A Match Made in Heaven?. Sun Chara
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Название: A Match Made in Heaven?

Автор: Sun Chara

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9780008145101

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ for city lights and delights? An iron shackle squeezed his heart at the possibility.

      A moment later, he stepped into the kitchen and nearly dropped the load in his arms. Sam stood at a slight angle by the stove to accommodate her condition and stirred the mixture in the blackened pot with a stick.

      “Soup or me?” She fluttered her lashes.

      “Can I have both?” He focused on her mouth and a wistful smile brushed his lips. Water streamed from his raingear and puddled at his feet.

      She remained silent.

      “Apparently not.”

      “Your friend cleaned us out.”

      “Bang on that.”

      He’d have a score to settle with Willie and his buddy … er … his accomplice. Johnny shook his head, more annoyed with himself than with Willie. He’d been so involved with appeasing Sam that he’d neglected his business by putting full trust in Willie. The man must’ve gambled away the funds he’d sent him to renovate the place.

      And that explained the hired hand’s quick exit. Without Willie around to take the brunt of Johnny’s disapproval, and with the possibility of embezzlement charges, he must’ve gotten spooked.

      In a position to be lenient, Johnny wouldn’t go that route, especially knowing the hardships Willie had gone through recently. Nevertheless, he expected an explanation and full payback from his former college buddy and now ex-employee.

      He tossed the bag and blankets in the corner and shrugged off his slicker. A quick glance showed him no place to hang it, and he draped it over the door, thoughts still jabbing his brain.

      It had been his intention to surprise Sam with their good fortune and bring her to this new home to live in the style she’d been accustomed. But she’d wanted to live in the city, and he decided to go along for a time. When her mother kept meddling by throwing Michael in his face and deriding him for not adequately providing for her ‘baby girl’, he’d kept mum about his finances. At least until he knew for sure which way the wind blew.

      And then Sam had gotten pregnant, and it changed everything. With the baby so near, he wanted to pamper her and give her all the comforts money could buy. He thought bringing her here would give them time alone to talk, get to the truth of their marriage … work things out.

      A sigh shot from deep in his chest, and he chanced a glance at her preparing their pauper’s supper. He swallowed disappointment. In her estimation, he must’ve moved down a notch or two to the bottom … er … under the barrel. He swatted rain from his lashes. But from here, there was only one way to go, and that was up. He chuckled at the notion, but it came out a dry sound. Surely things couldn’t get any worse between them?

      “Don’t know how he could have forgotten the canned soup,” she said, her cool words pulling him from his thoughts.

      “Peace offering, perhaps.” He glanced around. Sure enough, except for the small round table she ’d cleaned, it was empty. Warmth from the stove and the smell of tomato filled the kitchen, and he could almost believe —he slammed the brakes on his foolishness.

      “Doubt it.” She glanced up and met his gaze. “You wanna eat, Belen?”

      “Yeah.” He allowed his hungry gaze to travel the length of her, from the top of her head to the tips of her toes, then back up, until his eyes settled on her breasts, now much fuller since her pregnancy. His gaze encompassed her belly, full with child.

      His child.

      Emotion rose up inside him, choking. He gulped it down. He wanted to padlock her to him and never let go. “Starved.”

      “Grab a crate and dig out a couple of mugs from your duffel bag.” Sam waved the stir stick at him, spritzing the air with tomato soup. “I assume you came prepared?”

      “Sure.” He dropped to his haunches and yanking the sack open, rifled through the contents.

      The wind had tousled his hair, and he smelled of fresh air, mud…and man. Sam wanted to reach out and smooth the damp hair off his brow, touch her lips to the spot. She sucked in a breath and allowed it to feather out between her lips. Her mother had called him a ne’er-do-well. Had he no roots? No desire to provide better for his family—wife and child? The ‘not legally married’ summons gave them both an out. Would he take it? She ignored the pounding of her heart. She deplored living on subsistence level and going from place to place like a nomad.

      She tightened her grip on the stirring stick, the bark grazing her fingers. How well did she know this man she married— well, thought she’d married? “You can relocate at a drop of a hat, can’t you, Belen?”

      “I adapt.” He was focused searching through the bag and didn’t even spare her a glance. “Guess it’s the gypsy in my blood. Irish nomad.”

      “More like your military training.”

      “That too. Survival. At any cost.”

      His words were laced with double meaning, and she shook off the feeling of dread. She stirred the soup like her life depended on it. It did. Her future and her child’s future. “Well, I’m not of nomadic inclination, nor gypsy mode.”

      “Guess you’re not.” He pulled the two mugs from the bag more forcefully than necessary. “Ta, da!” He slammed them onto the table next to the flashlight, and it wobbled under the impact.

      “Pretty quick, aren’t you?”

      “I can be.”

      “I remember.”

      “Yeah,” Johnny grunted.

      Rush courtship … marriage … fight … flight.

      Unless he came up with a foolproof plan soon, rush split-up would get tagged on the list. To change the mood, he dragged a couple of wooden crates across the floor to the table and mocked a bow. “For m’lady.”

      “Thank you, kind sir.”

      She played along, but how long could he count on that? He straightened up and smoothed back his hair. Was it always going to be a struggle with this woman? A reluctant smile tugged the corner of his mouth. Never a dull moment with her, though.

      “What’s funny?”

      He shrugged, motioning with his head. “This. You and me.”

      “I find nothing amusing in the circumstances.” She turned her back, kicked a small wooden box against the wall and stepped on it.

      “Sam!” In two strides, he stood behind her, protecting, yet not touching.

      She stretched up on tiptoe, opened the crazy yellow cupboard and rifled across the top shelf. “Looking for crackers.” She cast him a cool glance over her shoulder. “Not asking too much, am I?”

      “You shouldn’t be doing that.”

      “What?” She lifted a shapely brow, her gaze turning dubious. “Asking for crackers?”

      He refrained from responding to her СКАЧАТЬ