The Storm (Fairhope) (9 page)

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Authors: Laura Lexington

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BOOK: The Storm (Fairhope)
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“I would LOVE for you to get pregnant soon!” I grinned, handing her a plate. “Then I wouldn’t have to suffer alone.”

“Ohhh…” Grace whined as she loaded her hamburger bun with condiments. Her latest diet was ditched in favor of the gobs of mayonnaise and mound of bacon spilling off the sides of her hamburger. “I can’t handle the vomiting, Jana. I know it’s been awful for you.” Her enviable lips pouted, and she batted her long, dark eyelashes sympathetically.

“You may not have morning sickness. A lot of people don’t.” I gulped as I endured a wave of nausea after looking at my loaded hamburger, which looked
so
tasty just seconds before. “I usually get sick at night. I’ll be in my second trimester in a few weeks, and hopefully this too shall pass.”

Gavin’s pager started going off incessantly, and he fumbled around for it in his jeans. “Shit. I’ve got to go, guys.” He looked worried.

Grace gaped at him. “What is it?”

“Attempted robbery over in Sunset Trace at the residence of a ‘pretty young woman in her twenties’ … they hope robbery is all it is.” His eyes were glued to his cell phone, where texts were coming through constantly.

“Well, golly, you better hurry up,” Grace said sarcastically. “Don’t want to miss a ‘pretty young woman in her twenties.’”

Gavin rolled his eyes. “There’s no one prettier than you, Grace.” He kissed her lightly on the cheek before rushing to his car. “Jana, can you run her home if I don’t get back?” I nodded. I wondered why he looked nervous to leave her. She wasn’t drinking much.

As his car roared into the night, she sighed. “I hate it when that happens. I know he’s on duty, but I hate when fun gets interrupted.” The frustration on her face shifted to admiration. “He’s so
good
, though, Jana. How can I stay irritated at someone so damn precious?”

Gavin Milton was the face of a future Fairhope hero, the type that frequented front pages of newspapers. A well-known local police officer, he would help anyone with anything at any given time. He was currently preparing to become a detective. Little old ladies and cute kids adored him, not to mention every woman between twenty and fifty swooned over him. Catching sight of that heartthrob face (and his phenomenal ass), who could resist? On some weekend nights off, he strummed his guitar and let that sexy voice out of its cage at local venues. He literally had phone numbers thrown at him from the seasonal and tourist crowds, but everyone local knew to suppress any naughty thoughts, too afraid of Grace and her famous outbursts to make a pass at what belonged to her.

“You can’t.” I hogged a bite of my delicious hamburger. “Scrumptious.”

“Guess it’s me cuddling with my bullet tonight,” she muttered under her breath where Andrew couldn’t hear, pulling the pickles off her burger.

“You’ll survive,” I replied. “While you’re sipping wine and soaking in a bubble bath, remember he’d rather be tangled up with you than rescuing some woman, even if she is young and pretty. He will always come home to you.”

“When he proposed, he said the one thing you don’t have to chase is true love.” She blushed, her gaze lost in the twinkling stars that spelled beauty in their own letters. “How could I say no to that? I don’t deserve him.”

“Don’t say that, Grace.” Were those tears in her eyes?

“I don’t, Jana.” A strangeness fell over her, but I couldn’t describe it. “He’s so…unreal. With Gavin, the lines are blurred between making love and having hot sex. Nobody else ever made me feel that way, you know?”

“Especially not a bullet,” I teased.

The laughs the three of us shared that night, the sound of love and friendship dancing with cold beer and country music would always be something I remembered—the plans we charted for our futures, Baby Cooks and Baby Miltons included, long days boating in Orange Beach and baseball on Saturdays. There was no way I could have forecast the turmoil brewing in the background of our lives underneath the stellar architecture of our Fairhope night sky. If someone told me how the stars would disjoin and all of our lives would be thrust into a tailspin that only God could grip to a screeching halt, I never in a million years would have believed it.

 

 

ANOTHER MORNING LITTERED with gray clouds and scattered thunderstorms marked my next field ride with Jeff. The day before, I had a new prescription filled. Now, I stared at the new pill that battled nausea waiting for me on my dresser, debating whether to take it or not. I decided its side effect of somnolence was better than vomiting and gulped it down with a glass of ice water.

I tackled the steps of dressing in slow motion. I frowned at my reflection, groaning as I realized I needed to add maternity clothes shopping to my already ridiculous to-do list. Baby Cook had taken up residence and blown up my abdomen. Listlessly, I ran my faithful Chi through my dry hair, hoping to fight the inevitable frizz that accompanied stormy weather.

I pecked Andrew and pushed myself out the door to face the day.

“I love you,” he called out as the door slammed behind me.

The weather became increasingly inclement as I sailed closer to my destination. I switched my windshield wipers up a notch as the rain began to pound harder. Lightning cracked and thunder rumbled, shadowing the clouds with the darkness of a nine o’clock PM sky. Why was it
always
raining? I longed for the orangey sunshine and blueberry violet skies that lived in my childhood memories.

My cell phone started ringing loudly, its first soft tones hidden under the deafening storm. Dangerously, I fumbled around on the passenger seat, groping until my fingers clasped my phone. Chris.

Ah, if only I were still working under him. At that point, I would have considered the major pay cut of going backward in exchange for a peaceful working environment. My relationship with Jeff had been nothing less than awkward since my big announcement.

I jerked my wheel back to the right after swerving irresponsibly due to my mindless searching. No wonder so many people thought talking on cell phones in the car should be illegal. “Chris!” I answered brightly. “How are you? I’m sorry it’s loud—it’s storming here.”

“I’m wonderful, girl.” Chris’s contagious voice made you want to hear him talk. “You?”

“I am doing well.” Sadly, the lie rolled off my tongue with no hint of insincerity. I almost believed myself. I remembered what Grace once told me: “It’s not a lie if you believe it, Jana!” No wonder she won trips every year.

“My mid-year review went well, despite being the black sheep.” I paused momentarily, realizing that the mid-year review was completed prior to my pregnancy. “How is your new associate?”

“He’s awesome!” Chris’s enthusiasm was genuine. “But he’s no Jana Cook. Nobody catches on faster than you.”

How ironic,
I thought, reflecting on Collin’s initial concern about my ability to acclimate.

“Well, I wish that my current partner—”

I didn’t see the black sedan in front of me until it was too late. I tried to slam on my brakes, screaming and dropping the phone.

My eyes widened in horror, and I forgot to breathe as I realized what was happening.

BOOM!

I have no recollection of what happened next, only diving mindlessly, unconsciously, back to my early twenties.

Drink in one hand, book in the other, toes in the sand … we were in Orange Beach again, “house-sitting” for Andrew’s parents while they sipped martinis and privately renewed their vows on a Caribbean cruise. I laughed as Grace, after one too many drinks, danced teasingly around Gavin, who was trying to sleep through the last half-hour of sunshine. She swung her sleek, toned legs over his body, straddling him and burying her face in his neck, her to-die-for lips softly kissing him. “I love you, baby. You know what I want to do?”

I reburied myself in my latest Jodi Picoult novel, shaking my head.

“Grace. Jana’s right there.” Shy, sober Gavin glanced apologetically in my direction. I shrugged nonchalantly, relishing the feel of the silky breeze flowing over my sun-kissed skin.

“Awwww, Jana doesn’t care. I tell her everything anyway.” She burst out laughing. “I teach her my tricks. Hey, Andrew, you hear that? You can thank me for Jana’s drastic improvement in the—”

“GRACE!” I shouted, fumbling into a sitting position. “For God’s sake, he’s helping those
kids
build a sandcastle. Shut your dirty mouth.” I watched my breathtakingly handsome boyfriend patiently help two five-year-olds sculpt the perfect sandcastle in the distance, fantasizing about what a storybook father he would be. “Although, I must admit I benefitted from your insight in that department.”

“Oops, I’m sorry, Jana.” She couldn’t stop giggling. “I need to be cut off. I didn’t even see those kids.”

All I could do was shake my head.

“Jana, you know what?” Grace smirked. I noticed her Playboy bunny breasts were about to fall out of her size-too-small triangle bikini top.

She shook her blond waves in Andrew’s direction, who was putting the final touches on the intricate sandcastle beside the two ecstatic children.

“What?”

“You are going to marry that man, live it up in a cottage on the beach, and paint all day. You’ll be famous!” She paused to take a sip of her drink, her sexy lips curving into a devious grin. “He may not be your first, but he’s going to be your last!” We all giggled.

“There will never be another man who makes me feel that way. He’s definitely my Romeo.”

My tired eyes, strained from having my head buried in a book all day, rested on Grace’s princess cut diamond engagement ring. I watched as solemn, strong Gavin massaged her scalp under her unruly mane, and found myself smiling as I noticed how tenderly he watched her, even in her wildness.

Andrew’s hypnotic eyes found mine, and the butterflies were born for the millionth time, sweeping me into his mesmerizing aura. God, I wanted every ounce of his body and soul to be mine, all mine.

He asked me to marry him that night.

I regained consciousness probably moments later, although the time slowly materialized as if it were hours. My eyes opened to a dizzy spread of dots in every color before my vision cleared. Gasping for air with the wind knocked out of me, frantic tears rolled down my face as I realized what happened. My head throbbing, I opened my door and tried to stand.

The driver of the other car was already by my side. “I’m so sorry,” I sobbed to him. “I tried to stop. My brakes must have locked up. I have insurance. It’s a company car.” My tears rendered me incomprehensible.

“It’s okay!” the man soothed, looking over my hysterical mumble-jumble. He was older, probably sixty, a businessman with gentle brown eyes and a kind, wrinkled smile. “The car will be fine. It was barely a dent, and your car looks like you just drove it off the lot. There’s no damage. Are you all right?”

“I-I think so,” I stuttered, watching the world spin around me. “I’m just really, really dizzy. I think I blacked out for a minute.” I lowered myself back into my car.
Calm down. Calm down.

Walking closer to me, brow furrowed, he opened my door. His jaw dropped when he saw my thirteen-week bubble belly poking out from my slender frame. I was finally showing. “Ma’am, are you expecting?” My victim looked genuinely concerned.

“Yes, but I think I’m okay…”

One of Gavin’s colleagues arrived within minutes and dutifully questioned us, as well as the witnesses who had stopped—some out of curiosity, some because they couldn’t go anywhere anyway until our cars were moved. The wreck was obviously, unquestionably, my fault. I explained that my brakes had locked up.

The police officer yawned and rubbed his eyes. I assumed he was coming off the night shift. “Well, that’s a wrap. Just a little bump. You know, my wife had one of those Nissans. She always complained about the brakes, too.” He finished taking his notes, explained what would happen next, and then left the scene.

Numbly, fingers shaking, I dialed Jeff’s number to confess my accident. Andrew was traveling to an out of town meeting, and the only response I could get was his static-y company voicemail. Grace’s cell phone was off, and Mama’s home line greeted me with a busy tone. Loneliness crept in, and I could not help entertaining poisonous what-if thoughts.
What if the wreck hurt the baby?

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