The Nanny's Plan. Donna Clayton
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Beside her, Pierce sighed. “I should have set an alarm clock or something. I shouldn’t have left them alone for so long.”
“You’ve got your work,” Amy said. “When Mrs. Winthrop flew out to meet with me last week, she stressed that you had just been offered some kind of special contract. That you were on a pressing deadline. It’s understandable that—”
“But the boys could have been hurt.”
Guilt seemed to pulse from him.
“I’m sorry there was a time lag between the boys’ parents’ departure,” Amy felt compelled to say, “and my arriving. But it really couldn’t be helped.” She lifted one shoulder. “I’m unable to fly.”
“Yes. Cynthia told me that you’d been grounded.”
Amy pointed to the side of her head. “It’s an inner ear thing. I’m not in any pain. Can’t even tell there’s anything wrong. But the company physician refused to risk a perforated eardrum that might be caused by in-flight pressure changes.”
“I see.”
Silence fell like a lead balloon. Her bare feet made her feel oddly vulnerable, but she didn’t want to ruin her shoes by putting them on when salt water was still dripping down her legs from the hem of her dress. She wondered if he noticed the faint but tangy odor of the bay emanating from her. She really was a mess.
“Do you have experience with children?”
“What?” The question startled her. “No, I don’t. But your sister thought I’d do okay with the boys.”
“This isn’t an interview,” he quickly assured her. “I’m not questioning your skills.”
Maybe not, but he was probing for information that would cause him to form opinions about her. It was her habit to avoid talking about herself as much as possible. There were certain facts about herself she’d rather no one discovered.
“It’s just that you were so good with them,” he continued. “With Jeremiah especially. He’s been pretty miserable since Cynthia and John left.”
The slate stones of the patio were cool and smooth under the damp soles of her feet.
“Well, it’s easy to imagine how he’s feeling.” She moistened her lips, shifted her shoes to her other hand. “Anyone who’s hurting deserves a little compassion.”
“It eases my mind to know that you would reach out to him like you did.”
That odd stillness descended on them again, that strange heating up of the temperature, although Amy knew that was impossible.
“You must be exhausted,” he said, his voice feather soft. “You’ve been driving for two days. I’ll show you to your room so you can freshen up.”
He slid open the French door through which the boys had already disappeared and motioned for her to enter before him.
“But I’m wet,” she said, eyeing the carpet. “I’ll ruin—”
“It’s okay. Go on in.”
The cream-colored rug felt luxuriously thick as she stepped inside on tiptoes.
“And don’t worry if you don’t make it down to eat with us,” he told her, closing the door behind them. “Take your time freshening up. I’ll keep a plate warm for you.”
Just then they heard what sounded like a chair being dragged across the kitchen floor, then a loud thump, then the murmur of children’s voices.
“Why don’t you let me find my room by myself,” she suggested. “It sounds like the boys might be getting…hungry.”
“It does, doesn’t it? They are a handful. Go up the back stairs there—” he pointed the way “—and your room is the yellow one just to the right. You can’t miss it. Oh, and maybe later, after things quiet down, the two of us can meet in my study and discuss our schedules over a glass of wine. You’ll need some time off. We can figure out which days you’ll have free.”
“That sounds good,” she told him.
He started off toward the kitchen.
“Excuse me,” she called.
He turned to face her.
“Um, I will need my suitcase.”
“Oh, of course.” He brought her the case with a murmured apology. “Sorry about that.”
A grin that sexy should be deemed illegal, and his absentmindedness made him less formidable. It made him quite appealing, in fact.
She was smiling when he started off again. She couldn’t help but call out his name a final time. From the expression on his face when he looked at her, it was clear he was baffled by what else could have slipped his mind.
“I just wanted to tell you that I like ruffled sprouts.”
There was absolutely no logical reason for the odd feelings pulsing through Pierce. No logical reason whatsoever. He sat at his desk worrying his chin between his index finger and thumb.
He’d taken great care planning this room when he’d had the house built. With its floor-to-ceiling bookcases, the long oak conference table, the reading nook and the wall of wide windows, his study doubled as a library. A place he could feel comfortable reading, deciphering the data of his research and writing up his scientific findings. This richly paneled room was his oasis.
However, tonight he was finding no solace here.
“Amy Edwards is a great girl,” his sister had told him. “She’s unassuming and, well…very sweet. She’ll be great with the boys, and you’ll like her, I’m sure.”
Cynthia had explained that for years Amy’s father had owned a small motel just off the intrastate in Kansas. Amy had helped run the business. Cynthia and John had gotten to know the family while John had been the pastor of a small church in Lebo earlier in his career.
“She’s honest and trustworthy,” Cynthia had said, “and she’s got a great work ethic.”
His brother-in-law had added, “From what I remember, she was a mousy little thing.”
Unassuming. Mousy. For some odd reason, those were the two adjectives that had stuck with him when he’d agreed to have the nanny in his home.
Pierce had always thought unassuming meant ordinary. And there was nothing ordinary about Amy Edwards. There was nothing mousy about her, either. She was the epitome of aplomb from the top of her coiffed head to the scarlet-painted tips of her toes…and they were very dainty toes, at that.
A scowl had his facial muscles tensing. He shouldn’t be noticing Amy’s bare toes. Or any of her other physical attributes,