Chapter 27 - getting on with life
Erin’s mother turned back to
Jack, “nice to meet you, and call me Sara.”
Jack nodded and gave a
gracious smile, then looked down at Erin, she looked terrified. It was his
first chance to study Dan Bailey, though he had seen him play a lot when he was
young. He was a distinguished man, he’d aged well, he was tall, broad and
seemed younger than his sixty plus years, in fact he barely had a grey hair on
his head, he was frowning, and that gave him an imposing appearance, not that
Jack was scared. His father had been more threatening when he’d been in his
teens than this man could ever be to him as an adult.
Turning to the door, jack
smiled at the older man, “and you of course Mr Bailey, a face I remember from
childhood.” Extending a hand he forced Erin’s father to accept the hand shake,
“saying that it’s not the face that I remember, but that goal against Italy,
what was it 1981? It’s played every time England play the Azzurri, and quite
rightly so. Great game and a great goal!”
Jack watched the older man
struggle to deal with his enthusiasm, so he decided to keep unsettling him.
“Sorry that you had to hear about me dating your daughter from the bloody paps,
I really hate that.”
With a grunt, Danny Bailey
turned and walked back into the house, when Jack turned to look at the other
two women he saw reluctant smiles on their faces. They’d been apprehensive of
the contact between the two men, but it seemed that he’d diffused everyone’s
tension.
With his own smile, he held
out a hand to Erin and they interlinked fingers, suddenly she could see he was
right, their solidarity was vital, any hint of the truth about their relationship,
or lack of would spell disaster. As they
entered the house he squeezed her hand then when she looked up at him smiled
down at her.
“Coffee?” Sara offered and jack replied
enthusiastically.
“That would be great Mrs...Sara!” He added at her
look of chastisement. “With milk if possible.”
Sara smiled then filled the
machine.
There was no sign of Danny, so
the three sat at the kitchen table and drank coffee, Jack answering Erin’s
mother’s questions, Erin watching the interaction with interest. When her
mother finally left them alone on the pretence of visiting the bathroom, he
edged his chair closer to Erin’s.
“You ok? You’re quiet!”
She sighed, “I didn’t think
this would work, but you’re right, my dad is a moody git anyway, but my mother
seems happy...but then I’ve got to tell them about the baby.”
He nodded, “and we’re grown
adults, we don’t need their approval. But they love you, they already have
grandchildren they love...it’ll be fine, you’ll see!”
When Sara returned, she
announced excitedly that Erin’s brother and his wife were going to join them
for lunch; the recently mentioned grandchildren were out with their maternal
grandparents. Within moments, just like the old days, Erin was drawn into
helping cook the meal. Erin’s father had finally lowered himself to join them
and the two men were at opposite ends of the table both perusing Sport’s
sections from various Sunday papers.
Half an hour later Jack had
broached the topic of golf successfully and a begrudging conversation had been
struck up. Erin had shared a few knowing glances with her mother as things
seemed to get a little easier.
Then Peter and Yvonne had
burst in bearing wine, beaming smiles on their faces. What could possibly go
wrong?
Jack fortunately hadn’t drunk
alcohol despite the copious amounts being passed around; he’d have hated to
rely on Erin in her current state which could only be described as extreme
shock. Any ground work he’d made with Erin’s father had come crashing down in
an awful display of male bravado.
He knew he was part to blame,
the man was a pompous old fool, but he was also protective of his daughter. So
when Jack had misread a few warmer conversations with Danny Bailey, he’d
misjudged timing hugely and announced that they were having a baby.
For a split second he’d seen
delight on Sara’s face, but that soon mirrored Erin’s shock as Danny turned to
him, both hands on the table, threatening to rear up like some python waiting
to strike.
“You what? ‘You’re having a baby’! What? Do you
expect us to jump up and down that ‘you’ some fly-by-night playboy has chosen
our daughter for your five minutes of fun? I know people like you!”
Jack adopted a similarly
aggressive position, “Mr Bailey, whether you like it or not this is happening!
Your daughter lives with me, we want to be together and we want this baby.”
“You don’t know WHAT you want! Just a few weeks ago
you were in the paper with some dizzy blonde! My daughter may have shit choice
in men, but she has way too much intelligence for you!”
“Danny calm down, be sensible!”
Sara tried her best, but she
wasn’t having any effect. Jack glanced at Erin and she looked like death, after
their scare previously he didn’t want this to get out of hand.
“Mr Bailey, Erin hasn’t been well...I don’t think
this fighting is good for her.”
“Fighting?” As Danny set off in another tirade of anger
and abuse, Sara turned to her daughter.
“You’ve been ill?”
Erin nodded, ignoring the two
men who were rutting like stags, “low lying placenta. I bled a lot, I’ve had to
stop work...rest...hopefully it’ll be just a precaution.”
As Sara nodded, Jack took
Erin’s hand, “let’s leave love, this is all a bit ridiculous...”
“What is it with you trying to tell me what’s best
for MY daughter?” they were still arguing around them.
Jack smiled apologetically at
the stunned faces of Peter and Yvonne, he turned back to Danny, “I don’t know
why you’re being so unreasonable, I admit this may not be the fairy tale you
wanted for your daughter, but we’re happy, really happy about this baby, and
whether you like it or not, our lives will be linked forever. How you feel
about Erin? I already feel about her and that baby, MY baby.”
Standing he led Erin to the
door, “thank you for your hospitality Sara...Peter...Yvonne,” he nodded an
acknowledgment to each of them, then smiled at Danny, “Mr Bailey.”
Once Barney caught up to them,
they were gone.
Erin hadn’t spoken for the
first forty minutes. So they’d driven in silence.
“You need to stop?” he glanced across when she didn’t
answer and saw tears rolling down her face.
With a groan he took the next
exit off the motorway and pulled off the road. Turning in his seat, he took her
hands, “hey, I’m sorry. I should’ve held my tongue.”
She shook her head, then
looked up at him, “no you were right, I didn’t have the strength to tell them.
But all you said, you’re right. He...thanks. For everything.”
Using his thumbs he wiped the
tears from her eyes, “it’s ok, I meant what I said, I’m seeing things
differently. Suddenly my life has purpose. That’s because of you. I’ll do
anything to protect and support you both. Don’t ever forget that. Ok?”
When she nodded, biting her
lip in such an innocent way, he slipped the car back into gear and rejoined the
motorway.
Erin was shaking with cold or
despair, she wasn’t sure. But she knew that she was glad of Jack’s arms around
her as he woke her outside his house. Helping her indoors he led her straight
to the lounge and settled her on a sofa then made her tea. Hoping that it would
work as it seemed to on TV.
She drank silently, then
stood. “I need sleep Jack.” When he nodded an understanding, she added, “Would
you hold me? Just hold me?”
Jack felt like whooping. She’d
pushed him away for so long, the thought of holding her, letting her sleep in
his arms was a painful thought, but it was a start, a move in the right
direction. He kept his answering smile enigmatic and assisted her
upstairs.
Diving in his bedroom he
slipped into shorts and a t-shirt reaching her room just at the moment Erin
emerged from the en suite in those ridiculous strappy short pyjamas. The sort
that would make a quick glance torture, having her wrapped around him...he was
definitely testing his saintly side.
Pulling back the duvet he
helped her into bed, then wandered around to the other side and climbed in
himself. And then she snuggled up to him, all soft curves, and lemony perfume,
and sighs...it was the little sigh that crippled him with lust.
It had been a hellish day, but
Erin couldn’t fault Jack’s behaviour, her father despised him his good fortune,
he had become a far greater football player than her father had had chance to
be. He was jealous of him, she could see that, and disliked him because he had
a reputation for being hot-headed, some might say passionate, but not her
father. He thought he was spoilt, childish, overindulged. He couldn’t be more
wrong, and if anything he’d showed himself to be that childish pathetic man.
And she was embarrassed.
But jack Reilly, well Jack had
done the right thing, he hadn’t resorted to name calling, point scoring or
beating his chest, he’d merely tried to explain how things were, respond to her
father’s accusations, then when that proved fruitless, he’d offered her his
complete support and protected her, taken her away from the trauma of it all,
and he hadn’t forced her to analyse it all the way home either.
And now, she was snuggled into
him, her nose against his neck, head on his shoulder, and his arms wrapped
tightly around her. And he was warm, hard and smelled so good.
The hand that rested on his
stomach wandered under the t-shirt he wore and she gasped against his skin as
she felt the warm skin of his body, his response was a similar moan, and his
lips connected with her forehead.
As she tilted her head back to
meet his lips, wanting nothing more than to lose herself in him, Jack sighed, “remember
what the doctor said Erin, don’t make this too difficult, will you?”
How could she forget that
mortifying moment in the doctor’s office when sitting together still scared
stiff at the thought that they could lose the baby, and Doctor Carter warning
that along with no work, no lifting, no strenuous activity, there was “no sex, definitely not, and I don’t just
mean intercourse. Any contraction of the uterus could set things off, and I don’t
know how that would end.”
At the time Erin had blushed
to the ends of her hair she was so mortified, but Jack as usual took it all in
his stride, smiling and murmuring an “of course”.
Oh yes she remembered that ok.
With a sigh she nodded, then turned her body towards his and closed her eyes.
Jack was having rather
different memories lying there, and wondered how long it would take until she
was fast asleep and he could disappear into an ice cold shower.
During the week Erin’s mother called
several times, her father was still livid, she admitted she thought that a
large part of that was anger at himself, but her father was stubbornly proud,
they both knew that.
“Do you want to meet up? Do some shopping?”
Erin sighed, “I’m so tired
Mum, and I really don’t want to push things, I’m so worried.”
“Of course, are you still going to Michelle’s next
weekend? Maybe I could come into London and see you?”
It was Michelle’s birthday the
following weekend and the two girls had always done things together. Ironically
Jack’s first game of the season was also in the capital that weekend, so he’d
agreed she could go, as long as she’d let him drive, and not gallivant in her
usual mad way.
It was hard succumbing to his
demands so wholly, but she really didn’t have a choice.
“That would be great. I’m meeting Michelle on Friday
evening, then there’s football on Saturday, so I’m at a loose end.”
Her mother was quiet for a
moment, “I’m happy to meet you with Jack if that helps Erin, I’m not like your
Dad, you know that.”
“I know Mum, but it’s fine. I’m staying at his apartment;
do you want to come there? See how things are?”
That was as concrete as their
plans really could be.
Jack had got special
permission to not be at the team hotel the night before the inaugural match, so
that he could accompany Erin to Michelle’s birthday meal. He was keeping up the
attentiveness that he’d shown since he found out she was pregnant, and since
the blow with her father they had a closeness that they’d missed out on before.
Erin was happy, happier than she had been for a long time, despite everything.
Wow now Erin's father is more childish maybe he is jealous of Jack's success etc or maybe because he's with Erin you know how some dads are really over protective of their daughters no matter what age they reach..
ReplyDeleteLooking forward for what happens next will we get to meet Jacks family?
Looking forward for the next update
Annie
She needs to tell him about her failed marriage! So hooked!
ReplyDeleteErin's father is just so silly. I mean come on seriously shouldn't he just be greatful that Jack's taking full responsibility of Erin and not just running away. But you never know he might just be really over-protective about his daughter especially because she was hurt before.
ReplyDeletePoor Jack, I wonder how many cold showers he's going to have to take? :) Looking forward to what happens next. I wonder when Erin will tell him about her ex-husband and if we get the chance to meet Jacks family. Anxiously, waiting for more.
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Samaira T