Название: The Ranch She Left Behind
Автор: Kathleen O'Brien
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781472016850
isbn:
She liked the small sounds of him working. The clink of a spoon against a cup, the quick swish of water dampening a dishcloth, the squeak of his tennis shoes.
The simple sounds of another human being. Suddenly she realized how completely alone sheâd been the past two months.
Finally, the internal shivering ceased. With a small sigh of relief, she shrugged off his coat. Glancing at the clock over the stove, she realized it was almost seven.
She must have been here an hour or more. She should go home and let him get on with his day.
âThank you, Ben,â she began, standing. âI should go hoââ All of a sudden she felt tears pushing at her throat, behind her eyes, and she sat back down, frowning hard at her cup. âIâI should...â
âYou should move,â Ben said matter-of-factly. He had his cup in one hand and a dish towel in the other, drying the china in methodical circular motions, as if he were polishing silver.
âMove?â She glanced up, wondering if sheâd misheard. âMove out of the town house?â
He nodded.
âJust because of what happened this morning?â
âNo. Not just that. You should move because you shouldnât be living there in the first place. For Ruth, maybe it was right. She liked quiet. For you...â
He shook his head slowly, but with utter conviction. âI always knew it was wrong of her to keep you there. Like a prison. Youâre too young. Youâre too alive.â
âThatâs not fair,â she interjected quickly. Criticism of Ruth always made her uncomfortable. Where would she have been if Ruth hadnât agreed to take her in? âRuth knew I neededâa safe harbor.â
âAt first, yes.â Ben sighed, and his gaze shifted to the bay window overlooking the gardens. His deep-set blue eyes softened, as if he could see them as theyâd been fifteen years ago, an old man and a little girl, with twin easels set up, twin paint palettes smudged with blue and red and yellow, each trying to capture the beauty of the flowers.
âAt first, you did need a quiet home. Like a hospital. You were a broken little thing.â
He transferred his troubled gaze to her. Then he cleared his throat and turned to the sink.
Ben knew about the tragedy that had exiled Penny from Bell River, of course. Everyone knew, but Ruth hadnât allowed anyone to speak of it to Penny. She thought it would be too traumatic. Having a mother die tragically was bad enough for any child. But having your mother killed by your father...and your father hauled away to prison...
And then being ripped from the only home youâd ever known, split from your sisters and asked to live in another state, with a woman you barely knew...
Traumatic was an understatement. But, though Ruth had meant well, never being allowed to talk about what had happenedâthat might have been the hardest of all. Never to be given the chance to sort her emotions into words, to put the events into some larger perspective. Never to let them lose power through familiarity.
Sometimes Penny thought it was a miracle she hadnât suffered a psychotic break.
âSweet pea, Iâm sorry. But I need to say this.â Ben still held the cup and dishrag, and was still rubbing the surface in circles, as if it were a worry stone.
âOf course,â she said. âItâs okay, Ben. Whatever it is.â
âGood.â He put down the cup and rag, then cleared his throat. âRuth did mean well. I know that. You needed to heal, and at first it was probably better to heal quietly, in private. But youâve been ready to move on for a long time.â
âHow could I? Ruth was so sick, andââ
âI know. It was loyal of you to stay, to take care of her when she needed you. But she doesnât need you anymore, honey. Itâs time to move on.â
At first Penny didnât answer. She recognized a disturbing truth in his words. That truth made her so uncomfortable she wanted to run away. But she respected him too much to brush him off. Theyâd been friends a long time. He was as close to a father as sheâd ever had.
âI know,â she admitted finally. âBut moving on...itâs not that easy, Ben.â
âOf course it is!â With a grin, he stomped to the refrigerator and yanked down the piece of paper that always hung there, attached by a magnet shaped like Betty Boop. âJust do it! Walk out the door! Grab your bucket list and start checking things off!â
She laughed. âI donât have a bucket list.â
âYou donât?â Ben looked shocked. He stared at his own. âNot even in your head? In your heart of hearts? You donât have a list of things you want to do before you die?â
She shook her head.
âWhy? You think bucket lists are just for geezers like me?â
âOf course not. Iâve never had any reason toââ
âWell, you do now. You canât hide forever, Pea. For better or worse, you arenât like the nun in Ruthâs parlor. You were never meant for that.â
Ruthâs parlor overflowed with lace doilies and antimacassars, Edwardian furniture and Meissen shepherdesses. Ruth had covered every inch of wall space with framed, elaborate cross-stitch samplers offering snippets of poetry, advice and warningsâso many it was hard to tell where one maxim ended and the next one began.
Penny had loved them all, but her favorite had been a picture of a woman putting on a white veil. When Penny moved in, at eleven, sheâd assumed the woman was getting married, but Ruth had explained that the poem was really about a woman preparing to become a nun.
The line of poetry beneath the veil read, âAnd I have asked to be where no storms come.â Penny had adored the quoteâespecially the way it began with and, as if it picked up the story in the middle. As if the woman had already explained the troubles that had driven her to seek safety in a convent.
âMy father murdered my mother,â Penny always imagined the poem might have begun. âAnd so I have asked to be where no storms come.â
Sheâd mentioned it to Ben only one time. He gave her a camera for her twelfth birthday, and she took a picture of the sampler, among her other favorite things. When she showed it to him, he had frowned, as if it displeased him to see how much she liked it.
He was frowning now, too. âI hope youâre not still toying with the idea of taking the veil.â
Penny chuckled. âOf course not.â СКАЧАТЬ