Читать книгу To Love And Protect - Muriel Jensen - Страница 13
ОглавлениеBEN LOOKED FRESH and capable as he hauled the twelve-foot ladder Hector had loaned them out of the shed behind the restaurant. Corie, who hadn’t slept well at all, knew she looked a little like a refugee from a zombie walk. She picked up the back end of the ladder and helped him carry it to her truck.
They’d had a quiet breakfast at the Grill and then driven to Teresa’s to discover that her ladder wasn’t tall enough to reach the top of the Christmas tree and that she didn’t have enough ornaments. Corie had made a quick call to Hector, who’d agreed to lend them his ladder, but the matter of more ornaments had necessitated a craft project. Teresa and the children had been left in charge of resolving that problem.
“Where’d you find your keys?” Ben asked as he placed the ladder on the tarp that remained in her truck.
She walked around to open the driver’s-side door, smiling ruefully at him when they were both in the cab. “Bianca had them. She loves to put things in her purse.”
“Ah. The youngest Stripe. I noticed the purse. She doesn’t look big enough to carry it.”
“She’s tougher than she appears.”
Corie loved the way he identified the children. The Flores girls were the Stripe Sisters. The Santiago brothers, the Army.
“I should have thought about that but I was stressed and late for work. Karina, the middle sister, found them and gave them to me.” She pulled away from the front of the restaurant, executed a wide U-turn then headed for Teresa’s.
“Is a U-turn legal in Querida?” he asked, his elbow resting on his open window. She noticed he was holding on to the roof of the truck.
“Not sure,” she replied. “Why? You going to arrest me? You’re not even on duty. Especially not here.”
“A cop’s always on duty,” he corrected. “Depends on the danger of the situation to the public as to whether or not he steps in.”
“Am I scaring you?” she teased. “I thought you were fearless.”
“That’s our brother, Jack. And you did almost take out that trash box in front of Hector’s, then the mailbox across the street while executing the turn.” He grinned at her. “That would have gotten you a pricey traffic ticket in Beggar’s Bay. Don’t know what the law is in Querida.”
“I do it all the time and I’ve never gotten a ticket.”
“Let’s hope your luck continues. Nice of Hector to send pastries back for the kids.”
“They’ll love them with their hot chocolate. So will I.”
“I noticed your sweet tooth. You had three pieces of cake at Jack and Sarah’s wedding, as I recall.”
She was a little embarrassed that he’d noticed that. She’d been nervous. For the woman whose mother had gone to jail, whose father had been a drug dealer and whose stepmother disliked her, the Palmer-Reed family harmony had been alien territory. Their happiness in each other’s company had been so thick she’d been afraid someone would notice she felt out of place. She tended to overeat when she was nervous. “It’s not very polite to point it out.”
He laughed lightly. “It’s not like it’s an evil quality or anything. It’s just nice to know you have a weakness. I’m guessing you’ve spent most of your life pretending you don’t have any.”
She ignored that and kept driving. He was spot-on, actually. She hated that about him.
* * *
FOR THE FIRST fifteen minutes of tree decorating, Ben thought he would go insane. Kids were everywhere. It was just the same ten kids, with Roberto safely tucked away in a playpen to protect him from being trampled, but the noise level and general activity made it seem as though they’d doubled, or even tripled, in number.
He thought it remarkable that the women didn’t seem to notice. They directed the wrapping of lights around the bottom branches and let the older children climb Teresa’s short ladder to help with the upper branches. Teresa hovered around them as Corie occupied the younger ones, who were stretching out the colorful paper chains they’d made.
Ben watched the happy, laughing faces. Only Rosie was looking on with a strange detachment that finally caught Corie’s attention. The lights were now halfway up the tree and the smaller children were placing ornaments on the branches they could reach. As Ben opened the large boxes of decorations, he heard Corie try to encourage Rosie’s participation.
“I think you should put up that pretty purple chain you made,” she said, catching Rosie’s hand and leading her toward the tree.
Rosie resisted. “I want to save it,” she said, “for our tree when my dad comes to get me.”
“He might not come in time for Christmas.” Corie knelt beside her.
Rosie met her gaze with firm, dark eyes. “He’s coming.”
Putting an arm around her, Corie squeezed her close. “Okay. Why don’t we put it on our tree and, when he comes, you can still take it home with you for your tree?”
Appearing reluctant to accept the compromise, Rosie sighed. The child reminded him of Corie. Her own imperfect family made it hard for her to give or to accept love when it was offered from someone else. She finally went with Corie to the big box that had held the chains the children had made, pulled out the remaining bright purple one and looked for the right spot on the tree.
Rosie pointed over her head. With the two ladders occupied, Corie stood on tiptoe to see if she could reach. She was at least a foot short.
Ben went to help. Moving Corie aside with a teasing, “Out of my way, short stuff,” he lifted Rosie onto his shoulders. She squealed in surprise then giggled when she found herself high enough to place the chain a third of the way from the top.
“How does that look?” Rosie asked of the room in general.
“It’s beautiful.” Corie stood back to admire it and Teresa nodded.
“Good job,” Ben agreed, lowering Rosie to her feet.
By the time they broke for pastries and cocoa, Ben concluded that all he could do in such a situation was abandon the need to control and simply embrace the chaos. Teresa had a little directorial control, but, for the most part, let the children experience the thrill of decorating by themselves.
They all sat around the large kitchen table, Corie and Teresa making sure there was an equitable distribution of treats. Ben leaned against the counter with a cup of coffee, listening in on the conversations.
Rosie and the Stripe Sisters talked about what they would do when their parents came for them. There were small, homey plans that involved doing their chores and cleaning their rooms. Lupe, the oldest sister, intended to plant flowers.
“What if we live in an apartment?” Karina asked.
“You can have flowers in an apartment,” Rosie said. “In a pot instead of in the ground.”
“But that’s not a garden,” Lupe protested.
“Sometimes you can’t have a garden,” Rosie said. “Sometimes you can only have a pot.”
The girls nodded seriously. Ben thought about how sage an observation that was.
“I’m gonna learn to play football. Catch, Peterson.” Carlos pretended to throw a pass. Soren, across the table, reached a skinny arm up to catch the imaginary ball. The two boys laughed.
“We don’t have a football,” Rigo, the next oldest Santiago brother, pointed out.
“That’s okay, I do.” Soren picked up his cocoa. “When your family comes, you can have my football.” He shrugged.
Ben suspected the boy didn’t believe that would happen.
“Maybe Santa will bring us one,” the youngest Santiago brother said hopefully.
Miguel, brother number three, chimed in with, “You’d have to be good for that to happen, Tonio.”
The boys laughed. “We’d better take Soren’s football.”
Corie came with the coffeepot to top up Ben’s mug. “You doing all right?” she asked. “These guys can be hard on the nerves when they’re excited. You got your strength training in for the day by lifting them all up to hang their paper chains. It’s fun for them to go beyond their reach.”
He had to agree with that. “It’s fun for all of us. What brought each of them here?”
She put the pot back on the warmer and came to lean beside him. “The Flores girls’—or Stripe Sisters, as you call them—mother is a widow and lost her job. She’s being retrained at a place in Florida that teaches food service skills and hotel management. Teresa got her into the program—it’s run by friends of hers. The Santiago Army’s dad was injured on the job in an oil field and, when he recovered, he went for retraining, too.”
“The kids have been here through all that?”
“Eight months for the Flores girls, six for the Santiago boys.”
“What about Rosie?”
“Teresa’s been in touch with her father, who is a US citizen living in Mexico. Her mom was in poor health and died at home and the neighbors brought Rosie here so her father, who remained in Mexico, could come for her and take her home without having to deal with the system.”
“Her parents were divorced?”
“I think so. Not sure. He doesn’t think he can support her but has been looking for a solution.”
Ben said in annoyance, “Like a job?”
Corie hitched a shoulder. “Teresa tries not to make judgments. Soren was the son of a border guard who died in the line of duty. He’d been a friend of Teresa’s, so she took Soren in. He’s sort of happy here.”
“Sort of? Shouldn’t a kid be definitely happy?”
“Ideally. It’s just not in the cards for some.”
He thought he heard a personal note in her voice. “Like you?”
Her eyes narrowed. “I was happy when I was really little. I remember Jack taking good care of me. I didn’t even realize how bad our mother was until they sent Cassie and me back to our fathers. That part of my life was okay until my father died. Then it was awful. Until Teresa found me when I was twelve.”
Ben sighed, realizing how much strength was around the table—and standing beside him. “Lots of sad stories.”
“Yes. Well. It’s a foster home. This is often sad-story central.” She straightened from the counter. “It’s too bad you’ll be going home soon. The kids really like you.”
“I have some things to do first.” He toasted her with his mug. “You’ll have to deal with me a little—”
The sound of the doorbell rang through the house. Teresa, arbitrating a dispute between Soren and Rosie, looked up.
Corie stayed her with a hand. “I’ll get it.” She set her cup down and crossed the living room to pull the door open.
Gil Bigelow, Querida’s chief of police, stood there in his dark blue uniform, his brimmed hat at a testy angle over light blue eyes. His craggy face was etched in stern lines. He was another good friend of Robert Pimental’s and one of Corie’s least favorite people. When Pimental had had her arrested for assault, Bigelow hadn’t even listened to her side of the story. If it hadn’t been for that passing delivery person, she’d probably be doing time today.
Bigelow’s hands rested lightly on his creaky leather belt overloaded with tools of the job. Teresa came up beside Corie.
“Good morning, Chief,” she said. “What is it?”
He firmed his stance. “I’m here to tell you that you have to be out of here in five days. According to Mr. Tyree, you’ve ignored all his efforts to encourage you to abide by the rules of your renter’s agreement. You argued with the assistant he sent. Therefore—”
“That isn’t true, Gil Bigelow, and you know it.” Angry color filled Teresa’s cheeks. “I am behind in the rent, but I’ve told him over and over again about the leaky ceiling, the bad plumbing in the kitchen and the wide cracks in the veranda. Those are his responsibilities as my landlord and he’s done nothing about them.”
“Now, Teresa, there’s no point in getting hysterical. The law is the law. He has the right—”
“I am not hysterical. I’m loud because you don’t hear me otherwise.”
Corie struggled to remain calm. “He’s done nothing but harass Teresa since he inherited the house from his father. He—”
“Pardon me.” Corie was completely surprised by the sound of a male voice behind her. A hand on her upper arm moved her aside as Ben stepped between her and Teresa. All the children, she noticed, had clustered around them, Rosie holding Roberto.
Ben extended his hand to Bigelow, his manner courteous but somehow charged, as though a current ran beneath the calm. The chief seemed to recognize it. “Good morning, Chief,” Ben said. “I’m Ben Palmer. I’m visiting for a few days. What’s this about eviction?”
Bigelow sized up the intruder then widened his stance, as though taking up more room somehow expanded his position. “This,” he said, his voice lowering a pitch, “is none of your business, Mr. Palmer. It’s between Ms. McGinnis and me.”
Ben continued to smile. “I’m sure you don’t want to violate the law, Chief. As a police officer, myself, I know that only a county sheriff or one of his deputies can enforce an eviction order, and then, only at the end of the court process.”
Anger and offended male ego lit Bigelow’s eyes. He cleared his throat. “Where you from, Palmer?” he asked.
“Oregon.”
“Well, this is Texas.”
“Right. But unless Texas has seceded, this law applies to you. It’s a federal law. It applies everywhere in the United States. You can’t make her leave.”
The chief took what he likely thought was an intimidating step toward Ben.
Ben stood firm and watched him approach, his manner still polite.
“I want her,” the chief said, a furious tremor in his voice, “and the children out of here in five days.”
Ben shook his head. “The landlord has to file an eviction notice. That would be a five-day notice for nonpayment of rent, which isn’t the case here—at least not without good cause. A ten-day notice for a breach of the lease, which isn’t the case, either. So, a thirty-day notice would be required. Still, the tenant could contest it. A formal eviction notice has to be filed first before a court case can proceed. At the very least, Ms. McGinnis can remain here for the next two months.”
Ben’s manner changed, the smile gone as he took a step toward the chief. “You’re the one who has to leave. You have no right to be here, therefore, you’re trespassing.”
“I,” Bigelow said, “am a representative of the law.”
“Without legitimate reason for the eviction you’re trying to serve, without the required paperwork and, apparently, without a working knowledge of the law you claim to represent.”
Corie’s heart pounded as the men stared at each other. Bigelow was clearly on the brink of violence, Ben waiting for it.
Expecting the chief to lay a hand on Ben at any second, Corie was surprised when he inhaled a breath and seemed to think better of it. Wisely so, she thought. Ben was a good fifteen years younger and considerably more fit.
“We’ll see about this, Palmer,” the chief said. Then he turned, strode toward his up-accessorized police car, got in and sped away.
Teresa threw her arms around Ben’s neck. “How do you know all that?” she asked.
“We had a situation at an apartment building at home. My partner and I were called in to keep the peace until everything was done properly. I learned a lot.”
Corie was astonished by what had just happened. Ben had defended them against one of Querida’s bullies. He’d stood up to the police chief’s intimidation tactics on her behalf. Well, not her behalf. He’d stood up for Teresa and the children, but their problem was as important to her as any of her own, so he might as well have defended her.
“We don’t have to go?” Rosie asked. “Ben made it so we don’t have to go, right?”
Soren laughed and patted Ben’s arm. “Ben scared the police chief,” he said. “We can stay for two more months.”
Corie ushered the children back while Teresa pulled herself together. The past year had been a nightmare with Tyree’s repeated threats to evict her. She held on to Ben the way Corie wanted to—as though he were a strong handhold in a hurricane. And it had been so long since either of them had anyone to hold on to in tough times except each other.
Corie sat the children at the table again, gave them each another pastry half, knowing she was taking the coward’s way out to soothe their nerves but accepting that it was expedient. She made more cocoa, turned up the Christmas carols and got a discussion going about what they should make for Teresa’s present.
* * *
BEN LOOKED DOWN into Teresa’s tear-filled eyes and felt an eerie change take place inside him.
She hugged him fiercely again. “Thank you, thank you!” she whispered thickly. “I’m so glad you were here.”
He patted her shoulder, feeling his whole world go south on him. To be honest, he had to admit that it had begun when he and Jack and Sarah had followed Corie on her path to theft and vengeance.
“We’ve held him off for now,” he said, watching her pull tissues out of her pocket and dab at her nose. “But this is just going to continue unless we settle this once and for all.”
She looked up at him doubtfully. “Tyree doesn’t care about our situation. His father was a good man, but all Cyrus cares about is getting me out. I hate it when the children are worried. I wish they could just go to school and come home and play and be happy.”
“Are their parents really coming back? Any of them?”
“Absolutely,” she said, her eyes suddenly dry, her customary confidence returning. “They’re not bad people. They’ve just had bad things happen to them. I started this place so that when parents are ready to take their children back, they don’t have to wait forever for the court to do its thing. They can just reclaim their children and make a home again. They’ll be back. I know Joel Santiago and Amelia Flores thought they’d be finished with school by Christmas.”
“All right,” he heard himself say, “then we’ll do everything we can to see that you stay.”
“How will we do that?”
“Leave it to me.”
“You’d have to stay around for a while.”
Yeah. He was getting that.
He’d never been a selfish person—he’d been raised better than that. But his life so far, apart from his job, had been about doing what he wanted to do. He was enthused and excited about his plans to start an investigative agency. He was willing to work hard and had a fairly good business head. He could make a success of Palmer Private Investigations.
But he wasn’t going to be able to launch his business until he had Teresa and Corie and the children on a safer footing and he’d resigned from the Beggar’s Bay police force. And then there was the jewelry... He had no illusions that he could single-handedly solve either issue. He needed an ally in the cause, but he was going to do his best to brighten up the children’s world and give them the stability they deserved.
Teresa hooked her arm in his and tugged him back into the house. “Thanks, Ben, for caring about us.”
“I’m glad I was here.”
“And for agreeing to stay.”
He was about to deny that he had done that, but it would have been pointless. He hadn’t said the words but in his heart he’d made the promise.
And it was all Corie’s fault.