The Millionaire's Homecoming. Cara Colter

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felt she had already given her ice cream parlor dreams way more thought than they deserved.

      David was pretty sure he felt the beginnings of a headache throbbing along the line of his forehead and into his temples.

      “I bet people would drive here from Toronto for rose petal ice cream,” she said dreamily.

      David stared at her. She couldn’t possibly believe that! Why did he feel as if he needed to personally dissuade her from unrealistic dreams?

      Because he had failed to do so when it had really mattered.

      Don’t marry him, Kayla.

      Tears streaming down her face. “I have to.”

      He could only guess what that fateful decision had put her through. He was going to guess that being married to Kevin had been no bed of roses. Or rose petals, either.

      And yet here she was, still dreaming. Was there a certain kind of courage in that?

      He hated coming home.

      “I’ll go see how the kids are doing with finding the dog,” David said gruffly.

      He could clearly see she wanted to refuse this offer—a warning she wasn’t exactly going to embrace his unsolicited advice about the ice cream parlor with open arms—but her concern for the little beast won out.

      “You have a cell?” he asked her.

      “In pieces on the road, probably,” she said wryly.

      “I’ll call here to the clinic, then, when I find out about the dog. Is he a certain breed?”

      “Why?”

      “If the kids haven’t found him, or I don’t find him hiding under a shrub near where you got stung, I’ll find a picture on the internet and have my assistant, Jane, make a poster. She can email it to me, and I’ll have it printed here.”

      Under her comical brows, Kayla was transparent. She was both annoyed by his ability to take charge and his organizational skills, and relieved by them, too. No doubt it would be the same reaction when he presented her with the total lack of viability for operating an ice cream parlor in Blossom Valley.

      “He’s a toy Brussels Griffon,” she said, hopeful that he would find the dog, yet reluctant to enlist his aid and hating that she was relying on him. But Kayla was as emotional as he was analytical, her every situation driven by her heart instead of her head.

      He put it into his phone. A picture of the world’s ugliest dog materialized, big eyes, wiry hair popping out in all the wrong places. The hair springing from the dog’s ears and above his eyes reminded him of an old man, badly in need of an eyebrow and ear trim.

      “Is it just me, or does this dog bear a resemblance to Einstein?” he muttered, showing her the picture.

      “Hence the name,” she said, and he smiled reluctantly. Damned if the dog didn’t bear a striking resemblance to the high school teacher, Mr. Bastigal, who had emulated his science hero right down to the crazy gray hair and walrus mustache.

      When she nodded that the dog on the screen resembled hers, he slipped the phone into his pocket and vowed to himself he would find it. He ran a multimillion-dollar empire. Trouble-shooting was his specialty. One small dog was no match for him. It looked like Einstein. That didn’t mean it was smart.

      And while he was tracking down the doggie, an assistant could do the homework on More-moo, not that it mattered. He was willing to bet Kayla would find another failing business to ride to the rescue of once she was given the reality check on More-moo.

      “I’ll leave Mary a business card with my cell number on it. You can call me if you change your mind about the ride home.”

      “I won’t.”

      He scanned her face, nodded and left the room, leaving the card with Mary, as promised. Mary seemed to want to catch up—she’d been the nurse here way back when he was lifeguarding, and she’d seemed old then—but he begged off, claiming responsibility for the dog.

      David Blaze had had enough of old home week. Except, as he walked back out into the sultry heat of the July day, he glanced at his watch. He hadn’t been here a week. Nowhere near. It had been thirty-two whole minutes since he had last checked his watch in the snarled traffic of Main Street.

      CHAPTER SIX

      KAYLA WAS AT HOME, and in bed. She could not sleep. She ordered herself not to look at the bedside alarm, but she did, anyway.

      It was 3:10 a.m.

      She was exhausted, and wide awake at the same time, possibly from the drugs in her system.

      But possibly sleep eluded her because she had become used to her little dog cuddled against her in the night, his sweet snores, his wiry whiskers tickling her chin, his eyes popping open to make sure she was still there, staring deeply at her, his liquid gaze holding nothing but devotion and loyalty.

      Unlike her husband.

      Wasn’t that why she was really awake? Contemplating what David had told her about the day of the drowning?

      She had called David a liar.

      But in her heart, she had felt the sickening reverberation of truth.

      That, Kayla decided, was what was hateful about being awake at this time of night. She was held hostage by the thoughts that she could fend off during the day. During the day there was so much this old house needed, it was overwhelming.

      But being overwhelmed was not necessarily a bad thing. It could occupy her every thought and every waking hour. Between that, the new dog and looking for the perfect investment opportunity, she was blessedly busy.

      But on a night like tonight, thoughts crowded into her tired mind. Even before David had said that about Kevin flirting with a girl instead of doing his job, Kayla had lain awake at night and contemplated her marriage.

      She tried to direct her thoughts to good things and good memories, like the night he had proposed, so sweet and serious and sincere.

      I want to do the honorable thing. For once.

      She frowned. She hadn’t thought of that part of it for a long time, and not in the light she was thinking of it now. Had he loved her, or had he done the honorable thing?

      Crazy thoughts. Middle of the night thoughts. Of course he had loved her.

      In his way. So what if his way bought flowers when they needed groceries? That was romantic! And he had been a dreamer. That was a good memory. Of them sitting at the kitchen table, in the early days of their marriage sipping the last of their coffee, his face all intense and earnest as he described what he wanted for them: a business of their own, a big house, a great car.

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