The Doctor’s Secret Bride: Chapter 5
The Doctor’s Secret Bride (Billionaire Brides of Granite Falls Book 1)
Michelleâs heart jolted when she heard the front door open and close.
âDaddyâs home.â Precious jumped off her lap and bolted out of the family room. She hadnât seen her father all day, and even though she was worn out from her day at the park and shopping with Michelle, sheâd been fighting sleep until he came home.
Michelle remained where she was, huddled in the corner of the sofa, too scared that her legs would refuse to bear her weight. Stand your ground, she told herself, remembering what Felicia had said. Ever since sheâd met Erikâs mother, sheâd been rehearsing her explanation speech. Like Felicia and Yasmine had warned, it wasnât the fact that sheâd canceled Preciousâ lessons that would upset him, but that sheâd done it without consulting him.
She imagined heâd been too upset with her to even come home for dinner. Mrs. Hayes had been in the middle of setting the table when heâd called. Heâd asked to speak with Precious, and judging from her responses, Michelle guessed he was asking her about her dayâs activities. What was to be a scrumptious meal of stuffed roast chicken and artichokes dipped in butter had felt like wood and sand in Michelleâs mouth.
That was three hours ago. It was now past Preciousâ bedtime.
Michelle looked up as father and daughter walked into the room. Erikâs eyes impaled her from about twelve feet away. Michelle stared back with uncertainty, but innate tenacity as she closed the book sheâd been reading to Precious and set it on the lamp table.
Dr. Erik LaCrosse was about to find out that she was nothing like his late wife. Cassie LaCrosse may have been afraid of confrontations. Michelle, on the other hand, had been tackling them all her life. Sheâd never backed down from a fight. You do that in her neighborhood, and people would be standing in line to stomp on you.
She watched as Erik crouched down to his daughterâs eye level and brushed back some unruly curls from her face. âItâs past your bedtime,â he said. âGo to your room. Iâll be up soon to tuck you in.â
âOkay, Daddy.â She yawned and turned to Michelle. âGood night, Michelle. I had a lot of fun today. Can we go to the park again, tomorrow?â
âWeâll see. Sleep tight, honey. See you in the morning.â Michelle prayed she wouldnât have to break that promise as she watched Precious leave. She pushed to her feet as Erik strode toward her.
âDo you have any idea how worried I was when I couldnât get a hold of you today? I called home several times and all Mrs. Hayes knew was that youâd taken my daughter to Manchester. Why didnât you answer your phone?â
Michelle swallowed. âIâm sorry you were worried, Erik, but I called the hospital and they told me you were in surgery. I left a message. As to my phone, I forgot to charge it last night and it died. Iâm sorry,â she reiterated.
âYouâre sorry. Youâre sorry.â The muscles in his neck pulsed with barely contained anger. âWho do you think you are to be changing Preciousâ schedule on your first day here? You are her nanny, not her mother.â
âErik, I know Iâm not Preciousâ mother and Iâm not trying to replace her, either. But come on, you really think one missed piano lesson and two hours of reading for one day is going to have a lasting negative effect on her?â
âThatâs beside the point, Michelle. You donât make decisions for my daughter. You follow the ones I give you, not defy them. Sheâs my child! Not yours!â
âIt doesnât matter whose child she is, Erik. The important thing is that she is a child. One from whom you expect too much. Youâve overloaded her with swimming, dance, equestrian, and music lessons. The child doesnât even have a day off to relax and be a kid. And now you went and signed her up for the summer theaterâacting lessons. She doesnât want to be an actress. She just wants to be a kid.â
His hands balled into fists and his jaw muscles twitched. âPrecious enjoys all those activities.â
âShe hates them. The only thing she likes is ballet, and maybe music. Sheâs afraid of horses. Did you know that?â
He stiffened as though sheâd struck him.
Michelle wanted to point out that Precious was not Cassie, but thought the sound of his beloved wifeâs name falling from her lips at a time like this would be a grave mistake. âYou made up this itinerary to keep Precious out of your hair,â she said. âShe goes along to keep you happy.â
âI donât want my daughter growing up without focus and discipline like you. And how dare you take her to that neighborhood of yours? You know what kind ofâ¦â His voice trailed off.
Michelle winced at the implications in the unspoken yet hurtful words, but decided to let it go. It was time for the doctor to face himself, deal with the real issue that was eating him up. She really didnât want to cause him more pain or guilt. God knows he had enough to last him a lifetime, but Precious was a powerless child and somebody had to fight for her. Holly, according to Felicia, was too chicken to do it.
Michelle realized that he might fire her when he heard what she had to say. If that was the case, then so be it, because she knew in her heart she could not do a good job at taking care of Precious if things remained the way they were.
Michelle wrapped her arms about her stomach to stop the panic rioting inside her. Her voice shook as she spoke. âErik, I know you think that what youâre doing is best for your daughter, but apart from last night, have you really spent any quality time with Precious since her mother died?â
âI have a demanding career. I donât have much time to spend with her. Thatâs why I hired a nanny. I was just lucky my phone didnât ring during the play last night.â
âThatâs exactly what Iâm talking about. Precious lost her mother and sheâs scared sheâs losing you, too.â Michelle knew exactly how Precious felt. She and Robert had done everything to win their fatherâs attention after their mother died. But it was never enough. If it werenât for good neighbors like Mrs. Hayes and Yasmineâs parents, she probably wouldnât have even survived infancy.
âYou donât understand.â He grated out between clenched teeth. âCassie was my life, and some drunk came along and took her away from me. Iâm doing the best I can.â
âWhy donât you stop feeling sorry for yourself, Erik, and concentrate on your daughter? Yes, your wife is gone, but your daughter is alive, and she needs you. Stop wallowing in self-pity and guilt and show her how much you love her.â
His chest rose and fell and his eyes glowed like a furnace. âDonât you dare tell me how to deal with my grief. You have no idea what Iâm going through. This pain, this guilt are eating me up inside and thereâs no one I can talk to.â
Michelle knew sheâd struck a raw nerveâprobably one that hadnât been touched for two years. She longed to tell him that he had her, that he could talk to her, but Precious was her primary concern. If she could just get Preciousâ life straightened out, she would make time for Erik, she swore in her heart.
âDid you know?â she said in a strangled voice, âthat the day your wife died, she was upset with Precious because sheâd lost something dear to her.â
His eyes clouded. âWhat are you talking about?â
Michelle paused, not wanting to go on, but knowing she had to. He needed to know how his daughter felt about him. It was the only way to bridge the distance between them. The truth hurt, but she knew it could also heal the pain inside them both. She shoved her hand in the pocket of her shorts. âHere,â she said pulling it out, and opening her palm.
He snatched the pink diamond bracelet from her hand. âWhere did you get this?â
âFrom Precious. She has this little box where she keepsâthings. I saw the bracelet when she opened the box to store my lucky penny.â
He spread the bracelet in his palm and held it under the light of the table lamp. It shimmered, shooting rays of pink across the room. âIâve been looking for this. Itâs the last Motherâs Day gift I gave to Cassie.â His eyes came back to her face. âPrecious had it all this time?â
Michelle nodded. âThat day, Precious took some of her motherâs jewelry from her closet to play dress up with her dolls. Apparently, your wife wanted to wear the bracelet to the party that night, and when she realized that Precious had lost it, she told her she was grounded until she found it.â
Michelle swallowed back a choke as he fisted his hand around the piece of jewelry and brought it against his chest. âYour wife left home that night very upset with your daughter, which is quite understandable under normal circumstances,â Michelle continued in as tranquil a voice as possible. âBut, Precious never saw her again, Erik. She thinks itâs her fault that her mother left. She thinks she was a bad girl. Thatâs why she does everything you ask. She thinks if she makes you angry, youâll leave, too. She tries so hard to please you, but you make it so difficult for her. Sheâs just a little girl who needs her daddyâs attention!â
The last statement was hurled from a place deep inside Michelleâs heart. A place where sheâd lived as a child, constantly trying to please her father, but getting nowhere. Tears pooled in her eyes for the desperate child upstairs and the half-broken man standing in front of her.
His fist dropped to his side. âHow could I have not known? Why didnât she tell me?â
Michelle heard the anguish in his tortured voice. Her heart ached for him like it had never ached for another living soul. She took a step toward him, wanting to offer him comfort just as sheâd done last night when heâd told her about the night his wife died in his arms. âBecause she was afraid, Erik. She thought youâd be angry. If I can help youââ
âHelp me? You canât help me.â He stumbled backward, his huge body shaking uncontrollably. âJust⦠go. Leave me alone.â
Michelle staggered blindly out of the room, not knowing whether or not she still had a job.
Erik closed his eyes and grabbed the back of the sofa to stop the trembling. His gut crunched painfully. He opened his mouth and took deep breaths into his constricted lungs, then fell to the floor, his head bowed in misery. He wept inside, but didnât shed a single tear. How could he have been so blind to his babyâs pain?
Michelle was right for accusing him of being a neglectful father who was wallowing in self-pity and guilt.
Damn her for being right.
The truth hurt like hell. For two years heâd hidden behind his grief, afraid to face his loss because the future had seemed so bleak without his wife. Heâd tried to imagine that it was just a long bad dream and that Cassie would come back to him. Heâd told himself that she was on an extended vacation and that life would return to normal after she came home and they resolved that last stupid argument.
But she wasnât coming home. She was gone forever. Heâd spent two years feeling sorry for himself, and denied his daughter the only other parent she had.
It had taken Michelle Carter, a girl from the wrong side of Manchesterâs tracks, to yank him out of his trance. Damn her! He slammed his elbows into the back of the sofa. Damn her for slapping him with the truth, for forcing him to face reality, to do what Cassie had asked as heâd held her bleeding mangled body in his arms on that dark horrible night.
âOh, Erik, you know how I hate tears. Donât cry, darling. Just live. Live, and take care of our baby. Love her, Erik. Love her for me. Tell her Iâm sorry forââ
Cassieâs last unfinished request pierced him cruelly. All this time he thought Cassie had asked him to tell Precious she was sorry for leaving her, when in fact sheâd been sorry for being angry at her. And all this time, Precious thought it was her fault her mother wasnât here.
God, it was nobodyâs fault but his. His alone.
Erik pushed off the floor and climbed the stairs two at a time, and headed in the direction of Preciousâ room. Her door was ajar and the light from the hall fell across her small form. Erik felt a tightening in his chest as he gazed at his child.
She was so beautiful and innocent. She shouldnât be saddled with the guilt of her motherâs death. No child should. Heâd spent two years wallowing in his own guilt when he should have been there for her, absorbing her pain, getting to know her the way her mother knew her. He was the only parent she had, and heâd let her down. Cassie must be so disappointed in him.
Erik moved closer to the bed where she lay with Bradie clutched in her arms. His jaws flinched when he saw the white streaks on her cheeks. Sheâd been crying. God, he hoped she hadnât heard his argument with Michelle. As angry as heâd been, heâd tried to keep his voice low so it wouldnât carry up the stairs.
Erik sat on the side of the bed and picked up her limp, warm body. He laid her across his lap, cradling her head against his chest. Unbidden tears rolled down his cheeks and melted into her head of tangled curls. He just held her, and allowed the essence of her innocent childhood to seep under his skin, melt his pain.
âIâm sorry, Precious. Iâm so sorry. I didnât know. Itâs not your fault, Muffin. Your mommy loved you very much. That was the last thing she said to me. She asked me to take care of you, and I havenât been doing that, have I? Baby, I promise Iâll try from now on. Iâll do my best to love you the way she did.â
Precious stirred and clutched the front of his shirt. âMommy.â
Erik held his breath, his heart racing in his chest. âPrecious,â he whispered.
âDaddy.â
âYes, baby. Itâs daddy.â
âI love you.â
âI love you too, baby.â
He gazed into her face. Her eyes were still closed. Was she dreaming or did she know he was actually holding her? Dreaming or not, her words sent a feeling of genuine filial warmth rushing through Erikâs heart. Something he hadnât felt for a long, long time.
***
The sounds of laughter caught Erikâs attention as he came down the stairs. He followed it to the family room where he found Michelle and Precious on a couple of oversized pillows on the floor in front of the wall-mounted TV.
With mild interest, he noted the contrast of Michelleâs short black hair to his daughterâs long brown mane. They were both wearing white shorts and cotton tops. New clothes, he noted with a smile, glad that Michelle had something new, something of her own to wear.
Watching them brought back memories of coming home to find Cassie and Precious sprawled on the floorâsometimes reading, sometimes playing a board game, sometimes having tea with her dolls, and sometimes watching TV. And just as Michelle was enjoying Bugs BunnyâPreciousâ favorite cartoonâso had Cassie.
He wasnât sure what to make of his comparisons between his wife and his daughterâs new nanny. He never had the same thoughts about Holly even though sheâd participated in the same activities with Precious. Perhaps his feelings were derived from the fact that Precious had taken to Michelle like lightening to a rod when it had taken her weeks to warm up to Holly. His daughter had known Michelle for exactly one day and sheâd already shared her heartâs deepest fears and secrets with herâfears and secrets she couldnât share with himâher own father.
He, too, had succumbed to the magical spell of this beautiful woman when heâd told her about Cassie just hours after theyâd met. Then last night, sheâd made him face his own harrowing fears. There was no denying it: there was something special about Michelle.
Was she an angel?
A wistful expression crowded his face as he wondered if Precious remembered him holding her last night. He dreaded their impending talk about the day her mother died, but he knew it had to be done today if their relationship was to improve. He couldnât have his daughter carrying the guilt of her motherâs death or worrying about him leaving her any longer.
Bang! Bang! Michelle and Precious roared with laughter as Elmer Fudd fired his shotgun only to discover that the mischievous rabbit had bent the barrel backward so it went off in the hunterâs face. Erik found himself grinning as well.
As his eyes fixated on Michelleâs firm buttocks, slim hips, and a narrow waist he could easily span with his hands, his grin faded. Bolts of lightning shot through his veins as he imagined her sleek thighs and long smooth brown legs wrapped around his waist. The woman was temptation, personified. And she made him hard and hot and heavy. Erik knew his feelings went far beyond the physical when he found himself imagining a little boy with short black hair and black eyes lying beside Michelle and his daughter.
âHey you two,â he said, walking into the room. He needed somethingâanythingâto derail those dangerous thoughts.
Precious jumped up and ran over to wrap her arms around his thighs. She gazed up at him with excitement. âWeâre watching Bugs Bunny. You wanna watch him with us, Daddy?â
âIn a little while, dear. You and I need to have a talk, first.â
Erikâs eyes followed Michelleâs movements as she uncurled from the pillow and rose to her feet. When her gaze locked with his, he saw the uncertainty in her eyes. After last night, the tension between them was understandably tenuous. It wouldnât take much to shatter it completely.
âIâll go⦠for a walk or something,â she said heading toward the door.
It was Saturday, and Mrs. Hayes was off for the weekend. Holly used to have every other weekend off, depending on his schedule. She would have been free today, thus Michelle was free. But he wanted to keep her around. He told himself it was because it was her third day on the job, and she needed to get used to her new routine, but his heart knew better.
âWait, Michelle. After my talk with Precious, Iâd like to take us out to breakfast, that is if you have no other plans.â
âYou donât have to, Erik. Iâmââ
âItâs a peace offering after last night.â He wanted to apologize for the insensitive words heâd said to her, but couldnât do so in front of Precious. Sheâd done him a wealth of good. He wondered how he could ever repay her.
She nodded her head in acknowledgment then left him alone with his daughter.
âI had a dream last night, Daddy.â Precious jumped on his lap the minute he dropped onto the sofa.
âWas it good, or bad?â
âGood, Daddy. If it was bad then it would be a nightmare.â
âYouâre so wise.â He nudged her nose with his. âSo what did you dream about? Me?â
She laughed. âNo. I dreamt about Mommy. She was brushing her hair and I was putting on all her jewelry in her jewelry box. She said I looked pretty. And then she said she loved me.â
Erikâs heart stopped for a minute and he tightened his hold on her. She must have heard Michelle tell him about the lost bracelet then cried herself to sleep. Erik was not a superstitious man, but something told him that Cassie had seen her daughterâs pain and had visited her dreams to comfort her. âAnd she does love you, honey,â he said, his voice cracking a little.
âEven in heaven?â
âEven in heaven.â He took a deep breath, and cradling her face in his hand, he gazed into her eyes. âMichelle told me what happened the day Mommy died. It wasnât your fault, Precious. You had nothing to do with what happened to her. You must always remember that she did love you, very much. You were the most important thing in the world to her. The last thing she said to me was how much she loved you.â
âShe did?â
âYes. Would you like to have this?â He placed the bracelet in her hand. âIt was your motherâs favorite and Iâm sure she would love for you to have it.â
Tears gathered in her eyes as she stared at the bracelet glittering against her palm. âIâm sorry I took it, and made Mommy mad.â
Erik pulled her close. âItâs okay, baby. Mommy isnât mad anymore. And, Precious,â he continued, âI am not going anywhere. I will always be here for you.â Erik prayed in his heart that he wasnât making a promise he couldnât keep. But the child needed to be reassured that she had one parent she could count on. âIf you ever think Iâm being too hard on you, I want you to tell me. I wonât get upset and I wonât leave you. Okay?â He searched her face for an inkling of understanding.
âOkay, Daddy. You know what else?â she said after a brief pause.
Her brown eyes beamed with excitement, touching Erik in the deepest part of his soul. âWhat else?â
âLast night I dreamt you came into my room, and you were holding me, and you told me you loved me.â
âI had that very same dream, Precious.â
âOh, Daddy. We were in each otherâs dreams.â She pressed her lips against her fatherâs cheek then wrapped her arms around his neck.
âWe will always be in each otherâs dreams, my darling Precious. Always. Now, where would you like to go for breakfast?â he asked as he set her on the floor.
âMcDonaldâs.â
âOh, Preciousâ¦â
âBut, I love the pancakes.â
Erik grimaced, getting to his feet. âGo get Michelle. Sheâll be delighted to know Iâm taking her to McDonaldâs on our first date.â
As Precious ran in search of Michelle, Erik pondered on his choice of words. Date? Did he actually say, date?
He went into the study, got his cell from his desk and slipped it into his shirt pocket. On his way out, he stopped at the door and gazed up at the picture of his wife. He instantly felt like a traitor for even thinking about taking another woman out for a simple breakfast.
âIâm just thanking her for bringing me to my senses about our little girl. You understand, right?â he said to the portrait.
He waited as if he expected a response. âIâm not breaking any rules,â he continued as the two-year-old conversation between his wife and his best friend surfaced in his mind, reluctantly pulling him back into his friendâs kitchen that awful night.
âYou have to tell Erik, Cassie. Tonight. I canât keep lying to him. Heâs my best friend.â
âI canât, Clay. It will kill him. I canât hurt him like that. He loves me so much.â
âYes, he does love you. And it will break his heart, but heâll⦠heâll heal. Heâll forgive you and move on. Heâll still have Precious andââ
Unable to take any more, Erik barged into the kitchen. âWhat the hell is going on here? Are you two having an affair?â
Both Cassie and Clayton jumped at the sound of his voice. Cassie, being Cassie, just stood there, looking all sweet and innocent, staring at him with her big brown eyes and ringing her hands while Clayton immediately confronted him.
âDamn it, Erik. What the hell kind of question is that?â
He collared his best friend. âI heard you tell her that she has to tell me. I knew there was something going on between the two of you. All the secret stares when you think Iâm not watching, the secret meetings of lateââ
âStop it, Erik,â Cassie begged. âJust stop it, please.â
And true to her character, Cassie ran out into the night through the back door.
Heâd found her standing beside their car, crying. It was the second time heâd seen his wife cry in all the years heâd known her. The first was when sheâd held their newborn daughter in her arms for the first time.
After Cassieâs death, heâd asked Clayton about the conversation heâd overheard. His friend had just looked at him and said, âWhat does it matter now? Cassie is dead. Let it go, Erik.â
Then Clayton, whom heâd known since med school, pulled up his roots and left New Hampshire. Erik had no idea where heâd gone. It was just as well. He really didnât want answers to the questions in his head. Heâd taken Claytonâs advice and let it go, that is, until now. Could it be that he wanted the truth now that heâd met a woman to whom he was potently attracted? Was he looking for closure so he could move on?
Erik closed the door, shutting out the ghosts of his past. As he walked down the hall, he knew he would have to face them again. He wasnât looking forward to it. Not in the least.