For the first time since driving over the Bay Bridge Tunnel from the mainland, he smiled. “And you are eternally youthful.”
“Not true, but thank you.” She gave him a wry smile in return. “I like to think I’ve mellowed with age.”
“Aunt Shirley, this is my son, Brody.”
Hunkered near the railing, Brody turned his little mouth upside down.
Jax bit off a sigh. “Brody, come meet Aunt Shirley. We’ll be living at her old house.”
Brody’s brows drew together like two wiggly caterpillars. “No.” His favorite word.
“I see the resemblance in the scowl.” Shirley blew out a breath. “Is he as stubborn and mule-headed as you’ve always been, dear nephew?”
Scrubbing his hand over his face, he laughed. Blunt as always. The more things changed, the more they stayed the same.
“He’s got Pruitt blood in him. Won’t take long for him to fall hopelessly in love with Shore life.” She winked. “You, too.”
Jax felt hopeless, though not with love. Time had run out for him and Adrienne. The enormous responsibility of being a single parent weighed heavy on his not-feeling-so-broad shoulders.
“I’m grateful for this lifeline you’ve thrown me, Aunt Shirl.”
Like a swift kick in the pants, she poked him with her bony elbow. “So don’t blow it, soldier.”
His lips twitched. His maiden aunt would’ve made an excellent drill sergeant.
Shirley squeezed his arm. “Darcy’s not happy about our arrangement. She’s not exactly your biggest fan.”
He grunted. “I can always count on you to give it to me straight, Aunt Shirl.”
The short bark of her laugh echoed over the tidal estuary behind the shop. “But I’ve no doubt with that renowned Pruitt charm of yours, you’ll find a way to convince her to stay for the busy summer season.”
His so-called charm was his fallback position. As comfortable as a broken-in, well-loved baseball glove. Where he kept his feelings safely hidden.
Jax made a face. “The way I remember it, Darcy Parks doesn’t charm easily. Or maybe she’s just immune to mine.”
“Nothing worth having is ever easy.”
“I’m prepared to give the business everything I’ve got.” He frowned. “We are talking about the business, right?”
Shirley stuck her tongue in her cheek. “Don’t tell your brothers I said so, but you’re my favorite Pruitt nephew. I have full confidence in your ability to handle every challenge that comes your way.”
“Like fiscal management?”
“That, too.” Her eyes sparkled. “It’s good to have you home, Jaxon.”
With his face pressed between the railing spindles, Brody peered out over the village green. Like a prisoner through iron bars.
She tossed Jax a ring of keys. He caught them with one hand.
His aunt plodded down the wooden steps in her hiking boots. “How about I take this little sea urchin over to the Sandpiper Café for some Long John doughnuts before they close this afternoon?”
In true Tidewater fashion, her “about” came out sounding like “a boot.” The soft musicality of her speech brought an unexpected welling to his eyes. It had been a long time since he’d been among his own people on the Eastern Shore. Too long.
Brody let go of the railing. “Hungwy.”
She smirked. “You trying to starve this growing boy, Jaxon?”
“We had a burger at the Bay Bridge Grill for lunch.” He squared his shoulders. “Shakes, too.”
One of the few things he knew about kids: keep feeding them so they don’t turn on you.
She held her hand out to Brody. “Ready?”
He snatched his hands behind his back. “No.”
Jax gasped. “Brody...”
His aunt widened her stance. “Do you want doughnuts or not, young man? Makes me no never mind, either way.”
Brody jerked his thumb in Jax’s direction. “Him?”
Not once since Adrienne died had Brody called him Daddy. Most of the time, he refused to communicate with Jax at all. Except for no. He’d mastered that word.
“Your dad will be waiting right here when we get back.” She patted Brody’s shoulder. An awkward “I don’t know what to do with a child” pat.
Join the club. He didn’t, either.
“I’ll be here, I promise, Brody.”
His son glared at him. An indication of what he thought of his father’s promises?
“Just like you.” Shirley chuckled. “In so many hardheaded, annoying ways...”
Great. Just great. He rubbed the back of his neck.
“Darcy’s on the dock. You two best get reacquainted.” A strange smile flitted across Shirley’s lips. “Welcome home, Jaxon. To the first day of the rest of your life.”
Jax swallowed. I know we haven’t talked in a while, but please, God, make it so.
With visible reluctance, Brody took her hand. As they walked toward the diner down the street, his dark head swiveled for one last glimpse of his father.
Like Adrienne that last day before they’d both deployed on separate assignments, never to see each other again. Jax’s lungs constricted. Guilt cutting off his air supply.
In a single bound, he came off the porch and rounded the corner of the shop. His legs ate up the ground, past the stacked kayaks and paddles. Dodging the pile of orange lifejackets.
Leaping onto the wooden planks, he felt the dock shudder beneath his weight. But spotting the silhouette of a woman sitting on the far end, he came to an abrupt halt.
Midafternoon, the sun arced high in the cerulean sky. The cove glimmered like a treasure chest filled with glistening diamonds. Her legs dangled over the water, but in one lithe motion, she rose. And bathed in golden light, she faced him.
His heart sped up. “Darcy?”
She bridged the distance between them on the dock. And he got his first good look at her in over a decade. She hadn’t changed much.
His breathing slowed. Somehow he’d been afraid she had. To him, Darcy was summer sunshine. Like the shimmery light playing across the pearlescent string of the barrier islands.
A sea breeze lifted a silky wave of the strawberry blonde hair skimming her shoulder. Freckles still sprinkled her nose. Her sun-kissed tan reflected the beach girl she was and had always been.
Darcy Parks, the little tomboy who lived next door to the Pruitts. Athletically slim, but rounded with more womanly curves than the sixteen-year-old he’d known. But like him, older.
Her blue-green eyes—like many here on the Shore—reflected the cool depths of the Machipongo Inlet. Becoming aware of her appraising scrutiny, he stuffed his hands in his pockets, striving for a nonchalance he didn’t feel.
Full of an untried optimism, he’d joined the army right out of high school to fight global terrorism. And his success or failure now depended on the grown-up version of a girl he’d once possessed a great fondness for.
Eyes