Forever and a Day (Lucky Harbor) Read online



  The barking seemed to have increased in decibels. “Don’t tell me it multiplied,” she said.

  “Okay, I won’t tell you.”

  Hmm. He was also extremely cool and calm under pressure. Something she’d never managed on her best day. And sexy as that was—so damn sexy—she’d discovered that men who had the cool, calm thing down were cool and calm everywhere, including their relationships.

  She didn’t want cool and calm in a relationship. She wanted passion. The big bang.

  Fun.

  “Arf, arf!” Toby yelled, coming running around the corner.

  Josh swung him up and around so that he carried the boy piggyback style. Now there were two faces looking at Grace, both so similar as to be eerie, though Toby’s was minus the fine stress lines outside the eyes and the world of knowledge in them.

  “Toby’s going to try real hard to be good,” Josh said.

  Toby nodded. Tank was at their feet, running in circles, chasing his own tail. With Toby still on board, Josh bent and scooped up the puppy too. “I can’t promise the same for Tank.”

  Tank panted proudly. “Arf!”

  Grace gave the pug a steely-eyed look that said, Eat my shoes today and die, which didn’t cow him at all. But she had a genuine smile for Toby. “Hey there.”

  “Arf!”

  “Are you and Tank brothers?” she asked him.

  Toby smiled and started to speak, but Josh adjusted his hold on Tank and reached back, covering Toby’s mouth.

  “Wait,” Grace said. “I think he was going to actually use words.”

  “Yeah, but trust me, you don’t want to hear them.”

  Toby pulled Josh’s hand away. “Are you my new mommy?”

  Grace’s mouth fell open in shock, and Toby giggled at the sight.

  “Okay, Tiger,” Josh said. “You know I love the sound of your laugh, probably more than any sound in the world, but I will squash you like a grape if you say that to one more woman today.”

  Toby pointed to Anna, who rolled into the living room behind them.

  “Yeah, I know,” Josh said mildly, sending his sister a glance. “I’m going to squash Anna like a grape too.”

  Grace was horrified he’d say such a thing to a sweet little boy, much less to his handicapped sister, but Toby just grinned.

  Anna did, too, and without a word, continued rolling through the house, ignoring all of them.

  Josh set Toby down. “How about you go find something to do that won’t get you in trouble,” he said.

  When the kid was gone, Josh looked at Grace. “I called Mallory.”

  “You did? For what?”

  “I realize that this is a favor, my favor,” he said. “But I had to make sure you’re everything you seem, even with the multiple degrees and what sounds like an…interesting family. And just out of curiosity, what kind of research are you doing for me, by the way?”

  She groaned and covered her face. “I told you, I don’t want to talk about it.”

  He laughed softly. “So we’re okay?”

  “Maybe. What did Mallory say?”

  “That I’d be lucky to have you as Toby’s nanny. And that she’d hurt me if I hurt you.”

  “What would you have done if she’d said something bad about me?”

  “I’d have brought Toby with me to work. I’ve done that before.”

  She couldn’t be sure, but it seemed like the big, bad, tough doctor shuddered at the memory. “You won’t have to do that this week,” she said.

  He gave her a smile that conveyed gratitude, and also a good amount of something else, something that wobbled her knees as he gestured her inside. Every other time she’d been here, the place had been very neat, but not today. Today it looked like a bomb had gone off, especially the kitchen. There were dishes in the sink and ingredients and utensils all over the counters.

  “It’s my housekeeper’s day off,” Josh said, and scooped Toby up, eliciting a squeal of delight. This got even louder when Josh hung Toby upside down before finally setting the kid into a chair in front of a loaded plate.

  “After-school snack was Toby’s choice today,” Josh explained. “Luckily this coincided with a lunch break for me, and I made what we like to call ‘guilt pancakes.’”

  From the ingredients and stuff scattered on the counter, Grace could tell they were wheat pancakes with blueberries, accompanied by turkey bacon. Her own father wouldn’t know a spatula, much less how to turn on the stovetop, so this was impressive.

  Josh poured a little dollop of syrup onto Toby’s plate, then ruffled the boy’s hair, his expression soft with something Grace had never seen from him before.

  Affection.

  “Be right back, Short Stack,” Josh said. “Eat up.”

  Toby held up his lightsaber with one hand, which was, of course, driving Tank nuts. The little pug was doing his circle-the-table thing, growling ferociously at every whoosh, vrrmm-whoosh, posturing like he was a Jedi as well.

  “Napoleon complex,” Josh said to Grace. “He thinks he’s bigger than he is.”

  Toby grabbed a pancake in his free hand. Flattening it on the table, he rolled it up before dipping it into the syrup and then into his mouth.

  “Utensils,” Josh said.

  Toby sighed and dropped his lightsaber to reach for a fork.

  Tank’s growl came to an abrupt stop when the lightsaber hit the floor, and with a startled snort, he ran off with his tail between his legs.

  Toby, holding a fork in one hand, used his other to stuff a huge bite into his mouth.

  Josh tapped the unused fork in Toby’s hand, then turned to Grace, gesturing that he wanted a word in private. He led her out the back door, shutting it behind them.

  She turned to look inside to see if Toby was using the fork or his fingers, but today the blinds on the window were closed.

  “Okay, so here’s the deal,” Josh said. “I lied about it being for an hour or two.”

  That had Grace turning back to face Josh. “So I’m not the only one going to hell?”

  Josh shoved his fingers through his hair, making it stand up on end. He was so broad that he blocked the sun, and with his arms up and bent, he was really testing the seams of his dress shirt in a way that worked for her, big-time.

  Suddenly he dropped his arms back to his sides as if they weighed far too much. “Look,” he said. “The truth is that I’m late. I’m overbooked. My sister’s going to give me a heart attack. I need someone to watch the Bean for me today, and you need money. Plus, he’s a good kid, really good, even if he refuses to use utensils or speak English. He will, however, bark at will, and he’s excellent at catching spiders.”

  This stopped her cold. “You have more spiders?”

  “No,” he said without missing a beat. “No spiders.”

  “You said spiders,” she said. “And I saw a big one in the side yard, in the sprinkler well.”

  “That spider went south for the winter.”

  “It’s summer.”

  “He wanted to be the first to get out of town.”

  “Look at you, with all the lies.” But she had to admit, “the Bean” was pretty damn cute. And the Bean’s father was even cuter—though she was sure he’d object to such an innocuous word as cute.

  Josh had spoken in a calm, quiet manner, but everything about him said exhausted tension. Not to mention how much he appeared to hate having to ask something of her.

  She understood pride. God, how she understood pride. But seriously? Was she really thinking of doing this simply because he was in a bind?

  No, a little voice inside her head said. It’s because he’s hot… “How long?”

  Josh didn’t move, didn’t give away any sign of relief, but his eyes warmed. “Eight o’clock, at the latest.”

  Five hours from now. Grace had no idea what to do with a kid for five hours.

  “Offer to kiss her again.”

  They both whirled around to find the back door cracked and an eyeball pee