Western Christmas Wishes. Brenda Minton
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Название: Western Christmas Wishes

Автор: Brenda Minton

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Короткие любовные романы

Серия: Mills & Boon Love Inspired

isbn: 9781474099219

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ me. Gladys has my number.”

      She shook her head. “I have to go inside. My grandmother is expecting me.”

      He seemed to want to say more, but when she shook her head, he didn’t. “I’ll leave you for now, but I’ll be waiting. I’m praying for you, Laurel.”

      The words stopped her. Her hand was on the door and she needed to go inside. Rather than saying something she couldn’t take back later, she hit the buzzer and waited for the door to unlock. She walked inside, aware that he was still there, watching her walk away.

      Ten steps into the building, Cameron Hunt appeared in front of her. She looked up, focusing on the ceiling because she didn’t want to cry, not in front of this man, a virtual stranger. She didn’t want to cry period.

      “You okay?”

      She lowered her gaze from the ceiling to the man standing just feet away from her. His expression remained impassive. He didn’t want to be involved. And yet here he was.

      “I’m good,” she assured him, although it didn’t feel like the truth. “Did we lose Rose?”

      “She’s with Gladys.” He surprised her by grabbing a box of tissues from a nearby table. “Take a minute. They’ll be fine on their own. Hopefully.”

      She started to object—to the tissues, to taking a moment—but she knew he was right. She took his offering and leaned against the wall as she pulled herself together.

      He stood next to her, his back against the paneled wall. His nearness provided an odd sense of comfort, as if he was an ally. It didn’t make sense but she wasn’t questioning it, not right now when she desperately needed a calming influence.

      His presence was the furthest thing from calming. He smelled like mountains and Oklahoma. His boots were dusty and worn. He’d placed himself so that the eye patch and scarred side of his face weren’t what she saw when she looked up at him.

      The moment was cut short by raised voices and some sort of ruckus.

      “Uh-oh,” she said as she pushed away from the wall. “That can’t be good.”

      “Doesn’t sound that way,” he agreed. “Time to intervene. I should have known that the two of them couldn’t stay out of trouble.”

      “It might be someone else.”

      He turned his head to peer at her with that one startling blue eye. A flash of humor flickered for an instant. “That is wishful thinking.”

      “I suppose you’re right.” She tossed the tissue in a wastebasket. “Thank you.”

      “For what?”

      “For insisting I take a minute to get it together.” She hesitated. “Do you know him?”

      He pushed back his cowboy hat and gave her a thoughtful look. “You don’t know him?”

      “I think I know who he is, but I don’t know his name.”

      “Curt Jackson. Local rancher. He just moved back to the area six months ago. His father passed away and his mother couldn’t handle the ranch on her own.”

      Curt Jackson. Thirty years of wondering had come down to this. Suddenly, the ruckus from down the hall grew louder.

      “This way.” Cameron motioned her forward, his hand just barely skimming her back as he moved her in the right direction.

      Seconds later they entered a large room where a variety of people had gathered: staff in scrubs, residents, some standing, some sitting, and a woman at the center who seemed to be in charge of the chaos. She was tall, dressed in a skirt and jacket, her hair pulled back in a tight bun.

      The man facing her wore a jogging suit of light gray, the same color as his thinning hair. He was pointing at her with a gnarled finger.

      “Are you telling me we can’t have a Christmas tree?” he asked.

      “I’m sorry, Mr. Clyburn, but the new owner said there will be no Christmas tree in the common area. It isn’t my rule, it’s the rule of the management.”

      “Oh, fiddlesticks, Dora, you’ve been here long enough. You could fight for us.”

      “I can’t fight this. No Christmas tree. Jeremy will take it back to storage.” She looked around at the group that had gathered. “I am sorry.”

      The gentleman in the jogging suit shook his head. “Oh, Dora, what in the world are you thinking? There are folks here who have next to nothing and no family to bring them gifts.”

      “My hands are tied.” She nodded at a man in gray coveralls who had a perplexed look on his face. “Jeremy, please take the tree and decorations back to storage.”

      The gentleman in the gray jogging suit sat down at a nearby table. “It’s a tree. You put lights on it and shiny things.”

      “Mr. Clyburn, you have to understand, this is not my rule. There will be no religious celebrations anymore, per the new owner.”

      “There’s little enough cheer in this place without you taking it all away.” An older woman with curly gray hair and a determined look stepped forward, Rose at her side.

      Laurel’s grandmother. Gladys Adams hadn’t seemed to age. Other than her arm in a sling, she was as spry as ever and obviously as willing to take on the administrator as she was the horse that had thrown her.

      “You will still have Christmas dinner.” Dora made the announcement, turning right and left so that the dozen people gathered in the room heard her.

      “A dinner made of government commodities that they spend almost nothing to purchase,” Gladys protested with a grim look of determination.

      “Gladys,” Dora responded, “it appears you have company.”

      Laurel smiled and waved at her grandmother.

      “That I do,” Gladys replied. “And since I’m just here for physical therapy, I’ll be going home soon. The rest of these poor souls have to suffer through your tight budget.”

      Gladys hurried over to Laurel, hugged her tightly and then allowed herself to be led from the room.

      “That didn’t sound good, Gran,” Laurel observed.

      “They’re stealing Christmas,” Rose chimed in.

      “That’s a little dramatic, don’t you think?” Cameron asked as he came up behind them.

      Rose shot him a look. “Of course it is, but I’m all about the D’s.”

      He looked perplexed and Laurel found herself smiling, because she knew about the D’s. Her grandmother’s hand on her arm made her feel better than she’d felt in weeks. Since her bakery had failed, then she’d learned the man she’d been dating was also dating another woman, upheaval seemed to be too calm a word to describe how her life had felt.

      For a moment СКАЧАТЬ