into the kitchen and stopped dead in her tracks, her eyes widening and mouth dropping open with shock. Vases of flowers were perched on every available surface. The fragrant and colorful blooms ranged from a simple dozen red roses to several arrangements of mixed flowers to a bouquet of brilliant pink and white stargazer lilies that was as wide as the table that bore its weight.
“What in the world?” Toni said.
“You better call that young man and forgive him for whatever he’s done. I don’t think the next batch will fit through the door,” Grandma said. “And don’t get me started on those damned balloons.”
“Balloons?”
“I told Birdie to take them to your room. It isn’t safe to have them floating about in the kitchen while I’m cooking.”
Over the sound of water boiling on the stove, Toni could hear Birdie giggling and the playful yap of one of Grandma’s Pomeranians.
“Are these all from Logan?” Toni wondered aloud. She reached for the card on the closest bouquet.
Grinning at Toni, Grandma tapped the vase closest to her. “Unless you have more than one man who is crazy in love with you, I’d guess so.”
The card read: Please call me, Toni. The woman who answered my phone this morning was my mother. Logan
“His mother?”
Toni snatched the card from the next bouquet. Toni, I swear didn’t cheat on you. I would never do that to you. Please call. I need to hear your voice. Love, Logan
She went around the room, reading one card after another. The next one seemed a little angry. What do I have to do to get you to answer your damned phone, Toni? Answer it! Now. Stop fucking ignoring me.
Then pleading. Please call me, Toni. Text me. Email me. Something. Please. Even if it’s to yell at me. I can’t take your silence.
Desperate. I’ll do anything to win you back, lamb. Just tell me what to do.
Insulting. You are the most stubborn woman I’ve ever met. Will you just talk to me?
Threatening? I’m going to track you down and kiss you until you see reason. We are meant to be together. Don’t you get that?
Just . . . I love you.
I love you, Toni.
That has to be enough. I love you. Desperately. Unconditionally. Forever.
Resigned. Well, this obviously isn’t working. I give up.
Clutching his little notes to her chest, she allowed tears to stream down her cheeks. Tears of happiness—he hadn’t cheated on her. Tears of exhilaration—he truly loved her. Tears of empathy—the poor guy had been completely miserable all day. Her cellphone was still over an hour away in Seattle, and unfortunately she didn’t have his number memorized. How could she reach him?
“Well?” Grandma asked.
Blurry-eyed, Toni spun around, still clutching Logan’s notes. “He loves me.”
Grandma smiled. “In that desperate I’ll-die-if-I-can’t-touch-you kind of way or the more settled I-can’t-notice-anything-but-your-absence-when-you’re-gone kind of way?”
“Both, I think.”
“Lucky you. So you’re going to forgive him and make amends?”
Toni choked on a laugh. “He didn’t do anything wrong to begin with. It was just a misunderstanding. But yes, I’d forgive him. I’d probably forgive him anything. Just don’t tell him that.”
Grandma patted Toni’s shoulder. “I guess you’d better call him and let him off the hook. Unless you think you need more flowers.” She glanced around the room at the abundance of blooms.
“I have more than enough flowers, but I left my phone at the office.” Toni gnawed on her lip, trying to decide on her best plan of action.
“Is your mother still there? Maybe she can bring it home with her.”
“Good idea!” She was still upset with her mother, but Toni was desperate enough to ask her for a favor.
“You just caught me on my way out,” Mom said via her office line. “I’ll bring it with me.”
“Thanks.”
“But wouldn’t it make more sense if I looked his number up in your contacts and read it to you? Just give me your pass code.”
Toni almost jumped on that idea, but remembered that Logan had recently changed his icon to an X-rated close-up of his cock, and she didn’t want her mother to get an eyeful of that.
“Uh . . .” She nibbled a fingernail. “No, that’s okay. Just bring it home. I don’t need it that desperately.” She cringed at her total lie.
“By the way, I’ve set up some home viewings for tomorrow,” Mom said, turning Toni’s moment of jubilation to bitterness. “I’d like you and Birdie to come with me to look at condos.”
Condos? Oh God, no.
“I might be busy,” Toni said. Actually, she would make