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Authors: Victoria James

Tags: #one-night stand, #unrequited crush, #accidental pregnancy, #motorcycle, #wedding, #florist, #victoria james, #category romance

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BOOK: The Best Man's Baby
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The sound of Jake’s phone beeping gave her the out she needed. He cursed under his breath as he glanced down at his screen. “I’ve got to answer this.”

“You go ahead.”

“Can you wait—?”

“No, really, I need to take care of a few things at the shop. Listen, you answer that,” Claire said with a wave of her hand at the incessant ringing. She started to back away on the sidewalk as she spoke, leaving Jake looking helplessly frustrated. “We can chat later,” she called out over her shoulder and walked as fast as her legs would take her. It was just two short blocks down Red River’s main street to get to her shop. With each step a new snippet of the doctor’s appointment would jump into her head. Things were seriously getting way ahead of her. What was happening? Jake was turning into a caring, concerned partner, and it was becoming more and more impossible to relegate him to the sidelines.

She unlocked the front door of her shop, fumbling with the key a few times before it finally opened. She threw her keys, purse, and coat on the empty counter and walked to her small office in the back of the store. Her heart hadn’t returned to a normal beat yet as she plunked herself into her swivel chair. She stared despondently at her closed laptop screen. It was all a mess, she thought, placing her head in her hands.

Hadn’t she always wanted Jake’s attention? So what was wrong? What was wrong was the undeniable knowledge that he was just doing this out of duty and nothing more. He wasn’t in her life because he wanted to be. Just three days ago no one knew she was pregnant. Now, because of her renegade spectacle, the entire town knew…except her mother.
Her mother.
Claire glanced down at her watch.

In approximately one hour, Lucinda Holbrook would find out she was about to become a grandmother.

Chapter Six

“This is garbage,” Jake muttered as he crouched down and looked at the uneven subfloor. He scowled up at Quinn. “This isn’t going to pass code,” he said, rising and wiping his hands on the front of his jeans.

Quinn walked around the room shaking his head. “This is brutal. And this is the model suite. We don’t get this done, we can’t launch on time.”

Jake nodded, walking across the small town house unit. His six weeks away from Red River had put him behind. He was head builder for Manning Construction, and with the growth they’d had, building was the last thing he’d been doing. Going to their various sites had taken up most of his time, and now they were in jeopardy of making some huge mistakes that would cost them their reputation and a hell of a lot of money. “We can’t keep using subcontractors. Ella could have done a better job than this. I’m telling you, you need to hire more full-time guys. You have way too many projects going on.”

Quinn was nodding and looking around the small living room. “You’re right. Do what you gotta do. We can’t afford delays on this.”

Jake nodded and looked away. He was going to have to tell Quinn about William. The problem was that he didn’t have everything figured out yet, and he couldn’t exactly ditch his brother without notice.

“We’ve always had trouble finding quality guys out here. I was thinking about seeing if any of William’s guys are looking for extra hours. Maybe weekends. At least to get us back on track.”

Jake’s gut twisted. Now he was going to be outright lying to his brother. “None of his guys are part-time.” He knew that for a fact because he’d spent hours poring over payroll, work orders, time sheets, and employee contracts.

“Suggestions?”

He shrugged and looked out the window. The parking lot below was filled with cars and Manning Construction trucks. In a few weeks, he’d have no ownership over this business. The days he spent working with his brother would be over. But he’d have his own company, one that wouldn’t be associated with their father. “I was thinking we should take on some guys in college. Do an apprenticeship program with the government. Something to get qualified workers. You’re better off training people yourself and having quality trades over random contractors.”

“Okay. I should have listened to you earlier. You were right.” Reasonable, levelheaded Quinn. That made all of this harder. “You’ll be doing all this anyway. So go ahead.You should do the hiring. You have good instincts about people,” Jake said, pulling his iPhone out of his pocket. He glanced down at the screen to avoid Quinn’s stare.

“Really? You’re the one who works with the crew. I’d rather you handled it.”

Jake kept his head down. “Well, I’ll talk to someone in the office about getting in touch with local trade colleges and we’ll see the response. Maybe for now I can pull a crew from the condo project to fill in here to get things back up to speed.”

Quinn nodded. “That sounds good. So, uh, everything okay?”

Jake looked up. “Yeah. Just thought of something. Amanda isn’t still answering phones, is she?”

Quinn laughed. “Nope. You’re safe. How’s Claire?”

He groaned out loud and then picked up a hammer. He needed to get some of his nervous energy out. He’d take out this entire damn floor by himself if it meant not thinking about Claire and Walters construction.

“That bad?”

“Worse,” Jake answered, picking up a pry bar in his other hand. He crouched down, hitting the end of the pry bar with his hammer harder than necessary. “I swear, whenever I think I’m getting through to her, she shuts me out. And I’m the one everyone says runs. Well, she’s running around all over the place. I had to jump into an elevator just to get her to speak to me.” He paused to give his brother time to laugh. “You have any Holly insider info for me?”

“Actually I do. Not that I like gossiping or anything,” Quinn said, looking uncomfortable.

“No, no, of course not. Me neither.” He forced down the pry bar to lift the edge of the plywood up off the joist as far as possible. He tried to concentrate on what he was doing, and told himself that he wasn’t dying to know whatever Quinn knew.

“Apparently Claire had a huge crush on you in high school.”

Jake lost his grip. He cursed and then managed to get the tool back into position and scowled up at Quinn. “That’s all you have for me? I knew that.”

“Look, that’s all I got. I don’t spend my evenings with my wife gossiping about you and your latest woman.”

“She’s not my latest woman. She’s
it
. Remember? I asked her to marry me?”

Quinn nodded. “Oh, right. So she finally said yes?”

Jake exhaled roughly. “
No.
But I’m not done yet.”

Quinn rolled back on his heels. “Ah, so you going to use a little of the Manning charm on her?”

He gave him a level look. “
Jake
charm. Not Manning charm. It’s not a shared asset.”

“Pfft. Good luck with that. So you have feelings for her?”

Jake squeezed his eyes shut. He needed to end this torture, and he didn’t even know what to say because he didn’t have it figured out for himself. He thought most of his feelings were about wanting Claire. Then he spent more time with her and other feelings happened. Like at the doctor’s office today. He looked over at his brother, who was standing there with his eyebrows lifted and a smug smirk on his face. “I don’t want to be part of this gossip circle, so don’t go running home to Holly talking about me. But, yeah, of course I have
feelings
.”

Quinn nodded slowly, darting his eyes in the other direction. His brother was a horrible liar. He was going straight home to tell his wife.

Jake let out an extra-dramatic breath. He pulled out the pry bar and sat on the ground. He was going to kill himself if he tried to have this conversation and work at the same time. “Let me ask your opinion on something.”

“Shoot.”

“You know that old property on Winding River Road?”

“The old Victorian house on the river?”

Jake nodded. “I’m thinking of buying it. I went in to see it with a Realtor and it needs a lot of work. Like I’ll probably have to gut it, take it back to the studs, but it’s an amazing property.”

He could tell Quinn was trying to hide his shock. “I had no idea you were thinking about buying a house.”

Jake shrugged. “I want to do this right. Start a real family.”

“Go for it. Do you need help with a mortgage or anything?”

“Nope. Thanks for the offer. I’ve got money,” he said. His brothers probably thought he was broke. Truth was, since he lived above the construction office, in Quinn’s old place, his expenses were low. He didn’t have lavish tastes, and Manning Construction was doing so well, all his money had gone straight to the bank.

“Okay. Well, if something comes up and you need anything, just let me know. And uh, how’s the baby?”

“Fine. And I’m raising that baby, with her. Regardless of what she thinks. Regardless of what any of you think. I’d never run from my own kid. I know you guys think I’m this screwup, but I know what a child needs, and it’s love and acceptance.” Jake coughed. He couldn’t believe he’d just said that. It looked like he was going to have to prop up Quinn’s jaw with the pry bar.

“For what it’s worth, I think you’ll make a good father,” Quinn said, looking at him.

Jake looked away for a second as unexpected emotion hit him.

“I know you and Dad had your issues, but he tried his best, and for what it’s worth, I know they’d be proud of you.”

Jake ground his back teeth together. Quinn didn’t have a clue, not a damn clue. It was that skewed perception of their childhood that had made him want to sever ties with all of them at one point. Telling his brothers the truth wasn’t an option. He could barely have a serious conversation about his life now, let alone the past, and he had no guarantees what their reaction would be. But that didn’t mean he was going to sit here and reminisce about a father who hated him.

“Thanks,” Jake said, rising. “I’m going to head over to the condo. I’ll see ya later.” He walked out the door, shrugging off the weight of that conversation. He’d rather think about Claire.


“This is so not fair,” Claire grumbled under her breath, her eyes glued to the front door of the Italian restaurant. She poured herself a glass of San Pellegrino, thinking how a glass of merlot would have numbed some of the pain this lunch date was about to inflict. She was waiting, rather impatiently, for her mother to arrive. She had thought it wise to make her little announcement in a public venue. Her mother was not the type to create a scene. Ideally, she would have liked to wait until her father was back home to make this announcement, but because of the burger-stabbing, she was left with no choice. It would be devastating for her mother to hear about her pregnancy from someone else.

She fiddled with the paper label on the bottle. Since Jake had returned to Red River, her entire life had become a circus. Her stomach clenched painfully as she spotted her mother’s beige Buick glide into an empty spot near the front door. She waved and forced herself to plaster on a smile as her mother approached. After all, she had to look like the blissful mother-to-be.

Her mother was decked to the nines as usual, her perfect size-four figure wrapped up in a pale-pink suit, her face and hair primped to perfection. Even a tornado wouldn’t budge a strand on her mother’s head. Claire gave her a quick kiss on the cheek before they sat on opposite sides of the booth.

Her mother shook her head as she settled into her seat, emphasizing her discontent with a
tsk
sound. “I must say I am surprised you picked this restaurant. The Italians are fixated on carbohydrates. I mean, it’s impossible to even look at this menu without gaining a pound.”

Claire slowly raised the menu to cover her face, pretending to be absorbed in the details and not at all ready to crawl under the table. She was going to try her best not to respond to her mother’s comment, but she knew her obsession well and that she would complain for the rest of the meal.

“Mmm. These gnocchi in a rosé sauce sound great,” Claire said, suddenly getting an overwhelming craving for the potato dumplings as she looked at the menu. Her appetite had been returning at unpredictable intervals, and it was such a wonderful contrast to the nausea she had endured the last two weeks.

Her mother gasped, reacting as though Claire had just told her she was an alien from another planet. “Of all the things to order, you choose carbs on top of carbs smothered in a rich creamy sauce. That’s hardly a figure-flattering choice. And after all the work you’ve done to trim those excess pounds.”

Claire felt her face ignite like a box of kindling. She focused on the thick black print of the menu. She focused on the letters. Anything to keep her mind from going back there. First the doctor’s appointment and now this.

She felt bile start to churn, felt her body go hot, but not because she felt anything like that girl anymore. Because she wanted to help her. She wanted to reach back into the past and hug the tormented young woman she once was.

Claire took a deep breath. She knew what the old Claire would have done—she would have ordered the grilled salmon, lemon sauce on the side, no potatoes, just grilled vegetables. And then she would have waited for her mother’s smile of approval. But she wasn’t the old Claire anymore. She had tossed her to the curb years ago. Now she was new and improved and she was going to ingest as many carbs as was humanly possible in one meal.

“You ladies decided?” the waiter asked with a bright smile, oblivious to the tension at the table.

“I’ll have the gnocchi with the rosé sauce. Oh, but first I’d like to start with bread.
Lots
of bread—with olive oil on the side for dipping.” She heard her mother’s gasp of horror.

“And
I
will have the grilled salmon, sauce on the side, grilled vegetables, and no potatoes please,” her mother said primly, handing the waiter her menu. And then she turned her full-on scary attention to Claire. She leaned forward in the booth. “Claire, I don’t know what kind of point you’re trying to make here by ordering that kind of food, but it’s just to your own detriment. You always were a rebellious child and teenager,” her mother said with a huff.

“Rebellious? What have I ever done?”

Her mother pursed her lips. “Remember the time you dyed your hair?”

“A darker shade of brown?” She fought the urge to engage her mother in a lose-lose debate. Instead, she got her frustration out by wringing her cloth napkin in her lap.

The waiter came with another bottle of San Pellegrino and poured them each a glass while they both sat in silence. She took a deep breath.

“So, Mom, there’s something I’d like to tell you,” Claire said, taking a sip of the cold, bubbly water.

Her mother raised her perfectly arched, perfectly waxed dark-brown eyebrows. “Really? You never tell me anything.”

“Right, well I’m about to tell you something now,” she said with a forced grin. “You know Jake Manning?”

Suddenly her mother’s face lit up like a Christmas tree in a department store window. “Why, yes I do. The best-looking of the Manning brothers in my opinion.”

She fought the urge to roll her eyes. Of course the only comment her mother would make would be the most superficial. Claire had no idea how her father had managed to stay married to her mother. Her father always preached about tolerance, love, compassion…

“Right. Well, he and I have been dating.” Okay, so maybe that was a little stretch, but it was a heck of a lot better than
I had a one-night stand with an amazingly hot man who impregnated me
.

“What? Why didn’t you tell me this?”

She chewed on her lower lip, trying to keep her tongue inside her mouth where it wouldn’t land her in any trouble. She coughed and then continued. “It didn’t seem important.”

“Hot buns fresh from the oven,” the waiter said interrupting, then leaving.

“Well, I must say, if you’re trying to hold on to a man like that, the last thing you should be doing right now is eating a basket full of bread,” she said, raising her brows and pointing to the bread basket with a tilt of her chin.

Rage, the kind that began at the tips of one’s toes and then skyrocketed through the body until it felt as though it needed to explode out of the head like a cartoon rocket ship, engulfed Claire. For a moment she didn’t move, didn’t utter a sound. She glanced from her left to her right. She had two options—the first being to pitch herself out the window, and the second being to dump the basket of hot rolls onto her mother’s head.

“Thank you for your heartfelt happiness, Mother.”

“Well, of course I’m
happy
for you, darling,” her mother said, her eyes growing wider as Claire slowly reached for a bun. She caught the glimpse of her reflection in the sparkling silverware, again, an irritating flash of who she once was sneakily entering her psyche. She saw a young woman with braces gleaming through an awkward smile and acne that took on a purplish hue she’d tried to hide with makeup. Frumpy clothes attempting to hide pounds of unhappiness were her uniform, and eyes always filled with tears and self-hatred stared back at her.

“Claire!”

She jumped and looked at her mother. The voice wasn’t in her past, it was right across the table, and its shrill tone mirrored her mother’s sour expression as she waited for Claire to notice her. “You know I have always supported you,” her mother said, taking a sip of water, her fuchsia lipstick leaving a mark on the crystal water glass. Claire tried not to get agitated, tried not to let her mother’s blatant disapproval affect her. When she’d been a teen, she wanted desperately to be the image of perfection. She wanted to have her mother’s petite frame, but that was then, Claire thought, looking at her mother. She had worked through a lot of her issues and she was a stronger woman for it.

“You know what, Mother?” Claire said, feeling the fire that burned in her body for the girl she once was. She didn’t wait for her mother to answer. She needed to get this out. Now. “You
haven’t
always supported me. You have always supported the image of what you thought I should be,” she said leaning toward her mother, her mother pressing away from her into the booth. She ignored the hurt look on her mother’s face and continued on, before she chickened out.

“You always thought I was too ugly and too fat. I was at the top of my class and you never once congratulated me for it. The only thing you ever congratulated me for was losing weight, and even then, it was with the mention of how
fat
I used to be. When I told you I was opening my own business you didn’t encourage me, you just pointed out that I should be concerned with starting a family. When my business started booming you told me not to neglect my appearance. And now, now, I’m here telling you I’m dating Jake and all you can think about is what I’m eating? Well, you know what?”

She paused, cleared her throat of tears, and shoved a piece of bread in her mouth and chewed.

“You know what?” she asked again, chomping away. “I like bread. Yup, that’s right,” she said, nodding, as her mother shook her head at her. Claire dipped a piece of the bread into olive oil, dabbing it furiously, “and I like myself. I like my body. I like my mind. I like the woman I’ve become, and you know what else?” she said, this time unable to stop the tears that welled in her eyes as she stared at her mother, olive oil dripping from the bread still in her hand and onto the pristine white tablecloth. “I know Dad loves me. I know Dad is proud of me. And I know, if he were here, the first words out of his mouth would have been congratulations,” Claire said, blinking rapidly. She felt her chest heaving from sobs that were trapped inside.

“Your father can’t protect you from the real world anymore, Claire. People are judged on their appearance every day and you’re naive if you don’t think so. That man you’re with isn’t going to be attracted to an overweight, frumpy woman. I’m just—”

“No. No, you’re not going to do this. You are not going to try to instill doubt in me. Not now.” She stood, grabbing her purse and coat and slid out of the booth. “Oh, and by the way, you’re about to become a grandmother,” Claire added. Her mother looked horrified. She spotted the bread basket still filled with bread.
Go for it
. “And you know what else, Mother?” Claire said, grabbing each bun and stuffing it into her purse. “I am going to take each and every one of these processed white buns and eat them!”

She turned, desperate to leave the restaurant. She needed fresh air. She wound her way through the tables, clutching her coat and purse to her chest, almost positive she dropped a roll somewhere between their table and the front door, but she kept on going. She didn’t make eye contact with anyone, hoping to God there was no one she knew here. What were the odds that quiet, shy Claire would be making a spectacle of herself twice in the same week?

Her knees shook and her body trembled as she walked away from her mother. The smell of grilling steak and sizzling beef wafted around her like a cloak of anti-pregnancy fumes. She swung open the giant wooden doors and gasped the fresh, crisp spring air as she stood on the sidewalk. She had to squint against the bright sunlight, taking a few moments to gather her bearings. And then she stood there, basking in the warmth of the sun, in the middle of the sidewalk in downtown Red River. She took one breath, then another, until a strange calm permeated. She thought of her father. Of Jake. Of how far she’d come.

She touched her abdomen, saying a quiet, proud hello.

I did it, baby.

BOOK: The Best Man's Baby
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