Authors: Marion Lennox
âPush,' said Harry. âNick, why are you off?'
âToo much of a good thing,' Nick gasped. He waved a helpless hand at Shanni, who was looking suspiciously as if she might laugh at his plight. She'd better not! âBut go right ahead without me. Shanni, push!'
âWuss!' But she pushed, grinning at him without sympathy and then turning back to John as she pushed.
âJohn, it might rain tomorrow,' she said thoughtfully, still pushing. Harry gave Nick a look of disgustâWimpy adults! his look saidâbut then decided he'd turn his attention to the sea, as if he was looking for pirates.
âThe hay will spoil if it rains,' Shanni said.
âThat's why I don't understand why you're not where you said you would be,' John snapped. âI don't want to waste time.'
âSoâ¦you were coming to choose tilesâor check on me?'
âI just wanted to see that you were okay.'
âThat's really nice of you, John,' she said softly. âBut, as you can see, I'm fine. Choosing tiles or eating lunch on the beach are hardly dangerous occupations. Don't let the hay spoil on my account.'
âWhy are you hereâwith him?' He glared at Nick and
Nick raised his eyebrows and smiled politely. Or tried to smile politely. His whole world was still looking decidedly crooked.
He said nothing. One reason was that he knew when to shut up, but the second was that he was still concentrating on balance. Very important, balance! He wondered how it would look if he lay down.
He didn't. A man had some pride! Plus the sand was wobbling.
âNick and I are taking Harry out to lunch.' Shanni was smiling at Harry, who was still looking for pirates. Great! They were welcome to pay attention to anything other than Nick's condition! âThis is John, Harry. You want to say hello?'
âNo,' said Harry, and Nick didn't blame him.
But he was still spinning! âDon't you want to stop yet?' Nick demanded.
âNo,' said Harry, very definitely. âIf you pushed as well I could go faster.'
Good grief! But there was no alternative. Clutching his balance and pride together, Nick managed a sickly shrug. He pushed.
And he listened.
âShanni, let's go,' John was saying urgently. âIf you come with me now we still have enough time to choose tiles.'
âThat's crazy,' Shanni said, exasperated. âWe don't even have the house plan.' She took a deep breath. âIn fact, we haven't even decided to get married.'
That floored John. âOf course we're getting married.'
âYou haven't actually asked me.'
âWe talked about it the other day. And we always knewâ¦'
âJohn, we need to talk about this by ourselves,' she said
urgently, casting a sideways glance at Nickâwho just as carefully looked away. âMaybe we could meet tonight.'
But John had no intention of being placated. âThis is ridiculous. I came into town to choose tiles.'
âI'm with Harry. And Nick.'
âLeave the kid with the lawyer.'
âHeyâ¦' Nick's protest was involuntaryâbut unnecessary. He could safely leave this to Shanni. She was angry enough for both of them.
âThe
kid's
name is Harry,' she said bluntly. âNot “the kid”. And Harry is my friend. I invited him and Nickâwho's a magistrate, not just a lawyerâout to lunch and for a play in the playground. When we're finishedâand not beforeâI'll take Harry back to Wendy.'
âWendyâ¦' John's voice rose in incredulity. âYou mean this is a kid from the
orphanage
?'
âYes,' she said, and there was ice dripping from the word. Back off, Nick was thinking urgently, but there was no way he could get that message across. John had no intention of backing off. This was a man used to getting his own way, and he wasn't tuned in to ice.
âShanni, this is ridiculous,' John said through gritted teeth. âThe whole town saw you walking down the street with this guy, and with the kid between you. Malcolm Taylor rang to tell meâ¦'
âSo this is the real reason you're here?' Shanni's anger was building by the minute. âBecause Malcolm saw me with another man and decided to report me?'
âThe town will think you're two-timing me!'
âBy sitting on the beach eating fish and chips with the local magistrate? In broad daylight and with a child between us?' Nick and Harry were forgotten now. If he were John he'd disappear for a while, Nick thought. He could feel the anger radiating from Shanni, and it was almost tangible.
âIt's not his place to take you to lunch.'
â
He
didn't take me to lunch. I took
him
for lunch.'
âIt's true,' Nick said mildly. âI had no choice at all. Ask Harry. I don't have a choice in anything. This lady has the force of two bulldozers.'
He was ignored.
âLook, come and choose tiles and we'll forget all about this,' John said urgently. âI meanâ¦the town will forgetâ¦'
âThat I'm a two-timing hussy?'
âI never saidâ¦'
âYou didn't need to.' She was fairly spitting. âJohn, I like you very much, and you've been a real friendâbut I will not be
owned
.'
âYou mean you don't want to marry me?'
She paused. There was a long, long silence. Unnoticed, the roundabout slowed to a halt. Both Nick and Harry were watching, entranced. Pirates and stomachs forgotten.
âI guessâ¦' She closed her eyes and when she opened them the determination that Nick was starting to know was back in force. âI guess that's what I do mean, John. Thank you for asking, but no.'
âYou're kidding!'
âNo. I'm sorry.'
âI see.' Once again, there was a long, long silenceâand then John turned to Nick, and the look he cast him was pure malevolence. âI just hope to hell he's worth it,' he spat. âTo throw me over for a bloody lawyer with designer suitsâ¦'
And he turned and stalked off over the sand-hills.
âPush,' said Harry.
That at least was something he could do. Nick pushed while Shanni gazed at the retreating back of her lover and he could see indecision written all over her.
âGo after him,' he said gently. âI can take care of Harry.'
What was he saying?
âThank you.' She turned to face them, an overbright smile pinned to her face. The decision had been made and there wasn't regret there as far as Nick could see. There was just pure anger. âBut I don't need any more males telling me what to do.'
âEspecially not a designer-suited lawyer?'
It broke the ice. She stared at him for a long minute and then, slowly, the anger faded. âOh, heckâ¦' She broke into a weak chuckle. âOh, help. I'm sorry. No. Wasn't he awful?'
âButâ¦if people are getting that impressionâ¦' Another thought was hitting Nick with force now, and he didn't like it. If the town thought Shanni was throwing her John over for him⦠âMaybe we should cool it.'
She stared. And then her jaw dropped in a sardonic look of incredulity. âCool it? Cool
what
?'
âI don't know. Maybe John has a point.'
Anger was flooding right back. âSo people all over town think I'm falling for you because I asked you to lunch.
And you're worried about it?
You jerk! You're as conceited and pompous as John.'
âPush,' said Harry firmlyâhe was tired of this adult conversation and was back to basicsâand they both pushed while undercurrents zoomed around and between them as if the playground was wired for electricity. And some of it had got loose.
âI'm sorry,' Nick said after a bit. Maybe he had overreacted. It was just this small-town thing. He did not want to get involved. He glanced at his watch and saw with relief there was just fifteen minutes left before three. âI need to get back.'
âOf course you do,' she said cordially. âDon't let me keep you.'
âYou're not coming?'
âHarry and I are playing on the roundabout,' she snapped. âYou do what you like.'
âRight. Right, then.'
He took a deep breath, looked at her for a long minute and nodded.
âSee you later, Harry,' he said.
âWhen?' Harry demanded, startled. His voice was urgent. âWhen will you see me?'
âI'm not sure.'
âMr Daniels is a very busy man,' Shanni said icily. âHe's probably got tiles to buy.'
âI do have a court case or two to judge.'
âThen don't let us keep you,' she said through gritted teeth. âHarry and I can manage very well without you. We can manage without men in general and without two males in particular. And one of them's you.'
Â
âWhat's been happening?'
âI was expecting you to come back with a black eye at least.'
Nick was no sooner in the courthouse than he was pounced on. Mary was at her desk, agog, and Rob was standing beside her, immaculate in his police uniform. The physical likeness to Shanni was unmistakableâas was their ability to ignore his personal boundaries.
He stared at both of them with dislike. There was sand in his shoes. He needed time to empty it before he was due in court in four minutes. His stomach was still churning from the roundabout and he felt ill. He didn't need an inquisition.
âWhy are you here?' he snapped at Rob.
âHey, I brought the prisoner,' Rob said, aggrieved. âNot that there's any need for force. It's Bart Commin in for shoplifting. He pinches four cans of baked beans every second Wednesday, because that's the day before pension. It
drives everyone nuts, but as soon as we make it officialâtry to give him the beans and dock his pensionâhe changes stores. We figure he likes the excitement.'
âGreat.' Nick groaned. âFourteen years' intellectual training for this.'
âYour tie's crooked,' Mary said, bright-eyed and interested. âYou've never had a crooked tie before.'
âSo your sister had her wicked way with me behind the sand-hills,' Nick snarled. âYou want to put a two-page announcement in the local paper?'
âDon't reckon we have to,' Rob said lazily, and grinned. âJohn's done it for us.'
Nick stared. âWhat exactly do you mean by that?'
âHe's spreading it all over town,' Rob told him. âI've heard it from at least three people on the way here. Seems my sister's thrown John over for the magistrate.'
âOh, great!'
âYour hair's not mussed,' Mary said, in a tone saying she wouldn't have minded if it was. âThat means you can't have been too far out of line.'
âPlus they had the littl'un with them,' Rob agreed. âIt wouldn't have happened.'
âYou'll go far as a policeman,' Nick snapped. âGreat detective work. Do you mind? I have a court case to run.'
âBart won't worry if you're running late,' Rob said easily. âI'm prosecuting and he's defending himself. There's hardly an army of lawyers waiting.'
âNo.' He would have preferred it if there wasâin fact he would have preferred anything to these four enquiring eyes.
âDid she really throw John over?' Mary asked, breathless.
He guessed he could tell them that. âShe did.'
There was a long drawn-out sigh from the pair of them, and he looked on, bemused.
âDo you mind telling me what's going on?'
âWe can't stand the man,' Rob said simply. âNone of us can. We were starting to worry she'd marry him through lack of competition.'
âAnd now along you come,' Mary said dreamily.
âRob?' Nick eyed his arresting officer with disfavour.
âYes, sir?' There was a glint in Rob's eye that reminded Nick of Shanni, and he wasn't sure he liked it. He wasn't the least bit sure he wasn't being laughed at here.
âThere's a jug of water on my bench. Fetch it and throw it over your sister.'
âIf you say so.' Rob grinned and Mary stopped looking dreamy and gave a half-hearted chuckle herself.
âOkay. I know I'm being stupid. It's just⦠I mean you're eligible as anything, and you'd be quite good-looking if you didn't have theâ¦' She paused and Nick glowered.
âIf I didn't have the what?'
âPot-belly and bald spot?' Rob suggested, and hooted with laughter. âJeepers, Mary, leave the guy alone.' But Mary just looked helpful.
âIt's your hairstyle and slick clothes,' she said. âThey make you look like a gangster.'
âGee, thanks.'
âOr one of those smart city lawyers you see on the movies,' she added. âAnd you're not one of those.'
âNo. More's the pity.'
âYou don't mind me saying it?'
âWhy should I?' He rolled his eyes. âGo ahead. Any more improvements you can think of while you're at it?'
âYou don't really have to wear those skinny ties,' she ventured.
âThe suit doesn't fit here,' Rob added, joining right into the spirit of things. âOld Judge Andrews wore tweed.'
âThe old judge kept forgetting to take his wellingtons off, too,' Mary said thoughtfully. âHe had a hobby farm so
he kept arriving in court smelling of cow dung. It made himâ¦I don't knowâ¦more approachable somehow.'
âYou'd like me to come to court without my hair combed, in a tweed jacket, a wide tie and stinking of cow dung?'
âYou have to do something. You'll never win our Shanni like you are now.' Rob chortled at Nick's expression and threw up his hands in mock surrender. âOkay, Your Worship. I can see I've gone too far. Let me organise a prisoner for you and we'll get this court case under way.'
Â
He shouldn't worry.
He shouldn't give a damn what they all thought of him, Nick decided as the afternoon wore on. The cases were trivial and demanded hardly any thought at all. He might as well think of his appearance.