Authors: Lori Copeland
Tags: #Romance, #Christian, #Fiction, #Christian Fiction, #Foster Parents, #General, #Love Stories
Cade squeezed her against him. “I’m not mad at Zoe. We just talk mean to each other. I really kinda like her. Hey, I could use some help feeding Maddy tomorrow. Why don’t you go into the store in the morning and get a carrot? I’ll bet she’d love that.”
The girl’s eyes brightened. “Can I give it to her?”
“Sure can.”
Dawn was streaking the sky as Cade and Holly put down fresh hay. He lifted the little girl up and sat her on the side of the stall so she could pet Maddy’s mane.
“She sure loves carrots, huh, Uncle Cade?”
“She appears to be pretty partial to you too.”
“Someday I’m going to have a horse like Maddy.”
Cade winked. “You got a pretty smile, just like your mama.”
Holly’s eyes misted. “I miss Ma and Pa. Ma was always laughin’ and singin’.”
Cade lifted her down and picked up a pitchfork. “I miss my ma too. Reckon we always will, but it gets easier. Your ma wouldn’t want us to be sad.” He paused and tipped her face up with his finger. “Let’s see that happy face.”
Her lips trembled and then turned up in a sweet smile. “I love you, Uncle Cade.”
He swallowed hard. “I love you too, Holly.”
L
ilith’s shrill laugher could wake the dead. Once she got going, folks as far as Suffox County could hear her high-pitched squeals and intermittent snorts.
“King me!” Edna said, stacking Gracie’s checkers in her growing pile and laughing along with Lilith until tears rolled down her cheeks. Though Gracie had just lost the game, she wound up laughing as hard as the other two women.
Zoe found herself joining in, giggling at the nonsense. If she were offered a king’s ransom, she wouldn’t be able to say what was so funny.
“Oh, my.” Gracie wiped tears from her eyes as she got up. “I think it’s time for cake and coffee.”
Arranging her black pieces for a new game, Zoe smiled and asked, “Can I help with the refreshments?”
“You can cut the cake.”
Lilith never looked up as she put another “won” mark in her column. “Just a small piece for me. Hubby says I’ve been eating too much lately.”
“That man.” Gracie laughed, waving her hand. “Anything my brother says should be taken with a grain of salt.” Zoe followed Gracie into the kitchen, leaving the two women to squabble over their scores.
Gracie’s kitchen smelled of perking coffee. Grandmother Willis’s hand-crocheted white tablecloth covered the round oak pedestal table sitting near the bay window. A fresh bouquet of snapdragons from the flower garden sat in the midst of Gracie’s best china. Her Stanley cookstove and white oak cabinets were the talk of the town.
Zoe breathed a sigh of envy. Someday she hoped to have a house like this one. She lifted the cake cover and sniffed. “Do you think Lilith won the last game fair and square?”
“Well, she may be my sister-in-law, but that doesn’t keep me from keeping a close eye on her.”
Zoe laughed. “I’ve never beat her, but I haven’t seen her cheat.”
While Gracie filled the creamer, Zoe cut thin slices of cake and arranged them on china plates.
“I’ve been dying to talk to you all day.” Gracie glanced up and grinned. “What’s this about Cade moving in with you? Lawrence said he saw him there the morning after the storm.”
Zoe’s cheeks burned. She wiped a bit of gooey burnt-sugar frosting off the knife and tasted it. “He didn’t ‘move in’ with me. The jail roof had a leak in it.”
“Lawrence says there are no sleeping quarters over the jail anymore.”
“No, the storm took care of that. The children want Cade to stay with us, but that’s impossible.”
“There’s always Pop. His place is small, but he could put up one more.”
“Pop’s under the weather.”
“Edna said he ate eight pieces of gooseberry pie at the social. That’s enough to fell an elephant.” Gracie replenished the sugar bowl.
Zoe grinned. “No telling how many he actually ate, but then he broke out in hives. I guess he’s had a miserable few days.”
Gracie poured coffee into the server, wiping up stray drips with a clean cloth. “I don’t suppose Glori-Lee can help. She’s closed off half her rooms since she hurt her back last spring.”
Arranging cups on a tray, Zoe sighed. She didn’t know what she was going to do now that Cade had no place to go. He was ill-equipped for fatherhood, and one would think, after the café incident, he’d know enough to leave the child-rearing to her.
“Where’s he sleeping? Land’s sake, you can hardly move around the way it is.”
“In the mercantile, on Jim’s cot. It’s all very proper. I could hardly turn away the children’s uncle without explaining why, and I didn’t want to get into that.”
Not only crowded, it was much too close for comfort. She couldn’t avoid Cade if she wanted to. This morning she’d been caught off guard when she walked out of the bedroom and found him bare chested, shaving at the sink. She’d caught herself staring. And he’d noticed. She’d pretended not to let it bother her, but he wasn’t fooled. He took his sweet time putting on his shirt, his mischievous eyes never leaving hers. She wasn’t about to back down, so she just stared right back.
Zoe shivered against goose bumps, recalling the effect he still had on her as she licked the knife and put it in the dishpan. “It’s nice to see the children smiling again. When I left this evening, Cade was on the floor wrestling with Brody and Will. You should have heard Holly and Missy giggling, Gracie. They haven’t done that in weeks.”
“So they’ve really taken to him.”
“Yes, I’m afraid they have. He’ll break their hearts when he leaves, and they’ve had enough sorrow in their young lives. By the way, he stopped at the Brightons’ to talk about the children. Bonnie’s come down with a fever.”
“You don’t say!” Gracie frowned. “Like Addy and John?”
“They don’t think so. Seth’s worried, but Doc Whitney will be back in a couple of days. He’s off in another county. I thought I’d take dinner to them tomorrow and ask if there’s anything I can do to help.”
“What about their young’uns?”
“Seth took them to Frank and Helen’s, in case the fever’s contagious.”
Gracie paused. “How will that affect Cade’s plans to let the Brightons adopt the kids?”
Zoe shrugged. “Not that I wish ill health on anyone, but it buys me some time. I’m going to do my best to convince him to let me raise the children. They’re so much a part of me already.”
“You’re bent on keeping them, aren’t you?”
“I’ve always wanted them, but I did what Addy asked. I sent for Cade. Now I wish I hadn’t. I thought surely he wouldn’t object to me raising them if he didn’t intend to.”
“Why does he object to your having them? Is it the money?”
“He doesn’t know my financial situation. He says he wants the children to have a mother and a father, but I think he’s just being spiteful.”
Gracie raised her brows.
“Don’t speculate,” Zoe chided. “I just mean things are strained between us right now. He wouldn’t let me have them if I were married to King Solomon.”
“He said that?”
“Not in so many words. He said I needed to marry and get on with my life. Have my own family.”
“You should.”
“Those kids
are
my family.” Tears stung her eyes. She threw a spoon into the sink. “I don’t understand why Addy didn’t give them to me in the first place.”
“Hmm,” Gracie mused. “A body would swear she was matchmaking, trying to bring you and Cade back together. After all, other than John and the children, you were the two people she loved the most.”
“That’s crazy. Even Addy wouldn’t do something that far fetched.” But privately, Zoe wouldn’t put it beyond Addy to have thought that if Cade came back, it could be the same as before. Unfortunately, Zoe had gained enough sense to realize that loving him was like loving the wind.
Edna’s voice resounded from the parlor. “Lilith! Where did that third king come from?”
Hyena-like laughing filled the parlor.
Zoe and Gracie broke into smiles. “Sounds like there’s going to be a tiff,” Gracie said. “We’d better get the cake and coffee in there.”
Backing out the kitchen door, Zoe balanced the tray with both hands, four white linen napkins tucked under her chin. “Gracie, promise me you won’t mention my financial situation to anyone.”
Gracie chuckled. “Have you ever known me to gossip?”
“Only since I was born.”
T
he next two days passed in relative peace. After the supper dishes had been cleared, Brody wandered into the kitchen. “It’s Saturday night, Zoe. Are we going to the dance?”
Cade sat on the back porch, cleaning his saddle. He glanced up when the boy’s question filtered through the screen door.
Zoe folded the dishcloth and hung it up to dry. “Not tonight, Brody. You need to go to bed early. We missed Sunday school last week, and I don’t want that to happen again.”
It was the first Sunday she’d missed in nine months. Ironing until the wee hours of the morning took its toll. If only the new yard goods would arrive, she wouldn’t have to take in extra work. She had enough orders to make her bank payments through the coming winter months. The shipment was due any day.