by Susan Crosby
It was hard to believe that until two months ago the kid had been homeless. He’d already packed about fifteen pounds onto his six-foot frame, but still didn’t weigh over one-fifty. He kept his hair a little long, and girls had started giving him the eye.
Kincaid waved at Honey, then they grabbed seats in the only open booth.
“Be right there, boys!” she called out, a plate in each hand, her long salt-and-pepper braid swinging side to side behind her.
“Eric called today,” Dylan said. “He and Marcy are coming up to see Gavin and Becca on Saturday. They invited me for lunch.” He looked away, his attention caught by four girls at a far booth who were sneaking glances at him and giggling.
Eric and Marcy Sheridan had rescued Dylan from the streets a couple months back. Eric’s sister, Becca, had recently married Shana’s brother, Gavin. Almost everyone in Chance City seemed to have a family connection to someone else.
Dylan dragged his gaze back to Kincaid. “Anyway, do you have something lined up for me on Saturday or is it okay if I have lunch with them?”
“You’re going to be a little busy on Saturday.”
Disappointment dulled his eyes, but Kincaid knew he wouldn’t argue about it. Dylan was grateful for the job, and more responsible than most eighteen-year-olds.
“You’re going to be moving,” Kincaid said, timing his words to coincide with Honey coming up to get their orders.
“Moving? Where? Why?” Dylan asked.
“Into the apartment above Respite.”
Dylan frowned. “That beauty shop place downtown?”
“It’s a salon, yes, but also a day spa. There’s a nice one-bedroom above it.”
“Where’s Shana going?” Honey asked.
“I hired her through At Your Service to work for me. I need a housekeeper, for one thing, but more than that. Shana is perfect for the job.”
Honey’s brows rose. “Isn’t that interesting.”
“It’s not personal, Honey. It’s strictly business.”
“I get an apartment all to myself?” Dylan asked, his eyes wide.
“Yes. It’s a building I own, so you’ll be paying me rent. I figure you’ve been freeloading off me for long enough.”
Dylan’s grin lit up the space.
“So…Emma, too, I suppose,” Honey said.
“Of course.”
“I’ve never seen you interact with a little one before.”
Probably because he hadn’t. He didn’t have an opinion on children one way or the other, but he also wasn’t going to be taking care of her. “I think she’ll enjoy having a yard to play in,” he said to Honey. “And I know Shana’s happy not to be commuting to Sacramento. It’s a good fit for everyone.”
Kincaid’s nerves settled some. Honey had reacted to the news, but she didn’t turn around and announce it to the crowd to egg on some bigger reaction. She would spread the word without fanfare, he figured.
Kincaid and Dylan ordered their dinners and talked about what it would mean for Dylan to have his own place, and all the responsibilities it entailed. Kincaid wasn’t sure Dylan was completely ready for the move, but it was the only way Kincaid could help Shana—at least, that she would accept. He’d keep a close eye on Dylan, make sure he didn’t flounder in his independence. Being homeless and forced to fend for himself was different from living in an apartment alone, where there were more temptations, not just a need to survive.
“Can we go see the place?” Dylan asked as Kincaid was paying the bill a while later.
“Not tonight. She said you should call her, though, and come over so she can help you redecorate a little. It’s kinda girly right now, I guess.”
The four teenage girls walked past them, each one smiling at Dylan. Kincaid had lived on his own at sixteen. He knew the potential hazards of it, especially when it came to the opposite sex. “We’ll need to have a birds-and-bees talk,” he said.
Dylan rolled his eyes.
“If you’re as smart as I think you are, you’ll pay attention to what I have to say,” Kincaid said.
“Yes, sir.”
Kincaid laughed at the military tone of voice.
They headed toward the diner door. “So, Shana’s moving in, huh?” one customer asked.
“To work for me,” Kincaid said, not stopping to engage in conversation. Fortunately, he’d never given the town reason to gossip about him through the years. He’d dated women outside of town, asked a fair price for the work he did and completed jobs on time. Still, even after nineteen years as a member of the community, he wasn’t well-known enough to be kidded much.
Which might change now that he’d shaken up his predictable world.
“What’s the big deal about Shana moving in as your housekeeper?” Dylan asked after they’d left the diner. “Lots of people have live-in help.”
“She’s a young, attractive, single woman, and this town loves its gossip.” Kincaid pulled out his keys and toyed with them. “Remember that. And its citizens have long memories, too. It’s like one big family, with its rivalries and devotion.”
“Thanks. I’ll remember.” Dylan looked around. “You know, when you first offered me the chance to come up here and work, I really wanted the job but I wasn’t sure about being so far from city life. But now I like it. It’s old, you know? I love knowing that gold miners settled the town all those years ago, and that the downtown is just a couple of blocks long and has wooden sidewalks that make noise when you walk on them, and people say hello all the time.”
“Even if everyone knows your business?” Kincaid asked.
“People knew who I was right away. That was cool. Plus, I like all the trees and hills and the great view of the Sierras. I can see myself staying here forever.”
Chance City did get into one’s blood, Kincaid thought. He’d felt the same affinity for it when he’d landed here. “You’re right. It’s a good town. See you at home.”
Home. Kincaid’s quiet home had been disrupted by having Dylan live with him, and it was about to be disrupted more. Much more. On the other hand, it should be more organized, too, having Shana around to take over some of his responsibilities. That much was the truth.
He just had to make sure she never found out why he’d offered her the job. He couldn’t be responsible for her running away again.
For someone who’d built his reputation on being a man of his word, that would be a death knell to him.
Chapter Three
Kincaid’s house was set back from the street by at least a hundred feet. Shana maneuvered her car down the long, curving driveway surrounded by pine and oak trees of varying heights and density, which mostly blocked the house from view, at least low to the ground.
“Sure is dark,” she said, then made the final turn and stopped in front of a large lodgelike structure, with a well-lit front porch.
“Dark,” Emma said from her car seat.
“I’ll bet it’s pretty during the day, though. What do you think, peapod? Look at all those windows. The view must be spectacular.”
Emma babbled her response, although “pretty”—her newest word in her rapidly expanding vocabulary—came through loud and clear mid-paragraph, even if it did sound more like “pity.”
Shana got Emma from the backseat and headed up the stairs of the impressive structure, so suited to its environment. According to Aggie, he’d built the house himself about four years ago. Apparently everyone had talked about it, because his original goal had been to sell it, then he hadn’t, surprising them all. They’d wondered why one man would need a house with five bedrooms. There’d even been a pool going for a while about when he would get married, but it never happened, and the gossip eventually died off, although everyone had wondered if he’d had his heart broken by a rejection.
Kincaid opened the front door and said hello before she could knock. He wore jeans, a plaid flannel shirt and thick socks. His shirtsleeves were rolled up a few turns, revealing muscular forearms. Strong. She associated the
word with him more than any other.
“Cat got your tongue?” he asked, cocking his head.
“Kitty?” Emma asked, looking around. “Me down,” she said, wriggling. “Kitty.” Her tone was the same insistent one she used to say “cookie.”
“There’s no kitty, peapod,” Shana said. “Or is there?”
“No pets at all,” Kincaid said. “Come in out of the cold. I built a fire. Don’t worry. It’s got a large, sturdy screen. I made adjustments to it today to affix it to the stone. There’s no danger to Emma.”
His consideration caught her off guard. “That’s very thoughtful of you.”
“Well, selfish, too,” he said. “I like my fires in winter and didn’t want to give them up.” He turned to Emma. “How are you, Miss Emma?”
“Do you remember Kincaid, Emma?” Shana asked. “Can you say Kincaid?”
Emma shook her head, her thumb stuck firmly in her mouth.
“It’s a new word, isn’t it? Please try, Emma. Say Kincaid.”
She gave Kincaid a long look, then said, “Kinky.”
Shana slapped a hand over her mouth, stifling a laugh. “Almost, baby. Try again. Kincaid.”
“Kinky,” Emma said, louder.
“Kinky it is,” Kincaid said, not seeming bothered by it.
“If it’s any consolation,” Shana said, “she started calling Dylan ‘Dilly.’”
“I’d rather be Kinky than Dilly.”
“I’m sure.” She smiled. “Where is he, anyway?”
“He drove to Sacramento to buy some posters, which apparently you suggested for his new place.”
“I don’t think he’s a wildflower-print kind of guy, do you?”
Kincaid shook his head. He led them toward the fireplace, which took up a good portion of one wall and was bracketed by floor-to-ceiling windows, triple-paned, he said, for temperature control. The furnishings were perfect for the lodgelike environment, overscale and masculine, and yet not so masculine as to feel sterile.
“Me down,” Emma said again. Shana set her on the floor, and she toddled closer to the fireplace, coming to a stop several feet from it. “Pretty.”
Shana joined her, taking off her tiny jacket, as well as her own. Kincaid took both and hung them on a rack by the front door.
“Your home is beautiful,” she said.
“Thanks. Would you like to see the rest?”
“Yes. Come on, Emma.”
Emma went ahead of them, so they followed her lead. She took them through the dining area on the opposite side of the living room, which also had a stunning view, then into the most perfect kitchen Shana had ever seen, with maple cabinets, stainless-steel appliances, green-and-gold granite countertops and more cabinet space than one man could ever possibly use, even if he were a professional chef. She’d had jobs as a short-order cook in small towns several times to earn her keep, but she didn’t consider her skills more than basic. Could the right kitchen inspire her to become better at it?
They moved on to two downstairs bedrooms, then upstairs to see two more bedrooms, an office and the master suite, which was about the same size as the one-bedroom apartment she currently lived in. Every room was completely and beautifully furnished. She looked at it all with a designer’s eye and didn’t see a need to change anything, which was a little disappointing. She’d been hoping her talents would be put to use at his house.
“You and Emma are welcome to use the two bedrooms downstairs or upstairs.”
“Thanks. I’ll think it over.” She thought it would be a good idea to keep her distance from him, keep Emma’s noise to minimal disruption, and yet she liked the security of being on the same floor.
“I need you to decide soon. Dylan and I will have to move furniture out of the right bedroom to make room for Emma’s things.”
“Okay. Did you have a professional designer?”
“I designed the house, but I hired a decorator to help furnish it. If you’d lived in town then, I would’ve hired you.”
Shana studied him for a few seconds, then watched Emma, who was standing at the foot of his bed as if plotting how to climb up on it. “This is weird,” Shana said.
“What’s weird?” He crouched to give Emma a boost, but she moved sideways, out of reach. He looked over his shoulder at Shana.
“Us. This. We’re not arguing. We always argue.”
“I wouldn’t call it arguing. No one ever shouts. Mostly it’s just insults. And you usually start it.”
Shana’s mouth dropped open. “I usually start it? You just started it.” She rushed forward to stop Emma, who’d grabbed the deep green duvet and was trying to pull herself up.
“I won’t let her fall,” Kincaid said, as if offended. He reached for Emma.
“No,” she said.
“Emma,” Shana said, caution in her voice
“No Kinky.” She took off running, another recently mastered skill, giggling all the way. Shana was hot on her heels.
He found them in his office, Emma holding on to his desk and moving away from Shana, giggling at the game. Her hands hit the computer keyboard, waking up the monitor, the sudden light startling her.
“You can’t touch the computer, Emma,” Shana said, turning to look at Kincaid. “I’m so sorry.”
He realized then what was on the screen. A spreadsheet of his annual expenses that he’d intended to transfer to a flash drive. She’d glanced at the screen. Would she notice? It had a big heading, in bold. If she read it, she’d know he’d already computerized the work he’d told her he wanted her to do.
Then she wouldn’t believe anything else he said—
“Here’s the box of receipts I told you about. I pretty much just toss them in here all year, then deal with them at the end.”
“I can manage that. I’m kind of surprised you’re that disorganized, Kincaid. You don’t seem like you would be.”
“We all have our flaws.”
“Yes, we do. Let’s go, peapod,” she said.
Kincaid blew out a breath then trailed them more slowly, gauging their location by following the laughter. There hadn’t been much laughter in this house. Not that it was a depressing place to be, not at all, but he’d been alone most of the time. Having Dylan around had been an adjustment, and there had been laughs between them, but nothing like he expected would become the norm with Shana and Emma around.
Kinky. He wondered what people would say once they heard Emma call him that in public, if she ever warmed up to him. The idea that she wouldn’t take to him hadn’t crossed his mind. Until now.
Except, she was Shana Callahan’s daughter, after all. Maybe like mother, like daughter.
He went into the living room and stoked the fire, adding a log, then sat in his chair, leaving the sofa for them. They came running back into the room, Shana scooping her up and whirling her around. It was a homey moment, one played out in houses around the world all the time, but a first for him. They were a family unit, Shana and Emma. Shana would be there day in and day out, taking care of the house, helping with his business, in his line of sight a great deal of the time, and sleeping nearby.
A wife but without the conjugal benefits, he thought.
He’d sort of considered that before, but having her here finally brought it home, the enormity of what he’d offered her—she’d be an almost wife.
And what she considered a negative—their sparring—he enjoyed. A lot. She was usually direct, her honesty startling at times, but he wished he knew why she was edgy around him. He hadn’t noticed her having the same reaction or behaving the same way with anyone else.
“Baby girl, you are wet. You need your diaper changed,” Shana said.
“Diappy.”
“Exactly.” Shana looked at Kincaid. “We should probably go. I’ll change her at home.”
But you just got here. He was caught between relief and disappointment. “Okay.”
They put their jackets on. He followed them out the door and down the steps, waiting as E
mma was buckled into her car seat.
“Say bye-bye to Kincaid,” Shana said to her, not shutting the door yet.
“Bye-bye.” She waved. “Kinky! Bye-bye!”
Apparently, she warmed up at the thought of leaving. “Goodbye, Miss Emma. I’ll see you soon.”
Shana shut the door, got in the car and started the engine. She rolled down the window, then she stared out the windshield, as if working up the nerve to say something.
Kincaid crouched and waited.
“Thank you for the job. And I’ll try not to argue with you,” she added with a small smile. “Not sure I can follow through on that one.”
“Baby steps, Shana. Just be honest. That’s all I ask.”
“You, too,” she said.
He tapped the car with his open hand to end the conversation, then stood. He could be honest with her—to a point. They both had reputations to uphold, after all. He intended to do just that. “It’s cold. You should get going.”
“See you Saturday,” she said with a wave, then she was gone.
He watched until her taillights were out of sight. He didn’t think he’d ever forget the look on her face as she’d thanked him. It had humanized her for him in a way that he hadn’t acknowledged about her before. He’d been told she was well liked by many other people, but at times it was as if she’d gone out of her way for him not to like her.
Until now.
He was glad he’d seen it for himself. He saw hope, even that they could become friends through all this.
Time would tell.
Shana carried Emma up the stairs from the salon to her apartment. How tiny the place seemed after seeing Kincaid’s. A few minutes ago, she’d almost told him about her past, but had stopped herself in time and only thanked him. A lot of people knew she’d moved around a lot, but not many other details. She hadn’t wanted rumors to spread, especially since she’d already come back to town as a single mother.
Only her immediate family knew the circumstances—and Aggie. For all that Aggie loved a good bit of gossip, she’d kept Shana’s situation to herself, even quoting her hero, Henry Ford—“‘Failure is simply the opportunity to begin again, this time more intelligently.’”