This Time For Keeps. Jenna Mills
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Название: This Time For Keeps

Автор: Jenna Mills

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

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isbn: 9781472028150

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СКАЧАТЬ cabernet there the night after Charlotte was born. Maybe tonight was the night to allow herself just one glass….

      Meg…where were ye? I was scared my wee one would get here before you did….

      She closed the cabinet. Walked out of the kitchen. Back to her office. Shut the door.

      That’s where she was when her cell phone rang. She picked it up, answered on the second ring.

      “Open up,” Julia said by way of greeting.

      Meg blinked. “Pardon?”

      “We’re on the porch,” Julia said in that brisk, all-business way of hers. “Didn’t want to knock and risk waking the baby.”

      Puzzled, Meg saved the business plan she’d been editing and went to the front of the house, where she opened the door to Julia and Lori, and a nondescript brown bag.

      Julia brushed right by her, looking both ways as she crossed the small foyer. “Is he here? Is that his truck out front?”

      Meg glanced out to see the white, late-model truck across the street. “Is who here?”

      Lori stepped inside and closed the door. “We know,” she said quietly. “We saw him.”

      Meg stilled as realization formed. Her friends had seen Russell. And here they were…checking on her.

      Because they knew—everything.

      “He’s not here.” The truck across the street had been there a few days, most likely belonging to one of Mrs. Morgan’s grown sons. “And you don’t need to be here, either. I’m fine.”

      “Right,” Julia said. “Your husband waltzes back into town after two years—”

      “Soon-to-be-ex,” Meg corrected. She’d filed the papers the month before Ainsley had died. All they needed were his signature.

      “My point exactly.”

      Lori’s eyes widened as Julia whisked into the kitchen. “You should have seen her. She pretty much let him have it.”

      Meg sighed. “Julia!” Then, “What happened to ‘You have to call him’?”

      Julia returned with three spoons. “Your terms,” she said. “Not his.”

      It was hard to argue with that.

      “And so you came over here to…?” she asked, glancing from the bag in Lori’s hands to the utensils in Julia’s.

      Julia grinned. “Eat ice cream.” Tucking her arm under Meg’s, she all but dragged her to the back door.

      Meg thought about protesting, telling them she was fine. Insisting that they go home. She hated that they felt the need to descend on her as if she was some fragile creature in danger of shattering.

      But gratitude overrode everything else.

      Over the years they’d shared a lot, from Barbie clothes to real clothes, and then real dreams. And real heartache. Julia and Lori had been there before she went off to college—and when Meg came home. They’d listened to her go on and on about the dreamy guest professor—and they’d gawked when he came after her. They knew about the night she lost her virginity. They’d helped her plan her wedding. They’d encouraged her when she and Russell had been forced to turn to medical science to conceive a child. They’d held her hand, helped with shots, held her up.

      In the end, they’d been the ones to help glue all the pieces back together.

      Outside, on the wide porch overlooking the yard that sloped down to the creek, she let them steer her to the top step, where they all three plopped down. Lori pulled the carton out of the bag. Julia ripped off the lid, revealing the mint chip ice cream beneath.

      Lori handed over the spoons.

      They all dug in.

      THE PINEY WOODS GAZETTE had once been a thriving daily newspaper. Meg’s great-grandfather had prided himself on being a newsman, founding the local paper to quiet the gossip that often gripped the town. He had been a man of facts. A man of principle. Focus. He thought everyone had a right to know…everything.

      It was a legacy Maxwell Landry dedicated his life to building—and passing down to his only son.

      Standing outside the offices of the Gazette, Russell figured it was probably best neither man had lived to see the newspaper business slowly wither away. More and more consumers were getting their news from alternative sources, particularly online. Print was static, cumbersome. Passé. It was only a matter of time before physical newspapers became a thing of the past. He and Meg had spent countless hours working on strategies—

      He frowned. No strategy in the world could stop the continuum of change. You adapted, or you became obsolete.

      He and Meg had never been very good at adapting.

      Neither had Ainsley. From the time she’d been just a toddler, his sister had never been able to just go with the flow. She’d seen the world through a lens all her own, and now she was gone.

      It still hurt like hell.

      Hating what had to be done, he pushed open the door and strode into the outer office, as he’d done hundreds of times before. And just like all those times before, the scent of vanilla and orange greeted him. His office had been down the hall to the left, across from Meg’s. Sometimes he’d worked there, but more often than not, he’d roamed the vacant space upstairs. He could think better there, without walls everywhere he turned.

      Lori sat at the front desk, flanked by two ficus trees. Her role had expanded beyond being a receptionist, but with limited budgets, staffing had become an issue—and someone needed to sit out front.

      Lori, with her warm smile and inherent gentleness, was the obvious choice.

      She looked up from her computer screen, and again, all Russell could think was how tired she looked. Dark smudges ringed her eyes, the glare of the overhead lights making her look even more pale. She and Meg were roughly the same age, which put her at thirtyish. But she looked far older.

      “Hi,” she greeted, and he couldn’t help but smile. He’d always had a soft spot for Lori.

      “Hi, yourself,” he said. “You okay?”

      She smiled, and the shadows seemed to recede. “Just tired,” she said, downplaying his question. “Busy day ahead. Trey has an—” She broke off, shook her head. “You’re here for Meg.”

      They were simple words…true. But not true at all. “I need to get the keys—”

      She picked up a small retro Magic 8 Ball from beside a picture frame on the edge of her desk. From it dangled two hot-pink keys. “Got ’em.”

      Lori had the keys. Meg had given them to her. Obviously she had no intention of seeing him.

      The quick burn in his gut surprised him.

      “I expected her back by now,” Lori said, СКАЧАТЬ