To Love Again. Bonnie K. Winn
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу To Love Again - Bonnie K. Winn страница 10
“It seems more like a family home than a bed-and-breakfast.” It was something that had struck Laura immediately.
Annie beamed. “Super! That’s exactly what I’ve tried to achieve.”
Ethan winked at his wife. “And we hope to fill it with children in time.”
Annie blushed, a pretty pinkening of her pale skin. Ethan put his hand over hers. Yes, they were a lovely couple. Laura swallowed her longing, her sense of regret. Why couldn’t she have met a man like Ethan? But then, on the surface, Jerry had seemed perfect, too.
Ethan had a way with kids that even Kirsten had a hard time deflecting. After dinner, he herded them both into the parlor by the kitchen to play games while Annie took Laura upstairs to show her their accommodations. Their generosity was overwhelming.
And in the morning Annie insisted on feeding them a hot breakfast before they took off to their own house. The kids dawdled but Laura was anxious to get started unpacking.
When she finally unlocked the door of her new home, it was daunting to see the mound of boxes. But she and the kids had been there less than an hour when she heard the doorbell.
“Mom!” Gregg hollered.
She set down the bed frame, still clueless how to put it together. “Coming.” Walking down the stairs she could hear the buzz of voices. Had her son allowed strangers into the house?
She was relieved to recognize Annie among some other women. “Hi.”
“Laura, I’ve rounded up recruits. Cindy, Leah, Katherine, Grace and Emma.”
Laura’s hand flew to her chest. “I don’t know what to say.”
Redheaded Cindy grinned. “Hello will do just fine. Then divvy us up however you want.”
Overwhelmed, Laura wasn’t at all certain how to ask them to help.
“I’m especially helpful in the kitchen,” Katherine suggested. “If that would all right. I could start sorting dishes, pots and pans.”
“Oh, yes,” Laura replied, relieved.
“And I’m good at toting boxes,” Grace added.
“They’re labeled,” Laura said. “With the rooms they belong in. I’m afraid they’re all in a huge pile right now, no rhyme or reason.”
“I can help with the boxes,” Emma pointed out. “Rhyme’s my specialty.”
“And I can help Katherine in the kitchen,” Leah offered.
“So, I can be your helper,” Cindy said. “What were you doing when we got here?”
“Trying to put together a bed,” Laura confessed, holding up a tiny screwdriver, the only one she’d been able to find.
“Ah.” Cindy fished in her pocket for her cell phone. “When all else fails…”
Annie took Laura by the elbow and guided her out to the front porch. “You okay?”
Laura shoved her hands in her pockets. “Yes. Why?”
“I want to help, but I don’t want to pressure you.”
“It’s not that…it’s…” Laura looked out at the quiet street, the old houses that spoke of generations of families living and loving in the same place. “I haven’t been accustomed to anything like this…it will take some getting used to. But I like it.”
“Whew.” Annie let out her breath.
“Didn’t you tell me this was going to be your busy day?”
“Yes, but not for a while. I have time to help.” Together they headed into the house.
Even though Laura wasn’t accustomed to the sound of women’s voices around her, the occasional laughter, she found she liked it immensely. Like a piece that had been missing, the chatter and occasional laughter fit perfectly.
After about a half hour of progress, she heard the low rumble of a man’s voice, accompanied by the tread of boots going up the stairs, then the distinct thud of tools.
Cindy popped her head into the kitchen where Laura was consulting on the placement of dishes. “We’ll have the beds put together in a few minutes if you want to come up and tell us where to position them.”
“What? How?”
“I called my husband, Flynn. I knew he’d make sure the beds were put together right. I’m pretty handy, but I’d hate to try assembling them and have somebody crash in the middle of the night.”
Laura pushed the hair off her forehead. “That would have been an initiation to the new house.”
“I like your spirit!”
That wasn’t something Laura had heard very often. Encouraged, she headed upstairs with Cindy. In Gregg’s room, Flynn, a lean, handsome man, had assembled the bed and was helping Gregg with his computer.
He grinned at her, and she immediately liked the tall man with the ready smile.
“Mom, Flynn makes software programs,” Gregg announced.
“That’s great, sweetie. Hello, and thank you for coming and doing this.”
“Always glad to help new friends.”
Together they quickly figured out where the beds in her bedroom and Gregg’s should go. Kirsten’s took longer.
“I don’t like it there.” Kirsten frowned as they pushed the bed beneath the wide window.
Laura sighed. They’d already moved the bed three times. “We’re running out of places to put it. We can always rearrange later.”
Kirsten’s room had a dormer ceiling, resulting in angled walls. Although architecturally interesting, it made arranging furniture difficult.
Kirsten’s face drooped. “It’s a pokey room.”
“You think so?” Cindy asked. “I guess I’m the weird one, then. This is my favorite room in the house. Before I got married, I lived in a Victorian quite a bit like this one. And it was the interesting rooms like this one that convinced me to live there. I can just picture willowy curtains—and this fabulous window seat, well…I always felt it was so private. I could curl up with a book or music and it was a secret nook, all mine.”
Kirsten looked over at the window seat. “I guess so.”
“I plan to make cushions for it when you decide on your color scheme,” Laura added.
They repositioned the bed one last time and then started on the other pieces. It was especially helpful to have Flynn’s brawn to move the furniture into place. The room looked pretty well put together when they were done. She had hoped by making