Mended Hearts. Ruth Logan Herne

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Mended Hearts - Ruth Logan Herne страница 5

Mended Hearts - Ruth Logan Herne Mills & Boon Love Inspired

Скачать книгу

thing Hannah wanted was to be managed. “Whereas I prefer the background, thanks.”

      Megan frowned, hesitated, then waded in. “You’re great with people, Hannah.”

      “I’ve got nothing against people. I just don’t like getting involved.”

      “But—”

      “And I’m busy.”

      “Do you need me to cut your hours at the store? Would that help?”

      “Not if I want to continue to pay my bills.” Hannah started to surge ahead, then came to a complete stop, aggravated, wishing she didn’t have to explain herself. Explaining meant she might slip back into the dark waters of things she avoided. “See, that’s the thing. I love working at the library because it’s small. Quiet. I help a few people here and there. It’s perfect for me. If we make it all big and beautiful, I’ll be expected to do all kinds of things, all the time. I like things the way they are, Meg.”

      “Why is bigger bad?” Megan wondered. “I would think you’d embrace the idea of helping more kids, more families, providing more books, more chances.”

      Megan’s words struck deep.

      Hannah had provided a lot of chances for kids back in the day. She’d gone out on limbs, taken the bull by the horns, encouraging, offering young adults a rare experience. She’d been a risk taker then, in her beautifully equipped classroom, before life flipped upside down.

      She was a rabbit now. Emotional necessity ruled the cautious lifestyle she’d adopted. It suited her duck-and-cover personality.

      “I’ll be on the committee if you’d like,” Megan offered. “Would that help? Then we could strategize while we’re at the store together. Kill two birds with one stone.”

      “What horrible bird hater thought up that analogy?”

      Megan laughed. “Don’t change the subject. What are you wearing Wednesday night?”

      “Nothing special.”

      “What about my blue sarong? The one I brought back from Hawaii?”

      “Hmm. Show up at the library in a sarong. Perfect for children’s hour.” She flashed Meg a wry look. “End of story. And this discussion. Besides, I can’t wear blue.”

      “What? Why?”

      Hannah felt a blush rise from her neck and resented her fair complexion for the first time in several years. “We need another color.”

      “You’ve lost me.”

      Hannah sighed. “He said if I wear blue he’ll have a hard time concentrating on anything besides my eyes.”

      Megan ground to a halt, pebbled stones skittering beneath her feet. “He said that? Out loud?”

      Hannah stopped, as well, directed a bemused look to her friend and sighed. “He did, but it was most likely to throw me off track because he wants this project done. If he can’t weasel his way out of it and pawn it off on his sister.”

      “Meredith’s back?”

      “If that’s his sister’s name, then yes.”

      “Huh.” Megan frowned and resumed walking. “I’ll have to call her, see what’s up. You’ll love her. She’s funny and down-to-earth. And she does great hair and nails.”

      “Corporate boy’s sister is a hairdresser? Why did I not see that coming?”

      “She loves it. And she’s wonderful, like I said. The Walkers aren’t your typical rich family.”

      Jeff Brennan had seemed pretty typical earlier that day. Focused, frenetic and finite, a path she’d traveled once before. No way was she going down that road again.

      “Is there such a thing as typical rich anymore?” Hannah asked. “There’s some pretty weird millionaires running around these days.”

      “And some downright nice ones.”

      Hannah laughed. “Present company excluded, of course. Although I hear candy-store entrepreneurs maintain their delightful normalcy because of their choice in wives.”

      “Makes sense to me.” Megan offered agreement with an elbow nudge to Hannah’s arm. “And wear the blue. Call his bluff.”

      A part of Hannah wanted to do just that.

      Another part couldn’t take the risk.

      The gold top Hannah wore said she had no intention of jumping into the water with him, metaphorically speaking. The fact that the soft knit looked just as good as the blue simply brightened Jeff’s evening.

      Watching as she wove her way through the tables of The Edge’s second dining room Wednesday evening, it was impossible to miss the strength of her moves, athletic and lithe.

      That inborn agility appeared out of step with her other body language. Her careful facial movements belied by nervous hands and the inward expression that shadowed her eyes intermittently.

      Edgy hands. Cloaked expression. A rough combination, all told, reminiscent of his mother in the bad days of his parents’ publicly awful marriage.

      He stood as she approached the table. The hostess smiled as she indicated a chair. Jeff pulled the chair out for Hannah, waited until she was comfortably seated, then sat in the adjacent chair.

      “You had to choose that one, didn’t you?” She met his gaze with a quiet look of challenge. “Being across from me wasn’t close enough? Or intimidating enough?”

      “I intimidate you?” Jeff unfolded his napkin, brow drawn, but not too much, just enough to let her know he could quirk a grin quickly. “Thanks, I’ll remember that.”

      “Annoyed, possibly,” she corrected, looking more sure of herself. “Intimidated? No.”

      “Good to know, although I was starting to feel pretty good about myself. I’ve been trying to intimidate my sister for years. No go.”

      “And yet still you try.”

      He grinned agreeably. “A brother’s job. Would you like an appetizer, Hannah? The Edge has great stuffed mushrooms. And the owner makes Shrimp le Rocco, huge shrimp done in a wine and cream sauce with a hint of Cajun, just enough to give it life.”

      “Are you auditioning for the Food Network?”

      “I’m a Paula Deen guy,” he admitted, smiling. “All that butter. Cream. Southern drawl. And she’s sweet but tough. Reminds me of Grandma.”

      “Your grandmother is one strong lady.” Hannah looked more at ease talking about Grandma. She settled back in her seat and fingered her water glass, then smiled and nodded at the waitress as they gave their drink and appetizer orders.

      The smile undid him, just a little. Sweet. Broad. Inviting. She had a generous mouth when it wasn’t pinched in worry.

      “She

Скачать книгу