Mommy in Training. Shelley Galloway
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Just so she wouldn’t realize how good it felt to be around her—and how guilty he felt about staying away for so long, he sassed her right back. “I knew it wouldn’t be long before you started ordering me around.”
She took his elbow and led him into the rear of the house, where the overlarge kitchen lay. Its space had nothing to do with gourmet cooking and everything to do with the number of people who could sit at the cereal bar.
Matt noticed that their pace was slower than he recalled, and Mrs. Wyzecki’s arm a little frailer than he remembered. He was glad things had worked out with SavNGo and he could return as promised.
“Have a seat, Matt. Would you like some water?” Before he could answer she was on the move again. “Sit down and let me get a glass for you.”
After she set the drink in front of him and he took a few sips, Matt supposed it was time to get to the heart of the matter. “So, you really are moving.”
Faded blue eyes told him a wealth of things her words did not. “It’s true.”
“You sure you’re ready to pick up and go? Jim died just a year ago.”
“It seems longer when everything here reminds me of him. It’s time, Matt.” Hopping up again to turn on her kettle, she added, “There’s too many memories around here.”
Memories were why he’d driven all the way from Philadelphia to Crescent View, Texas, in one shot. Some things were worth remembering. “Maybe after you let things settle in for a while longer, you’ll want to stay.”
She turned to him in surprise. “And not let you move in after I promised you could? I wouldn’t do that. That’s not who I am, Matthew.”
“I could find someplace else to live,” he said slowly. “I feel I’m pushing you out.”
“I asked to you to move here, not the other way around. You haven’t pushed a bit.”
“Well, if you change your mind, just let me know. A year isn’t all that long.”
“You’re one to talk. We both know worlds can change in a year’s time.”
She was right about that. His world had changed during his senior year in high school. In twelve months, he’d lost his father, moved in with the Wyzeckis and had applied and been accepted at a number of colleges far away from the only place he’d ever known.
Linking her fingers around the glass, damp and pearly with condensation, Mrs. Wy added, “I’m really looking forward to a new place. I went and visited one of those retirement communities. For a good price, I can have a condo near a walking trail. They even have a fully staffed dining room. I’ll be able to go out to eat whenever I want.”
Mrs. Wyzecki might have just said she was going to take up tap dancing, it sounded so strange. “You, not cooking?”
“Things have changed since you left, Matthew. I don’t have a need for macaroni casserole anymore.”
That had been a favorite dish. “That’s a shame.”
“As I said, things change.” The pointy chin that he knew so well inched upward. “It has been almost ten years, you know.”
He did know.
Her expression softened, and for a moment, Matt was sure they were both back in time. Back when he was a teenager with a chip on his shoulder the size of Rhode Island and had just moved into the Wyzeckis’ house.
She’d served chicken and dumplings for dinner Matt’s first night there. It had taken everything inside him to keep his mouth shut in between mouthfuls, he’d been so afraid he was going to say something stupid—like it had been a really long time since he’d had a home-cooked meal. Not since his mother had died when he’d been in fourth grade.
“Anyway,” Mrs. Wyzecki blurted, transporting him back to the present. “I figure between the two of us, we could get this old place cleaned up and emptied out in no time at all. Then, come September, it’ll be all yours.”
The change of ownership still felt strange. “No hurry.”
“Oh, I think there might be a bit of a hurry. You’ve got things to do. We both know that.”
“All I’ve got to do is open Store 35, and it’s right here in Crescent View. This move can take all the time it needs to. I usually have to live out of a suitcase for my job, so it’ll be nice to have a home base.”
Brightening, she patted his arm. “I guess the timing was meant to be, huh?”
“I guess so.”
The timing hadn’t been a coincidence. He’d fought long and hard to get Crescent View a supercenter—the town was dying ever since the GM factory had closed. People here needed SavNGo.
But just as important to Matt was the opportunity to come back as somebody. Though he’d been a star athlete, he’d also been the kid without any family at graduation. For years before that, he’d been the kid who didn’t have a mom to help out at class parties or watch his games.
He’d also been the kid with the tough, demanding father who gave affection according to how well he performed on the football and baseball fields.
Everyone had known that.
So it was going to be nice to walk around Crescent View without a shadow hanging over him. Without a hint of talk about who he was ever going to become. He wanted to be able to hold his head up high. It meant a lot to him. So much it was embarrassing.
Ever observant, Mrs. Wyzecki narrowed her eyes at his tone. “You okay, Matthew?”
Hearing his name from her lips in that know-it-all tone never failed to bring a smile. “I’m fine.”
“When you get settled here, I hope you’ll breathe some new life into this old place. Put on some new paint. Maybe add a screen porch.” She pointed out the back window to her late husband’s pride and joy: the in-ground pool. “All the plant life surrounding the pool is overgrown. The sun hardly hits the concrete around it anymore.”
“I can trim the trees.”
“It needs more than that. Matthew, what this place needs is a family.” She looked him over. “You ought to start thinking about that.”
Well, that brought him up short. He wasn’t in the family-planning way. At all. “Don’t get carried away.”
“Oh, one day you’ll find the right woman,” Mrs. Wy said with a smile. “You’ll fill up this house with love and laughter again and life will be right as rain. Right now, it’s too quiet. When the night drags on, my mind drifts to how things used to be.”
He couldn’t help smiling. “Kids running everywhere?” The Wyzeckis had always taken in foster kids.
“Yep. Kids and dogs and mountains of laundry. Sometimes I was sure that I had more schedules to keep track of than any big-city CEO.”
“You