Their Mistletoe Matchmakers. Keli Gwyn
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Название: Their Mistletoe Matchmakers

Автор: Keli Gwyn

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Вестерны

Серия:

isbn: 9781474079730

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ hands toward the heat, reveling in the warmth.

      “Where are the children?”

      “Alex and Marcie are in school. I sent Gladys to meet them with umbrellas since the weather took a turn. Dot asked to go, too, so I let her.” She’d had such fun getting to know her nieces and nephew over the past week. The youngest girl loved her older siblings and missed them when they were gone. Since they were all Dot had left of her immediate family, it made sense.

      Henry leaned back against the dry sink, his arms folded. “Who’s Gladys?”

      “My maid, er, the housekeeper.”

      “You brought a servant all the way from Philadelphia? Why?”

      She preferred his playful side to his drawn eyebrows and pursed lips. She’d dealt with more than enough disapproval from her father over the years. She didn’t need it from Henry, too. “To care for the children, of course.”

      “You don’t have to care for them. I am.”

      “How can you? You still live up in Marysville, don’t you?” In his Miners’ Hotel, which he’d opened a few years back, if she had her facts straight. Pauline’s friend Norma said he’d made the trip down to Sutter Creek as soon as he’d received word of the steamship accident that had claimed Pauline and Jack’s lives, among many others. Although Henry’s concern for the children was laudable, he couldn’t leave his business for too long. Could he?

      “I did live there, but I’m here now.”

      Norma hadn’t elaborated on his plans. “For a visit?”

      “To stay. The children need me, so I’ve put my place up for sale. That’s why I had to go back up there and wasn’t here when you arrived.”

      He wasn’t making sense. “Are you saying you intend to take them in?”

      “Yes.”

      That one word, uttered so matter-of-factly, robbed her of her breath. He wasn’t going to raise the children. She was.

      She needed to set him straight. Now.

      * * *

      The last thing Henry needed was the children’s meddlesome aunt interfering, but that determined look in Lavinia Crowne’s chocolate-brown eyes spelled trouble.

      “I was clear in my letter. Father sent me here to—”

      “What letter?” He hadn’t received one.

      “The one I mailed the day we set sail. Didn’t you get it? I understood the Pony Express to be quite reliable.”

      “Where did you send it?”

      “To your hotel in Marysville.”

      He nodded. “It would have arrived there when I was here in Sutter Creek. I asked my clerk to forward everything. The letter’s probably on—” he swallowed “—on Jack’s desk.” Two months had passed, and yet he still had a hard time saying his brother’s name without a stab of pain.

      “I s-see.” She was rubbing her arms and clenching her teeth to keep them from chattering.

      “We can talk later. You need to get out of those wet things. I’ll get some water heating so you can bathe, and then I’ll see about stretching a tarpaulin over the shed before it gets any wetter inside.”

      “Wh-what happened to the shed?” She rushed to the window overlooking the backyard. “Oh! The branch destroyed a good bit of the roof, didn’t it? That’s too bad.”

      “Don’t worry. I’ll fix it once the storm’s past.”

      “I’m glad I wasn’t inside. I was g-going out there to get more kerosene.”

      “I’ll bring some when I come back.” He moved closer, attempting to capture her attention, but it remained riveted on the storm’s damage. “Do you need anything else before I go?”

      She twisted a mud-coated curl around her finger. Her parted mouth and glassy-eyed stare gave her the look of someone who was lost. “I never thought about death much until I lost my mother. First Maman and now Pauline and Jack. Life’s a fleeting thing, isn’t it?”

      He wasn’t sure what she wanted to hear, so he waited to see if she would continue. Thankfully, she did.

      “Do you miss them?”

      “I do.” He stared out the window, remembering the last time he’d seen Jack and his doting wife. It had been a hot September day. They’d been sitting on a blanket in the shade of that very oak tree, having a picnic lunch with the children. Laughter had flowed as freely as the lemonade.

      “My brother and I had our differences when we were younger, but once we got a few years on us things improved. Pauline helped smooth Jack’s rough edges. She tried to help smooth mine, too, but according to her, I’m a—” he formed quotation marks in the air “—‘diamond in the rough.’” The memory of her saying those words in that playful way of hers made him smile. He turned to find Lavinia gazing at him, a look of wonder on her lovely face.

      “I’m glad you got to know her. She was w-wonderful. I m-miss her so much it hurts.” She dragged in a shuddering breath, blew it out and squared her shoulders. “I should get changed. It wouldn’t do for the children to see me looking like this.”

      “They were happy, Lavinia.”

      She nodded, but her attention was on her soiled dress. “Yes. You’ve mentioned that before.”

      He had—ten years ago. She hadn’t believed it then, but if she did now, it might bring her some comfort.

      “I’d better see to the tarpaulin. Be sure to bolt both kitchen doors so you have your privacy. I’ll come in the front and entertain the children when they arrive.”

      She spun to face him, her chin lifted in regal fashion, all business once again. “That’s not necessary. Gladys can see to them until I’m ready.”

      Lavinia’s clipped dismissal didn’t sit well with him. He was the children’s uncle, and he knew them far better than she did. At least she cared about them—unlike her father. Paul Crowne had shown no interest in them, a fact that had grieved Pauline greatly. How could a man ignore his own grandchildren and deprive their only aunt of the right to visit them as he had? Pauline would have loved to have seen her sister again. From what she’d said, Lavinia had begged their father to allow her to come to California repeatedly, only to be met with his steadfast refusal.

      Henry chose not to challenge Lavinia. He could clarify things later, once she was clean and dry.

      He headed to the shed and surveyed the damage. It wasn’t as bad as he’d feared. He tacked a tarpaulin in place, a task that took longer than expected due to the brisk wind.

      There. He put down the hammer and checked for leaks but found none. That should keep out most of the water. Once the rain stopped, he would see to the repairs. He grabbed the kerosene tin and hurried toward the house. The children should be home soon, and they’d give him those delightful hugs that threatened СКАЧАТЬ