Season of Sisters (44 page)

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Authors: Geralyn Dawson

BOOK: Season of Sisters
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Brown wounded-doe eyes shifted toward her. "Tess!"

Tears bursting anew, Chloe collapsed in her arms.

Tess grabbed hold tight, then guided her sister awkwardly toward the love seat. Chloe's tears swelled to sobs as she sank onto the seat. "Hush now," Tess said in soothing tone. "Calm down. It's all right. I'm here now."

"Thank goodness," Chloe gasped between sobbing hiccups. "Everything's falling apart. Everything is so mixed up. I'm so mixed up. I don't know what to do anymore, Tess."

She's never known what to do.

Tired from traveling, weary from worry, Tess reached inside herself for patience. She came up empty. "What are you going to do?" she repeated, plopping down beside her sister. "I would think that's obvious. You're going to have a baby, Chloe. A baby isn't a hobby or a cause. Motherhood is not a phase you can abandon or outgrow. Motherhood is for life."

"I know that!" Chloe clutched her belly protectively. She met Tess's gaze, her eyes gleaming and fearful. "I know! That's
why...
I can't... what if... if..."

"What, Chloe?"

"What if Snake doesn't come back for me?" she wailed.

Tess sensed that her sister seldom voiced that particular fear, and both her heart and frustration crumbled. "It'll be okay, honey. I promise. We'll figure something out."

"I have a job. I work here, at Harmon Lanes. At the beauty shop, actually. I do nails." When Tess glanced down at her sister's neglected nails, Chloe added, "I'm on maternity leave."

Tess was happy to hear the defensive note in Chloe's voice rather than the hopelessness she'd heard moments ago.

Chloe grabbed another tissue from the box on the end table and blew her nose. "I have a place to live. Sort of. It's Snake's home. He grew up in Cedar Dell."

"I met a few people on my way to the bathroom," Tess said. "Someone said something about an eviction notice?"

"It's his mother. She's giving me a terrible time. She's an awful, wicked woman." Chloe told a long, involved tale involving her boyfriend's mother and green Jell-O and mean spirits. She made Widow Duncan sound like a small-town version of Cruella DeVille.

When Chloe had completed her tale, she sniffed hard, then squared her shoulders. "Snake told me I could stay there, and I refuse to let anyone make me leave."

"That's the spirit." Tess reached out and tucked an errant strand of Chloe's dark-honey hair behind her ear. "We'll fight the old bat and her lawyer, and we'll win. Don't worry."

"I knew you'd help me. But that eviction notice... I don't know, Tess. They say Nick Sutherland is an awfully good lawyer."

"Psst." Tess dismissed him with a twist of her wrist. "I'm an awfully good manager, and I know just how to handle lawyers. Believe me. No small-town Texas shyster is going to get the best of me. Now." She rose gracefully to her feet and brushed a piece of lint from her black silk slacks. "How about we rejoin the others, I grab a piece of cake, then we wrap this party up and head to your place. You can show me all the gifts you received."

Chloe nodded, her smile revealing the natural beauty Tess was accustomed to seeing. "Did you bring me a present?"

"Ah, now you're feeling more like your old self, aren't you?" Tess handed her the gift basket, and they ooh'd and aah'd over the contents for a moment, then rejoined the baby shower. Chloe apologized prettily for her outburst, and the ladies of Cedar Dell graciously blamed it all on hormones.

Twenty minutes later, the party wound down. Since all the gifts wouldn't fit in Tess's rental car, Kate Cooper offered to drive Chloe home, as previously planned. For a moment, Tess doubted her sister could hoist herself up into Kate's SUV, but Stewart Mooney arrived just in time to provide a helping hand.

Tess actually felt hopeful and more than a little excited as she followed the truck down a narrow farm road. They were having a baby. She was going to be an aunt.

"Auntie Tess," she said aloud. Good. That's good. She wondered what names Chloe had chosen. Please not something from her hippie phase, like Amber Dawn or Twinkle Starlight, she thought.

Maybe it'd snow in Cedar Dell tomorrow, too.

The drive took longer than Tess had anticipated. Twenty minutes after leaving the community center, they passed a moonlit vineyard and a pretty Spanish-style house. Could this be Chloe's home? Tess could see why she wouldn't want to leave. When the truck in front of her passed the driveway, she murmured, "Obviously not."

Her thoughts turned to Snake's mother and her eviction notice, which in turn made Tess think about the attorney. Nicholas Sutherland. Chloe had called him Nick. Kate Cooper said he was a stand-up guy. Yeah, right. What sort of stand-up guy would help evict a pregnant woman from her home?

Kate's SUV slowed down, and her right turn signal began to blink. Tess didn't see an electric light in sight, and concern niggled at her mind. This was the middle of nowhere.

Her car bounced on the rutted dirt road, and her concern deepened to worry. When an animal dashed across the road in front of her car and she recognized the gleaming golden eyes of a coyote, her worry turned to fear. Then they arrived at Chloe's trailer.

In the privacy of her car, Tess let out a scream.

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Excerpt from

 

My Big Old Texas Heartache

 

by

 

Geralyn Dawson

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 1

 

Kate Harmon often thought that living the good life was like putting on a pair of panty hose. Just when she finally wiggled her way to a comfortable fit, she'd invariably get a runner.

At least tonight's runner was literal rather than figurative. Scowling, she kicked off a heel and eyed the spot where her little toe poked through nylon. "It's Monday night. I shouldn't have to wear hose on Monday night. That should be a law. A Constitutional right. Number seven in the Women's Bill of Rights."

"What's number six?" her seventeen-year-old son asked.

"It involves underwire bras."

"I don't think a Women's Bill of Rights exists," called Adele Watkins from the kitchen. Ryan's former nanny and Kate's dearest friend in the entire world, Adele completed the family of three who lived in a new house in a North Dallas suburb.

"We don't have a Women's Bill of Rights? See, that's the problem. Ryan, maybe you should study law rather than engineering. Think how proud I would be if my son freed the women of America from Monday night panty hose."

"Quit babbling, Kate, and get ready for your date. You have no reason to be nervous."

Kate made a face toward the kitchen and Adele.

Ryan shot her a cocky grin from the sofa, where he lounged on his spine. "I'll free you now, Mom. Don't wear 'em. Nobody wears hose anymore. They’re totally out of style. Show a little bare leg with that snazzy black dress and make him drool."

"Ryan Scott Harmon. What a thing to say to your mother."

He shrugged. "Face it, Mom. You're hot. All my buddies think so."

She hesitated, pleased, then preened just a bit. "Really?"

"Yeah. For an old lady."

She threw a sofa pillow at him. "Brat. Don't you have homework to do? If not, I can find you some chores."

"Can't do it." He flashed her that devilish grin that invariably reminded her of his father, then sauntered toward the stairs. "I've got a ball game in half an hour."

"You do? Oh no. I'm going to miss it. I thought your weekday baseball games were all on Thursday this season."

"They are. This is basketball. Girls nine-to-eleven church league. I'm subbing as a referee because Mark Johnson has a big chemistry test tomorrow."

"Oh, Ryan. I'm sorry I can't be there. You know how much I hate to miss—"

"Mo-om," he interrupted, pivoting around. He placed his hands on her shoulders, leaned down, and pressed a kiss to her forehead. "I'm a ref; not a player. Parents don't come to games where their kid is only refereeing. You don't need to feel guilty about this one. In fact, I'd be embarrassed if you went."

"I don't care if you're embarrassed," Kate grumbled. "I love attending your ball games. I'm a proud member of the Bleacher Butt Brigade."

She'd labored long and hard to get to this point. Single mothers who worked full-time and attended college missed out on most Little League and Pee-Wee events. Only during the last couple of years had she been able to watch his games with any regularity.

"You're almost a senior in high school, so my opportunities to play proud-mother-in-the-stands are coming to an end all too soon. When you're in college back East, I won't be able to make many intramural games in Cambridge or New Haven."

"C'mon, Mom." He looked away and shrugged. "Go lose the hose so you're perfect for your date."

"It's not a date," she insisted. It couldn't be. "It's a business dinner."

"Uh-huh. With
Dallas Magazine's
'Hunk Lawyer of the Year' at one of the hottest restaurants in the Metroplex."

Kate shot him a chastising look.

He grinned back at her. "I heard you talking to Adele."

"You shouldn't eavesdrop, and of course I have to wear panty hose. It’s a business event."

"I could make a comment here about garter belts that would probably get me in trouble." He kissed her forehead and moved away. "Enjoy yourself. You don't go out nearly enough. You can come to my ball game on Thursday, and Saturday we have a doubleheader."

A doubleheader. She loved doubleheaders. As Ryan bounded up the stairs to don his official's black-and-whites, Kate's gaze once again snagged on the run in her stockings. She sighed and glanced at the clock. Nicholas Sutherland was due to arrive in half an hour, and despite what she’d said to her son, she still hadn't decided if she had a client meeting or a hot date. Her stomach staggered at the thought.

She'd taken the call from the offices of Sutherland, Mason, and Post expecting a question about one of her accounting clients. Hearing Nicholas Sutherland's resonant voice requesting the pleasure of her company for dinner to discuss a matter of mutual importance had her all but oozing from her chair. She'd met the man briefly twice before, once at a Dallas charity 10K run, and once at a United Way leadership meeting. He'd never paid particular attention to her. Not
that
kind of particular.

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