The Secret Wife (28 page)

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Authors: Susan Mallery

BOOK: The Secret Wife
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She drew in a deep breath and raised her gaze to him. “I know you have no reason to believe me, but I’m going to say it again. I love you with all my heart. I swear, I’m never going to leave you, no matter how many inheritances you have, or how much money, or where you have to live. If necessary, I’ll camp on your doorstep, I’ll hide in the back seat of your car. Maybe I’ll even get a job at your office and be in the way all the time.”

His heart flared hot enough to burn away the darkness in his soul. Light poured in. Light and love.

He drew her to him and touched her cheek. “That won’t be necessary.”

“I’m almost afraid to ask, but why?”

He smiled. “Because I love you and I want to be with you for the rest of both our lives. I want to grow old with you. I want to have children and watch them grow. I want to build a home next to the orphanage and divide our time between Ojai and New York. I want you. It was wrong of me to assume you were leaving, and I apologize. Please forgive me and stay with me as my lover, my wife, my other half.”

Wonder filled her green eyes. “I don’t understand. You love me?”

“Yes.”

“You believe that I love you?”

He laughed. “Yes. Why is this so hard to understand?”

“It just is. Does this mean…” She paused. “Do you trust me?” she whispered.

“With my heart and soul.” He bent his head and kissed her.

Their lips clung together in a moment so perfect it defied description.

When they separated, he held her close. “I don’t promise not to get weird from time to time,” he said. “Old habits are hard to break.”

“I’ll just slap you until you snap out of it.”

“That’ll work.” He cupped her face. “Are you sure?”

“More than anything.”

“Then I have something for you.” He hesitated, suddenly embarrassed by the gesture. Maybe it had been a mistake.

“What?”

He reached into his trouser pocket and pulled out the plain gold band he’d slipped on her finger when they’d first been married. “Five years ago you left this behind,” he said. “I’ve kept it, hoping one day you’d want it back.”

“Oh, Cole.” She took the ring and put it on. “Thank you for saving it. And for believing in me, and for loving me and just everything.”

They kissed again. He was content. Whatever the future might hold, both Elissa and the eternal symbol of their love were back where they belonged.

* * * * *

Read on for an excerpt from
THE GIRLS OF MISCHIEF BAY
, book one in the Mischief Bay series!

Susan Mallery, the
New York Times
bestselling author of
Three Sisters
, is world renowned for her “insightful, funny, and poignant” stories (Booklist). With her
Mischief Bay
series, she brings vivid color to the story of three friends on the brink of a new life.

The Girls of Mischief Bay

Looking for more? With more than a hundred ebooks available, you can enjoy dozens of other memorable titles from
New York Times
bestselling author Susan Mallery, including her
Blackberry Island
trilogy:
Barefoot Season
,
Three Sisters
and
Evening Stars
!

Don’t miss the charming
Fool’s Gold
series. All titles available in ebook!

Until We Touch

Before We Kiss

When We Met

Christmas on Fourth Street

Three Little Words

Two of a Kind

Just One Kiss


Halfway There

(ebook novella)

A Fool’s Gold Christmas

All Summer Long

Summer Nights

Summer Days


Almost Summer

(ebook novella)


Only Us

(ebook novella)

Only His

Only Yours

Only Mine

Summer Brides
(anthology)


Sister of the Bride

(ebook novella)

Finding Perfect

Almost Perfect

Chasing Perfect

Yours For Christmas

Chase Me

Hold Me

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One

“DID TYLER MAKE THAT FOR YOU?”

Nicole Lord turned to look at the picture she’d posted on the wall of Mischief in Motion, her Pilates studio. Three large red hearts covered a piece of pink construction paper. A handprint had been outlined over the hearts. The hearts were wobbly and highly stylized, but still recognizable. Not bad, considering the artist in question was not yet five. The handprint had been traced by one of his teachers.

“He did,” Nicole said with a smile. “I promised him I would bring it to work and show everyone.”

Her client, a thirtysomething fighting her way back from a forty-five-pound pregnancy weight gain, wiped sweat from her face and smiled. “He sounds adorable. I look forward to when my daughter can do more than eat, poop and keep me up all night.”

“It gets better,” Nicole promised.

“I hope so. I’d always assumed once I started having kids, I’d want six.” The woman grimaced. “Now one is looking like more than enough.” She waved and walked toward the exit. “See you next week.”

“Have a good weekend.”

Nicole spoke without looking, her attention already back on her computer. She had her noon class, then a three-hour break before her late-afternoon classes. Which sounded nice until she thought about all she had to get done. Grocery shopping for sure—they were out of everything. Her car needed gas, there was dry cleaning to pick up and somewhere in the middle of all that, she should eat lunch.

She glanced at the clock, wondering if she should text Eric to remind him to pick up Tyler from day care at four. She reached for her phone, then shook her head and sagged back in her chair. No, she shouldn’t, she told herself. He’d only forgotten once and he’d felt awful about it. She had to trust him not to forget again.

Which she would, she told herself. Only these days he was forgetting a lot of things. And helping less around the house.

Marriage, she thought ruefully. It all sounded so romantic until you realized that hey, you not only had to live with someone else, but there would also be days when they actually thought you were wrong about things.

She was still trying to figure out in which order she was going to run her errands when the door to her studio opened and Pam Eiland strolled in.

“Hey, you,” Pam called cheerfully, an oversize tote hanging off one shoulder.

Anyone who didn’t know Pam would assume she had a clutter problem if she needed to haul around that much stuff in her bag. Those who did know Pam were privy to the fact that her actual handbag was fairly small and that most of the space in the tote was taken up by a soft blanket and a very weird-looking dog.

Right on cue, Lulu poked her head out of the tote and whined softly.

Nicole stood and approached them both. After giving Pam a hug, she reached for Lulu. The dog leaped into her arms and snuggled close.

“I see you’re in pink today,” she said, stroking Lulu’s cheek, then rubbing the top of her head.

“We both felt it was a pink kind of day,” Pam told her.

Lulu, a purebred Chinese crested, had white hair on the top of her head, by her ears and on her tail and lower legs. The rest of her spotted body was pretty much naked and an unexpected shade of grayish pink with brown spots. Her health issues were legendary and what with having no fur, she was chronically cold. Which meant Lulu had a collection of sweaters, jackets and T-shirts. Today’s selection was a lightweight, sleeveless pink sweater trimmed with shiny gray ribbon. With money tight and her own clothes threadbare, Nicole found herself in the embarrassing situation of envying a dog’s wardrobe.

Lulu gave her a quick puppy-kiss on the chin. Nicole held onto the warm dog for a few seconds more. Her relationship with Lulu was the least emotionally charged moment in her day thus far, and she was determined to enjoy it.

Pam, a pretty brunette with an easy smile, wore a loose short-sleeved dress over her leggings and workout tank. Unlike the other clients who came in for the noon class, Pam didn’t walk over from an office. Nicole knew the other woman had held a job at her husband’s company years ago. She understood how a small business worked and often gave Nicole sound advice. Aside from that, Pam seemed to have her days to herself. Right now that sounded like a dream come true.

“Who’s coming today?” Pam asked as she pulled the blanket out of the tote and folded it before setting it in a corner of the room. Lulu obligingly curled up, with her long legs tucked gracefully under her body. Nicole knew the dog wouldn’t budge until class was over. She supposed the sweet temperament and excellent manners made up for Lulu’s odd and faintly sci-fi appearance.

“Just you and Shannon,” Nicole said, clicking on her computer’s scheduling program to confirm. She was actually relieved to have a smaller class. Lately she was so damned tired all the time. Pam and Shannon could have run the workout themselves, so there wouldn’t be pressure to stay on top of every move.

Even better, all three dropouts had come in early that morning. The studio had a strict twenty-four-hour cancellation policy, which meant she was going to be paid for five students regardless. She accepted her momentary pleasure even though the thought made her a bad person, and vowed she would work on her character just as soon as she figured out how to fix what was going on with her marriage and got more than four hours of sleep on any given night.

Pam had slipped off her sandals in preparation for class. But instead of putting on her Pilates socks, she turned to Nicole and grinned.

“Want to go to lunch?”

Pam’s smile was infectious. Her hazel-green eyes crinkled at the corners and her mouth curved up.

“Come on,” Pam teased. “You know you want to.”

“Want to what?” Shannon Rigg asked as she walked into the studio. “I’ve had a horrible morning dealing with a misogynistic idiot from the bank who insisted on continually asking to speak to my supervisor. When I explained I was the CFO of the company, I think he had a seizure.” She paused, her blue eyes dancing with amusement. “I offered to send him a scanned copy of my business card, but he declined. Then I told him that if he didn’t get his act together, I would be moving the company’s four-hundred-milliondollar account to another bank.” She paused for dramatic effect. “I think I made him cry.”

Pam held out her arm, hand raised, for a high five. “You both constantly impress me. Nicole juggles her husband, her five-year-old son and her growing business. You’re busy frightening men who really should know better. I, on the other hand, will pick out my dog’s wardrobe for tomorrow and make biscuits from scratch. It’s sad.”

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