Read A Perfect Bride For Christmas Online
Authors: Dyann Love Barr
prodigal daughter or anything. I’d feel more
comfortable, really.”
“Then let me pay for your hotel.”
Another pause but this time she sounded
pleased. “All right.”
An olive branch of sorts.
“I’ll be in town on the eighteenth then.”
“Good. Let me know where you want to stay,
and I’ll make the arrangements.”
“Thank you, bye.”
Alex hit the end button on his phone and stuffed it back into his coat pocket as he entered the
kitchen. Mom still kept Dad’s favorite beer on stock in the refrigerator for the boys. The last time they’d shared one had been right after Dad’s funeral.
He pulled one out and twisted the top off.
“Here’s to you, Dad. I don’t know how you kept your sanity with the three of us.” Alex raised the bottle in a mock toast and downed half of it in several big gulps. The moment it hit his belly, the chocolate milkshake and his double bacon cheeseburger
protested. His stomach gave a nasty roll.
The red, vinyl and chrome chair scraped against the floor as he pulled it back from the table and plopped down. Alex leaned back as his belly
rumbled. It would be a tossup whether he could
make it to the john in time or puke in the kitchen 132
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sink. A knock at the back door made him groan. He shuffled to his feet and opened the door to find Jesse holding an insulated casserole carrier, along with a foil-covered pie pan resting on top.
He felt the world sway at a whiff of fish.
“Hey, I saw the lights and thought I’d run this over and stick this in the fridge. I’ve got to be at work early, and then Ethan has basketball practice tonight. Mom likes my tuna noodle casserole and cherry pie.” Jesse frowned. “Hey, are you all right?”
Alex had just enough time to make it the sink before he let out a Technicolor yawn. The smell brought on another bout of vomiting.
In the kitchen, the carrier clattered as Jesse put it on the table. Moments later, water ran from the half-bath off the kitchen. Spasm after spasm racked his body until all that came up was the bitter taste of bile. A slap of a cold cloth against the back of his neck helped to get the gagging under control.
“Here.” Jesse directed him to a chair after he
rinsed his mouth out with cold water. “Keep that back there for a few minutes.”
She pulled the casserole out of the container and put it on the bottom shelf of the refrigerator. “There.
The cherry pie has to cool down a bit, and you can put it in the fridge later. I’ll be right back.”
He nodded as she hustled out of the kitchen and into the dining room. Closing his eyes made the nausea worse, even with the compress tight against his neck. A few minutes later, she returned with a bottle of club soda. He let out a groan and closed his eyes again. He hated club soda.
“Mom keeps this here in case I drop by. You
know how I love a club soda with a twist of lime.”
The top gave an effervescent fizz as it twisted off the bottle. “Drink this up. You’ll thank me once you’ve had a nice big belch.”
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“No.” Alex pushed the glass away.
“I don’t want to have to beat your sorry ass to get this down you.” She sat in the chair at the end of the table and pushed it back at him.
“Just go away, Jesse.”
“No can do, Cupcake.” She leaned her elbows
against the tabletop and rested her chin in her hands. “What’s Mom going to do if she comes home and finds her baby boy has a sick stomach? Hmmm?”
“Blackmailer.” He glowered at her and picked up the drink. “You’re a monster, you know that?”
She smiled at him and motioned for him to
drink. “Ethan says that at least once a day.”
Alex took a deep swallow of the nasty stuff that hit his stomach with all the finesse of an anvil.
“You’ve been a pain in my ass for as long as I can remember.”
“That’s no way to talk to your elder’s.”
“Three years doesn’t constitute older, just
obnoxious. You’re as bad as Clint.”
Her cheeks turned a couple of shades pinker,
her blue eyes more intense at the mention of his brother. “I didn’t see much of Clint when he was here for the funeral. He said something about
getting back to his stables in Kentucky.” Jesse got out of her chair, and rummaged around in the
cabinet underneath the sink. She shook a bit of cleansing powder in the sink and scrubbed. “Heath and I got a chance to catch up. Sounds like he’s doing pretty well at his security business. Hey, drink the rest of that.” Jesse pointed her finger at the half-empty glass.
“Yeah, Heath’s business is booming. Clint’s up to his eyeballs in typical farm issues—you know, wind, rain, hail, sick horses, wrath of God, that sort of stuff.”
“He’s picked a hard road, but I know he can do
it.” She rinsed out the sponge she’d used and put it 134
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back on the rack inside the cabinet door. “So are you going to tell me what happened tonight? Did it have to do with Sydney?
Alex pushed the now empty glass away. The
bubbles made a home in his stomach and were salsa dancing up a storm. “No, I mixed bacon
cheeseburgers and a chocolate shake with a beer chaser.”
“Blar.” Jesse wrinkled her nose. “How did you
make that fatal error in judgment?”
He raised his eyebrow and glared at her. “I took my daughter’s to McDonalds.”
“So?” She raised an eyebrow back at him.
“It was a war zone, Jesse.”
She gave him an evil smile. “It only gets better, Cupcake.”
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The sun came. The morning light dazzled bright
against the snow remaining on the ground. Zoe had the small television on the kitchen counter turned to the local weather.
“It’s going to be a beautiful day for the Kansas City area.” The weatherman pointed to the west
coast. “But we have a slow-moving storm building in the Pacific. From the looks of things, it won’t hit us for another week, but we’re expecting at least ten inches or more with blowing winds. Some are calling this the storm of the century.”
Cherri wandered into the kitchen and poured a
cup of coffee. “I wonder how many storms of the century we’ve had since two-thousand?”
Zoe chopped a bunch of celery she planned to
put into a minestrone for supper tonight. It could be slow cooking while she finished the cooking for a big holiday bash tomorrow night. “It’s going to mean more cancellations, and Amelia King will cancel the reception now that there’s no wedding.”
She chopped faster. Her skin still felt the touch of Alex’s hands. What had it been like for him and Sydney? Did he wring the same emotions, the
sensations out of Sydney as his talented hands
skated over her long, lean, model-perfect body?
“Whoa,” Cherri shouted and slammed her coffee
mug on the kitchen table. The next minute, she
grabbed Zoe by the hand and pulled her towards the sink. Blood poured from a nasty cut at the tip of Zoe’s finger.
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“I didn’t feel it.” She felt her knees go weak at the sight of her blood swirling down the drain with the water.
“That’s because you keep your knives so sharp.”
Zoe shook her head. “It’s a clean cut. It would’ve been a lot worse with a dull blade.” The water stung the fresh cut worse than the cut of the knife.
“Dull, sharp,” Cherri growled as she twisted the injured hand under the faucet. “It doesn’t matter.
You still cut your hand.” Blood continued to well from the wound after Cherri turned off the faucet.
“Hopping Hecate’s hatband, what were you doing?”
She grabbed a couple of paper towels off the holder and wrapped them around the injured finger. “Are you sure you don’t need stitches?”
“No.” Zoe shook her head. “It’s not that bad. I’ll put a Band-Aid on it, double glove my hand when I work. I’ll be fine.”
“Right.” Cherri looked skeptical.
“I will be. I let myself get distracted for just a moment and then
boom
, I cut myself. It’s not the first time. There’s a first aid kit on the top shelf of the pantry.”
Cherri went to the pantry and pulled out the
first aid kit. She opened it, rummaging around until she found what she needed. “You were thinking
about Alex King. Mooning over him.”
“Mooning?”
“That’s what my Gramma Harriett calls it when
you’re pining for a man—not the stick your butt out of the car kind of moon. You’ve had this silly smile on your face from the moment I brought the girls home.” She sat down next to Zoe and peeled away the paper towels. “It’s still bleeding a little.” Cherri replaced the paper towel with a couple of fresh ones and threw the soiled towels in the trash. She went to the sink to wash her hands. “If I didn’t know better, I’d say you got lucky, but,” Cherri whirled back 137
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around. “You got laid, didn’t you?”
Zoe felt the heat rise to her cheeks. “I don’t
know how it happened. One minute, I’m screaming at him about the letter. The next, I’m dragging him upstairs.”
“Did he kick and scream, put up a fuss, yell,
rape
?”
“No, but it was wrong. He just got dumped and I didn’t care. What kind of example am I? I’m failing at motherhood.
Zoe peeked under the paper towels again.
Although the bleeding had stopped, the wound
throbbed with each heartbeat. It might look bad but luckily, she’d avoided a trip to the emergency room.
She held out her hand to Cherri. “Here, slap a little antibiotic ointment and a bandage on this, and then I’ll be as good as new.”
Cherri dabbed a bit of ointment on the cut. Zoe pulled a sharp breath between her clenched teeth.
“Ow.”
“Liar.” Cherri peeled the bandage out of its
wrapper and positioned the pad against the cut.
“You know, I have you in a vulnerable position here.”
She placed one side of the bandage against her
finger and smoothed the adhesive down. “I could ask for all the juicy details but that would be wrong.”
Cherri pulled the other end tight and gave the
bandage a final look. “So spill.”
“No. I’m afraid you’re going to have to get your thrills another way.” So would she. Zoe held her throbbing hand in the other. It wasn’t as if she were the only person in the world with an ex-husband they still loved, but it didn’t stop the aching need that grew by the minute. ****
“Alex, will you settle down?” his mother
snapped. She wriggled in the large floral chair, pulling the lap robe over her legs of her pink sweats 138
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while she tried to get comfortable. Her injured foot rested on an ottoman with her crutches off to the side. “I just got home from the hospital and you’re already driving me crazy.”
He stopped mid pace. “Sorry, Mom, I’ve got a lot on my mind right now.”
Like how to tell her that
Sydney called off the wedding.
She patted the rose-colored lap robe tight
around her legs. “You know, for someone so smart, you’ve gotten yourself into quite a mess, haven’t you?”
“You’re right about that.” Alex perched on the
huge arm of the chair and took her hand in his. “I just keep making one mistake after another.
Sometimes, I think none of this would’ve happened if Bianca hadn’t dumped me.”
“Hold up there.” Her fingers tightened over his.
The hairs on the back of Alex’s neck stood up in warning. It was the same sixth sense that had told him to run for the hills as a kid. Luckily, his mother wasn’t up to chasing him around the house. “What?”
“If I remember, and believe me, they did enough brain scans in the hospital that I know all my
marbles are intact, Bianca jilted you because she caught you with another woman.”
Old sins came back to bite him on the ass. “I was only flirting, nothing else.”
“Well, even so, your timing was execrable. If I’d been Bianca, I would’ve made sure you couldn’t flirt with anyone for a very long time.”
“Ouch.” He leaned down to plant a kiss on top of her silver hair. “I’m so glad you’re my mother. Would you like a cup of tea? It should be finished steeping by now.”
“I’d love a cup, and don’t change the subject.”
She called out to him as he went into the kitchen for the tea and a piece of Jesse’s cherry pie. He wasn’t ready to tackle the tuna casserole just yet—even the 139
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faint whiff he got when he opened the fridge made his stomach lurch. He retrieved a lap tray from the pantry and brought her the tea and pie.
“There you go.” Alex placed the tray over her
legs with care.
“Oh, good, I see Jesse sent over some of her
cherry pie.” His mother forked up a bite of the flaky pastry. “That girl might have been a tomboy when she was young, but she knows her way around the kitchen.”
“Yes, and she sent over a large tuna casserole as well.”
“Yummy.”
“I think I’ll just have a bit of chicken noodle soup and call it good. I had a bit of an upset stomach last night, and I don’t want to be a repeat offender.”
His mother stopped in the middle of bringing
the fork to her mouth and put it back on the plate.
“You tried to distract me with food.”
“Guilty as charged.” He sat on the couch and
played with the fringe on one of the pillows. “I wanted to let you rest your first day back without dumping my garbage on you.”
“Alexander Franklin King, I’m your mother, who
else should you come to if you need to talk?”
“Dad, but he’s not here.” He rubbed his nose.
“Zoe gives me headaches of her own.”
“And three beautiful girls.”
“They aren’t the headache.” He smiled and
rubbed his stomach. “Although I found out that
reality trumps theory every time. It’s one thing to want a family. It’s another to have one handed to you.”