Surprising
Seduction
Chapter
1
Bright morning sun
glinted on the stained glass windows of the gray stone church. Lauren Grant
left the memorial garden where the ashes of her sister and brother-in-law had
been interred inside the stone wall near her parents’ site. She rubbed her arms
to chase the chill of the autumn day.
Conversations
flowed around her. She drew a deep breath to force back the tears ready to
fall. Not yet. She had to leave. More words of sympathy might release the
flood.
As she dashed past
the stairs leading to the sanctuary, she saw him standing with the pastor, two
of Jim’s colleagues and a teacher friend of Carrie’s.
Tony Carlin. Tall,
broad-shouldered, dark hair. She felt sure his piercing blue eyes compelled
witnesses to tell the truth when he questioned them on the stand. Jim’s brother
and the man she had to share custody of their ten month old nephew troubled
her. She wasn’t sure why, except sharing wasn’t part of his nature.
She reached her six-year-old hybrid sedan. In the sunlight the car
appeared more blue than green. She slid into the driver’s seat, started the
engine and drove through the streets of the Hudson River
town to her classmate’s house. The action gave her time to control the need to
cry. She was on the way to pick up Jamie. The baby didn’t need to see her cry.
She parked in the
driveway of the white frame house and rang the bell. Her friend opened the
door.
“Tee. Tee.”
Jamie’s happy cries greeted her.
She held out her
arms and he almost leaped into them “Were you a good boy?”
Marsha smiled. “He
was a dream. Wish my hellions were the same. I have your notes from yesterday’s
class. Will you be there tomorrow?”
“Have to be.”
Lauren sank on the couch. “With midterms looming I can’t afford to miss another
day.”
“Makes two of us.
I made a list of classmates willing to watch Jamie. Do you have someone for
tomorrow?”
Lauren nodded.
“The young man I tutored for Carrie signed up for weekend duty. He watched
Jamie for them several times so they could go out to dinner.” Lauren struggled
to fit her squirming nephew into his blue jacket.
“Study hard
tonight,” Marsha said. “I’m sure there’ll be a quiz.” She walked with Lauren to
the door.
“Never fails.”
Lauren wished she could follow her friend’s suggestion. Hopefully there would be
time to copy yesterday’s notes as well as go to battle with Tony Carlin over
the guardianship issue.
The trip from her
friend’s house to Carrie and Jim’s condo took ten minutes. Jamie’s chatter had
ceased the moment she’d fastened him in the car seat. At least he hadn’t cried
this time. Did he remember the accident?
She turned into
the circle of the development and parked in the driveway of the unit. She’d
lived here since the day of the accident and the deaths so Jamie could have a
familiar environment. After opening the garage door she lifted Jamie and
carried him inside.
“Mama.”
She nearly lost
her composure. “Just Auntie.” Tears she dare not shed burned her eyes. “Just
Tee.”
“Tee.” He patted
her face.
“Hungry?” She
removed his jacket and put him in the blue and yellow highchair. After setting
a pan of water to heat she opened two jars of baby food and headed the meat and
vegetable combination. She poured water from one of his bottles into a cup.
Jamie used the plastic container as a hammer. He settled as soon as she popped
a plastic bib over his head. She sat on a bar stool at the counter separating
the narrow kitchen from the rest of the first floor. With a spoon she fed him.
After Jamie
finished both jars of food and drank milk from the cup she carried him to the
spacious nursery. There she changed his and sat in the rocker to feed him the
rest of the bottle.
When she placed
him in the crib he was asleep. She turned on the monitor. For a time she
studied him. How much he resembled his father and uncle, except for his hazel
eyes, a gift from Carrie.
With a sigh she
walked downstairs, straightened the kitchen and leaned against the counter. The
tears of grief she’d held inside refused to be contained any longer. As though
a water pipe had ruptured, gasping sobs accompanied the flood.
She gulped deep
breaths attempting to control the gush of grief. She cried for her young nephew
deprived of the parents who had adored him. The tears turned butter when her
own loss arose. Carrie ad Jim had dragged her from a slide into self-destruction
and helped her become a woman with a future. The sobs morphed into mourning for
the couple who would never achieve their potential and never see their son
grown into a man.
As Lauren wiped
her eyes thoughts of Tony Carlin rose.
Great story. I love children in my romances!
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