Read Midnight Sons Volume 1 Online
Authors: Debbie Macomber
“Then it wouldn’t hurt to give the cabins away.”
“Give them away?” Sawyer echoed. It stood to reason that no one would
pay
for them. Who’d want them anyway, even if they were free?
“We’re going to need something to induce women to move to Hard Luck,” Christian said. “We aren’t offering them marriage.”
“Damn right we’re not.” John gulped down a slug of coffee and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
“Companionship is all I’m interested in,” another of the pilots added. “Female companionship.”
“We don’t want to mislead anyone into thinking this is about marriage.”
“Exactly.”
Sawyer looked around the room at his pilots. “Marriage is what practically all women are after,” he said with more certainty than he actually felt.
“There’s plenty of jobs in the lower forty-eight,” Christian said in a perfectly reasonable tone. This was always where Sawyer ran into trouble with his younger brother. Christian could propose the most ridiculous idea in the most logical way. “True?”
“True,” Sawyer agreed warily.
“So, like I said before, we’ve got to offer these women some incentive to live and work in Hard Luck.”
“You want to give them the cabins?” Sawyer scratched his head. “As an
incentive?
”
“Sure. Then if they want to bring in electricity and running water they can do it with their own money.”
Sawyer checked around to see what the others were thinking. He couldn’t find a dissenting look among them. Not on Ben’s face and certainly not on any of the others. He should’ve known Christian’s idea would take root in the fertile minds of his women-starved men.
“We’d clean up the cabins a bit first,” Christian said as though this was the least they could do.
“We found a bear in one of them last year,” Sawyer reminded his brother.
“That bear didn’t mean any harm,” Ralph said confidently. “He was just having a look around, is all. I doubt he’ll be back after the shot of pepper spray Mitch gave him.”
Sawyer just shook his head, bemused.
“But it might not be smart to mention the bear to any of the women,” Ben was quick to add. “Women are funny about wild critters.”
“Yeah,” John said in hushed tones, “take my word for it—don’t say anything about the wildlife.”
“Say anything?” Sawyer asked. The men made it sound like he was going to personally interview each applicant.
“To the women when you talk to them,” Ralph explained with exaggerated patience.
“I’m going to be talking to these women?”
“Why, sure,” Duke said, as if that had been understood from the beginning. “You’ll have to interview them, you or Christian. Especially if you’re going to offer them housing when they accept a job in Hard Luck.”
“You’d better throw in some land while you’re at it,” Ben said, reaching for the coffeepot. He refilled the mugs and set the pot back on the burner. “You O’Hallorans got far more of it than you know what to do with. Offer the women a cabin and twenty acres of land if they’ll live and work in Hard Luck for one year.”
“Great idea!”
“Just like the old days when the settlers first got here.”
“Those cabins aren’t
on
any twenty acres.” Sawyer raised his arms to stop the discussion. “It’d be misleading to let anyone think they were, or that—”
“No one said the cabins had to be on acreage, did they?” Duke broke in. “Besides, to my way of thinking, people shouldn’t look a gift house in the mouth.” He chuckled at his own feeble joke. “House, get it? Not horse.”
“A year sounds fair,” Christian said decisively, ignoring him. “If it doesn’t work out, then they’re free to leave, no hard feelings.”
“No hard feelings.” John nodded happily.
“Now, just a minute,” Sawyer said. Was he the only one here who possessed any sense? He’d come into the Hard Luck Café
for a simple cup of coffee, discouraged by the news that Phil was leaving. The morning had rapidly gone from bad to worse.
“How are we going to let women know about your offer?” Ralph asked.
“We’ll run some ads like we said,” Christian told him. “But maybe not in magazines. That’ll take too long. I’ve got a business trip planned to Seattle, so we can put ads in the papers there and I’ll interview the women who apply.”
“Hold on,” Sawyer said, frowning. “We can’t go giving away those cabins, never mind the acreage, without talking to Charles first. Besides, there are antidiscrimination laws that make it illegal to advertise a job for women only.”
Christian grinned. “There’re ways around that.”
Sawyer rolled his eyes. “But we really do need to discuss this with Charles.” Their oldest brother was a silent partner in the O’Hallorans’ air charter service. He should have a voice in this decision; after all, they’d be giving away family-owned cabins and land.
“There isn’t time for that,” Christian argued. “Charles’ll go along with it. You know he will. He hasn’t paid that much attention to the business since he started working for Alaska Oil.”
“You’d better have an attorney draw up some kind of contract,” Ben suggested.
“Right.” Christian added that to his list. “I’ll do it tomorrow. I’ll write the ad this morning and see about getting it in the Seattle paper. It might be best if we placed it in another city, as well. It wouldn’t be much trouble to go down to Oregon and interview women from Portland. I’ve got plenty of time.”
“Hey, good idea,” John murmured.
“I’ll design the application,” Sawyer said reluctantly. This was happening much too fast. “You know, guys…” He hated to throw another wrench in the works, but someone needed a clear head, and it was obvious he’d been elected. “If any woman’s foolish enough to respond, those old cabins had better be in decent shape. It’s going to take a lot of work.”
“I’ll help,” John said enthusiastically.
“Me, too.”
“I expect we all will.” Duke drained the last of his coffee, then narrowed his gaze on Christian. “Just make sure you get a blonde for me.”
“A blonde,” Christian repeated.
Sawyer closed his eyes and groaned. He had a bad feeling about this. A very bad feeling.
It had been one of those days. Abbey Sutherland made herself a cup of tea, then sat in the large overstuffed chair and propped her feet on the ottoman. She closed her eyes, soaking in the silence.
The morning had started badly when Scott overslept, which meant he and Susan had missed the school bus. Seven-year-old Susan had insisted on wearing her pink sweater, which was still in the dirty-clothes hamper, and she’d whined all the way to school. Abbey had driven them, catching every red light en route.
By the time she arrived at the library, she was ten minutes late. Mrs. Duffy gave her a look that could have curdled milk.
But those minor irritations faded after lunch. Abbey received notice that the library’s budget for the next fiscal year had been reduced and two positions would be cut—the positions held
by the most recently hired employees. In other words, Abbey was going to lose her job in less than three months.
She finally got home at six o’clock, tired, short-tempered and depressed. That was when Mr. Erickson, the manager of the apartment complex, hand-delivered a note informing her the rents were being raised.
It was the kind of day even hot fudge couldn’t salvage.
Sensing her mood, the kids had acted up all evening. Abbey was exhausted, and she didn’t think reruns of
Matlock
were going to help.
Sipping her tea, she wondered what had happened to throw her life off course. She had a savings account, but there wasn’t enough in it to pay more than a month’s worth of bills. She refused to go to her parents for money. Not again. It had been too humiliating the first time, although they’d been eager to help. Not once had her mother or father said “I told you so,” when she filed for divorce, although they’d issued plenty of warnings when she’d announced her intention to marry Dick Sutherland. They’d been right. Five years and two children later, Abbey had returned to Seattle emotionally battered, broken-hearted and just plain broke.
Her parents had helped her back on her feet despite their limited income and lent her money to finish her education. Abbey had painstakingly repaid every penny, but it had taken her almost three years.
The newspaper, still rolled up, lay at her feet, and she picked it up. She might as well start reading through the want ads now, although she wasn’t likely to find another job as an assistant li
brarian. With cuts in local government spending, positions in libraries were becoming rare these days. But if she was willing to relocate…
“Mom.” Scott stood beside her chair.
“Yes?” She climbed out of her depression long enough to manage a smile for her nine-year-old son.
“Jason’s dog had her puppies.”
Abbey felt her chest tighten. Scott had been asking for a dog all year. “Honey, we’ve already been over this a hundred times. The apartment complex doesn’t allow pets.”
“I didn’t say I wanted one,” he said defensively. “All I said was that Jason’s dog had puppies. I know I can’t have a dog as long as we live here, but I was thinking that maybe with the rent increase we might move.”
“And if we do move,” Abbey said, “you want me to look for a place where we can have a dog.”
Her son grinned broadly. “Jason’s puppies are really, really cute, Mom. And they’re valuable, too! But you know what kind are my favorite?”
She did, but she played along. “Tell me.”
“Huskies.”
“Because the University of Washington mascot is a husky.”
“Yeah. They have cool eyes, don’t they? And I really like the way their tails loop up. I know they’re too big for me to have as a pet, but I still like them best.”
Abbey held out her arm to her son. He didn’t cuddle with her much anymore. That was kid stuff to a boy who was almost ten. But tonight he seemed willing to forget that.
He clambered into the chair next to her, rested his head
against her shoulder and sighed. “I’m sorry I overslept this morning,” he whispered.
“I’m sorry I yelled at you.”
“That’s all right.” There was a pause. “I promise to get out of bed when you call from now on, okay?”
“Okay.” Abbey closed her eyes, breathing in the clean shampoo scent of his hair.
They sat together for a few more minutes, saying nothing.
“You’d better get back to bed,” Abbey said, although she was reluctant to see him go.
Scott climbed out of the chair. “Are we going to move?” he asked, looking at her with wide eyes.
“I guess we are,” she said and smiled.
“’Night, Mom.” Scott smiled, too, then walked down the hall to his bedroom.
Abbey’s heart felt a little lighter as she picked up the paper and peeled off the rubber band. She didn’t bother to look at the front page, but turned directly to the classifieds.
The square box with the large block printing attracted her attention immediately. “LONELY MEN IN HARD LUCK, ALASKA, OFFER JOBS, HOMES AND LAND.” Below in smaller print was a list of the positions open.
Abbey’s heart stopped when she saw “librarian.”
Hard Luck, Alaska. Jobs. A home with land. Twenty acres. Good grief, that was more than her grandfather had owned when he grew raspberries in Puyallup a generation earlier.
Dragging out an atlas, Abbey flipped through the pages until she found Alaska. Her finger ran down the list of town names until she came across Hard Luck. Population 150.
She swallowed. A small town generally meant a sense of community. That excited her. As a girl, she’d spent summers on her grandparents’ farm and loved it. She wanted to give her children the same opportunity. She was sure the three of them could adjust to life in a small town. In Alaska.
Using the atlas’s directions to locate the town, Abbey drew her finger across one side of the page and down the other.
Her excitement died. Hard Luck was above the Arctic Circle. Oh, dear. Maybe it
wasn’t
such a great idea, after all.
The following morning, Abbey reviewed her options.
She set out a box of cold cereal, along with a carton of milk. A still-sleepy Scott and Susan pulled out chairs and sat at the table.
“Kids,” she said, drawing a deep breath, “what would you say if I suggested we move to Alaska?”
“Alaska?” Scott perked up right away. “That’s where they have huskies!”
“Yes, I know.”
“It’s cold there, isn’t it?” Susan asked.
“Very cold. Colder than it’s ever been in Seattle.”
“Colder than Texas?”
“Lots colder,” Scott said in a superior older-brother tone. “It’s so cold you don’t even need refrigerators, isn’t that right, Mom?”
“Uh, I think they probably still use them.”
“But they wouldn’t need to if they didn’t have electricity. Right?”
“Right.”
“Could I have a dog there?”
Abbey weighed her answer carefully. “We’d have to find that out after we arrived.”
“Would Grandma and Grandpa come and visit?” Susan asked.
“I’m sure they would, and if they didn’t, we could visit them.”
Scott poured cereal into his bowl until it threatened to spill over.
“I read an ad in the paper last night. Hard Luck, Alaska, needs a librarian, and it looks like I’m going to need a new job soon.”
Scott and Susan didn’t comment.
“I didn’t think it would be fair to call and ask for an interview without discussing it with both of you first.”
“You should go for it,” Scott advised, but Abbey could see visions of huskies in her son’s bright blue eyes.
“It’ll mean a big change for all of us.”
“Is there snow all the time?” Susan wanted to know.
“I don’t think so, but I’ll ask.” Abbey hesitated, wondering exactly how much she should tell her children. “The ad said the job comes with a cabin and twenty acres of land.”
The spoon was poised in front of Scotty’s mouth. “To keep?”
Abbey nodded. “But we’d need to live there for a year. I imagine there won’t be many applicants, but then I don’t know. There doesn’t seem to be an abundance of jobs for assistant librarians, either.”
“I could live anywhere for a year. Go for it, Mom!”
“Susan?” Abbey suspected the decision would be more difficult for her daughter.
“Will there be girls my age?”
“Probably, but I can’t guarantee that. The town only has 150
people, and it would be very different from the life we have here in Seattle.”
“Come on, Susan,” Scott urged. “We could have our very own house.”
Susan’s small shoulders heaved in a great sigh. “Do
you
want to move, Mommy?”
Abbey stroked her daughter’s hair. Call her greedy. Call her materialistic. Call her a sucker, but she couldn’t stop thinking about those twenty acres and that cabin. No mortgage. Land. Security. And a job she loved. All in Hard Luck, Alaska.
She inhaled deeply, then nodded.
“Then I guess it would be all right.”
Scott let out a holler and leapt from his chair. He grabbed Abbey’s hands and they danced around the room.
“I haven’t got the job yet,” Abbey cried, breathless.
“But you’ll get it,” Scott said confidently.
Abbey hoped her son was right.