Wanted: A Family. Janet Dean

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Wanted: A Family - Janet Dean Mills & Boon Historical

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pray? Or the action of a man without faith? Time would tell. Either way, she’d keep her doors locked at night.

      As she entered the back door, a wave of light-headedness swept over her. She’d been up since dawn. The bowl of cold cereal she’d eaten was long gone.

      In the kitchen, her food untouched, Elise drooped at the table, as limp as a rag doll, tears running down her cheeks.

      Callie splayed her fingers over the girl’s nape and massaged her muscles. “Are you all right?”

      “You saw how he looked at me.”

      “Don’t take it to heart. You know we expectant moms can’t trust our perceptions. Why, we’re laughing one minute, crying the next.”

      “I know I’m right, Callie. I’ve seen that look of censure before.”

      “Well, if that’s the case, he’d better keep his opinions to himself or I’ll send him packing faster than a camel can spit.”

      “Camels spit?”

      “I’ve heard they do. And I can, too, if I’m riled.”

      Elise’s snuffles ended on a giggle, a rainbow in the stormy ups and downs of expectant motherhood.

      Callie headed to the stove, slipped an egg and a slice of pork onto her plate. “I’ll see what Jacob Smith has to say for himself.”

      While Elise finished eating, Callie left the house.

      Across from Mr. Smith, she sat on a weathered chair with splayed legs. Her full skirts all but touched the scruffy toe of his boot.

      As if uncomfortable with the contact, he yanked his foot back, then lifted the last forkful of food to his mouth. His hand was large, long-fingered. The nails were clean and he had a sprinkling of dark hair between his knuckles.

      “Looks like I’m too late to ask if the food needed salt.”

      “Breakfast was perfect, as is. Every bite.”

      She’d missed cooking for a man, especially an appreciative man. She smiled. He smiled back. The dimple winked in his left cheek, giving his angular face a boyish look.

      Bowing her head, she offered a silent prayer then cut into the pork.

      Stripes wove between them, rubbing against Mr. Smith’s boot. He gave her ears a gentle scratch and was rewarded with a grateful purr. The way people treated animals said a lot about them. “Where’s home?” she asked.

      “Nowhere in particular.”

      Eyeing him, she scooped egg onto her fork. “We’re all born somewhere, Mr. Smith.”

      “Yes, ma’am, but… I don’t know exactly where.”

      Her hand stilled. “Care to explain?”

      “I grew up in an orphanage.” He’d said the words in a matter-of-fact voice, with no trace of emotion, yet his eyes didn’t meet hers.

      The bite of egg lodged in Callie’s throat. If not for Aunt Hilda, Callie would’ve met the same fate. Swallowing hard, her gaze darted his way.

      He looked tranquil enough, but a twitch in his jaw suggested otherwise. “Not a happy experience?”

      He shrugged, but the raw bleakness in his eyes confirmed her opinion.

      “You got kin around these parts?” he said, deftly changing the subject and avoiding his past.

      “My late husband’s parents live a few blocks west.”

      “I’m sorry about your husband.” Green eyes locked with hers. “Must be comforting, having his family nearby.”

      She nodded. Those searching eyes noticed her lack of enthusiasm. The man missed nothing.

      “So what brings you to Peaceful?”

      He gave a lopsided grin. “Reckon I’m here to help you.”

      “Are you saying you came to Peaceful by chance?”

      “The town’s name drew me.” He laid his plate on the bench. Except for a few biscuit crumbs, he’d wiped it clean. “Thank you for the meal.” His gaze settled on the lean-to. “And for the lodging.” He plopped his hat in place. “I’d say I got the better end of our deal.”

      “You may think otherwise once you wrangle with the roof.”

      “I’m part mountain goat.” He rose. “If it’s all the same to you, I’ll repair the roof this morning. Tackle the porch during the heat of the day.”

      “Do as you think best.”

      A flicker of surprise skidded across his face. That boss at the construction company must’ve been a stickler.

      “I’ll bring your dinner out at noon. Wait a minute.” She walked inside, grabbed a fruit jar with a galvanized lid from the kitchen. “It’s going to be a scorcher. Fill this or you’ll wear yourself out making trips to the pump.”

      He took the jar and tipped his hat. “Much obliged.”

      “Take care on that roof. It’s steep.”

      “Yes, ma’am.” His eyes sobered. “I will.”

      He strapped on a pouch of nails and stuck the hammer under his belt, then leaned the ladder against the back of the house, making adjustments until he had it centered to suit him. Before she could steady it, he’d grabbed an armload of shingles and scrambled to the top and out onto the roof. As he clomped up the incline, she held her breath and then slowly released it, noticing his confidence and agility.

      And the way his back muscles rippled through his shirt.

      At the unwelcome response to the man, her cheeks burned. With her hands full to overflowing and no idea where she’d get the money to take her and Elise through the winter, how could she keep noticing a man’s muscles, a drifter at that?

      Her father-in-law would say only a no-account man chose to work for room and board, instead of settling down with a good-paying job.

      Callie shivered. Jacob Smith had been closed-mouthed. Was he running from something? Or to something?

      Whatever his motive for coming to Peaceful, she didn’t need another complication in her life. How long before he could get the work done and leave?

      Couldn’t be soon enough to suit her.

      Sweat stinging his eyes and blurring his vision, Jake pulled a nail from the pouch and fastened a shingle in place. He yanked a handkerchief from his hip pocket, threaded it under the crown of his wide-brimmed hat, then plunked it on his head.

      Laying shingles in this unseasonable heat was hard, dirty work, but he welcomed the exertion, liked being in control. Control he’d lost in jail, but needed badly. A man felt alive when he pushed the limits of his endurance. Afterward, his muscles might ache,

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