking anything for granted. This time, when they spoke their vows, it would be forever.
T
he first week after Macy left town, I went to her house every day. On the weekend, I was there two or three times. When it became apparent that she truly meant what she’d said and would be gone for an extended period, I cut back on my visits.
The second week I came by twice. A man on the neighborhood watch committee questioned me one evening. After that, I figured I’d better make myself scarce.
The third week, I was over only once and then, after a month, I didn’t go back. Yes, Macy had meant what she’d said. I tucked the ring in the back of a drawer and tried to forget about it. I should have returned it; sooner or later I would.
My only consolation came from Harvey. I spoke to him every day that first week, although it did little good. The
two of us were like wolves howling at the moon, miserable and lost without Macy. I have to admit that by the end of July I was pretty pathetic.
“Has she ever done anything like this before?” I asked her cantankerous next-door neighbor that first week. I recalled that day in mid-June, when she’d taken off and not come home until evening.
“Oh, she’d leave for a few hours when she got upset. She has that place she goes when she needs to think, but she’s never been gone this long. My guess is she went somewhere else,” Harvey said.
“Where would she go?”
“If I knew that,” he yelled, “I’d go after her myself!”
“What about her family?”
Harvey shrugged. “Doubtful. If she did go to her parents’ in New Mexico, her mother would likely send her right back.”
Harvey’s suspicions proved correct. When I called her parents, I learned that Macy hadn’t been in touch in several weeks. I explained who I was and said I loved Macy. Her mother had never heard of me. That was another big dent to my pride. By then, it had received so many dents I was beginning to feel like a car abandoned at the junkyard. I asked Mrs. Roth to contact me if she talked to her daughter. She didn’t call and I could only assume Macy hadn’t gone running to her family for solace.
“How’s Sammy doing without Macy?” I asked Harvey the second week. She’d taken the three cats with her, wherever she might be.
“He misses her as much as you and I do,” the old man said starkly.
The third week, Harvey called me after ten one evening, so excited I had difficulty understanding him. “Turn on channel thirteen,” he finally said, enunciating slowly and clearly as if I were some backward pupil.
As it happened, I had my TV on and flipped to the proper channel just in time to catch the end of the grocery-store commercial that had caused Macy such trouble. Seeing her in that 1960s costume again set my heart racing.
“You see her?” Harvey demanded.
“Yes.”
“Looks good, doesn’t she?”
I nodded, knowing Harvey couldn’t see my response. But that was okay because he knew how I felt. I was so hungry for the sight of Macy, I would’ve crawled inside the TV set if I could have.
“Miss her, don’t you?” he said with surprising gentleness.
“More than I could ever have guessed. You?”
“She’s a pest.” He sighed. “Never thought I’d say this, but it’s downright lonely around this place without her.”
“At least you’ve got Sammy.”
“If you want him, come and get him,” Harvey retorted. “He’s all yours.”
That was an empty promise if I’d ever heard one. “No, you keep him,” I said.
“Sammy’s company, all right,” Harvey said next. “But half the time he’s over at Macy’s door, whining because he
misses her and those darn cats. I swear I’ve never seen anything like it.”
I was whining myself.
“You coming by tomorrow?” Harvey asked.
I squared my shoulders and my resolve. “No.”
“Why not?”
“She isn’t there, is she?”
“Not yet.”
“Then I can’t see any point in coming by.” My friendship with Harvey was a good reason, but I preferred to keep in touch with him by phone. It was just too painful to visit her house, her neighborhood.
“You want me to call when she comes back?”
I had to give that some consideration. “No, I don’t think so.” I didn’t mean to have a defeatist attitude, but I’d done all I could. As far as I was concerned, it was Macy’s turn.
“No?” Harvey echoed in disbelief. “What’s the matter with you, boy?”
First, I don’t like being referred to as a
boy
, and secondly, Macy had been clear about what she wanted. And what she didn’t want. The way I saw it, if she couldn’t love me enough to see past our differences, a relationship between us had no potential.
“I gave it my best shot, Harvey,” I said. “Macy doesn’t want to be part of my life, so I’d better live with her decision.”
“She loves you,” he argued. “But she’s afraid. She’s never been in love like this before.”
“I have,” I reminded him. I knew what it meant to love someone else, the way Hannah had loved me, and this
wasn’t it. Macy might
think
she was in love with me, but her actions certainly contradicted that.
“Let the girl have a second chance,” Harvey said.
I smiled at his feeble attempt to patch things up. He could argue all he wanted, but his arguments were irrelevant, since Macy was nowhere to be found.
I insisted I was done with Macy; nevertheless, I sat up for several hours, staring at the TV, flipping channels, looking for a repeat of the Safeway commercial just to see her again.
That said, I do have my pride. To prove I was getting over her, I accepted a blind date and actually had a semi-enjoyable evening. The woman, Carrie, was a friend of Melanie’s, Patrick’s wife. Carrie was a perfectly nice person, but she wasn’t Macy. She had an easy laugh but she didn’t make
me
laugh, didn’t make me think or challenge me. Nor did she try to feed me cat food or drag in a stray dog to love and protect.
One date was all it took. I realized I wasn’t nearly as over Macy as I’d hoped.
What particularly disturbed me was the fact that Macy had never finished the mural. It remained three-quarters completed. Every time I walked past it, I looked at that jungle scene, those parrots and that baby giraffe, and thought of Macy.
Nearly everything in her life seemed to be like this unfinished painting. She had good intentions, but one thing or another kept her from following through with what she started. Apparently, this translated into relationships, as
well. I was just another unfinished project discarded along with the mural on my wall.
My guess was that this inability to complete anything went back to her childhood. In one of those lengthy phone conversations, during which we chatted for three or four hours, I’d learned that Macy had always been considered a bit odd by her family. They had little patience with her often-roundabout approach to things and her idiosyncratic views. And they rarely showed much interest in any project she undertook. The only person who understood and appreciated her had been her grandmother. I’d come to love her quirky nature, but I couldn’t get past her ability to walk away from people and projects.
Linda caught me staring at the mural the first week of August. “Do you want me to find someone to finish it?” she asked.
“No, thanks.”
“It’s funny, isn’t it, how she simply vanished like that?”
Funny
isn’t the word I would’ve used. “Yeah,” I said and headed for my next appointment.
“Before you go in there, I need to tell you this is a new patient. He’s, well, a bit of an unusual case.”
I nodded. “Thanks for the warning.” She wore a strange expression and I couldn’t help wondering what was so different about this new patient. I soon found out.
When I walked into the room, I found Harvey sitting on the exam table, his legs dangling down so far they touched the floor. “Harvey,” I said, unable to disguise my shock.
“I made my appointment like everyone else,” he grum
bled, crossing his arms over his chest in a defensive gesture.
“I’d like to remind you that I’m a pediatrician.”
“And I’d like to remind
you
that I came at my appointment time. Don’t tell me you’re going to refuse me treatment.”
“No.” If Harvey was seeking medical help, I’d do everything I could, and that included referring him to a specialist. If necessary, I’d personally escort him to every appointment. I’d come to love this old man as much as Macy did, probably more. I wouldn’t turn my back on him the way she had.
“You’d better sit down,” he said.
“That bad, huh?” I teased. Because of the chest pains he’d occasionally mentioned, I suspected the problem was with Harvey’s heart, although he didn’t seem any worse than the day we’d met.
I plugged my stethoscope into my ears. “Let’s start by listening to your heart.”
“I’m not here about my heart.”
“All right,” I said, removing the stethoscope. “Why
are
you here?”
Harvey took a moment to answer. He nailed me to the stool with his piercing gaze, then said, “Macy’s back.”
I was glad I was sitting down. Still, I couldn’t immediately form the words to question him. “When did that happen?” I finally asked.
“Couple of days ago. She doesn’t look good, either.”
“Oh.” I was reluctant to show interest, but at the same time I was curious. I just didn’t want Harvey to know it.
The old guy frowned at me, but I wasn’t intimidated. I’d learned months ago that he was all growl and no bite.
“She’s lost weight and she didn’t have any to lose.” Lips pinched, he shook his head. “She’s nothing but skin and bones.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.” And I was. “Where did she go?”
“To a friend’s place on the other side of the mountains, near Wenatchee.”
She’d never mentioned a friend near Wenatchee. I wondered if this person was male or female.
“I told her about you hanging around the place for a month or so.”
I’d rather he hadn’t; nevertheless, I was curious to know her reaction.
“And?” I asked in a bored voice. I doubt I’d fooled him but my pride demanded the pretense.
“She didn’t say anything.”
That figured. “I’ll bet Sammy was pleased to see her.”
“And her him. Those two were glued to each other for a whole day. I don’t understand it.”
“She rescued him. Sammy owes her. What’s there to understand?”
“I wasn’t talking about Sammy and Macy,” he snapped. “I mean Sammy and those cats of hers. You’d have thought they were best friends. They were all over him and Sammy just stood there, happy as a clam at high tide, letting those blasted cats weave in and around his legs. I wouldn’t have believed it if I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes.”
Despite my determination not to, I smiled. Everything had felt out of kilter while Macy was away. And now she was back—but it didn’t matter. It couldn’t matter.
“So?” Harvey said none too gently.
“So,
what?
”
“Are you going to see her?”
“Nope.”
“Why not?”
“I wasn’t the one who ran away.”
“That didn’t stop you the first week. You practically lived at my house. I can remember a couple of times I had to escort you to the door because it was past my bedtime.”
“That was before,” I said.
He narrowed his eyes. “Before what?”
“Before—” I looked at him pointedly “—I came to my senses.”
Harvey shook his head slowly from side to side. “It seems to me you’ve
lost
your senses.”
“Macy has a habit of running away whenever she’s confronted with anything difficult or boring or unpleasant. I’m not chasing after her, Harvey. If she loves me, she’ll come to me.”
His frown darkened. “Cut her some slack.”
“I did. I gave her a month. Now it’s up to her.”
He didn’t like it, but I could see he wasn’t going to argue. I guessed he’d talked to Macy and learned what I already knew. Macy might be full of energy, crackling with life and unexpected ideas, but she was afraid of commitment, afraid of love. If my feelings for her weren’t enough
to give her the courage to face me, then nothing I said or did would make any difference.
“The two of you are more trouble than you’re worth,” he said with a disgruntled snort.
“No doubt.” I could appreciate that it had taken a great deal for Harvey to make an appointment to see me. He knew that if he’d phoned, it would’ve been a short conversation. This way, he could see my reaction for himself and gauge how likely it was that his efforts would bring Macy and me back together.
“You want me to examine you?” I didn’t wait for an answer. I inserted my stethoscope’s earpieces again. “Since you’re paying for this appointment, you should make it worth your while.”
“You’re charging me?” he asked in an outraged voice.
Apparently, he hadn’t considered this until now. “It’s our policy to charge for office visits, so in a word, yes. I’m charging you. Or Medicare, as the case may be.”
“You got to be kidding! No wonder people say no good deed goes unpunished.”
I listened to his heart. “Not bad,” I told him. There was a strong, steady beat. I listened again, then moved the stethoscope around to his back. “Take a deep breath,” I instructed. His lungs, too, sounded fine.
“I’m doing all right,” he muttered when I checked his reflexes. “I’ve decided I’m not dying.”
“Glad to hear it.”
“Well, not yet, anyway. Those chest pains? They went away. Must’ve been indigestion from eating cat food.”
I couldn’t suppress a grin.
“I’d like to run a couple of blood tests,” I said. “Just to make sure your latest self-diagnosis is correct.” I now suspected his fainting spells had been caused by hypoglycemia and I wanted to confirm that.
“No way.”
“You afraid of giving me a little blood, Harvey? If you do it, you’ll get a sticker for your forehead and a lollipop.”
He didn’t respond for a moment, then sighed in resignation. “Why didn’t you say so earlier?”
“Good boy.” As I said it, I had a clear memory of the time he’d called me “boy” and how I’d felt about it.
“I’m a long way from being a boy,” he grumbled.
“Uh-huh.” I patted him on the back and helped him off the examination table, aiding him with his balance. “Didn’t you tell Macy you’re in your second childhood? Just think of this as your annual checkup before you hit puberty.”