Chapter Thirteen
“S o the thing is I’ve never brought anyone to see Dirk before,” Darcy said. “I don’t know what he’s going to think or say. I know we’re friends, but you’re also a guy and that could have an impact on him.”
“You think?” Mark asked calmly, never taking his attention from the road.
Darcy nodded even though he couldn’t see her movement.
“Sure. I mean Dirk has some developmental issues, but he’s also a fourteen-year-old boy.
There are hormones at work. Not that he’s shown any interest in the whole boy-girl thing.
I don’t even want to think about that. Talk about a nightmare in the making. My point is—”
Mark spared her a quick smile. “Darcy, I know what your point is. Dirk may be completely fine with meeting me. He may also be threatened. I won’t take it personally if it’s the latter.
I promise to do my best to make him like me.
Now would you please calm down before you give yourself a heart attack? ”
“I’m fine.”
“No, you’re not. If you bounce your foot any harder, you’re going to break through the floor of my truck.”
“What?” She glanced down at her leg. Sure enough it was jumping around as she gave in to her nervousness. “I might be a little tense,” she admitted. “It’s just I’ve never done anything like this before.”
“Everything is going to be fine,” he promised.
Easy for him to say, she thought to herself.
What he didn’t know was that she had a lot more on the line that he realized.
She desperately wanted things to go well with Dirk.
If she had any chance at a long-term relationship with Mark, he was going to have to get along with her brother.
And figuring out that she was in love with Mark had made her want things to last as long as possible.
She still couldn’t believe she’d fallen for him, but given what they’d been through together, she shouldn’t be surprised.
There had to be a reason that she’d ended five years of celibacy with him.
Some of it was sexual chemistry, but some of it was something much more.
She was drawn to his strength—both physical and emotional.
She liked who he was and how he lived his life.
She admired him. And there was the small detail of him being easy on the eye and darned good in bed. What was there not to like?
The question was—should she tell him about her feelings?
So far every fiber of her being had screamed “no” really loud.
The man had recently been through a horrible experience with a woman he’d wanted to marry.
She wasn’t completely sure he was over that.
Or if he was, she could be his rebound relationship.
Neither possibility gave her any reason to put her heart on the line.
They pulled into the parking lot of the school before she had a chance to calm herself.
In what felt like seconds, they’d made their way to the great room, where Dirk was waiting along with several of his school friends.
She’d warned him that she was bringing a friend and now she waited anxiously to see how her brother would react.
He walked toward them slowly. Darcy’s heart filled with love as she stared into her brother’s familiar face. He was tall and good-looking and obviously happy. He grinned at her. She flew into his arms and they hugged. Then she stepped back and introduced them.
“Dirk, this is Mark. He lives next door to me. He’s a detective.”
Her brother and Mark shook hands. “Nice to meet you. Darcy’s told me a lot about you,” Mark said easily.
Dirk nodded. “Darcy always says nice stuff about me. A detective works with the police. Do you keep Darcy safe?”
“I work for the local sheriff’s office rather than the police, which is almost the same. Do you worry about your sister?”
Dirk nodded. “She’s by herself now. I don’t want her to get scared at night.”
“I see.” He gazed at the young man. “Darcy knows that if she ever gets scared, she can call me. I’m right next door and I’ll do everything I can to keep her safe.”
Dirk nodded. “Good.”
Darcy felt some of her apprehension fade away. She’d been worried about this meeting, but it seemed as if things might work out after all. Mark had taken Dirk’s concerns seriously, while her brother didn’t seem threatened by her having a man in her life.
She linked arms with both of them. “So what’s on the schedule for today?” she asked.
“I want to show Mark my pictures from Chicago,” Dirk said. He glanced over her head. “I went there with my school. It was Thanksgiving. We took the train and then stayed in a hotel.”
“Sounds like fun,” Mark said.
“It was. I took my camera. Darcy gave it to me and then she gave me film. I like taking pictures.”
“He’s very good at it,” Darcy told Mark. She returned her attention to her brother. “Then what?”
“After lunch some of the guys want to play basketball. I’d like you to watch.”
“Absolutely,” she promised. “I’ll even cheer when you get a basket.”
Dirk smiled. “Would you like to play with us?” he asked Mark.
“It just so happens that basketball is my game.”
* * *
Life was bitterly unfair, Darcy thought later that afternoon as her brother and Mark raced down the court.
The two guys were a terrific twosome, tossing the ball back and forth, making baskets and then high-fiving each other.
They didn’t look that much alike, but there was a similarity in their physical grace.
Mark had collected his workout clothes from his gym bag in his truck.
Darcy tried not to notice how good he looked sweating.
She’d worried about him and Mark for no reason.
They were getting along like old friends.
Which made her concerned for a completely different reason. How was she supposed to resist him now?
“Darcy’s got a boyfriend.”
She turned toward the singsong voice and saw Andrew climbing the bleachers to sit next to her.
“I’m not even going to dignify that comment with a reply,” she said with a sniff.
Andrew laughed. “Dirk told me you were bringing a friend. I wanted to check him out for myself.”
“What do you think?”
He turned his attention to the basketball game. “Aside from favoring one leg, I would say he’s a pretty good player.”
She glared at the counselor. “He hurt himself playing last weekend, and you know that’s not what I meant. I don’t care about his physical prowess on the basketball court.”
Andrew nodded. “I know. I watched him at lunch. He’s okay with the kids.
Some people feel uncomfortable, but they get over it.
Others never fit in. They’re awkward and find excuses to stay away.
Your friend there—” he jerked his chin toward the court “—is one of the good ones. He doesn’t really care that these kids are different. ”
“That’s what I thought, too,” Darcy admitted.
“You sound like you wish it wasn’t true.”
“I don’t, exactly. Let’s just say his acceptance of Dirk complicates things.”
What she wasn’t about to tell Andrew is that it made her more vulnerable, which was the last thing she needed with Mark.
She was already in love with him and having daydreams about happily ever after.
She had to keep reminding herself that he hadn’t shown any interest in a permanent relationship.
Her luck in the man-woman department had been pretty lousy for years and he’d just been through a horrible experience during which the woman he’d wanted to marry had tried to kill him.
Not exactly a formula for romantic bliss.
“What are you scared of?” Andrew asked.
“I’m not afraid. More resigned. Life has taught me that when things get tough, people tend to desert like rats on a sinking ship.”
Andrew returned his attention to the game. Dirk made another basket and Mark yelled out congratulations.
“Maybe your friend is more the lifeboat kind.”
“Maybe.”
She desperately wanted to believe it, but she was afraid of being let down again. She was tired of being hurt. Not that she had much choice. Now that she was in love with him, it was unlikely she would get out of this unscathed.
* * *
“I had a good time,” Mark said on their drive home. “Thanks for inviting me.”
“You’re welcome.”
He gave her a teasing smile. “All that worry for nothing.”
She nodded. “I guess I shouldn’t have sweated the visit so much. Dirk really enjoyed meeting you.” In fact, her brother had seemed more sad that Mark was leaving than that she was going as well.
“I liked meeting him, too. He’s a special kid with a very special sister. You’ve done a hell of a job, Darcy.”
“I don’t deserve any praise.”
“Sure you do. You’ve worked your butt off to provide for your brother.
Just in the past six or eight months you’ve uprooted yourself, moved to an unfamiliar town and enrolled your brother in a wonderful, but very expensive school.
You’re strapped for cash and determined that he get the best education he can. ”
While she appreciated the praise, she didn’t understand it. “He’s my brother. What else would I have done? You took care of your sister.”
“My situation wasn’t anything like yours. Maddie was already in high school when our folks died and, except for the usual teenage stuff, didn’t require anything extra of me. You took on taking care of Dirk when a lot of more prepared people would have walked away. And you’ve helped me a lot.”
“Me?” She turned toward him. “What are you talking about?”
“I came back to Whitehorn physically on the mend, but the rest of me was a mess. I hadn’t worked through all my conflicting emotions about Sylvia. I wasn’t ready to be back in the world. I wanted to hide and lick my wounds. You got in the way of that. I owe you.”
“I was just being a friend. You don’t owe me anything.”
She didn’t want his gratitude or a debt. She wanted something more permanent. Hope fluttered in her chest and no matter how much she told herself it was dangerous, the light, tickly feeling wouldn’t go away.