Match Made in Court. Janice Kay Johnson
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“I missed you!” When she looked up, her face was pinched.
Linnea lifted her onto her hip and kissed the top of her head. “Didn’t you have fun?”
Matt, arriving on the doorstep, looked grim. “No,” he said. “I don’t think she had fun.”
“Why not?” she asked, then backed up. “Come in.”
“Maybe I shouldn’t,” he said, handing over Hanna’s pink parka.
“Please. I’d like to talk to you.”
His mouth tightened, but after a moment he gave a curt nod and stepped inside. Linnea hurriedly closed and locked the door.
“Did you have lunch?”
He shook his head. “Hanna said she wasn’t hungry.”
Linnea looked down at her niece. “Not even a little bit? It’s noon, and you hardly nibbled at breakfast. What if I make you a peanut butter and honey sandwich? Or … Oh! What about grilled cheese?”
The little girl snuffled and rubbed her face on Linnea’s sweatshirt. “Okay,” she whispered.
“I’ll heat soup and make sandwiches,” Linnea decided, leading the way to the kitchen.
He followed, to her relief. When she asked, he poured milk for Hanna and her and juice for himself while she dumped tomato soup in a pot and started slicing cheddar cheese. Hanna stuck close to her, a silent, ghostlike presence, while her uncle Matt sat at the kitchen table and watched her with a brooding gaze. The atmosphere reminded Linnea unpleasantly of home, when Finn would sulk about something and she tried to avoid drawing his attention and her mother insisted that obviously he’d been wronged and shouldn’t she go into the school and talk to the principal? Dad, of course, slipped away to his den.
Naturally, Linnea felt compelled to chatter. “I think my favorite animals are the otters. Do you remember that time we saw one playing in the stream at the zoo?” she asked her niece, who didn’t answer. To Matt, she said, “He kept sliding down, then going back up and doing it again. It was so cute. But I like the giraffes, too, and the lions. And, oh, when there’s a baby gorilla!” Flipping the sandwiches, she stroked Hanna’s hair with one hand. “Did you see the gorillas today?”
Hanna shook her head.
“We didn’t get that far,” Matt said. “She didn’t even really look at the animals we did get to.”
Oh, dear. “I’m sorry you didn’t have fun,” she said softly to her niece. “Oops! The soup is boiling.”
She dished up three bowls and had Hanna carry saltine crackers to the table. Then she brought the grilled cheese sandwiches on plates, lifted Hanna into her seat and sat herself.
It felt … strange having a man here. Except for her dad, no man had ever eaten here in her kitchen with her. Tess dropped by casually once in a while, but never Finn.
Anyway, Linnea suspected her brother hardly ever ate lunch unless he was entertaining a client or talking on his cell phone or texting at the same time.
Matt seemed to fill the space in a way Linnea knew she didn’t. It was partly physical; he was a large, solidly built man with broad shoulders. But it was also a matter of temperament. She could feel his tension, as if the very air crackled with it. Those gray eyes were both impassive and dark with what she felt sure was an incipient storm.
Of course, his tension wound Linnea tighter than a rubber band ready to snap, which, coupled with Hanna’s withdrawal, didn’t make this lunch an undiluted pleasure.
Hanna ate half a sandwich and a few spoonfuls of soup, then, to Linnea’s relief, asked to be excused. “Can I watch TV?” she asked, after a wary glance at her uncle.
“Why don’t you take a book and lie down instead?” Linnea suggested. “You look tired, kiddo.”
She’d been letting Hanna watch entirely too much television. She always curled up at one end of the sofa, clutching a throw pillow as though her stomach hurt, and stared at the screen as if mesmerized. Mesmerized, or not seeing it at all, Linnea wasn’t sure which. It had become Hanna’s refuge, which didn’t strike Linnea as entirely healthy.
She could tell now that her niece wanted to argue, but after a moment she gave a reluctant nod and trudged from the kitchen. Matt didn’t say anything, but he watched her go with that same brooding expression. When Hanna didn’t even look back, a muscle twitched in his cheek, and Linnea wondered if his feelings were hurt.
From her seat she could see the hall. She waited to say anything until Hanna went in her bedroom and shut the door. Then she looked at Matt.
“Was she just shy?”
“She wouldn’t talk to me. Is that shy?”
“Well, of course it is,” Linnea said in bewilderment. “What did you think?”
Very coolly, he said, “I wondered if someone had been talking to her about me. She almost acts as if she’s afraid of me.”
“Someone?” Then she got it, and her mouth dropped open. “You mean me? Why would you think …?”
“Perhaps your brother.”
“I really doubt that Finn—” She couldn’t tell him that she didn’t think Finn actually talked to his daughter that often.
He raised an eyebrow, giving his face a saturnine cast that made her wonder if he’d read her mind. “Finn?”
“I doubt he gives that much thought to you.”
“Then what’s going on? Hanna and I have always been good friends.”
“You haven’t seen her in a year. That’s forever for a child.” She hesitated. “And things have been hard for her at home. I suspect Tess and Finn were fighting a lot. Hanna hasn’t seemed very happy to me lately. She’d already … withdrawn. Become clingy when she was with me.”
Matt frowned. “Tess hasn’t said anything.”
“Would she have?” Linnea weighed how much to say, then thought, What does it matter now? “Hanna wasn’t like them,” she explained. “She’s quiet, and sensitive, and she shrivels when voices get raised. I’m not sure even Tess understood that she didn’t react the way either of them would have to … anything.”
His mouth flattened. “Then suddenly she’s being told that her mom is dead.”
“There were police in the house, and then I took her and she hasn’t even talked to her dad since.”
To his credit, he was listening. “Your parents?”
“They adore her.”
He waited.
“Dad is always gentle with Hanna. But it wouldn’t surprise me if Mom is saying more than she should to a child Hanna’s age. She’s pretty worked up on Finn’s behalf. She and