Authors: Dee Henderson
Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #Romance, #Religious, #ebook
“They didn’t flood you with questions?”
“They’re just glad to have you back. They’ll be patient for a while now.”
“How’s the reporter problem?”
“Dispersing, thankfully. There were only two around the gallery this morning to shout questions and snap pictures as Marie and Tracey were leaving. Most have shifted to interviewing friends of the family and trying to arrange interviews through Daniel.”
“I’m glad. Anything else happening in your days? I know crime in this city didn’t stop just because I’ve been taking a slice of your time.”
He smiled, not minding she was asking and finding it endearing. “An armed robbery at a liquor store had me out late last night. We’re working two assaults, a domestic disturbance, and a high-speed chase of a guy who boosted a car off a dealer’s lot. I’d say it’s been a typical weekend so far. Would you like some help with setting the table?”
“Sure. Plates are that end, and glasses near me.”
He got up to work alongside her. “Where’s Caroline?”
“She’s around somewhere, but the lady likes to be discreet; she ate early even though I protested it. I think she was talking to Marsh last I heard. Something about a ring. I can’t believe my little sister is about to be engaged.”
“Let’s hope Marsh finds the occasion to give it to her soon; everyone is ready for it to happen and he’s stalling.”
“I knew the money would be a problem. I just didn’t figure it for this problem.”
Luke chuckled. “They’ll sort it out. He’s older than her and now she’s more wealthy than him too—it gets those reporters talking too much. You’ll like Marsh, Amy. He’s not that easy a guy to figure out, but he’s solid.”
“A wedding is going to be a challenge—they’ll want me there and I’m going to have to refuse.”
“Cross that bridge when we get there. You want regular knives or steak knives?”
“Regular should be fine.”
The meal on the table, Luke held Amy’s chair for her. “Would you like me to say grace?”
“Please.”
He kept it simple, sorting out the emotions of several days into thankfulness that the sisters had met together safely and the pleasure of a nice meal. When he said amen, her head stayed bowed for a moment, and he turned his attention to the food to give her privacy.
She lifted her head, blinking hard. “I’m always weepy eyed these days. I don’t know why.”
“Stress letting off. You’ve been wound pretty tight for a long time.”
“Probably. I used to pray for the next day to not bring trouble with it, and now—this place is pretty calm and it does surprisingly feel safe. My family is nearby. And that makes life so much easier. I used to always be running—now I know I’m planted, at least for a little while.”
“We’ll make it safe for it to be a very long while,” Luke said. “I’m glad you fixed dinner—I would have been bringing something like fast-food fried chicken or the like. This is good.”
“I’m glad you like it.” Amy reached for the fruit salad. “Can I interest you in staying for a movie tonight? Caroline brought a huge stack of DVDs along.”
“I can be tempted,” Luke replied, smiling at her.
Amy had already stacked wood in the fireplace, ready to strike a match and bring it to life. Luke moved to do that while Amy sorted out the DVDs. He listened and heard Caroline’s car pull out. She’d passed by, mentioning a quick trip to meet Marsh as the reason, but he thought that was more of an excuse to give them not only privacy, but time. Luke wouldn’t be leaving until she returned.
The fire going and beginning to draw so it wouldn’t smoke, he watched it for a moment, then turned. He pushed back the coffee table and sat down on the floor to use the couch as a backrest.
“Hardwood floors are going to get hard on the tailbone after a while.”
He laughed and patted the floor beside him. “Start the movie and come be a teenager again. We can pause it and move to the couch later.”
She started the movie and adjusted the volume, then settled herself down beside him. “I’m too old for this, Luke. I was out riding on one of those four-wheelers yesterday, and I’ve got sore muscles that make me feel like I’m fifty.”
He slid her a pillow for behind her back.
“Yeah, that helps.”
He settled his hand over hers and interlaced their fingers. She fit him well, in age, in spirit, and he liked the look of her more every time he saw her. He wouldn’t mind at all seeing this relationship finally slide past friendship to something more. She leaned her head against his shoulder to get comfortable. “So what are we watching?” he asked, amused.
“A legal thriller, I think. I’m so far behind what is out now that I don’t even recognize titles.”
“Want to make it a double feature?”
She chuckled and he felt it in his own ribs. “Only if we’re sitting on the couch.”
He smiled at her relaxed form and then turned his attention to the movie. His dogs were out here, his lady, a few more shifts in his schedule with his deputy chief’s help and he’d figure out how to be out here more often too. It would make a good next few weeks.
AMY PULLED A LOAD OF TOWELS out of the dryer and pushed the door closed with her hip. It was nice to be able to do routine tasks without pausing to think about what might be around every door and waiting down every hallway. She carried the towels into her room and dropped them onto the bed to fold. She could feel the tension beginning to fade away after three days in this place. Luke had been right about that—the fact the stress level had been too high for too long.
Caroline had called with news the arriving car was Connor’s; it would be good to have the boxes of clothes he was bringing out. Marie had promised to find the dresses as well as the winter clothes, and Amy about had closet space ready to hang them up; she’d found extra hangers in the guest bedroom.
The bedroom door burst open behind her. Amy turned, startled to see Tracey just before she was swallowed in a hug. Amy hugged her sister back, in turmoil over what it meant to have her here on an unplanned spur-of-the-moment visit.
“Marsh asked me to marry him!”
Amy leaned back to study her sister’s smiling face and had to smile back. “Did he?”
Tracey held up her hand to show off the ring. “I had to tell you. He’s taken so
incredibly
long to ask the question.”
Her sister was beaming. Amy wrapped Tracey in another hug. “I’m glad for you. Really glad. I don’t know if I’m ready for you to be marrying a cop,” she teased. “You’ve had such a sheltered life and all.”
Tracey laughed. “I know. We’re going to fix up his place, and I’m going to still finish my degree. He’s insistent about that. But maybe an early April wedding, so we can go south for our honeymoon and do some traveling together.”
Tracey had come to the safe house without them being fully ready for it and possibly put herself at risk, but it had already happened. She was too excited to share the news to realize it, and Amy wasn’t going to burst her bubble with a caution. She’d have that conversation with Connor shortly, if Caroline wasn’t already doing so. Amy tugged her sister down on the bed beside her. “Let me see that ring again.”
Tracey offered it and Amy fell in love with it too. Simple, nice diamonds, with a modern elegance to the flow of the gold. “Marsh has very good taste.”
“He swears part of the delay in asking me was finding the ring. Caroline said Marsh pulled her along to see at least two hundred rings over the last couple months, half a dozen of them ones she would like herself, and he was never satisfied.”
Amy laughed. “I love him already.”
“Would you mind if he stayed around tomorrow night so you could really meet him? I know I wasn’t supposed to come out with Connor today, but I begged so hard they finally gave in.”
“Bring Marsh along Wednesday and see if Daniel would also like to come out for the evening. The guys can make sure no one is being followed, and that’s the biggest risk short of someone saying something they shouldn’t.”
“They haven’t given us a phone number to you yet, afraid one of the reporters might be listening in.”
“I asked them to wait; being overheard really is a risk, Tracey.”
“I’m disappointed, as I could keep you talking for hours, but I’ll adjust.” Tracey stood up and held out her hands. “Come on, say a brief hi to Connor, and I’ll get out of here. Marie packed you like a gazillion clothes, and she already ironed every one. She hated the fact the guys insisted they get folded into plain boxes before they were carried out.”
“I appreciate that,” Amy replied, remembering one dress in particular she hoped Marie had packed. She wouldn’t mind turning Luke’s head if he came out Wednesday night too. “So if you’re planning an April wedding, how’s that going to affect the class schedule?”
“Marsh agreed I could cut back this semester to the hours I need to audit as prerequisites for the doctorate degree—that way I can stay with Marie while she’s having to make so many decisions about the gallery, and I’ll drive over for the two classes. I want time to prepare a proper wedding, and the house will take some planning together for what gets remodeled.”
“It sounds like a good compromise.”
“I can tell he was ready to get married when he listened to the ideas and said okay and didn’t even fuss particularly hard about it being some of my money that went into expanding his study and building on another bedroom upstairs, so I can have a room to use as a home office too.”
Amy followed Tracey downstairs, listening to the news, smiling at the joy she could hear in her sister’s voice, and worrying about the rushed way she had come. Tracey wasn’t dating Connor—any reporter would have picked up she had left the gallery with Connor, not Marsh. It was another reason to be curious, and that made reporters trouble.
Daniel was an interesting man. Amy watched him move around the living room Wednesday evening, talking with Marsh, then lingering in a conversation with Caroline, and thought he made a good fit. She liked him. No one had brought up the half-sister fact, and it was beginning to sting less. She personally never wanted to know her father’s name, and part of her was relieved she hadn’t been asked to absorb that shock too.
She studied Caroline as she spoke with Daniel and saw a slight flush on her friend’s face, animated in a really beautiful way. Caroline was elegant tonight and attracting attention from a guy wise enough to want to linger and get to know her better. They’d be a good couple, Amy thought, in a mind to think such thoughts. Marsh hadn’t let Tracey get more than a few feet from him all evening, and Connor was doing a reasonably good job getting Marie out of the awkward phase of dating to being comfortable with him. Amy hadn’t missed the way Connor had secured hold of her sister’s hand early in the evening and simply not let go.
“You look content tonight.”
She had a few seconds’ warning before Luke’s hands settled on her waist from behind.
She leaned against him. “I’m feeling very much the oldest sister at the moment, watching my chicks find new homes.”
He chuckled and leaned his head down beside hers. “Come for a walk. It’s a clear night outside, and I’m inclined to remember how to enjoy moonlight with a pretty lady, but that’s best done somewhere my cops are not going to notice.”
She let her hand slide down to take his. “I like the sound of that.”
Luke nodded to Caroline, and she nodded back. They stopped to get coats and then slipped outside.
“It’s brisk tonight.” Amy could see her breath, and her warm leather gloves became stiffer in the cold air.
“The moon makes up for it.”
Luke reached for her hand, and Amy moved comfortably to his side. They walked down the drive toward the main road.
“It’s been quiet out here so far?” Luke shined his torch over a couple rough bricks in the path.
“Yes. The place is beginning to feel like home. Caroline says we can use it another six weeks, if not ten. I’m going to miss it when it’s time to move on.”
“Your sisters certainly enjoyed the chance to come out. The guys said they were both impatient with the convoluted drives to get here.”
“They went separately to dinner and then diverted to here?”