“Whose dog is that?” I ask when he opens his door.
“Ours.”
“Ours?!”
The dog barks with a reply.
I’m not even going to touch that comment. Instead, I search the directions for the nearest Starbucks on my phone. “Take me here.”
He completely ignores my map as he turns in the opposite direction.
“Declan!”
“I know I don’t deserve it but give me ten minutes of your time.”
I’m thrown back into the memory of the last time he asked for ten minutes but gave me ten words instead.
I am falling in love with you, Iris Elizabeth Kane.
The memory makes me compliant enough to keep quiet as he drives us down the road. Gray clouds part above us. Rain falls against the windshield, and Declan is forced to turn on the wipers to see clearly.
The dog whimpers at the sound of thunder. “What made you get a dog?”
“You said you wanted one.”
My mouth drops open, and no words come out.
“It took me eleven shelters to find the one that fit your exact requirements, but somehow I pulled it off. I just hope you like him because there is no way he is ever going back to that god-awful place. They would have put him down if it weren’t for me.”
A laugh bursts out of me before I can swallow it. When I made up the story of the dog, I never really thought Declan would actually go out and find one for me. Let alone adopt one that is the size of a bear.
“Why would you do that?” My voice cracking mirrors my resolve.
“Why not? You wanted it, so I made it happen.”
“And the minivan?”
“I thought we might as well have one ready to go for all the kids you want one day.”
My vision turns misty. “You can’t possibly mean that.”
“I do, and I plan on showing you.” He stays silent as he presses a foot on the accelerator.
The rest of the ride is a bumpy one. I’m grateful when Declan stops the van before I throw up from carsickness. He parks us in front of an old farmhouse with boarded-up windows and a porch that looks about ready to collapse. With the way he gets out of the car without an umbrella, I could almost forget it’s raining.
He doesn’t seem the least bit bothered by it as he opens my door and holds out his hand. “Come with me.”
I blink up at him. “It’s raining.”
“I know. That’s kind of the point.” He grabs onto my hand and tugs me out of the car.
Raindrops splash against my skin. Declan leads me away from the car, although we don’t make it very far before he stops in front of the worn-down porch. Water clings to his hair, skin, and clothes. I’m not sure I look any better with the way my T-shirt is plastered against my body. I’m tempted to seek shelter on the porch, but the wood looks warped and decayed from years of neglect.
“What is this place?”
“One second.”
“Sure, I’ll just wait while I catch pneumonia.”
His hand gripping onto mine tugs and rotates my stack of rings until they both slip off.
An unbearable tightness in my chest intensifies as I check out my ringless finger. “Wait—”
Declan pulls out a ring box from his jacket and gets down on one knee.
His face remains a blank canvas, completely devoid of any visible emotion as he looks up at me.
My heart pounds against my chest as he latches onto my left hand.
“What are you doing?”
“Proposing to you in the middle of a rainstorm in a Tom Ford suit.”
Oh. My. God.
No way. There is no freaking way he is recreating the story I made up.
Right?
Wrong. He pops open the ring box, and I gasp. Even without the sun shining down on it, I can tell he bought the most beautiful emerald ring I’ve ever seen.
“Iris.”
“Yes?” I drag my eyes away from the ring and back toward his face.
His hand holding onto mine trembles, and I know it has nothing to do with the rain. I give him a reassuring squeeze. He mumbles something that sounds like here goes nothing, and my chest caves in on itself at his display of vulnerability.
“Ya'aburnee1. As in you bury me. A rough translation for the way I want to leave this world before you because I can’t imagine having to go through a single day without you in it. If this last week was a preview of that kind of life, then I can assure you it isn’t a life worth living. You’re my wife and my best friend. The future mother of my children and the one place that truly feels like home. You’re the woman I want to spend the rest of my life with, not because you signed a contract, but because you love me enough to stay without one.