thought, and now he pops up on the doorstep, big as life and twice as irritating. He hadn’t even asked her how she was feeling—not that she wanted to be fussed over, she reminded herself. But he was a doctor—and he was the one who’d come up with that ridiculous diagnosis.
“Ah, Loretta.” Brady all but drooled when she set a heaping plate of fragrant bread in front of him. “My father’s a lucky man.”
“I suppose cooking’s the first priority when a Tucker goes looking for a wife,” Vanessa said, feeling nasty.
Brady only smiled as he glopped on maple syrup. “It couldn’t hurt.”
Vanessa felt her temper rise. Not because she couldn’t cook. Certainly not. It was the narrow-minded, sexist idea that infuriated her. Before she could think of a suitably withering reply, Loretta set a plate in front of her.
“I can’t eat all of this.”
“I can,” Brady said as he started on his own meal. “I’ll finish up what you don’t.”
“If you two are set, I’d best go open the shop. Van, there’s plenty of that chicken soup left that Joanie brought over yesterday. It’ll heat up fine in the microwave for lunch. If this rain keeps up, I’ll probably be home early. Good luck with Scott.”
“Thanks.”
“Scott?” Brady asked, as Loretta went out.
Vanessa merely propped her elbows on the table. “Don’t ask.”
Brady waited until Loretta had left them alone before rising to help himself to more coffee. “I wanted to talk to you about the wedding.”
“The wedding?” She looked over. “Oh, the wedding. Yes, what about it?”
“Dad’s been applying a little Tucker pressure. He thinks he’s got Loretta convinced to take the plunge over the Memorial Day weekend.”
“Memorial Day? But that’s next week.”
“Why wait?” Brady said after a sip, echoing his father’s sentiments. “That way they can use the annual picnic as a kind of town wedding reception.”
“I see.” But it was so soon, Vanessa thought frantically. She hadn’t even adjusted to being with her mother again, to living in the same house with her, and now … But it wasn’t her decision, she reminded herself. “I suppose they’ll move into your father’s house.”
“I think that’s the plan.” He sat again. “They’ve been kicking around the idea of renting this one eventually. Does that bother you?”
She concentrated on cutting a neat slice of the bread. How could she know? She hadn’t had time to find out if it was home or not. “No, I suppose not. They can hardly live in two houses at once.”
Brady thought he understood. “I can’t see Loretta selling this place. It’s been in your family for years.”
“I often wondered why she kept it.”
“She grew up here, just as you did.” He picked up his coffee again. “Why don’t you ask her what she plans to do about it?”
“I might.” She moved her shoulders restlessly. “There’s no hurry.”
Because he knew her, he let it go at that. “What I really wanted to talk to you about was a wedding present. Obviously they won’t need a toaster or a set of china.”
“No.” Vanessa frowned down at her plate. “I suppose not.”
“I was thinking— I ran it by Joanie and she likes the idea. Why don’t we pool our resources and give them a honeymoon? A couple weeks in Cancun. You know, a suite overlooking the Caribbean, tropical nights, the works. Neither one of them have ever been to Mexico. I think they’d get a charge out of it.”
Vanessa looked up at him again. It was a lovely idea, she decided. And if was typical of him to have thought of it. “As a surprise?”
“I think we can pull it off. Dad’s been trying to juggle his schedule to get a week free. I can sabotage that so he’ll think he can only manage a couple of days. Getting the tickets, making some reservations, that’s the easy part. Then we have to pack their bags without getting caught.”
Warming to the idea, she smiled. “If your father has the same stars in his eyes my mother does, I think we can manage that. We could give them the tickets at the picnic, then bundle them into a limo. Is there a limo service around here?”
“There’s one in Frederick. I hadn’t thought of that.” He pulled out a pad to make a note.
“Get them the bridal suite,” Vanessa said. When he looked up and grinned, she shrugged. “If we’re going to do it, let’s do it right.”
“I like it. One limo, one bridal suite, two first-class tickets. Anything else?”
“Champagne. A bottle