"I used to think I knew everything there was to know about you!" Matt said loud enough for me to hear over the rushing winds. "I was wrong." His hands warmed my bare arms while he towered over me.
"I didn't know you. Not the way I thought I did. You weren't just the girl who rolled her eyes at my jokes, who always looked dwarfed by a pair of coveralls. You weren't just the girl who could fix anything even though you've got the smallest hands I'd ever seen."
He moved closer to me still. The heat radiated off his broad chest.
"You work so damn hard and never make a penny. You cry when no one's around because you take care of everyone before yourself. You don't ask for help even when you need it the most. You don't own a dress but you do own a thong." His voice dropped in volume as the distance between us shrank. "You can sing like an angel and you didn't even know it because you've put so much of yourself into keeping the garage going." Matt cupped my cheek and I nestled into the comfort of his wide, rough palm. "And you have no idea how beautiful you are."
I looked up at him then. The rain cascaded off his face, dripping down the end of his nose and coursing down his cheeks.
"I messed up," he confessed into the howling wind. "Being with you opened my eyes to something I never even knew I wanted . . . I freaked out. You're so much more than I ever let myself see. How is that I didn't ever notice? Everyone else noticed, you know. Lilly and Adam, Rhi and Joe, the Rev and Adeleβhell, even my parents and Chuck and Vi noticed. They've been giving me hell all week."
I couldn't speak past the ache in my chest.
"I didn't know," Matt continued. His sapphire eyes never wavered as they held mine. "I hate myself because I didn't know. All I knew is that I wanted to help you, to take care of you. I didn't want you flirting with that Ryan guy or anyone else. I couldn't stand the idea of you kissing anyone else; I didn't want to share you."
"How can you still look at me?" he whispered, his husky voice tinted with anguish. "How can you not hate me after what I did?"
My voice cracked as I told him, "I could never hate you, Matt. Even after what happened . . ." After all he'd put me through I never once hated him, I'd only hated myself.
"I've wanted to tell you. All week I knew I had to say something, anything to you to get you to smile at me again. But I couldn't, not with your dad around. And then the more time passed, the harder it was -- I was just diggin' myself into a deeper hole and I didn't know how to get out of it. Everyone is pissed at me. My family, you, your dad, myself..."
"That wasn't my fault," I pointed out. "I didn't ask him to come back."
Matt smoothed the wet hair from my forehead. "I know. I could see he needed to be there though and that he needed to do that for you. He's not well, is he?"
"He's getting better," I said with a small smile, hopeful that it was true. "He's changed."
"He's changed and I've changed," Matt confessed. "But you've stayed the same."
My cheek brushed against his palm as I shook my head. "No, I don't think so. After last weekend, how could I ever be the same?"
A smile flitted over Matt's handsome face. "That's how I feel about it too. That's why I freaked out. You were Flick, just Flick. Then all of a sudden you were flirtatious and beautiful and . . . The last thing I expected was that you'd make my head spin. You weren't supposed to fit so perfectly with me."
"What was I supposed to be?" I couldn't help but ask.
Matt took the last step forward and wrapped me in his arms. I shivered as I pressed myself against his warm, solid body while the storm raged around us.
"That's the thing," he admitted gruffly. "You are all of those things.
I'm
the one who's supposed to stop being so stupid and realize it."
My arms banded around Matt's waist and I rested my cheek against his chest. "You're not stupid," I said with a smile.
"I'm an idiot," Matt argued with a chuckle. "A gigantic idiot."
I closed my eyes, completely oblivious to the rain and the cold, only concerned with being held by Matt again. "Okay, you're a bit of an idiot."
He drew back and arched his brow like he did whenever we teased each other. I knew we were going to be okay.
"I'm sorry," Matt murmured against the top of my head. "I'm so sorry I ran away. You scared me, Felicity. What I feel for you scared me."
I nodded. I understood completely. It scared me too.
"I will never leave you again," Matt promised. He cupped my cheeks and raised my chin so he could look me in the eyes. "I will never hurt you again."
He wouldn't. I knew he wouldn't. Because of all the things Matt had ever said to me, or done to me, he'd never, ever lied to me.
His mouth hovered just above my own. "I think I love you."
I rose onto my tiptoes and my next words brushed his lips. "I think I love you too."
We kissed with a ferocity that rivalled the waves crashing at our feet. Every movement of Matt's lips against my own, each delve of his tongue into my mouth, was an apology and a promise.
"I take it back," Matt gasped when we broke apart, both fighting for air. "I don't think I love you." He brushed the rain from my cheeks. I wondered if he knew it was mixed with my tears. "I know it."
Before I responded, however, Matt swept me up into his arms and carried me back down the beach. Automatically I threw my arms around his neck.
"What are you doing?" I shrieked in his ear.
He chuckled and dropped a quick kiss on my mouth. "Bringing you inside where it's warm and dry. I'm supposed to be taking care of you, remember?"
"I
can
walk," I reminded Matt, who pretended not to listen.
The door opened for us as we approached the cottage. Everyone laughed as Matt manoeuvred through the doorway without putting me down.
Rhiannon, Adele, and Violet chorused, "'Bout time!"
Matt blushed beneath the dusting of freckles on his rain-stung cheeks.
Joe held a stack of fluffy towels. "Yer drippin' on the floor," he deadpanned in his signature low voice.
Rhiannon took the towels from her husband and since my hands were busy clasping the back of Matt's neck, she piled them on my stomach. "Why don't you two go upstairs and dry off?"
Matt didn't wait for further instruction. I held on as he moved from the sun porch, through the living room and to the steep stairs leading to the second floor. I thought he might put me down to make the climb, but he didn't.
Upstairs, we bypassed the small room that was Sophie's nursery and headed straight for the long, narrow spare bedroom that stretched across the front of the second storey. A few single beds lined the wall beneath the windows. The ceiling was so low under the eaves that Matt had to duck his head. He made his way straight to the far corner, where a double bed was nestled against the wall.