Читать книгу Little Matchmakers - Jennifer Greene, Jennifer Greene - Страница 10

Chapter Four

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Tucker glanced at his watch. What was it about Tuesdays? He’d been chasing his tail all morning, and now it was almost 1:00 p.m. “Hey, Will! Get the lead out!” he yelled, as he hiked toward the truck.

A group of fifty high-school kids were scheduled around five, and before they arrived, there was still a ton of prep to do. The camp cook needed a sort-out of the menu. The truck bringing supplies and freezer goods for the week was overdue. The camp counselors needed one last run-through of the week’s activity plans before the new gang arrived.

He’d volunteered to drop Will at Plain Vanilla—and pick up Pete at the same time. But running this late, he just needed to get the show on the road.

Will lumbered outside, shot his father a look, then lumbered into the truck. Tucker recognized his son’s “delinquent” face. As soon as they were buckled in, he turned the key. “What’s the silent deal? I thought you were on board with this idea.”

“I was. Until I got a stomachache.”

“When did the stomachache hit?”

“About an hour ago.”

About an hour ago—if Tucker remembered right—Will had taken off right after an early lunch with a fly rod. He’d come back whistling, changed clothes. Now, the silence.

Only one road led down from the mountaintop. One corkscrew turn followed another. Each bend and twist showed a different vista—a flash of mountain cliff, the velvet of green wooded shade, a burst of sunlight. Tucker had driven the road a million times, never tired of it. He wouldn’t use the word magical because that was too corny. But he’d never been able to put an anxious childhood behind him until settling on the mountain for good.

Growing up a MacKinnon had made Tucker determined that Will’s childhood would be different than his.

“Did you change your mind about working with Garnet?” he asked his son.

“No. Not exactly.”

“But you’re bugged about something.”

“Not exactly.”

“Could you maybe pin down some ‘exactlys’ for me?”

Will scowled. “Her place is kind of interesting. She’s okay, too. I mean, she was at school a lot. So I know she’s okay.”

“But …?” Sometimes communicating with his son was like trying to prod a bear out of hibernation.

“But she might not want me around, Dad. I don’t want her to be stuck with me.”

Because Tucker didn’t have a temper, he didn’t want to wring his ex-wife’s neck. He just calmly, rationally considered how much damn harm the woman had done to their son. “Garnet asked if you were willing to help her. She’s not even as tall as you, Will. Probably doesn’t weigh nearly as much. And there are no guys around there. She was just hoping you might be willing to do some guy-type projects with her.”

“I told you. I like that idea. In fact, I was really charged to go this morning. I don’t even care if she pays me. It’s just …”

Tucker waited. Waiting had always been fun for him. Like poking a needle at a toothache.

“… I just don’t know if I’ll know what to say to her.”

His son was worried about that? Hell, Tucker didn’t have a clue what to say to her, either. It’d taken several years of their sons being in the same class for Garnet to even recognize he was alive. And then he’d practically had to knock her down to win some conversation.

Less than ten minutes passed before they pulled into her drive. A half-dozen cars were parked in front of the shop, a variety of customers wandering around outside. Still, he noticed her first.

Her hair was bunched under a straw hat. She was wearing a sleeveless tank with the Plain Vanilla logo, shorts, sandals. She was laughing with a customer. The sun sheened on her bare shoulders and toned upper arms.

She shaded her forehead when she saw the truck, left the customer and immediately strode toward them with a smile. A smile, Tucker noted, that was for Will rather than him.

“Hey, guys.” She had a no-nonsense stride, pure girl, but still lithe and easy. “Man, am I glad you’re here, Will. I have a problem you could really help me with. It’s a secret that I just can’t share with anyone here. So I need somebody I can trust.”

“I can keep a secret,” Will promised her.

“Great. You don’t mind getting a little dirty, do you?”

“No. It’s okay. I like getting dirty.”

“No kidding?” Garnet shot Tucker a quick wink, but really, she hadn’t noticed him yet. She was still all about straight eye contact with Will. “I figured by midafternoon, we’d both need a break. But I wasn’t sure what you liked to snack on? So I got a couple different kinds of juice, made some fresh chocolate chip cookies …”

“I really like cookies.”

“Oh, thank heavens. I wasn’t sure.” She shot Tucker another wink, but unless he stood on his head, he doubted she was ever going to look at him directly.

The screen door to the store banged open, and out came Pete. Tucker wanted to scratch his neck. Petie had the same expression as his Will had had this morning. The Christian-entering-the-Romans’-lion’s-den look. The long-suffering look. The I’ll-do-this-but-you’ll-have-to-kill-me-to-have-fun look.

“Hey, Pete,” Tucker said.

“Hey, Mr. MacKinnon.” The kid was dressed appropriately. Sturdy shorts. Short-sleeved shirt. Running shoes. His hair looked like a cap, as if it’d been cut with a bowl, and framed his face, showed off his round glasses … and the half-dozen freckles on his nose.

“I’m glad we’re trying this trade thing,” Tucker said genially. “Your mom said you’re pretty good with numbers, organizing things.”

“Yeah. I am, sometimes.”

“I’m not sure anyone can organize me, Pete. Grown men have tried. But I sure could use some help if you’d be willing to give it a shot.”

The face looked a little brighter. Still five shades of glum, but not quite so miserable.

“Well, hop in and we’ll take off.”

Petie did … and for all of three and a half seconds, Tucker had Garnet’s attention. She came closer to the truck door, took off the straw hat. Her hair shivered and shook in the sun, finally freed from confinement, making him think that’s how it’d look when she woke up in the morning. Or after a nap.

Or right after making love.

That thought came from nowhere. Tucker punched his inner censor, smiled at her like a normal human being instead of the lovesick idiot he was turning into around her. “Not sure of this …” he murmured.

“You, too? I’m afraid we’ve invited a disaster on each other.”

“Yeah. I saw the expressions. Well … we’ll retrade around six-thirty?”

“Sounds right. I’ll bring Will earlier if there’s any problem or he wants to go home.” She lifted a hand.

He got it, she wanted to touch knuckles. They were, after all, in this project together. So he leaned forward to touch her knuckles, and again, she looked straight at him.

Just like that, it happened again. A wildfire of emotion, torching through his veins. Need, coiling like a snake. Want, whispering like silk through his witless mind.

His response was adolescent and annoying as hell.

But it was real.

If their sons would just go along with their crazy plan, he’d have chances to see her again. To be around her. To see if she ever peeled off that careful, friendly veneer for a man … or if she could be coaxed to.

Garnet was late—not for the first time—but there was no speeding on the twisty curves near the mountaintop. She breathed a sigh of relief when she finally saw the hand-carved sign reading MacKinnon Breakaway.

Next to her, Will immediately piped up, “Yeah, that’s us. The house is on the right, Mrs. G.”

She pulled into the driveway and braked. The plan was to drop off Will and pick up Petie—and immediately skedaddle. Her son had to be starving. She sure was.

Still, she soaked in the view for a few moments. She had to admit she’d been curious about where Tucker lived.

“The house started out as my great-grandpa’s,” Will told her. “But my grandpa just called it the lodge. But when we moved here, my dad built cabins for all the campers and retreaters to stay. He didn’t want strangers underfoot right where he lived. That’s what he said, anyway.”

“It’s really cool,” she told him.

“Yeah, I know.” Will opened the van door and hit the ground running. She followed more slowly, still studying the sprawling log home. It wasn’t really as big as a lodge, more set up as a country place that could accommodate a big family or family gatherings. Gabled roof. Two stone chimneys. Old, majestic shade trees. A veranda on the second story, wrapping around the whole house.

Little Matchmakers

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