truly wanted nothing more than to be a good husband to her.
âI love you,â he whispered.
âI love you, too,â she replied.
And she did. She knew it even in places that still ached, parts of her that would never be the same.
Five gunshot wounds, he had told them when heâd brought her, bleeding and dying, to the hospital. Five.
It was a wonder she was alive, and right then, she was so, so grateful that she was.
âDo you wanna just come on home with me?â he said, his lips close to her ear, his breath warm on her neck. âJust because the wedding went up in smoke doesnât mean we canât still have a honeymoon night.â
âSure,â she said. âIâll come home with you.â
âReally?â He looked shocked. Pleased, but shocked.
âYou betcha. Right after you go into my house and tell my granny that Iâm going to be shackinâ up with you tonight, wal-lerinâ in the squalor of fornication andââ
âAll right, all right. Never mind.â He pulled back and put the car in gear. âSeemed like a good idea at the time.â
She laughed, leaned over, and kissed him on the cheek. âWeâve waited this long. Whatâs another week or so?â
âAgony.â
He drove on down the street and pulled into the driveway of her quaint, Spanish-style cottage. Every light in the house appeared to be on, and even with the windows rolled up, she could hear the Reid clanâs ruckus.
âYou donât have to walk me in,â she said. âJust come by and get me as soon as youâre out and about tomorrow morning.â
âWhat do you wanna do?â
âBe somewhere else.â
âGotcha.â
They kissed once more. Quickly. Granny Reid was probably looking out the window.
âVan,â he said, as she started to open the car door. âThat hot, sweaty jungle sex ... are you really expecting that three times a day? Because Iâm not sure if I canââ
âOh, please. Get real. Weâre both over forty, for heavenâs sake.â
He looked enormously relieved. âThank goodness. I donât want you to be disappointed if ...â
She climbed out of the car, then leaned back in and gave him a smile and a wink. âDonât you worry about a thing, sugar dumplinâ. Twice a dayâll be plenty.â
âOh, good. You had me worried there.â
She closed the carâs door and watched as he backed out of the driveway and drove away. Feeling a little heart string tug when he disappeared, she wondered why. Thousands of times had she watched him drive away from her house over the years, and it had been just part of the old routine.
But a few months ago, the routine had been shattered.
They had rebuilt. Now, everything was different. And for the most part, it was pretty darned good, she decided, standing there next to her driveway, still feeling the warmth of his kiss on her lips.
When she started to walk up the path toward her front door, she felt the pain in her thigh, and another twinge in her abdomen, and that half-numb, half-tingling sensation just below her left breast. That was the shot that had nearly killed her.
And there were the nightmares.
So, everything that was new wasnât good. But, all in all, she felt terribly lucky to be alive.
And even though she had planned to be on her honeymoon tonight, it was still delicious to arrive home to this tiny, Spanish-style house with its gleaming white stucco walls, red clay tile roof, and elegant draping of thick, crimson bougainvillea.
Her mood lifted even more when she saw two beloved silhouettes outlined in her living room window. A pair of enormous black cats, Cleopatra and Diamante ... watching and waiting patiently for Mom to come home. Ah, so sweet.
Then another pair of silhouettes ... two curly-headed children.
The cats scrambled off their window perches and disappeared from view. One of the