Wanted: One Son. Laurie Paige

Wanted: One Son - Laurie  Paige


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excited and totally confused.

      Her son stirred in her arms. She released him and grabbed a tissue for each of them. He wiped his eyes and blew his nose, then moved away from her.

      She didn’t try to hold him. There was something older and infinitely sadder in the depths of her son’s eyes, as if a part of his childhood had been ripped away from him in the hours he’d been gone. It hurt her.

      “Where did you go?”

      “Nowhere, just walked around.” His voice cracked. “Then I tried to thumb a ride home.”

      Just as Nick had thought he would.

      “I have to thank Deputy Dorelli,” she said, recalling they’d left him in the parking lot.

      When she went out, the cruiser was gone. He’d brought her son back, then thoughtfully left them alone. She stood in the last warm rays of sunlight, not sure what she felt.

      Since Christmas, something had changed between her and Nick. He made her uneasy with his unrelenting gaze, as if he’d weighed her worth and she came up a full pound short.

      She drew a shaky breath and turned to her son. “Let’s go home, shall we?”

      “Yeah, we’ve got to check the stock.”

      “Right. ’On a ranch, the chores are never done—’”

      “’Just caught up for the moment,’” Doogie finished the often-quoted lecture from his father.

      Later, thinking over the long day, Stephanie decided she’d overreacted. She inhaled the sage-scented air. Her son was in bed, she had a successful business, all was right with her world.

      So why did she feel so miserable?

      

      Stephanie dropped the day’s receipts into the after-hours depository at the bank with a weary sigh. The Summer Madness sale was over, thank heavens. For six days, from Monday until one o’clock today, they’d been swamped by customers. She and Pat and Amy had put in long hours this week.

      Not that she was complaining. They’d moved a lot of merchandise. The new line of jewelry they’d decided to try had done very well. She’d already ordered more of it.

      Stopping by her car, she viewed the Saturday traffic, which was light. She had to go to the grocery, but first she’d have lunch before going home to her recalcitrant son.

      The week had been a terrible one. They’d hardly spoken to each other. He’d resented going to the sitter’s house, and she had missed having him at the shop. They could certainly have used his help. However, she had to stick to her guns.

      To have rescinded his punishment would have meant she could be maneuvered into changing her mind or that she didn’t think shoplifting a serious offense. He might have gotten the idea he could do as he darned well pleased.

      But it had been a hard week. He didn’t speak unless spoken to, and then, as briefly as possible. She’d left him at the ranch doing chores that morning.

      A truck, one of those sports utility vehicles that the sheriff’s department used, turned the corner. She recognized the dark hair and wide shoulders even from a distance. She quickly climbed into her car and drove off.

      She didn’t want Nick to see her standing on the sidewalk, unable to make up her mind about what to do on a Saturday afternoon and dreading the weekend. He would probably go to the Bear Tooth Saloon that evening. It was the local hangout for singles. She drove down the block, trying to decide what she wanted to eat.

      She quietly sighed. She really was beat. She’d get her groceries and head home. She pulled into the parking lot at the only shopping mall located in the town and stopped. Her gaze fell on the new deli that had recently opened.

      A sign in the window proclaimed the special of the day was a soup and salad combo. That sounded good.

      The air-conditioning hit her with a pleasantly chilling blast when she went inside. It was unusually hot for June. She called a greeting to the waitress, who’d been two years behind her in school. “Hi, Peg. How’s it going?”

      “Hi. We’re busy today. You alone?”

      “Yes.”

      The first person she spotted when Peg led her to a table was her nemesis. Nick was seated at a booth with an adorable blonde who leaned against his shoulder and gave him a kiss on the cheek while Stephanie watched, her eyes going wide.

      He smiled and playfully tugged at a golden curl that brushed his chin. When he looked up, his eyes met hers.

      She didn’t look away fast enough. He nodded a greeting, then glanced around at the restaurant. The place was full and a line was forming for tables. He gestured to the banquette opposite him and his dinner partner.

      The waitress, who knew both of them, noticed the invitation. “Do you want to sit with Nick?” she asked. “That way you won’t be alone, and it’ll free up a table for someone else.”

      Stephanie remembered a time when she’d been alone and had longed for his company. She’d faithfully waited for him, for all the good that had done her. Ah, well, she could stand his company for one meal, she decided grimly. “Okay.”

      She followed the younger woman across the room and slipped into the seat opposite Nick and the cute blonde. “I don’t think I’ve met your date,” she said, her smile real this time.

      “Nikki, meet Stephanie. Stephanie, this is my favorite niece, Nikki Carradine.”

      The four-year-old dimpled into a charming smile. “I think you’re pretty,” she said to Stephanie. “I’ve got a boyfriend,” she confided. “His name is Zach. Do you have one?”

      Stephanie felt a blush warm her ears. “Not at the present.”

      “Uncle Nick doesn’t have a girlfriend,” she continued. “I was going to marry him, but Momma said I have to marry somebody my age. How old are you?”

      “Nikki, it isn’t polite to ask a lady her age,” Nick chided with a gentle smile that did things to Stephanie’s heart.

      “Why not?”

      His brows drew together. “I’m not sure, but I think Nonna said it wasn’t done, and I always believed her.”

      “I’m the same age as your uncle,” Stephanie told the pretty youngster, ignoring her escort.

      “Do you have a little girl?”

      “No. I have a twelve-year-old son.”

      “Is he nice?”

      “Most of the time.”

      Nikki looked at her uncle with a question in her beautiful blue eyes. Stephanie remembered that her father, an attorney in Denver, had blond hair and blue eyes.

      “A little old for you. Better stick with Zach. He’s in her Sunday School class,” Nick explained to Steph.

      “But I’m not going to marry him,” Nikki declared.

      Talk of marriage made Stephanie uncomfortable. She tried to avoid looking at Nick, all but impossible since he sat directly across the table from her. She was acutely aware of his dark chocolate eyes flashing from one person to another as he followed the conversation. He wore a slightly skewed, definitely sardonic, grin.

      The waitress came for their order. When she left, there was an awkward lull in the conversation.

      “How was the Summer Madness sale?” Nick asked.

      “Fine. Busy.” She took a sip of water.

      His foot brushed hers under the table. “Sorry.”

      Tingles floated up her leg. “That’s okay.”

      “Uncle Nick, I need to go potty,” Nikki announced.

      “Sure


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