and that’s a shame. But you’re not going to get the opportunity to embarrass your brother and his wife today. Now you can leave on your own, or I can help you with that.”
“Why don’t we all help him with that?” Del said as he and Jack flanked Carter.
“I don’t think there’s any need for that.” Parker clipped down the path, then muscled her way through. She stood, an ice queen in Armani, and stared down the best man. “Is there, Donny?”
“We’ve got better things to do. Come on, Roxie. This place is a dump anyway.”
“I’ll make sure they leave.” Del shook his head in disgust. “Go on back in. How’s the face, Carter?”
“It’s not the first time I’ve had a fist smash into it.” He wiggled his jaw experimentally. “It always hurts though.”
“Ice pack.” Parker watched the CBBM and SBP’s departure with cold eyes. “Emma.”
“Come with me, Carter.”
“It’s all right. Really.”
“Ice pack.” Parker’s tone brooked no nonsense. “I’ll signal the all-clear, and let’s get back inside. Nobody hears about this.”
“Did you see what he did?” Mac murmured.
“He who?” Del asked.
“Carter. He just . . . Every time I think I have him figured out, he shifts on me. It’s confusing.”
Somebody else had it bad, Del noted as Mac hurried down the path to finish her job.
IT TOOK NEARLY TWO HOURS BEFORE MAC COULD FINISH AND track Carter down in Laurel’s kitchen. He sat alone in the breakfast nook, reading. As she came in, he glanced up, took off his glasses. “All clear?”
“More or less. I’m sorry it took so long. Carter, you should’ve gone home. It’s after midnight. I should’ve gotten word back to you. Oh, your poor face.” She winced at the bruise on his jaw.
“It’s not so bad. But we decided I should stay here. If I’d come back out, I might’ve had to explain how I came by this.” He touched his fingers gingerly to the bruise. “I’m terrible at lying, so this was simpler. Plus, as promised, there was cake.”
She slid in across from him. “What are you reading?”
“Oh, Parker had a copy of a John Irving novel I hadn’t read yet. I’ve been tended, entertained, and fed. Your partners made sure of it. And both Jack and Del each came back for a while. I’ve been fine.”
“You didn’t even wobble.”
“Sorry?”
“When that stupid bastard belted you. You barely reacted.”
“He was half drunk so there wasn’t that much behind it. He shouldn’t have put his hands on you.”
“You never even raised your voice. You shut him down—I could see it happen in his face, even before the troops arrived. And you never touched him or raised your voice.”
“Teacher training, I suppose. And a wide and varied experience with bullies. Did the newlyweds get off all right?”
“Yes. They don’t know what happened. They’ll find out, I imagine, but they had their day—and that was the point. You were a big part of that.”
“Well, it was an experience. All it cost me was a sore jaw and a pair of shoes.”
“And you’re still here.”
“I was waiting for you.”
She stared at him, then just gave in to the shimmer inside her heart. “I guess you’d better come home with me, Carter.”
He smiled. “I guess I’d better.”
MISTAKES HAPPENED, RIGHT? MAC REMINDED HERSELF AS SHE opened the door of her studio. If this was a mistake, she’d fix it. Later. When she could think more clearly. But at the moment, it was after midnight, and there was Carter in his three-piece suit and ruined shoes.
“I’m not as tidy as you.”
“Tidy’s such a fussy word, don’t you think?” He gave her an easy smile. “The sort that makes you think of your great-aunt Margaret and her tea cozies.”
“I don’t have a great-aunt Margaret.”
“If you did, she’d probably be a tidy sort with a tea cozy. I prefer the word organized.”
Mac tossed her coat over the arm of her couch. Unlike Carter, she didn’t have a coat closet. “I’m organized then, when it comes to my work, my business.”
“I could see that today. It seemed you knew exactly what to do, where to be, what to look for before it was there.” He laid his coat over hers. “That’s creative instinct married to organization.”
“And I use them both for the work. Outside of that, I’m a messy woman.”
“Everyone’s messy, Mackensie. Some people just shove the disorder into a closet or a drawer—at least when company’s coming—but it’s still there.”
“And some people have more drawers and closets than others. But since it’s been a