Название: The Ranch She Left Behind
Автор: Kathleen O'Brien
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781472016850
isbn:
âNo.â She shook her head instinctively. No, she definitely wasnât.
âOf course you are. How could you not know it? The men know it. Every male who sees you falls in love with you on the spot. You make them want to be heroes. Think of poor Officer McGregor out there.â
It was her turn to blush. Penny knew she wasnât glamorous. She had two beautiful sisters, one as dark and dramatic as a stormy midnight, the other as pale and cool as a snow queen. Penny was the boring one. And if she hadnât been boring to begin with, these years with Ruth, who didnât believe in wearing bright clothing or making loud noises, had certainly washed her out to a faded, sepia watercolor of a woman.
The only beauty she had any claim to showed up in her art.
Benâs affection made him partial. As if to offset Ruthâs crisp, undemonstrative manner, he had always handed out extravagant compliments like candy.
âDonât be silly, Ben.â
âIâm not. You are. Youâve got that quiet, innocent kind of beauty, which, believe me, is the most dangerous. Plus, youâre talented, and youâre smart, and youâre far too gutsy to spend the rest of your life hiding in that town house.â
She had to smile. She was the typical youngest childâmeek, a pleaser, bossed around by everyone, always trying to broker peace. âCome on. Gutsy?â
âAbsolutely. Youâve conquered more demons at your young age than most people face in a lifetime. Starting with your devil of a father, and going up through tonight.â
âI havenât been brave. Iâve simply endured. Iâve done whatever I had to do.â
âWell, what do you think courage is?â He smiled. âItâs surviving, kiddo. Itâs doing what you must. Itâs grabbing a can of wasp spray and aiming it at the monsterâs ugly face.â
She laughed, and shook her head. âAnd then shaking like a leaf for four hours straight?â
âSure. For a while youâll shake. But trust me, by tomorrow, youâll realize tonight taught you two very important things. One, you canât hide from troubleânot in a nunnery, and certainly not in a San Francisco town house.â
The truth of that sizzled in the pit of her stomach. She might want to be where no storms comeâbut was there any such place?
She nodded slowly. âAnd two?â
âAnd two...â He took her hand in his and squeezed. âTwo...so trouble finds you. So what? Youâre a warrior, Penelope Wright. Thereâs no trouble out there that you canât handle.â
* * *
MAX THORPE HADNâT been on a date in ten months, not since his wife died. Apparently, ten months wasnât long enough. Everything about the woman heâd taken to dinner annoyed him, from her perfume to her conversation.
Even the way she ate salad irritated him. So odd, this intensely negative reaction. Sheâd seemed pretty good on paperâjust-turned-thirty to his thirty-four, a widow herself. A professional, some kind of charity arts work on the weekends. His friends, who had been aware that divorce had been in the air long before Lydiaâs aneurysm, had started trying to set him up with their single friends about six months after her death, but this was the first time heâd said yes.
Obviously heâd surrendered too soonâwhich actually surprised him. Given the state of his marriage, he wouldnât have thought heâd have this much trouble getting over Lydia.
But the attempt to reenter the dating world had gone so staggeringly wrong from the get-go that heâd almost been glad to see his daughterâs cell phone number pop up on his caller ID.
Until he realized she was calling from the security guardâs station at the outlet mall.
Ellen and her friends, who had supposedly been safe at a friendâs sleepover, had been caught shoplifting. The store would release her with only a warning, but he had to talk to them in person.
Shoplifting? He almost couldnât believe his ears. But he arranged a cab for his date, with apologies, then hightailed it to the mall, listened to the guardâs lecture, and now was driving his stony-faced eleven-year-old daughter home in total silence.
A lipstick. Good God. The surprisingly understanding guard had said it allâhow wrong it was morally, how stupid it was intellectually, how much damage it could do to her life, long-term. But Max could tell Ellen wasnât listening.
And he had no idea how he would get through to her, either.
Ellen had turned eleven a couple of weeks ago. She wasnât allowed to wear lipstick. But even if she was going to defy him about that, why steal it? She always had enough money to buy whatever she wanted, and he didnât make her account for every penny.
In fact, he almost never said no to herânever had. At first, heâd been overindulgent because he felt guilty for traveling so much, and for even thinking the D word. Then, after Lydiaâs death, heâd indulged his daughter because sheâd seemed so broken and lost.
Great. He hadnât just flunked Marriage 101, heâd flunked Parenting, too.
âEllen, I need to understand what happened tonight. First of all, what were you and Stephanie doing at the mall without Stephanieâs parents?â
Ellen gave him a look that stopped just shy of being rude. She knew he didnât allow overt disrespect, but sheâd found a hundred and one ways to get the same message across, covertly.
âThey let her go to the mall with friends all the time. I guess her parents trust her.â
He made a sound that might have been a chuckle if he hadnât been so angry. âGuess thatâs a mistake.â
Ellen folded her arms across her chest and faced the window.
The traffic was terribleâFriday night in downtown Chicago. It would be forty minutes before they got home. Forty very long minutes. He realized, with a sudden chagrin, that heâd really rather let it go, and make the drive in angry silence. Though heâd adored Ellen as a baby and a toddler, something had changed through the years. He didnât speak her language anymore.
He didnât know how to couch things so that sheâd listen, so that sheâd care. He didnât know what metaphors she thought in, or what incentives she valued.
The awkward, one-sided sessions of family therapy, which theyâd endured together for six months to help her deal with her grief, hadnât exactly prepared him for real-life conversations.
Even before that, everything had come together in a perfect storm of bad parenting. His job had started sending him on longer and longer trips. Mexico had happened. When he СКАЧАТЬ