Love Finds a Home. Kathryn Springer
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Название: Love Finds a Home

Автор: Kathryn Springer

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781472022325

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ away.

      “Are you going to catch up with him at the park?” Jake asked, knowing it was the second stop on Charlie’s route.

      He shook his head. “Mom doesn’t want me to go farther than the café.”

      Jake frowned. When he was Jeremy’s age, he and his best friend had practically worn the rubber off their bicycle tires on summer afternoons like this. His mother had seemed to accept the nomadic lifestyle of adolescent boys. Her only rule was that Jake eat breakfast before he left the house in the morning and be back in time for supper. And what happened during the hours in between he didn’t need to account for.

      Given the way Emma had hovered close to Jeremy the first time they’d met, Jake had a hunch she wasn’t as lenient.

      “Mom is still at the library. I should go back.” Jeremy squared his thin shoulders.

      Jake couldn’t help but be moved by the boy’s valiant attempt to hide his disappointment. “Do you want a ride?” he heard himself say.

      The blue eyes widened. “In the police car?”

      “That’s what I’m driving.” Jake couldn’t help but smile at his reaction. “Hop in.”

      Jeremy didn’t have to be told twice. He was sitting in the passenger seat with his seat belt buckled before Jake opened the driver’s side door.

      “My dad drove a car like this, didn’t he?”

      The innocent question took Jake off guard. Did Jeremy remember his father? “I’m sure it was similar,” he said carefully. “But it probably didn’t have a laptop like this one.”

      “It’s important to keep up with changes in technology,” Jeremy said seriously as he leaned forward to study the radar gun mounted to the dash.

      “That’s right.” Jake’s lips twitched as he turned the car around. “How is the apple tree doing?”

      “I think it’s going to live. And it’s better than flowers, even if we didn’t have anything to take to the cemetery.”

      Jake’s hands tightened on the steering wheel. He hadn’t considered that the bouquet the police department gave Emma would end up on Brian’s grave.

      Further proof that he’d made a mistake.

      “There’s Mom.” Jeremy pointed out the window.

      Emma stood on the sidewalk in front of the library, her willowy figure accentuated by the white blouse and knee-length denim skirt she wore. Her gaze was riveted on the squad car.

      The expression on her face warned Jake that he’d just made another mistake.

      The sight of a squad car cruising down the street caused Emma’s hands to clench at her sides. It was silly, she knew, to have such a strong reaction to a vehicle.

      She steeled herself, waiting for it to go past. Instead, the car glided to a stop in front of the library.

      The sight of a familiar face in the window squeezed the air from her lungs.

      What happened?

      The words stuck in Emma’s throat as she watched Jake Sutton’s lean frame unfold from the vehicle. He prowled around to the passenger side and opened the door.

      “Chief Sutton gave me a ride in the squad car, Mom.” Jeremy was smiling as he jumped out. “It’s pretty sweet.”

      “But…” Emma struggled to find her voice. “What about the ice cream? Didn’t you catch up to Charlie in time?”

      The smile faded. “Yeah.”

      Emma sensed there was more to the story and her heart sank. “Was someone bothering you again?”

      “You know Brad and his friends. They just like to show off,” Jeremy mumbled.

      She glanced at Jake and found him regarding her with that measuring look. The one that made her want to run for cover.

      “Everything is fine,” he said. “Jeremy mentioned you were at the library, so I offered to give him a ride back.”

      “And he let me turn on the lights.” Jeremy’s smile returned.

      Emma caught her breath as a memory surfaced, momentarily breaking through the grief that had formed like a crust of ice over her heart.

      On Brian’s official first day with the Mirror Lake police department, he had stopped home and handed her a camera, shamelessly turning his lunch break into a twenty-minute photo session. His attempt to strike a serious pose had made Emma laugh—which had sparked Brian’s laughter in return.

      Every one of those moments had been captured in heartbreaking detail except for one difference.

      That carefree young woman was someone Emma no longer recognized. Someone who no longer existed.

      Watching Emma’s eyes darken, Jake realized he’d done more than cross a line. He’d inadvertently stirred up something in her past. It was possible that in order to cope, Emma had found it easier to tend her grief instead of her memories.

      “Mom?” Jeremy tugged on her arm. “It’s got a really great computer, too. They can look up all kind of things. I’m not in it, though, so we looked up you instead.”

      Jake winced as Emma snapped back to the present and turned on him.

      “Me?”

      Jake smiled, hoping she would realize that running her name through the system had been a harmless illustration to satisfy Jeremy’s curiosity, not an invasion of her privacy. “Date of birth March fifteenth. And you have a very clean driving record.”

      Emma took a step back. “Jeremy, it’s time to go. I have to lock up now.”

      The message in her blue eyes was clear.

      If Emma had her way, that was all he would know about her.

      Chapter Four

      Emma was up to her wrists in wet cement when her cell phone rang. She managed to dry off her hands and wrestle the phone from the pocket of her jeans on the fourth ring, seconds before the call went to voice mail.

      “Hello?”

      “Mrs. Barlow? This is Pastor Wilde from Church of the Pines.”

      Emma’s fingers tightened on the phone.

      She should have expected this. Jeremy had been drawn into the church’s fold by a colorful flyer he’d seen stapled to the bulletin board at the library, advertising a special weeklong children’s program. Emma had agreed to let him participate, assuming her son’s interest would end once the seven days were over. She hadn’t considered that Jeremy would want to start attending the worship services, but at his insistence they’d gone to Church of the Pines the past few Sundays.

      For his sake, she’d СКАЧАТЬ