‘My son has always been a private person. He has his family and Nathaniel and Gregor, and that’s always been enough for him. There have been girlfriends, obviously, ones he was close to, but he’s always kept his circle tight, excluding them and not even realizing it.’ Andy grinned again, his eyes on Cam, who was walking with his arm wrapped around his mum’s shoulders, grinning down into her face. ‘Not you, though. You’re in. And Cameron is … well, I don’t think I’ve ever seen him this happy.’
My heart lurched, my breath stuttering as I focused on Cam, loving the way he moved, powerful, at ease with himself, confident. Not to mention his easy affection with people, his ability to reveal how he felt about someone without caring what anyone else thought. ‘You think?’
‘Yup.’ Andy nudged me with his shoulder, a move Cameron had obviously unconsciously developed from watching his dad. ‘I’m glad he met you, Johanna.’
All the tension melted out of my shoulders and I relaxed. ‘Me too,’ I whispered, unable to mask my feelings.
Before Andy could ask me whatever probing question was brimming in his eyes, my phone rang. I apologized and tugged it out of my jacket pocket. It was Joss.
My heart stopped.
Mum?
‘Hello?’ I answered a little breathlessly.
‘Hey, you.’ Joss’s voice was quiet, unsteady.
I felt sick. ‘Is everything okay? Is Mum okay?’
‘God, yes.’ She hurried to reassure me. ‘I’m actually calling to tell you something.’
That sounded slightly ominous. ‘Something?’
‘Well … Braden proposed to me yesterday.’
WHAT? ‘Oh, my God.’
‘I said yes.’
‘What?’ I laughed happily, hearing her throaty and quite obviously pleased chuckle on the other end of the line. ‘I’m so happy for you! Congratulations, hon, and tell Braden I said “about time”!’
Her laughter warmed my frozen cheeks. ‘I will. Look, Ellie is already planning a dreaded engagement party, so, um, we’ll talk when you get back. Hope “meeting the parents weekend” has gone well.’
‘Very well. Not as well as your weekend, obviously.’
‘Yeah. Well, he paid a cab driver to be in on it and he proposed in Bruntsfield in the cab just where we met. He pulled out a ring, told me he loved me and that he’d try not to fuck it up if I tried not to fuck it up, so how could I say no?’
I snorted. ‘You couldn’t. Sounds like the perfect proposal for you.’
Her voice softened. ‘Yeah, it kind of was.’
‘So happy for you.’
‘Thanks, Jo. I’ll see you soon?’
‘Soon.’
We hung up and Andy looked at me with a quirked eyebrow. ‘Good news?’
I nodded. ‘My best friend just got engaged. She doesn’t have any family of her own, so this is amazing for her.’ Suddenly tears pricked my eyes at the thought of everything Joss was gaining, and I laughed a little weepily, feeling like an idiot.
‘What’s going on?’ Cam approached, his eyebrows drawn together in a glower. ‘Why are you upset?’
‘I’m not upset.’ I waved him off with a goofy smile and held up my phone. ‘That was Joss. She and Braden just got engaged.’
Cam grinned, hooking an arm around my neck to draw me into his side. ‘Come here, sappy girl. The brisk coastal wind will dry those tears.’
I cuddled into him. ‘Don’t you think it’s great news?’
He nodded, his eyes bright on me. ‘I think it’s brilliant news. She’s a good girl, deserves to be happy.’
God, he was lovely sometimes.
‘And Braden is a brave man. I’ll need to buy him a pint when we get back.’
Andy grunted at our side. ‘A pint for a soldier going off to war.’
Cam’s shoulders shook beneath my head. ‘Exactly.’
‘For a general surveying his battlefield and using logic against an illogical foe.’
‘Yep.’
‘For a warrior about to head into the mouth of the dragon’s cave.’
‘Definitely.’
‘For –’
‘Okay, okay, funny men,’ I interrupted with a huff. ‘Who needs a coastal wind to dry the eyes when I’m in the presence of the MacCabe sense of humour?’
Andy shot me a wry smile and then turned a full-blown grin on Cam as we drew closer to Cole, Lena and Bryn. ‘You better keep this one, son.’
20
‘Hello, beautiful.’ A deep, familiar voice brought my head up from the letter I was shoving into an envelope.
Greeted by the sight of Malcolm standing in the doorway to Mr Meikle’s reception area, I smiled. My heart thudded a little faster as he smiled back affectionately, all class and polish in his designer suit. ‘Malcolm,’ I replied warmly.
His dark eyes glittered as he strolled casually into the room towards me. ‘It’s good to see you.’
I stayed frozen awkwardly in place for a moment as I decided what I should do, how I should greet him. Malcolm waited on the other side of my desk, his eyebrows raised in question.