Connor laughed loudly as Erin grimaced.
“That was the first and last time he ever tried to make me dinner.”
Connor shook his head and added the prepped carrots he had resting in a bowl nearby.
“How is Gavin, by the way?”
“Pretty good,” she answered, dropping a handful of peeled potatoes into a bowl of ice water. “He’s still stationed in Afghanistan, working on one of the army’s water sanitation projects. He’s enjoying it, but he misses home.”
Connor slid a glance her way and caught the frown tugging at Erin’s mouth. He hadn’t meant to make her melancholy.
“It’s no easy feat, being an army wife. Especially not with a son to raise.”
“You’re telling me,” she replied, and then she paused. “Kitt misses him. A lot.” She sighed and seemed to rally herself. “But it’s only for a few more years, and then we can be a family again.”
Connor felt a tug of both sympathy and envy for his friend. He knew it was rough on her, having her family separated. Gavin had moved his family into his great-aunt’s bed-and-breakfast shortly before his most recent deployment, and Connor knew how much Erin wanted them to be reunited under one roof. On the other hand, he felt the familiar pang of his own regret. Though he did his best to juggle the role of both mother and father to Molly, he sometimes felt as though part of their family dynamic was incomplete, as well.
Uncomfortable with this line of thought, he ladled some chicken stock into the sauté pan and watched as it hissed once more.
“Do you think you could get started on the corn fritters, after you’ve finished those potatoes?”
“Sure thing, Chef.”
And just like that, he and Erin resumed their roles of chef and sous chef. Sometimes he thought the titles sounded a little fancy for the restaurant his father had first started, but Connor had trained at one of the most prestigious culinary schools in the country. Erin’s skills were more of the trade-school variety, but they both observed the proper appellations in the kitchen.
He and Erin worked a familiar dance around each other, reaching for a pan or grasping a slotted spoon. They’d worked together at the Rusty Anchor for over three years now, even before his dad had passed on. It was long enough that they’d become comfortable with each other’s routines. And when Connor had taken over the restaurant following his father’s death, Erin’s loyalty had eased his transition to boss and owner.
Connor finished cracking half a dozen eggs into a stainless-steel bowl and began to whisk vigorously, the rhythmic motion requiring little thought and allowing his mind to wander. It was hard to believe Patrick Callahan had been gone for two years. Just the other day, he’d caught Molly squinting at the last photo he’d taken of his dad—he kept it on the apartment fridge. When he’d asked her what she was doing, she’d replied, “Trying to remember what Grandpa looked like.”
He’d experienced a swell of melancholy at this admission. In two years, Patrick Callahan’s image had already begun to fade from Molly’s memory. In another two, would she even be able to remember him at all without the aid of photographs? He missed his da, especially during the mornings when he first entered the restaurant. How many times had he stepped into this very kitchen and caught his father humming under his breath, singing snatches of Irish folk songs, as he began to prep ingredients for the day?
“Connor.”
He stopped whisking at the sound of Erin’s voice and realized the eggs were beginning to form peaks. He’d been agitating them for too long.
“Connor, the phone.”
He heard it then, the insistent chirp of the kitchen’s wall phone. Dropping the whisk and bowl onto the counter, he headed toward it.
“Let’s hope it’s a dinner reservation for twenty people.”
Erin snorted. “That’s about as likely as the Irish prime minister calling to schedule an afternoon tea.”
“Hey, a man can dream, can’t he? And you never know about the prime minister.”
Erin rolled her eyes, and he grinned as he grabbed the phone off its hook.
“Rusty Anchor,” he answered.
“Mr. Callahan? Connor?” the woman on the other end responded.
His lips slipped downward at her sharp tone. “This is he.”
“This is Geena Evans.”
Connor’s heart sped up. “Molly? Is she all right?”
The lingering silence on the other end of the line caused his chest to tighten further.
“Is my daughter all right?” he repeated and was vaguely aware that Erin had come to stand beside him, her face pale with concern.
“She’s all right. However, I think it would be best if you came to pick her up. Now.”
The tension in his chest eased but was soon replaced by a prickling uneasiness.
“What did she do?”
“I’m not comfortable discussing it on the phone.”
Connor expelled a long sigh. “The lunch hour is about to start. Might there be a chance I could pick her up after it’s over?”
This time, the silence was loaded with irritation. He could sense it crackling across the line.
“I would really prefer if you would come get your daughter now, Mr. Callahan.”
He blinked. Whatever Molly had done during her playdate with Piper Evans, it must have been quite serious.
“I understand. I’m on my way.”
Geena hung up without replying. Connor stared at the receiver for the space of another heartbeat and then slid the phone into its cradle.
“That was Geena Evans. She’s insisting I go pick Molly up immediately.”
Erin’s forehead creased with concern. “Is she all right?”
“It seems so. Only she must have gotten into some mischief.”
The lines above Erin’s eyebrows deepened. “Geena Evans is an overprotective mother.”
“Mmm.” Connor didn’t know how to comment. Overprotective though she might be, Molly was a handful, even for him. “Do you think you can manage without me for a bit? I shouldn’t be gone more than a half hour.”
Erin waved a hand, unconcerned. “I’ll be fine.”
Connor hesitated. “Are you sure?”
“Yeah, no problem. Besides, Harper should be arriving any minute now for her shift.”
The reminder of Harper put his thoughts squarely back where they’d been only moments ago.
“Go get that mischief-making daughter of yours.”
“Right. Call my cell if you need me. I’ll be back in a half hour.”
He began removing his chef’s jacket and braced himself to confront whatever sort of trouble Molly had gotten into this time.
* * *
CONNOR HELD HIS tongue as Molly swung her foot up and down, beating it against the glove compartment until he shot her a warning look. She dropped her leg with a sigh and looked out the window instead. It was a typically busy summer day on the main street of town, with plenty of people strolling the sidewalks and shopping in the many posh boutiques that had appeared in recent years. He noticed Molly eyeing a woman walking a pair of dogs, and she pressed her nose to the passenger window as