The Scrooge Of Loon Lake. Carrie Nichols

The Scrooge Of Loon Lake - Carrie Nichols


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abundance of extra money for Christmas presents, so she was making sure each gift from Santa was well thought out.

      Des rose and stepped back until he stood shoulder to shoulder with her. “He doesn’t say much.”

      She knew she could agree with him and that would be the end of the matter. That was what she’d learned to do with people who passed anonymously through their lives. She’d even perfected her smile when people said things like “I wish mine was that quiet.”

      “That’s because he can’t. Three years ago, when Sam was two, a car jumped the curb into a crowd of people leaving a minor league baseball game in Nashville, where we were living. That crowd included my husband and my son. Ryan was killed and Sam suffered a TBI.” She cleared her throat. “Sorry, a TBI is—”

      “Traumatic brain injury,” Des interrupted. “I’m familiar with the term.”

      She glanced at Sam, who was still enamored with the snowmobile. “I’ll spare you all the fancy medical jargon and say he understands words, but his brain can’t plan and sequence the movements to say them. Apraxia of speech is the official term.”

      Des nodded. “And this hippotherapy you mentioned helps?”

      “Not with speech but it helps with muscle memory and balance,” she said. “Plus, he enjoys it. Being with the horses is more of a reward than just another therapy session like with the speech-language pathologists or physical therapy.”

      “Is that why you left in such a hurry yesterday?”

      “Yeah, that’s one appointment he doesn’t like to miss. Sam, don’t climb up there. It’s—”

      “It’s fine. He won’t hurt anything,” Des interrupted and motioned to Sam. “You can sit on the seat if you want, bud.”

      Natalie tamped down the automatic protest that sprang up and pressed her lips together. It wasn’t easy, but she needed to allow Sam room to explore. Smothering him only helped her, not him.

      Des shifted his stance, bringing her attention back to him. She longed to ask what had happened to him, but politeness made her hold her tongue. Telling him she’d noticed his limp seemed a bit too forward, despite his mentioning Sam’s lack of verbal skills. Her Southern mother had drilled proper manners into her with the zeal of Natalie’s drill sergeant father. Plus, she was enjoying the sunshine on this final day in November. Not to mention being in the company of a male over the age of five. She didn’t want to spoil either with awkward questions.

      “Is he in school?”

      She shook her head. “I held him back an extra year. You can do that with kindergarten. He still had a lot of weekly therapy sessions and he’s made great strides in almost everything this year, which was why I felt comfortable enough to pick up and move here.”

      “So will he ever be able to…” Des trailed off and winced.

      “Every individual’s recovery is different.” Even to herself, her answer sounded rote and unconvincing. “We’re working with an AAC device. Sorry, that’s his augmentative and alternative communication device. Ha, my dad was career army so I grew up with all those military acronyms, but I must say medical experts love them just as much.”

      “Ah, an army brat. That explains it.” He weighed her with a critical squint.

      She shifted under his scrutiny. “Explains what?”

      “You have a slight accent, but I haven’t been able to place it.”

      “Yeah, I guess my speech patterns are a mixture of everywhere. My mom is from Georgia, so I have a bit of her accent but did my best to fit in wherever we were living at the time.” Her stomach did a little fluttery thing. He’d tried to pick out her accent? That meant he’d thought about her. A little thing like that shouldn’t please her as much as it did. Why not? her inner voice demanded, because she’d given him enough thought since yesterday. Des Gallagher had occupied a lot of headspace for such a brief meeting.

      His face was impassive, but his gaze roamed over her. “Georgia? Huh, maybe that explains it.”

      “My accent?”

      He shook his head. “Nope.”

      “Sorry? You’ve lost me.” Her knees wobbled under his examination. What the heck was he on about?

      “How old are you?”

      “Twenty-six. Why?” She stood straighter. Despite a few silver strands threaded in his thick, lustrously black hair, he seemed no older than his midthirties. They were contemporaries.

      He grunted. “There’s eight years separating us. Hardly calls for you to sir me.”

      “When did I call you sir?” She couldn’t recall a faux pas like that.

      He rubbed the back of his scalp. “Yesterday. When you first walked in.”

      “You must have flustered me.” Should I be admitting that? “Between my drill sergeant father and Southern mother, sir and ma’am comes naturally. I—I sometimes fall back on that if I feel like I’ve been put on the spot.”

      He swiped a hand across his mouth, his dark eyes amused. “In that case, I apologize for flustering you.”

      “Bless your heart, you can’t help it,” she said in a perfect imitation of her mother, not that he would know that.

      His eyes narrowed in suspicion. “Am I detecting an insult in there somewhere?”

      “If you are, then that’s on you.” Natalie shook her head, doing her best to look innocent. “Are you from Loon Lake?”

      “Colorado. I settled here after leaving the navy three years ago.”

      Her gaze went to his white American foursquare home with its hip roof, black shutters and wide brick steps leading to the front entrance. The house seemed large for one person and she wondered if he’d planned to share it with someone when he’d invested in the property. Tavie had mentioned he lived alone. Again, not her business if he had a dozen girlfriends. “So have I changed your mind about those ornaments?”

      “Not a chance, Ms. Pierce.” He took a step back as if needing to put distance between them. “Don’t waste your time on a lost cause.”

      Great. She’d managed to kill the camaraderie they’d shared moments ago. She plastered a smile on her face. “I gotta warn you. I’m a champion of lost causes. A regular St. Jude.” Holding out her hand, she said, “Come along, Sam, I think we’ve taken up enough of Lieutenant Gallagher’s time for one day.”

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