Название: Small-Town Homecoming
Автор: Lissa Manley
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Mills & Boon Love Inspired
isbn: 9781472072474
isbn:
She took off at a run, went up the back stairs and flung open the screen door that led to the kitchen. The second she entered the house, a burning smell drifted her way.
She raced across the kitchen, noting that the oven timer had gone off while she was out on garden hose patrol. Praying she could salvage the desserts, she grabbed an oven mitt off the counter and yanked the oven open. Hot, acrid smoke wafted out.
With a muttered exclamation, she pulled out the rack. The trio of pies sat on the cookie sheet she’d baked them on, only they looked more like blackened lumps of dough than anything remotely edible. She should have known better than to leave the ancient oven unmonitored. The appliance was touchy about maintaining an even temperature, and until she could afford to replace it with a newer, more reliable model, she had to keep a close eye on everything she baked. And a new-model oven would come after a new porch, fresh exterior paint and a new furnace. The list was endless. The money was not.
Sighing, she set the cookie sheet on the stove. She regarded the ruined pastry, shaking her head. She’d followed Grams’s dog-eared recipe to a T, and had wanted these to be as sigh-worthy as Grams’s pies had always been. Instead, Jenna had ended up with ugly blobs of black dough that were far from the ideal she wanted to uphold.
Her grams’s pies always turned out bakery perfect.
She threw the mitt on the counter, then turned and saw Sam and Curt heading into the kitchen, Sam in the lead.
Curt’s eyes went to the pies. “Oh, wow.” He came over and stood next to her, gazing at the burned mess, his hands on his narrow hips. “Guess you didn’t catch them in time.”
“Nope,” she replied, trying to ignore how his damp hair was drying all wavy and touchable. “They’re ruined. Guess I have some more baking to do.”
He furrowed his brow. “They look fine to me. Nicely browned, in fact. That just adds flavor. I’d eat them, no problem.”
“You would?”
“Sure,” he said, shrugging. “Pie is pie.”
She liked his laissez-faire attitude, but too much was at stake for her to share his outlook. “While I appreciate your willingness to eat burned dough, these aren’t up to snuff.” She sighed.
He regarded her, his long-lashed brown eyes steady.
Her heartbeat skipped and she stepped back automatically.
“Hmm. I know what we have here,” he said with a tiny smile.
“You do?” Somehow she was able to make her voice steady when her pulse was going through the roof.
“A perfectionist, perhaps?”
Sam chimed in. “Yeah, Miss Jenna likes everything to be just right.” He frowned. “She makes me redo my homework all the time.”
“Yes, I’m a real slave driver in the homework department,” she said, infusing some dry levity into her voice.
“What’s a slave driver?” Sam asked, his nose scrunched up.
“Someone who makes little kids do homework,” Jenna explained. She’d majored in education, and knew that if Sam fell behind now because of his focus issues, he might never catch up. Early elementary education set the groundwork for the rest of a child’s schooling.
“Sounds like Miss Jenna is just trying to help you out,” Curt said. “And that’s good for you. School is important.”
“Exactly,” Jenna said, giving Curt a grateful look. “And sometimes striving for high ideals is necessary.” She’d know, being the only unperfect person in a family of perfect people, the one who’d always had to work harder for everything.
“I think Miss Jenna should take all the time she needs to make the pies up to her standards.” Curt turned dark eyes her way.
“Thank you. And I need these to be perfect because two of them will be for a wedding reception I’m catering here tomorrow. I have to remake them.” She made all of her dough from scratch, so the process wasn’t as quick as unrolling premade store-bought crust. “I’ll do that later tonight.”
“Remember, I have the play at my school tonight,” Sam piped in, plopping down in one of the kitchen chairs next to the small table set in one corner. “You promised you’d come.”
She arranged her face in a serene expression; she had forgotten about the play, not that she’d let Sam know that. “And I never break my promises, so I’ll be there.” It would be a late night. Unless... She looked at her watch. Still relatively early. “Maybe I could get them done now, before dinner.”
“I thought we were going to work on my model car,” Sam said, his voice bordering on a whine.
Where was her brain? “Oh, yeah, we were. No problem.” She wasn’t about to flake out on Sam, not when so many other adults in his life had done so. Even if it meant staying up late to remake her pies. “Go get it out of your backpack, and we’ll get right on it.”
Curt looked back and forth between them, both brows raised. “Model car?”
“Yeah!” Sam said, jumping from the chair. He puffed out his chest. “I bought it with my own money.”
Jenna smiled. Sam had saved for months to buy the model kit.
“Cool, dude,” Curt said, nodding. “I built a few models in my day.”
Sam’s eyes went wide. “You did?”
“You bet. I’ve always been into cars.”
“You wanna help me?” Sam said.
Jenna held out a hand. “Sam, Mr. Graham just arrived. I’m sure he has other things to do.”
Curt turned his long-lashed eyes her way.
She forced herself not to stare.
“Actually, I don’t start work at the Sports Shack until tomorrow,” Curt said. “So after I get changed, I’ll have plenty of time to help him.”
She blinked, a bit taken aback by his offer. “He just sprayed you in the face with a garden hose.”
Curt shrugged one broad shoulder. “No harm, no foul.” He scruffed Sam’s head. “Besides, he apologized. So no hard feelings.”
Wow. What a generous offer. “Well...”
“And if I help him with the model,” Curt said, continuing, “you’ll have time to get your pies in the oven, and everyone’s happy.”
“I don’t want to impose,” she said, holding back out of courtesy, even though letting him take over with the model car project would help her out. She had a lot on her plate these days. Actually, her plate was overflowing. But she’d deal. She’d promised Grams she’d keep the inn going, and she would, no matter what.
Besides, СКАЧАТЬ