Beauty and the Brit

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Beauty and the Brit Page 7

by Selvig, Lizbeth


  “It’s up to you, of course,” David added, “but she’ll be fine. Kim and Jill will watch over her well. She might as well get to know the place.”

  The one thing Rio had figured to have some control over, some sense of home with, had been Bonnie. What had happened to the scared teen hiding from the police chief? Here she was, jumping into the pool without Rio as a life preserver.

  Grow up, Rio. You always say you never want to be her mother.

  “All right, if you’re sure.” She looked to Kim.

  “Absolutely.”

  Rio turned warning eyes on her sister. “Be careful.”

  “Duh.”

  David chuckled.

  Rio could already see how Bonnie, with her extrovert’s personality, might take quickly to Bridge Creek. Rio felt slightly ill at ease in a place where nobody seemed to be on guard or at least on watch for danger to erupt.

  “What do you think? Shall we go? Leave the little girls to their gossip?”

  That’s when it dawned on her she was about to head off alone with the man, his muscles, and his accent. She glanced hopefully at Bonnie, but her sister didn’t even look up from her newest lesson on how to pick up a horse’s foot. There was no hope she would change her mind about coming to town.

  “All right.”

  “Do you need anything from the house?” David asked, when they’d reached the yard. “Take as long as you like. There’s no hurry.”

  “I should grab my purse.”

  “I’ll bring the car ’round to the front.”

  The butler-esque phrase seemed to clear her head. Or maybe it was just being out of the barn where his delicious masculine scent couldn’t scramble her brain.

  She faced him. “You’re going above and beyond for us, and I can’t thank you enough. But I hope you won’t keep waiting on us hand and foot. I’m not used to that.”

  He frowned. “I know you’re not. You’re used to making your own way, and I respect that. But you’ll find we do for each other around here. And you have an incredible number of things to figure out. They don’t all have to be sorted this minute, but when you need help we’ll be here. Go grab what you need,” he finished. “See you in a couple of minutes.”

  She made her way back to the stark room she’d chosen and was pleased with the sense of comfort the empty space still gave her. For one moment it was like standing on a blank canvas, no blemishes, nobody else’s marks on it, no expectations of what should be on it or in her life.

  Her shoulders relaxed slightly.

  One problem at a time. She could learn to do that. The only truly immediate problem she had was how she was going to survive a closed-in car ride with David Pitts-Mattherson without his presence and that voodoo scent he wore turning her logical brain to mush.

  Her logical brain was all she had left.

  Chapter Six

  * * *

  DAVID SHIFTED IN the leather seat of his Forester and glanced at Rio, who, with her chin in her palm, had lost some of her rigidity. If she wasn’t comfortable in his presence, at least she seemed resigned rather than resentful. Now if only he could bring back the smile he’d seen exactly twice since meeting her. It wasn’t fair that such a stunning woman should have to wear this guarded a look all the time. From what he remembered of her rare happy face, it turned her into a radiant beauty. And him into jelly.

  Not that he could blame her for wearing the weight of the world on her slender, angry shoulders.

  “Not much to see until we get a bit closer to town.” He broke the silence and nodded to the expanses of corn and wheat fields.

  “It’s incredible,” she replied. “I forget there’s this much empty space in the world.”

  “After living in the city, this must seem barren. There’ll be houses here soon, though. Land is getting sold acre by acre.”

  “That’s sad.”

  “We’re just far enough from large cities that it’s taken a while for the growth to reach us. But Faribault and Northfield, the biggest cities in this area, are spreading outward.”

  “Until just now, they were foreign names on a map.” She turned to him, her eyes big and blue. “This could be Mars.”

  He grinned. “You might be even more convinced of that after meeting the townsfolk.” He drawled out the word with an exaggerated American accent.

  It had taken him plenty long enough to fit into the quirky community—not that small English towns were any less strange—but he’d grown to love the people and this place he’d called home the past ten years.

  “I’ve already met the local law. I’m a little afraid to show my face.”

  She turned a grimace into a passable smile, and his pulse thrummed. He’d been right about the smile. It set off her rich russet hair like sunshine set off a lake.

  “Don’t worry about him. The word is this job is a bit of a step down for our Chief Hewett. He arrived thinking this is the lawless West, and he’s the man to clean it up. He’ll mellow out. If your brother and his mates happen to show up, they’d not get far. Kennison Falls manages to take care of its own.”

  “I’m not one of its own, though.”

  “That’ll change, I promise.”

  “Oh my gosh!”

  Her cry and gasp nearly made him swerve. He stared at her and then toward the “Welcome to Kennison Falls” sign, and he did swerve. Straight onto the shoulder and to a stop. In front of the sign stood a very large vehicle shaped like a giant hot dog.

  “What the devil?” He laughed.

  “Wonder Weenies,” Rio read off its side, and for the first time in his experience, her sapphire eyes flooded with mirth. “Seriously? This is the home of the Giant Wonder Weenie?”

  “Never seen it before in my life.” David stared at the bright monstrosity. “There’s a sign on it.”

  “‘Weenie Feed Fund-raiser for the Kennison Falls Library Association,’” Rio read. “‘August twenty-first and twenty-second. Sponsored by The Loon Feather and Bert’s IGA.’ Friends of yours?” Her wide, sweet lips parted into an enchanting bow.

  David swallowed. So many of their conversations had taken place under such dark circumstances; he’d never studied how appealing her lips were when they moved. How their plump fullness fit perfectly on her slightly cherubic face.

  “The Loon Feather is a town institution—a great restaurant and meeting place. Bert’s is where to go and complain about politics or the weather while you’re picking up your groceries. I’d reckoned to bring you both places.”

  “I’d definitely ask to go to the Weenie Feed if it was sooner than August twenty-first. Now, that’s a meal worth leaving the big city for.”

  So, she could joke about her situation—given the proper circumstances. He tucked the knowledge away and put his foot back on the accelerator.

  “It’s only two weeks from now. Maybe we can get you to the Weenie Feed.”

  “I certainly hope not,” she said, her smile leaving her eyes and freezing in place as the momentary cheeriness dissipated.

  THEY ROLLED ALONG Main Street, and Rio knew David watched her, assessing her reactions. His gaze sent relaxing, almost physical, starbursts of tingles across her skin—a sensation she could definitely get addicted to—and she took in the appealing downtown under the narcotic haze of pleasure. She didn’t want to like what she saw, but the small town ambience was so different from the harshness pervading the streets of her city neighborhood. Here charm bloomed like the flowers in the storefront window boxes, and a dozen or more businesses had adopted blue-and-white striped awnings that gave the whole main street a coordinated sweetness.

  She read the business signs: “Dewey’s Gas ’n’ Garage,” “Joey’s Barber Shop,” “The Curly Cue Salon,” “Mamie’s Attic,” “The Bread Basket.”

  “How the heck do you pronounce that?” She pointed at a white sign hanging from a post before a street front law office. The names VOSEJPKE and HORESJI looked like letters tacked against the wood by a three-year-old.

 
David chuckled. “I feel for you. There’s a lot of Czech heritage along with the Scandinavian. Give ’em a try.” He slowed enough so she could look closely.

  “Vo-sej—” She shook her head. “I haven’t got a clue.”

  “Vo-sayp-kah and Ho-rish.”

  “I just decided I could never live here.” She allowed herself a quick laugh that relaxed something inside. How could she hold on to pure anger in a town with a Wiener Mobile and words containing consonants that should never get near one another?

  “There’s the police station.” David pointed out a small brick building.

  “Is there much crime here?” Rio asked.

  “I expect there’s crime everywhere,” he replied. “But in a town of nine hundred, everyone knows most everyone else. There are four officers, two just part-time, and I think they deal mostly with thefts, vandalism, curfew violations, underage drinking. But in the ten years I’ve lived here, there hasn’t been a murder in town, and our gangs consist of factions of kids from the different small towns that feed into the same bigger school district.”

  “No wonder the chief took an instant dislike to me. I’m the worm in his perfect apple.”

  “Hey, none of that chat.” David glowered, his voice stern in genuine admonition. “You’re nobody’s worm, Rio. I don’t know you well, but I know that. You’re tough and brave. Don’t let him get you to belittle yourself, even in jest.”

  His gentle scolding warmed her even as it shocked her. David had struck her as so passive, so amenable to every situation. His protectiveness—of her, no less—even in this back-door kind of way, made her feel safe for the first time.

  “Thank you,” she said quietly.

  His scowl vanished. “Believe me, this town is nice, but it’s definitely not perfect. Except, maybe, for that place. The Loon Feather, just across the street.”

  She took in the pretty corner building with its gray brick walls that all but glowed in the afternoon sun, and the striking mural of a loon carrying its chick on its back that took up nearly an entire side wall.

  “My gosh. It’s all so pristine. Everything shines. Do they repaint it all every night like they do at Disneyland?”

  “Hardly. It’s ‘pristine’ because pretty much everything we’ve passed so far, even The Loon itself, got nailed by a category four tornado two years ago this month.”

  Her jaded disdain for the picture-perfect town turned to guilt. “Oh! I’m sorry. That explains the newly planted trees and the empty lots. It must have been pretty bad.”

  “Devastating, yes. Not everyone has been able to rebuild, sadly, but thank God nobody died, so it also made everyone a bit closer. Disaster can bring out the best in people.”

  Slight swelling closed up her throat. She sympathized with those who hadn’t been able to rebuild. She knew the feeling—an empty future weighed almost more than a person could handle.

  “Are you hungry?”

  She forced down the lump at the base of her esophagus. She’d spoken to all the bank people and insurance representatives she’d been able to reach in the five days she’d been at the shelter. She could do no more until after the weekend. Meanwhile, she wasn’t about to start leaning on his charity already. She’d leaned on him so literally and with such weakness the night of the fire. He didn’t need to keep seeing her as a poor needy woman.

  “I’m fine just getting a few things at the grocery store.”

  “All right, what I meant was, would you join me for lunch? I know where you’ll get a proper welcome to town—friendlier than the one from our new constable.”

  “That wouldn’t take much.” She raised her brows. “I’d get a cheerier reception from the town undertaker.”

  “Undertaker?” His unexpected laugh was infectious. “I doubt they even call them that in Dodge anymore.”

  “What does a proper-speaking English duke know about Dodge?”

  His brown eyes took on a rich, velvety sparkle, and he adopted a passable Southern drawl. “Why, you’d be surprised, Miz Rio. Even dukes can learn lower-class ways given enough time.”

  She tried to hide a smile and execute a nonchalant shrug. “Fine, you’re on. Take me to this super-friendly place. If the greeting isn’t as good as you say, you’re paying.”

  His brows knotted again. “I’m paying anyway.”

  “I can—”

  He held up a finger. “This was my idea. It wasn’t my intention to make you spend extra money your first day. Get the next one if you like.”

  He’d done it again—protected her from herself. He’d allowed her to save her meager funds and yet save face. The man was sharp. Or truly kind. Or slick-tongued. She honestly couldn’t tell which.

  Five minutes later he led her into the wood-and-calico interior of what he reiterated was the town’s favorite gathering place. She stood face-to-face with a large, neat birdcage, well-appointed with hanging toys and mirrors and occupied by two cockatiels, one gray, one white. A printed sign outside the cage read, “Cotton’s new phrase is ‘Have some pie.’”

  David laughed. “This phrase is brand-new. Effie’s going for shameless promotion now. Brilliant.”

  Rio frowned. “I don’t get it.”

  At that moment the gray bird tilted his head and trilled out a familiar song she knew came from some old television show. When he finished, the white bird gave a short whistle and hopped across its bar. “Howdee, Stra-jer.”

  Delight bubbled through her. “Oh! That’s so cool.”

  “Meet the official greeters of Kennison Falls, Cotton and Lester. Lester’s the singer, and he’ll remember which song he sang for you. From now on, you’re with the Andy Griffith team. Cotton used to do nothing but stare—now she’s cock o’ the run. Can’t stop her talking.”

  “Wekkom, kom in,” the bird said.

  “Told you you’d be greeted properly,” David said.

  Enchanted, Rio put a knuckle up against the cage bars. The Andy Griffith Show. That’s what the tune had been. “Do you have a song?” Lester bumped his beak against her skin but didn’t bite.

  “Same one,” he said. “Everybody is one of two. Andy’s theme or ‘The Colonel Bogey March.’ You know, Bridge on the River Kwai?”

  “Insane,” she said. “It seems like it has to be faked somehow.”

  “Not at all. Canny little birds, these. Survived the tornado. They keep everyone cheerful without fail.” He leaned toward the cage. “Cotton. Have some pie. Have some pie.”

  “That means something?”

  “It’s what they’re teaching her to say next. Say it every time you come in now, until she knows it.”

  “Have some pie?”

  “Hav, hav,” said Cotton, and Rio laughed outright.

  In the mostly empty main café, David walked straight to a table against a far wall filled with shelves that held classic old coffee and cookie canisters. Each table in the room bore a different calico or print fabric tablecloth and contrasting napkins resulting in a delightful hodgepodge.

  “Why, hello, David. It’s a surprise to see you here in the middle of the day.”

  A tall, trim older woman with sun-worn cheeks and an impressive gray braid that hung over her shoulder and nearly to her waist held out two menus.

  “Claudia?” David lifted his brows. “Likewise. How did you get pressed into service?”

  “You haven’t heard yet. Effie took a tumble in her garden yesterday and broke her hip. They’re talking replacement. We’re scrambling to fill in for her.”

  “That’s dreadful!”

  Rio immediately caught the true concern in their voices.

  “It is. Meanwhile, I took today as hostess and waitress. Gladdie will take tomorrow. Karla will stay on until she has to start teaching the last week of August. We’ll manage. Now tell me. Who have we here? The new resident from Minneapolis is my guess. Hello, dear. Rio, isn’t it?”

  Rio stared, flabbergasted. How did this grayed, lined woman-left-over-from-Woodstock remotely know who she was? The
too-easy familiarity gave her a dull stomachache, although she didn’t see a shred of malice anywhere in the woman’s smiling face.

  “It’s all right,” David soothed, reading what must have been a fabulous example of disbelief on her face. “News moves swiftly through a small town. You’ll get used to it.”

  “Awesome.” She held her tongue against further retorts. She didn’t need any more enemies. Then again, she didn’t need an entire town keeping watch on her either.

  “Claudia Lindquist, may I introduce Arionna Montoya? Rio is preferred, though, yes?” He looked to her for confirmation, and she nodded. “Rio, this is one of our . . . what are you, Claudia? The original town mum, I should think.”

  “I’m certainly ancient enough.” The woman’s laugh rang musically. “Very pleased to meet you, Rio. Welcome.”

  “Thank you. Glad to meet you, too.”

  Only she wasn’t. Claudia Lindquist knew too much already, and she’d learned it too quickly, reminding Rio of her step-grandmother—a woman she’d be pleased never to see again.

  “So, what’ll it be, dear ones? The only things we don’t have are Effie’s pies. I’m afraid nobody can re-create those. But Tiffany over at The Bread Basket has sent us some cheesecake. It’s a pretty good substitute.”

  “Tiffany’s chocolate cheesecake,” David said with a grimace of pleasure. “Glad not to have to choose between that and Effie’s pies. Okay. Give us just a sec?”

  “You got it, handsome. Rio, if you want that cheesecake after lunch, it’s on us. Sort of a welcome-to-town offering.” Claudia turned for the kitchen, her braid swinging back over her shoulder.

  “You’re wrong. This is Disneyland. She’s just in costume, isn’t she?”

  “I told you not to judge a town by its new police chief. And don’t worry about everyone knowing you. The network around here makes satellite technology look like two tins and a string. The town will take you in and keep you safe if that’s what you need. It’s a good place.”

  She could barely imagine a good little place anymore. Her home had been a good little place.

  “I’m sure it is.”

 

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