Marrying Marcus. Laurey Bright

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Marrying Marcus - Laurey  Bright


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      “Yes.” Her voice was husky, but his casual tone steadied her. “What…what’s it called, do you know?”

      “The name should be on a marker in the pot.” Marcus leaned across to part some spiky leaves, and his sleeve brushed her arm. “Dark Delight.”

      As he drew back he slanted her a swift glance, and his hand briefly rested on the skin of her arm, a comforting caress. His breath stirring her hair, he said, “It will get better, you know. Hard to believe right now, maybe, but I promise you it’s true.”

      She gripped the edge of the bench in front of her. “I don’t want your sympathy, Marcus.” It would be too easy to turn and let him take her in his strong arms and hold her while she wept out her bewilderment and heartache. She had to get through this day without cracking, in order to keep her pride, at least, intact.

      “Sorry.” As far as the space would allow, he moved away from her.

      “I didn’t mean to seem ungrateful.”

      “I’m not looking for gratitude, Jenna.”

      “You’ve been awfully kind.” She blinked the tears away and managed to face him.

      A strange expression crossed his hard features, almost as if he shared her pain. He lifted a hand, and his thumb wiped an escaped salty droplet from her cheek. “It will soon be over.” His thumb strayed to her abused lower lip, where she had bitten into it. Unexpectedly he dipped his head and pressed his firm mouth gently to hers.

      Chapter Three

      It lasted only a second, but a faint warmth seeped into her cold heart, and when he stepped back, saying, “Can you stand to go back inside?” she nodded, feeling somehow stronger, braced for the fray.

      Jenna helped Katie and her mother rustle up an impromptu meal. Some visitors had drifted away, but there was quite a crowd around the big table in the spacious dining room, and Jenna’s lack of conversation went unnoticed. Marcus took a seat next to her, shielding her from Callie and Dean on his other side.

      After the dishes were disposed of, Marcus found Jenna hanging up a tea towel in the kitchen, carefully straightening the edges. “Anytime you want,” he said, “we can go.”

      Thankfully she took the hint. Steeling herself, she parried Katie’s suspicious surprise that she’d decided to go home after all, using the excuse that this was a family occasion, and repeated her congratulations to Dean and Callie.

      Within minutes she was releasing a sigh of relief as she fastened her safety belt.

      Marcus started the car and edged out of the driveway. “You can let go now, if you want,” he said.

      Cry, she supposed he meant.

      Although she’d been fighting tears for hours, now the urge to weep had left her altogether. She sat dry-eyed and silent beside Marcus all the way back to the city. The sunlight dancing on the water of the west harbor as they sped alongside it seemed to mock her bleak mood of despair.

      Leaving the high speed zone, Marcus glanced at her as he eased off the accelerator. “Will you be all right on your own?”

      “I won’t slit my wrists,” she promised.

      He smiled. “I know you wouldn’t. If you’d rather come to my place, I have a spare room.”

      She shook her head. “Thanks, but no. You’ve been great, Marcus.”

      “It doesn’t cost me anything, and much as I’d like to wring his neck, I couldn’t allow Dean’s homecoming to turn into a disaster.”

      He might have been sorry for her, but his main concern was his family. Because she was close to his brother and sister, Jenna too had always come under his protection, but she guessed that if she threatened their happiness he’d sacrifice her without a second thought.

      Which was right and natural. Only it didn’t make her feel any better.

      Marcus said, “It’s a pity your mother’s so far away.”

      For the past three years Jenna’s mother had been living in Invercargill, at the other end of the country, with her second husband. “I’m too old to run to my mother,” Jenna said.

      She’d learned early in life that running to her mother didn’t solve anything. Karen Harper loved her daughter, but at times her own problems had been too overwhelming for her to cope with Jenna’s, as well.

      Marcus cast her a glance. “If you do need someone to run to,” he offered, “I’ll be around.”

      She managed a pale smile. “Thanks, but I don’t think so.”

      “Independent little cuss, aren’t you?”

      “I’ve always tried to be.”

      “Had to be, I suppose. It must have been tough, losing your father so early.”

      “I never really knew him—I only have a few hazy memories. It was hard on my mother, though. I’m glad she’s found someone else.”

      “We promised to keep an eye on you, you know, when she went to live down south.”

      Jenna had been just short of twenty then, still at university and living in a students’ hall. “I don’t think she meant me to be a lifelong burden on your family.”

      He turned the car into the quiet suburban street where she and Katie lived. “You’re not a burden, Jenna. You’re a friend. And that’s going to make things difficult for you over the next few months, perhaps. You won’t confide in Katie, will you?”

      She wasn’t sure if it was a question or a disguised warning. “No.” It was going to be difficult enough for Katie, adjusting to a stranger having a claim on her twin. Knowing that her closest friend carried a torch for him would add extra stress.

      “Here you are.” The car stopped outside the building. “I’ll come in with you.”

      “You don’t need to—”

      He ignored that, and it was just as well. When she opened the door of the flat they were greeted by disaster. Water was dripping from the ceiling and running down the walls, spreading a huge dark stain across the carpet.

      “Hell!” Marcus surveyed the mess. “It’s either a burst pipe or someone’s left a tap running in the flat above you.”

      It was hours before it was all sorted. The upstairs owners—away for the weekend—were tracked down, a key located, the forgotten tap turned off. And then came the cleanup.

      Marcus stayed despite Jenna’s protest. He made phone calls, shifted furniture, helped her mop up water, and tracked down a carpet-cleaning firm who sent a couple of men who moved more furniture and set huge electric fans about the place to dry out the carpets they’d lifted and folded back.

      Over the roar of the motors Marcus said, “Well, that settles it. You’ll have to come to my place after all.”

      “I don’t know if—”

      “You can’t stay here,” he said. “Is all you need in this bag?” He lifted the tote that she’d previously put essentials into, assuming that she would stay the night at the Crossans’.

      “I’ll just change my clothes,” she said, capitulating. Her cotton trousers and shirt were wet and grubby. “I won’t be long.”

      One thing about the past few hours, she’d scarcely had a chance to think about Dean and his bride-to-be.

      Marcus’s apartment was a direct contrast to the cheery muddle Jenna and Katie lived in. The main room was large and airy, the sofas long and luxurious and precisely aligned about a solid rimu coffee table that held one elegantly formed pottery dish. Theirs was invariably cluttered with magazines, paperback books left open and facedown, junk mail,


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