He grinned and waved. “Good. I was worried.”
She listened to his car pull out of the driveway and turned to the sleeping Tim. “You know what I really think? I think he’s magic. No one’s ever kissed me like that. No one! Not that it matters. I’m done with men, forever.”
She put the water on for coffee and sat down to read the helpful hints, but her thoughts kept returning to Pat. She wondered if she was just licking her wounds from her relationship with Dave. Was this just a reaction from her bruised ego? No, she thought. When Pat had touched her, it had been magical. No other explanation. She’d gone gooney – brained.
Tim awoke, saw the strange woman looking down at him, and began to howl.
Almost twelve hours later Megan glared at Tim and wiped a splot of smushed green beans off her nose. The baby seemed to have become adjusted to her during this long day.
“So, how old are you, kid? Nine, ten months?
You think you’re a match for a twenty – seven year- old college graduate? Hah! Gotcha.”
She successfully spooned a load of green beans into the little mouth.
“Brrrph,” Tim said, spewing green beans across the table and into Megan’s hair.
Pat chugged into the driveway in his old tan Dodge van and made a quick assessment of Megan’s house in the fading light. He’d found out she was house – sitting for a member of the William and Mary faculty who was on sabbatical. On the outskirts of town, the house was surrounded by several acres of land. A barn and a large fenced – in pasture stood behind it. It was a neat two – story colonial, painted a traditional Williamsburg butternut yellow, with trim in two shades of green. A battered car was parked by the garage. The car was a faded maroon color, and was missing a back bumper and a front left fender. Possibly the only car in Williamsburg uglier than his, he thought.
He let himself into the unlocked house. “Hello,” he called from the front door. “Anybody home?”
“In the kitchen.”
“Having fun?”
She scowled at him as he walked into the kitchen, and pointed at her green – speckled hair. “You think this is fun?”
Pat made an effort not to laugh. Being a new mother could be a trying experience.
Megan leaned back in her chair. “Well, I suppose it has been fun. You know what he did today? He said cookie. This kid is so smart.” She wiped Timmy’s face clean with a wet cloth.
“The problem is, I’m not getting anything done! This is a busy time of the year for me.” She lifted a teapot from the counter and handed it to Pat. “I’m a potter. I make these tea sets, and a little boutique in Old Town Alexandria sells them for me. They have a big order in for the Christmas season.”
“You made this? It’s beautiful.”
She took it from him and ran her finger over the white – and – blue glaze. “Thanks. My really pretty pieces I save for a gallery in Washington. I’m going to have my first one – woman show in January.”
Pat looked at the little boy tied to a kitchen chair with an apron and felt guilty. He hadn’t known about Megan’s pottery. Somehow he had to make things easier for her. “Maybe I should hire a different baby – sitter. I didn’t realize you had these commitments.”
Megan noticed he was wearing the sneakers with the sutures again. He didn’t have any money, she guessed. He was just starting out, like her, and he was probably getting by day to day. Where would he find the money to pay a baby – sitter? Besides, she liked Timmy. She wouldn’t trust just anyone to take care of him. She shook her head and opened a jar of beige gook.
“No way. We made a deal. This kid doesn’t get to spit beans on anybody but me… or you. Here.” She handed the gook to Pat. “You get to feed him dessert. Rice pudding.”
“Looks pretty good. Do we have an extra jar? I didn’t have time for lunch.”
“Sorry. We have junior beef stew and smashed beets.” She looked in her freezer. “Turkey dinner, ham and sweet potato, veal parmigiana.”
“Veal parmigiana. You weren’t kidding when you said you couldn’t cook? Do you always eat frozen dinners?”
“No. Mostly I eat peanut – butter – and – jelly sandwiches. Why is this kid eating his food for you? Why isn’t he decorating your face with it?”
“Would you spit out dessert?”
Pat certainly had chosen the right profession, Megan thought as she sat down across from him. He was great with babies.
“Are you a pediatrician because you know a lot about kids? Or do you know a lot about kids because you’re a pediatrician?”
“A little bit of both. I have an older brother and three younger sisters. I guess I did my share of baby – sitting.”
“Do they live around here?”
“My parents live in San Diego. My brother and his wife and kids live in Connecticut. My oldest sister is a graduate student at Berkeley. My two younger sisters go to UCLA.” He grimaced. “Everyone’s coming here for Thanksgiving.”
“Oh, boy.”
“It seemed like a good idea two weeks ago. A real, old – fashioned Thanksgiving in Williamsburg.” He thunked the spoon into the empty pudding jar and stared at the steaming frozen dinner she slid in front of him. “You sure you don’t know how to cook?”
“I know better than to burn applesauce.”
“That puts you one up on me, Mrs. Hunter. Welcome aboard.”
“What do you mean, ‘Welcome aboard’?”
“We’re a family. You’re Mrs. Hunter. What would people say if we didn’t spend Thanksgiving together?”
“I’m not Mrs. Hunter. We’re not a family. I don’t give a flying moneky what people say-”
“Please.”
It was the first time she’d seen him totally serious, and it left her speechless. His eyes were unsettling when they were teasing, but they were devastating when they were serious, and he’d spoken in a husky whisper that could have pursuaded her to do almost anything.
Pat was even more surprised than Megan. The unnerving truth was that he couldn’t imagine a Thanksgiving without her. He knew it was crazy, but he actually thought of her as Mrs. Hunter. He suspected it was because all day he’d been fantasizing about her performing wifely functions- most of them in her satiny nightgown.
A real, old – fashioned Thanksgiving with Pat and his family and little Timmy, Megan mused. The more she thought about it, the more excited she became. It would be wonderful to have a Thanksgiving feast in the little restored house with the huge fireplace.
“Are you really going to make all your own food?”
“Will you help me?”
“Of course I’ll help you. It’ll be great. We can have pumpkin pie and homemade cranberry sauce and spoon bread.”
Pat poked at his veal. It was still frozen inside. “Do you honestly think we can cook a real meal?”
“Piece of cake.”
Timmy slumped down, still bound to the back of the chair with the apron. His eyes were closed in sleep and his mouth was slightly parted.
Megan and Pat smiled as they shared a moment of parental affection.
“I think I should be getting him to bed,” Pat said, untying the sleeping child while Megan got the big blue blanket. He wanted to bed Megan, too, but he didn’t think that would be such an easy task.
She wrapped Timmy in the blanket and handed Pat his jacket. “Don’t even think about it,” she said.
“You read minds?”
“That thought was pretty clear. Don’t get carried away with this Mrs. Hunter stuff. I’m through with men.”
He studied her for a moment. Her expression was somber. “Through with men forever?”
“Forever.”
“You’re not… um, you know.”
She blushed. “No. I’m completely heterosexual, and I’m absolutely healthy. It’s just that I’ve decided marriage isn’t my cup of tea.”