His Healing Touch (18 page)

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Authors: Loree Lough

BOOK: His Healing Touch
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There was a soft knock. “Come in,” she called.

“Hi.”

Kasey swiveled around to face the door. “Adam,” she said, doing her best to control the width of her smile. “I got your messages. I was planning to call you when things settled down for the night.” A nervous laugh punctuated her fib. “But then, around here, that could mean never!”

Chuckling, he moved closer. “Nice job,” he said, nodding at the flowers.

“Three down and twenty-one to go.”

“Wow. That’s quite an order.”

She shrugged. “Perfect timing, too. The orthodontist says Aleesha’s braces have to stay on a while longer.”

“So,” he said, and she heard the tentativeness in his voice, “how’ve you been?”

“Good.” She hopped off the stool. “And you?” Why were they standing there, talking like strangers, she wondered, when three times, locked in one another’s embrace, they’d shared some of the most romantic moments in her life!

“Fine,” he said, nodding like one of those back-of-the-car doggies. “Fine.”

“Good,” she said, mirroring the nod. “Good.”

“So…”

“Buttons.”

His brows rose. “Buttons?”

She grinned. “Sew? Buttons? Get it?”

“Oh. Yeah.” He chuckled again. “Sew.”

“So…have you eaten supper?”

“No.”

“I made beef stew. If you can hang around ’til I wash up, I’ll whip us up some dumplings.”

That induced a smile. “I’d like that.”

Maybe, Kasey hoped, with Pat and Aleesha around, she and Adam would find a way to knock down this…this wall of uncomfortableness that seemed to have built up between them.

She led the way to the door, and when he joined her, she snapped off the lights and locked up. “So,” she said as they walked toward the house, “how’s your patient?”

“Turned out it was one of Wade’s patients.” He explained how the woman’s agitation had caused all kinds of internal damage, gave her a quick rundown of how he’d repaired things.

“Must be a good feeling,” she said, once they were in the kitchen, “knowing that what you do for a living makes real differences in people’s lives, that what you do actually
saves
lives.”

“Sometimes,” he said, helping himself to a glass of water, “and sometimes not.”

Win a few, lose a few? she wondered. That couldn’t be easy to cope with.

“Sometimes,” he continued, sitting at the table, “it’s just tough, because, let’s face it, sometimes, doctors are just plain powerless.”

Kasey got out a mixing bowl, started assembling the ingredients to make dumplings. “You’re not invincible,” she
said matter-of-factly. “No one expects perfection
all
the time.”


I
expect it.”

She could tell by his tone that he meant it. “But Adam,” Kasey said, stirring the batter, “that’s impossible. Nobody is perfect.”

He nodded. “I know,” he said quietly. “But confound it, doctors oughta be. People put all their faith, all their trust, in us. We’re supposed to
know
things, supposed to have the education and the experience to
fix
things, y’know?”

As he nodded, Kasey sighed. She wondered what else had happened at the hospital to upset him. “That’s a terrible burden.” She glanced over her shoulder. “Must be why they pay you the big bucks.” She smiled to make sure he knew she’d only been teasing.

Adam smiled back. “Yeah. Big bucks.”

Something told her he hadn’t become a cardiologist for the money. Maybe someday, he’d tell her why he had.

“Remind me when you leave that I still have Thanksgiving leftovers to give you.”

“Great,” he said, grinning, “I just got here and already you’re planning my departure.”

Kasey blushed. “I didn’t mean it that way!”

He nodded. “I know. Just pullin’ your leg, is all.”

She dropped the dumpling mix onto the bubbling stew, one tablespoon at a time.

“Can’t recall the last time I’ve had stew ’n’ dumplin’s.”

“Nice rib-stickin’ meat meal, eh?” she said, hoping to remind him he’d suggested meat at their Mi Casa lunch.

“So,” he said, leaning back in the chair, “where’s Aleesha and Pat?”

She glanced at the clock. “They’ll be home soon. Aleesha had play rehearsal after school, and Mom is work
ing on the White Elephant sale for the church.” She paused. “It’s this Saturday, you know. Wanna come?”

Adam shrugged. “Hmm,” he said, “I’m afraid I have one too many white elephants already.”

Laughing, Kasey put the lid on the stew pot. “So have I. But I’m going, anyway. Other people’s junk fascinates me. And sometimes, I find things that work in my arrangements.”

“Cool.”

“Yeah. Cool beans.”

He took a gulp of the water. “So, what’ve you been up to?”

What would he say? she wondered, if she said something like,
Oh, nothing much…just turning down marriage proposals, mostly.
Kasey looked at the bare ring finger of her left hand and thought it had never looked better.

“Seen Buddy lately?”

Her heart thudded. Had Adam read her mind? “As a matter of fact, I saw him this afternoon.”

His smile vanished. “Is that so?”

“Yup. He wanted to show me the property he’s going to buy. Someplace way out in horse country. Twenty-five acres and a mansion that makes the White House look like a cottage.”

Adam whistled. “Well, that’s Buddy for ya—if you’re gonna do a thing, do it big.”

She pictured the diamond, thinking
If only you knew!

“If I was a betting man,” Adam began, “which I’m not—I’d bet ole Buddy hasn’t given up on you.”

Really?
she thought. Buddy’s proposal echoed in her mind. The other day, she’d considered giving Aleesha the Understatement of the Year award. Maybe, she thought, Adam deserved it more.

“Can’t think of any other reason he’d want to show off a grand estate to you.”

I can think of one,
was Kasey’s silent response,
He wants me to be lady of the manor.

Heart pounding, she forced the idea from her head.

She could avoid it for now, but sooner or later, she knew, Buddy was going to show up and demand an answer. It’d be nice, she mused, if that answer was
Sorry, Buddy, but I’ve already agreed to marry Adam.

Now
there’s
an idea I can live with,
she decided, smiling.

Aleesha burst through the door, bubbling with information about her school day. Practically on her heels, Pat came into the room and started telling them about the plans for the White Elephant sale.

They both behaved as if it was perfectly natural, perfectly normal, for Adam to be sitting in the kitchen, nonchalantly sipping water, while Kasey set the table. In fact, they acted like his presence was an expected part of their family ritual.

Kasey decided right then and there not to wait for Buddy to command a decision. First chance she got, she’d call him, and as delicately—but firmly—as possible, tell him no.

Because if there was so much as a remote chance for her and Adam to have a future together, she didn’t want anything standing in the way of it.

Chapter Nine

H
ands on her hips, Pat said, “You haven’t been yourself for weeks. What’s wrong?”

Kasey continued loading flower baskets into her car. “Nothing’s wrong, Mom. I’m just flustered. You know that Christmas is my busiest time of the year.” She slammed the trunk.

“Nonsense. You thrive on ‘busy.’ But lately, you’re as nervous as a mouse in a maze, always looking over your shoulder, like you’re a fugitive from the law!”

Fugitive? Well, she
had
been running…from facing Buddy. She needed time to sort things out, to pray about what would be best for everyone concerned. As she waited for a sign from God, Kasey tried her best not to jump every time the phone rang, lurch at the sound of the doorbell.

Pat’s concern was proof she hadn’t tried hard enough.

If she’d just followed her heart, there on the balcony of that exquisite mansion, she wouldn’t have needed a list of legitimate excuses to dodge Buddy. But for as long as she could remember, she’d sidestepped confrontation—giving up sandbox toys, handing over lunchbox treats, playing
games—anything but risk sparking even the most minor dispute. After all he’d done for her family—and she couldn’t think of anyone else it might be—refusing him without giving the question careful, prayerful thought would have been unkind, un-Christian, ungrateful, to say the least. Maybe after the holidays, when things didn’t seem so rush-rush, she’d have the courage to face the issue.

The thought made her feel a certain kinship with a lion tamer. But at least the khaki-clad circus performer was allowed to bring a whip and a chair for protection against the beast’s rage.

“Are you listening to a word I’m saying?” Pat asked. “Where
is
your mind lately! Seriously, Kasey,” her mother said, “you’re beginning to worry me.”

“Sorry, Mom,” Kasey said into the trunk. “But honest, there’s nothing to worry about. I’m fine. I promise.”

Pat scowled. “Tell that to the vein in your temple.”

Instinct made her put a hand to her head. “Vein? What vein?”

“The one pounding like a bass drum. Ever since you were a toddler, it’s how I could tell when you were trying to hide something.”

Kasey sat on the car’s rear bumper, rested her palms on her thighs. This was a lose-lose proposition, and she knew it, because once Pat got an idea into her head, she could be like a puppy with a bone: there’d be no peace until Kasey told her what she wanted to hear.

Pat was as hale and hearty as any seventy-three-year-old. Still, Kasey didn’t like the idea of worrying her mother any more than she looked forward to listening to more of Pat’s enquiries. “Buddy asked me to marry him,” she blurted.

Pat gasped. “He…he
wh
—?”

Nodding, Kasey sighed. “Yup. He bought himself a huge
estate in northern Baltimore County. ‘This can all be yours,’ he said.”

Grabbing Kasey’s hand, Pat started for the back porch. “You’re coming with me, and you’re going to tell me everything. Do you understand?” She shook a warning finger under Kasey’s nose. “And if you dare leave out a single detail,” she said, grinning as they walked along the flagstone path, “you’ll go to bed without supper!”

“Okay,” Kasey promised, “I’ll give you a blow-by-blow description.”

In the kitchen, Pat poured them each a cup of coffee, then sat at the table. “Aleesha won’t be home for hours yet.” She pointed at the seat across from hers. “Start talkin’.” She folded her hands on the place mat, waiting.

“Well,” Kasey began, hanging her jacket on the back of her chair, “a couple days after Thanksgiving, he asked me to take a ride with him, said he had something to show me. A surprise. We ended up at this twenty-five-acre grand estate that looked like something out of
Gone With the Wind.
He told me there were just a few minor details to iron out before it would all be his.” Kasey frowned. “And mine…if I’d marry him.”

“Oh, Kasey.” Pat held her head in her hands.

“Mom,” she said, forcing a smile, “relax. He proposed, that’s all. Last I heard, it wasn’t a death sentence.”

She came out of hiding and pursed her lips. Kasey got the distinct feeling that her mother was preparing to tell her that marriage to Buddy was exactly that.

“So where is this…plantation?” Pat asked, instead.

Glad to change the subject—and the mood—Kasey said, “Near the Maryland–Pennsylvania line, in a little town off I-83 called Freeland. It used to be exclusively a farming community, but according to Buddy, it’s built up quite a
lot in the past few years.” She hesitated. “The house is gorgeous, and more than two hundred years old.”

Pat sipped her coffee. “And…?”

“And what?”

“And what did you tell him?” She looked at Kasey as if to say,
Are you trying to drive me crazy?

“I didn’t tell him anything.”

The heavy ceramic cup hit the table with a
clunk.

Kasey shrugged.

“You didn’t say no?”

Another shrug.

“Well, you didn’t say
yes,
did you?”

“It’s a long, long ride from Freeland to Ellicott City, Mom.”

Pat didn’t say a word, but Kasey knew that
look.
When Kasey was a girl, the expression accompanied Pat’s stiff-backed, arms-crossed posture, and was usually the precursor to “I know what you’ve been up to, young lady.”

“So,” Pat said, “to keep the peace, you let him think you might say yes.”

Exactly!
Kasey thought.

“Do you think that was wise?”

“Probably not.”

“When will you tell him?”

Kasey sighed. “I don’t know.”

An exasperated groan prefaced her mother’s question: “You
are
going to say no, aren’t you?”

She shrugged, just one shoulder this time.

“You mean to say you’re actually thinking of
accepting?

Actually, it had crossed Kasey’s mind. Half a dozen times, if not more.

For years, Buddy had been setting the stage to run for public office. In the past year, he’d set his sights on a Sen
ate seat. In a few years, he’d confided, he’d be eligible for the governor’s mansion. “Only thing missing is a house, a wife and two-point-five kids.” If he’d said it once, he’d said it a hundred times. And how many times had she heard, “You’re good for me, Kase. You make me look respectable.”

The plain and simple truth of the matter was, Buddy needed her. And after all he’d done for her family, Kasey felt she owed it to him to at least give the proposal serious consideration.

Besides, Pat wasn’t getting any younger. Every couple of months, it seemed, the doctors were prescribing additional medications to control high blood pressure, high cholesterol, hiatal hernia. And Aleesha had a whole laundry list of things wrong with her; only God knew what would crop up next. If Kasey had only herself to take care of, Fleur Élégance would have generated more than enough cash for a comfortable lifestyle. But Aleesha’s ever-changing condition was costly, and insurance usually didn’t cover nearly enough of the medical bills. Kasey would rather die than let even one of the girl’s symptoms go untreated.

Several times since the adoption, a pile-up of medical emergencies had put their little family in such financial straits that Kasey had started hunting for part-time jobs. But just when all seemed hopeless, she’d find an envelope in the mailbox….

It wasn’t a great leap, going from “Buddy has been taking care of us” to “Buddy will
keep on
taking care of us.”

“If I married Buddy,” she said quietly, picking at a hangnail on her thumb, “we’d never have to worry about money again.”

When she looked up, Kasey was surprised to see tears swimming in her mother’s eyes.

“Don’t do it, Kasey. Don’t settle.” She accented the last two words—
slap-slap
on the tabletop.

Kasey reached out and blanketed her mother’s hands with her own. “Mom, what choice do I—?”

“We’ve always landed on our feet. Where’s your faith, Kasey?”

In the mailbox, in a plain white envelope,
was Kasey’s miserable thought.

“If I sit here and let you make the same mistake I made without even trying to talk you out of it, I’d never forgive myself.”

There was a haunting, heartbroken note in her mother’s voice when she said “mistake.”

“When I was a young woman, I wanted to be married so badly!” Pat began. “I wanted children and a house, a husband to pamper…the whole nine yards.” Blotting her eyes with a paper napkin, she sniffed. “I was in my twenties, all my girlfriends were married, some even had a couple of kids. I wanted that life, too, so much that I…”

She swallowed a gulp of coffee. “Now, don’t get me wrong,” she continued, “your father was a good man, a good provider, and God rest his soul, I loved him. But…”

But? How could there be a “but” when Al Delaney was the most wonderful man in the world?

Pat bit her lower lip. “…but I was never
in love
with him.”

Kasey felt her mouth drop open, and snapped it shut again. Frowning, she put her hands in her lap. It was all she could do to keep from leaping up, stomping out of the house, away from this conversation.

“After your dad popped the question,” her mother said, “I told him about my dream. He promised we’d have kids, dozens of them if that’s what I wanted, soon as we could afford them.

“Well, a year went by, then two, and I started nagging him, demanding to know when we could start our family. But every time I brought it up, he had a hundred reasons why he thought we weren’t ready yet, why we should wait….”

Ever since Kasey was old enough to speculate, she’d wondered why her parents had waited until they were in their mid-forties to start a family.

Pat sighed, blew her nose. “After a while, I realized he didn’t think we’d
ever
be ready. I began to understand he didn’t want children, that he probably never had wanted them, that he’d only said what I wanted to hear because his mother thought it was high time he got married and out on his own. I thought I’d grow calluses on my knees, praying for God to change his mind.”

But her dad had been such a loving, doting parent! Kasey didn’t understand. She looked at her watch, ran her hands through her hair, crossed her legs, then uncrossed them. She wanted out of here, now, before she found out her father’s love had only been an act…his way of telling her what she needed to hear.

Pat stared at the wall above the sink. “I remember once,” she said, her voice soft and thoughtful, “when we’d been married about twenty years. I’d been spring cleaning. Your father came in and saw the leather jacket I’d bought him for our first anniversary in the trash bin. He’d put on a few pounds and hadn’t been able to wear it in a decade or more, but, oh, what a scolding I got for trying to throw that ratty old thing away!”

Pat held her arms out to her sides. “‘I cherish that coat!”’ she hollered, mimicking him. “‘You cherish a
coat?
’ I yelled right back at him. ‘Well,
I
would have cherished our
children!
”’

Kasey turned sideways in her chair, ready to walk away
from the table, to exit the house. To her way of thinking, Al Delaney had been perfect in every way…the perfect father, the perfect provider, the perfect neighbor, a perfect friend to everyone who knew him. She didn’t like anyone—not even her mother—tampering with that memory.

“We never had a honeymoon,” Pat continued, “never took a vacation. And I didn’t complain, because I kept thinking, ‘Look how much money we’re saving by not gallivanting around.’ Kept hoping and praying he’d finally say we had enough in the bank to…”

She wrapped her hands around the coffee mug. “And as I live and breathe I still don’t know why—but he came home from work one day and announced he was taking me to Niagara Falls to celebrate our twenty-fifth anniversary. It was all a very big deal, and we planned that trip for months….”

She focused on the wide gold band she still wore on the third finger of her left hand. “He took me to a restaurant and paid extra for a seat near the windows, so we could see the Falls. Then, over dessert, he gave this to me. I cried like a baby, in front of all those people, because it was the first and only thing he ever gave me that I didn’t
need.
” An impish grin turned up the corners of her mouth as she added, “But I had a little surprise for him, too.”

“‘Al,’ I said, ‘you’re going to be a father.’ He didn’t speak to me for days. In fact, he barely said a word the whole nine months.”

It nearly broke Kasey’s heart, hearing that, because she’d always believed her father loved her more than life itself. If the news had made him angry with her mother…

A dreamy smile sparkled in Pat’s eyes. “But once you arrived, oh, did he change his tune! He loved you like crazy. And more than once, he told me if he’d known how
wonderful fatherhood could be, he would have let me have that dozen kids.”

Pat took another sip of her coffee. “After that, we tried to get you a baby brother or sister.” A faraway look distracted her for a moment. “But after a few years of trying, we gave up. The doctors said we’d waited too long. By then, it was too late, and I was just plain too old to—”

Enough!
Kasey thought, getting to her feet. She’d convinced herself her mother’s frail health had been the reason she’d had just one child. To find out she could have grown up in a noisy house, with pushing-shoving-giggling-yelling siblings, if not for Al’s fear, or greed, or—at this point, it didn’t matter
what
he’d been feeling—hurt. She slipped into her jacket. “I have deliveries to make,” she said, grabbing the doorknob.

She was on the porch, ready to pull the door shut behind her, when her mother said, “Kasey?”

Shut the door,
she told herself.
Just close it and get away from here before she tells you something else you don’t want to hear.
“What.”

“Are you in love with Buddy?”

Love?

Until that moment, she hadn’t seriously thought about it. Buddy was nice enough, but while he seemed mulish about maintaining a fast-lane public image, he kept his private life a closely guarded secret. Could she spend a lifetime beside him?

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