toward the pond, his eyes shielded by his dark glasses. âWhatever sheâs said, whatever she thinks, sheâs going to have to start making some adjustments. If sheâs in some sort of trouble, Iâll get it out of her.â
âIf youâre so damned concerned, so damn interested, why the hell did you get divorced?â
Jake lifted his shoulders. âGood question, Leo. Damn good question. When I figure it out, youâll be the second or third to know. Meanwhile, short a head archaeologist or not, weâd better get to work.â
Heâd fallen for her, and fallen hard, the first time heâd seen her, Jake admitted. Like a finger snap, his life had been divided into before and after Callie Dunbrook.
It had been terrifying and annoying. She had been terrifying and annoying.
Heâd been thirty, unencumberedâunless you countedDiggerâand planning to stay that way. He loved his work. He loved women. And whenever a man could combine the two, well, life was as perfect as it was ever going to get.
He didnât answer to anyone, and certainly had no intentions of answering to some curvy little archaeologist with a mean streak.
God, heâd loved that mean streak of hers.
Sex had been nearly as stormy and fascinating as their bickering. But it hadnât solved his problem. The more he had her, the more heâd wanted. Sheâd given him her body, her companionship, the challenge of her contrary mind. But sheâd never given him the one thing that might have settled him down.
Her trust. Sheâd never trusted him. Not to stick by her, to share loads with her. And most certainly she didnât trust his fidelity.
For months after sheâd booted him, heâd consoled himself that it was her blatant lack of faith that had ruined everything. Just as for months heâd held on to the conviction that sheâd come crawling after him.
Stupid, he could admit now. Callie never crawled. It was one thing they had firmly in common. And as time passed, heâd begun to see that maybe, perhaps, possibly, he hadnât handled everything quite as adeptly as he could have. Should have.
It didnât really shift the blame away from her, which was exactly where it belonged, but it did open the door to considering another approach.
That current still ran between them, he acknowledged. There was no question of it. If the Antietam Project offered him a channel for that current, heâd use it.
Heâd use whatever came to hand to get her back.
And whatever was troubling her now, well, she was going to tell him. She was going to let him help her. If he had to tie her down and pry it out of her with forceps.
C allie hadnât expected to sleep, but just after dawn sheâd curled up on top of the bed in her old room. Sheâdhugged a pillow under her arm, the way she had since childhood when ill or unhappy.
Physical and emotional fatigue had beaten out even the headache and the nausea. Sheâd woken a full four hours later at the sound of the front door slamming, and the bright call of her name.
For a moment, sheâd been a child again, snuggled into bed on a Saturday morning until her motherâs call stirred her. Thereâd be Cheerios for breakfast, with fresh strawberries cut up in the bowl and the extra sugar sheâd sneak into it when her mother wasnât looking.
She rolled over. The aches of her body, the sick headache, the utter weight settled in her chest reminded her she wasnât a little girl any longer, whose biggest concern was sweetening her cereal.
She was a grown woman. And she didnât know whose child she was.
She swung her legs slowly to the floor, then sat on the side of the bed with her head in her hands.
âCallie!â Sheer delight lifted Vivianâs voice as she rushed through the doorway. âBaby, we had no idea you were coming home. I was so surprised to see your car in the drive.â
She