Read Every Little Thing About You (Yellow Rose Trilogy 1) Online
Authors: Lori Wick
Tags: #Romance, #Christian, #Fiction, #Christian Fiction, #Western, #Historical, #INSPIRATIONAL ROMANCE, #General, #Religious, #Texas, #Love Stories
second smile.
"And why" she asked now, a smile still in her voice,
"did Mrs. Tobler think I needed help with the needle?"
"Well, I didn't understand it at the time, but I realize
now that she said, 'You might as well help Lib find the
needle. I've got to set this old man straight.'"
Hand to her mouth, Liberty dissolved into laughter,
and without thinking, she collapsed into the chair, a position
that lasted for only a second before she was on her feet
again.
"I found it!" she gasped, just stopping short of
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clutching her stinging backside.
Slater's eyes flew to the seat and there it was, protruding
point-side up. It wasn't hard to imagine why Liberty
had not stayed in the chair. Slater bent to retrieve it just
as Mrs. Tobler came in the door.
"You've found it," she said matter-of-factly. "I knew
Liberty could do it with some help." With that the old
woman plucked the needle from Slater's fingers. "Now get back out there and keep an eye on him. He knows what he's supposed to do, but you'd better watch him.
"Libby! You come with me. I want you to see that new
quilt I put on my bed."
Liberty nodded and even smiled. She followed Mrs.
Tobler with a wave at Slater. Slater waved back before
moving to exit the room. Before he left, however, he looked
back to see Liberty following their hostess, her hand now
reaching back to rub the pin hole. Slater stopped for a
moment, his heart wrung with tenderness. Even as he proceeded
back out to work, the scene remained on his mind
along with another emotion, one he couldn't quite define.
5^
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v/
"thank you, mrs. locken," Griffin said kindly on
Monday evening. "Everything was great."
"You're welcome, Griffin. Would you like some coffee
on the porch?"
Griffin looked at Tess, and she nodded.
"I'll help you, Mama," Tess offered.
"I'm fine, dear. If I need help, I'll ask your father. You
go ahead."
Tess led the way but wished she didn't have to. She
never wanted it to look as if she'd conspired to get Griffin
alone. For this reason she took a chair that sat off on its own
when she reached the front porch.
Griffin noticed and even understood why. Tess had
never pushed herself at him. Hus, along with dozens of
other facts about this woman, made his feelings even
harder to accept. He hadn't planned to love anyone. And
he certainly hadn't planned on a sweet, godly woman
loving him.
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"Was it busy today?" Tess asked, always interested in
his work.
"Pretty quiet. Lib was in this morning, but she said it
was quiet too."
Tess smiled. "I like Libby so much. She's so fun and
smart."
"You're smart too, Tess," Griffin said. He knew she
struggled with her self-image. She was a very beautiful
woman, with pale blonde hair, skin like cream, and huge
blue eyes. And since most people thought that was all there
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52 lori wick
was to her, she had begun to believe it. It didn't help that
her father and older brothers were men who had little time
for family. Making money was their main concern.
"That's what Libby always says, but when you're with
someone as capable as Libby, it's hard to believe."
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Griffin didn't answer. Tess hadn't been looking directly
at him, so when it got quiet she looked up to find his eyes
on her. His face looked boyish, as it often did. It made Tess
smile.
"You don't look tough enough to be the sheriff."
"And you're too wonderful to be in love with an old
hound dog like me."
"Oh, Griff," Tess said softly.
Griffin watched her look away, her eyes filling. He had
talked with Duffy and Pastor Caron, and they had asked
him if he was trusting God. He thought that he was, but
did trust mean being blind to the facts? When a man had
his type of job--the type of job that had killed his father-- did he go into marriage without a backward glance? And what if they had children? He would not only leave Tess
alone, but his kids too.
Griffin looked out over the quiet street the Lockens
lived on. He had been happy to be single, but then Tess
moved into town a year ago and came to church with her
mother. At first he thought there wasn't much under those
pale blonde curls or behind that ready smile, but then she'd
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visited Mam and Duffy's house at Liberty's invitation, and
Griffin learned otherwise. She was a woman whose faith in
God was genuine and whose courage was deep.
"Here's coffee," Mrs. Locken said as she used her hip
to push open the screen door, the tray in her hands. Griffin
rose to take it from her.
"If you don't mind, I think I'll go in and have mine with
Albert. Call if you need something."
"Thank you, Mrs. Locken."
Tess rose to pour the coffee and offered him a cup. She
fixed it just the way he liked. The light was fading, but
Every LittfyThingAbout You 53
when she sat with her own cup. Griffin could see that Tess'
eyes were still moist.
"Maybe I shouldn't stay, Tess," Griffin forced himself to
say.
"You don't have to if you don't want to/' she said to
him, and Griffin had to close his eyes. She was so special
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"What do you want me to do?" he finally asked.
Tess took a big breath. "I want you to play me in
checkers. You beat me the last two times, and I want a
rematch."
For a long moment the sheriff could only look at her.
Not able to help himself and not willing to try. Griffin
reached over and let one finger slide down her soft cheek.
"I'll get the board."
Tess' eyes closed the moment he stood, her heart wondering
how she would make it. Every moment with him
was sweet torture. She wanted to sob her eyes out but
heard him coming back through the house.
If he isn't for me, Lord, please work a miracle in my heart so
it doesn't break in two.
^-
"A shave and a haircut," Griffin said when he got home
that night and found Slater in the living room. "Did you go
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for a job or courtin'?"
Slater laughed. "I didn't think it would hurt to look my
best."
"Where'd you go--the bank?"
Slater's look was smug. "You happen to be looking at
Shotgun's newest contractor."
Griffin was not long in catching on. "I'd heard that
Price Hathaway headed to Austin. You must have taken his
job. How do you like working for Hank?"
Slater's eyes grew comically. "He knows what he's
doing, and he knows what he wants me to do; it's just a
matter of getting him to remember that he thought about
54 lori wick
the order but didn't tell me. I think I know why Price left
town."
"Hank's a case, but you're right, he does know how to
build. Are you by any chance at Mrs. Tobler's right now?"
"That's the place. She wants a covered porch on the
back side of her house. It's only going to shade two windows,
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but she wants it"
"She's got a big heart but also a mind of her own. Libby
went there as a little girl for sewing lessons."
"She was there today."
"For sewing lessons?"
"No. Mrs. Tobler lost her needle and expected your
sister to find it."
"Did she?"
"Not until after she sat on it,"
Griffin's brow lowered. "Is she all right?"
"That's not a question I could really ask her. I think it
smarted, but she might have been more surprised than
anything."
"How did you learn about the needle?"
Slater gave Griffin a rundown and that man's face
became very thoughtful.
"Did I say something wrong?" Slater had been
watching him closely.
"No, not at all," Griffin told him honestly but knew that
the rest of his thoughts would have to stay inside. Slater
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wouldn't thank him and neither would Liberty. Not to mention
the fact that you can't figure out what you're doing in your
own relationship, Griffin, let alone getting involved in someone
else's.
"How do you think you'll like a hammer and nails after
law enforcement?" Griffin asked in an effort to shift his
thoughts.
Slater thought for a moment, his head leaning back
against the softly padded chair; it was a question he'd been
asking himself all day.
Every Little Thing About You 55
"It's going to take some getting used to," Slater finally
admitted.
Griffin nodded but still didn't ask the question that had
come to his mind the moment he'd learned this man was a
Texas Ranger. That question might take some time or turn
out to be one he could never ask.
"There's a church picnic this Sunday afternoon,"
Griffin told him instead. His mother had let him know that
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day. "We must have come in after it was announced."
"Right after church?"
"Yes, at the Millers', on the creek."
"Do we bring something?"
"My mother and Libby usually take pity on me and
bring enough for a threshing crew. Unless you're in the
mood to cook, don't worry about it."
"My skills in the kitchen can't compare to your
mother's. I wouldn't starve, but a home-cooked meal
always tastes like a feast"
Griffin laughed, but such words made him think of
Tess. She was a great cook. With sudden clarity he realized
something that had never been evident to him. In the last
two months, when Tess' feelings and his own had become
dear, he'd talked to Pastor Caron and Duffy. They had been
very helpful, but he'd never spoken to his mother--the
woman who had been widowed because she'd been married
to the town's sheriff.
Sitting across the room, Slater watched the emotions
chase across Griffin's face but kept silent Clearly the man
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had much on his mind. If memory served him correctly,
this was the night the blonde woman had wanted him to
come for dinner. Had Liberty called her Tess? Is that where
he'd been when Slater found the house empty? Much as
Slater wondered, he knew he would never ask.
"I'm for bed," Slater said instead, wanting to give this
man who had offered him a home even more privacy.
"I'll bet you are. Waking up to have a gun pointed at
you takes it out of a man."
56 lori wick
Slater laughed. "When I saw your sister today, I asked
her why she didn't draw."
"Did she blush or laugh?"
"A little of both, I guess." Slater stood. "Good night,