Read Handpicked Husband (Love Inspired Historical) Online
Authors: Winnie Griggs
Adam, peering past the startled young man, grinned wryly. While they were down at the lake getting cleaned up for breakfast, Ira had driven the gaudy wagon around to the front of the cabin.
Here in the bright morning sunlight it presented an even more startling spectacle than it had in the evening shade yesterday. For one thing, he could see the front now. The wagon’s roof extended over the seat, shading a pale pink upholstered bench. The sides extended past that same seat in a double set of quarter-moon-like scallops. It made the driver’s box appear to be the inside of some exotic seashell. Combined with its other flamboyant features, the vehicle had all the finesse of a clown at a funeral.
“I see you’ve noticed my studio on wheels.”
Regina, arms wrapped around a small crate, stepped down from the porch. She handled her awkward burden with more ease than Adam normally expected from a woman. It should have made her appear mannish. Instead, it gave her a sort of stately grace.
“Quite striking, don’t you think?”
It took him a heartbeat to realize she was talking about the wagon. Clearing his throat, he reined in his wayward thoughts. And realized her eyes glinted with the hint of mischief.
She was baiting them.
Chance, however, missed the signals. “Um, yes, quite striking.” Then he tilted his head as if he wasn’t sure he’d heard correctly. “Studio?”
She smiled sweetly. “Yes. I’m a photographer.” She made as if to step past them. “Now, if you gentlemen will move aside, I’d best put this away before I drop it.”
“Here.” Chance reached for her burden. “Let me give you a hand.”
“No!”
At her sharp tone, Chance’s hands froze inches from the crate, then slowly withdrew.
Adam frowned. What was wrong with the woman? Couldn’t she see the kid had only been trying to help? She seemed to be going overboard trying to prove she didn’t need a man in her life.
“I’m sorry.” Chance stumbled over the apology, his confusion obvious. “I was just—”
Her eyes rolled and she gave a deep sigh. “Look, Mr. Dawson, I appreciate your gesture, but this box contains fragile photography plates representing many,
many
hours of work. No one but myself or Mr. Peavy handles them.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“If you want to help someone.” She paused to blow a strand of hair off her forehead. “Mrs. Peavy is getting breakfast ready. I’m sure she could use a hand setting the table.”
Looking none too happy with the mundane chore he’d been assigned, Chance nodded and headed inside.
Adam fell into step beside Regina as she resumed her trek to the wagon. He didn’t make the mistake of offering to take the box from her. “A bit hard on the boy, weren’t you?”
She cut him a sideways glance. “I have too much invested in these to take risks.” She blew at that obstinate lock of hair again. “Besides, Chance doesn’t strike me as the careful type.”
Adam couldn’t fault her there. Changing the subject, he pointed to the wagon. “So, is the understated look your idea?”
She tried hard to appear affronted, but Adam saw the slight twitch to her lips. “I prefer a touch of flair over the mundane.” She moved to the back of the wagon, where a stubby ladder led up to an open door. “As for the colors, I figured such a fancy design cried out for a truly resplendent treatment.”
“Resplendent? Don’t you mean gaudy?”
Before she could offer a retort, Ira appeared in the wagon’s doorway. “Here, just slide those in.” Ira’s sleeves were rolled up and his gold tooth glinted in the sunlight. “I have the camera and equipment already stowed away.”
The judge’s granddaughter, huffing out a feminine grunt, hefted her load onto the ledge at the top of the ladder. “Thanks, Ira. I have one more set of plates. We can load the rest of our baggage and supplies later.”
A strangled oath, uttered in British overtones, signaled Everett’s return from the lake. Adam stepped to one side to see the dandy, hair still damp and a towel flung over one shoulder, staring at the wagon in absolute horror.
“You don’t think she expects us to ride in that atrocity, do you?” Everett’s mouth was set in a belligerent line. “This is just too much. First we spend the night on the kitchen floor, then we have to hike down to a lake this morning just to wash and shave. I will not—”
His words ground to a halt as Regina stepped out from behind the wagon. Placing a fist on her hip, she tilted her chin up. “Rest assured, Mr. Fulton,
she
doesn’t expect any such thing. I only extend that privilege to my friends.”
Everett had the grace to flush.
“Now if you’re finished praising my hospitality, you may avail yourself of more of the same by joining us for breakfast.” With a decided flounce, she headed back to the house.
Mitchell, who’d been a step or two behind Everett, met Adam’s gaze with a barely perceptible twitch of his lips. He slapped his towel on Everett’s shoulder. “You might want to follow Miss Nash inside and see if you can make amends.”
Everett shot him a dark look, then spun on his heel and headed for the front door. Mitchell followed at a more sedate pace, as unruffled as ever.
Adam glanced toward Ira to find the man grinning broadly.
“Consider all this amusing, do you?”
Ira chuckled. “Things are sure gonna be interesting around here the next few weeks.” He gave Adam a conspiratorial wink. “I always did think highly of Reggie’s granddaddy.”
Adam wasn’t quite certain how to respond, so he changed the subject. “Mind if I take a look inside?” He nodded toward the wagon. “I’ve never been in one of these before.”
“Suit yourself.” He gave Adam a tongue-in-cheek grin. “Just don’t touch anything. Reggie’ll have my hide if you break something.”
Adam nodded and climbed inside, ducking under the short doorway. It only took a moment for his eyes to adjust. With the open door and a window on each side, the interior wasn’t as dark as he’d expected.
He just barely had room to stand upright, though, and if he stretched out his arms he could probably touch both sides of the wagon at once.
“Not very roomy for someone your size,” Ira commented. “Ain’t much of a problem for me though.”
The gnome of a man bent over and slid the newly-delivered crate into a cubbyhole sized exactly right to accommodate it. Then he deftly fastened a leather strap across the front. That box wouldn’t budge from its slot, no matter how bumpy the road.
The whole left wall, from floor to ceiling, was covered with similar niches and cabinets. A good many of them were already snugly filled with odd-size crates. “All these boxes contain photography equipment?”
“Yep.” Ira straightened. “Cameras, flash pans, chemicals, glass slides—everything a photographer might need, along with spares for emergencies.”
“So, she’s pretty serious about this hobby of hers?”
The older man winced. “I wouldn’t let her hear you call it a hobby if I were you, son. Reggie considers herself a professional, with good cause.”
Interesting. Was the man just being loyal, or was Regina really that good? She certainly seemed to have the determination to make a go of something like this if she put her mind to it.
“Hand me a strap from that pile, would you?”
Adam turned to face the other side of the wagon. Along this wall was a long, well-padded, benchlike structure running more than half the length. Adam guessed it probably doubled as a cot when needed.
Cabinets made good use of the space below, and hooks hung above it for storing odds and ends, many of them unrecognizable to Adam.
He grabbed the requested strip of leather and handed it to Ira. “Did you construct all this?”
Ira nodded. “Yep. Every bit of it—at least on the inside. Reggie designed it, though.” He shook his head. “You should have seen her measure and fuss. She wouldn’t let me touch a thing until she was sure she had it all figured just right.”
Adam had no trouble believing that. Regina Nash was obviously a woman who liked to be in control.
“Set a spell, if you like,” Ira said over his shoulder.
But Adam had seen enough. The enclosed space was beginning to feel too much like the prison cell that had been his home for over six years. “Thanks, but I think I’ll see if there’s anything I can do to help get everyone packed up.”
He climbed out of the wagon and drew in a lungful of the fresh woodsy air. His eyes drank in the view of open sky and rolling woodlands, unobstructed by fortified walls or armed guards.
As he stepped around the wagon, he was greeted with another sight that had been absent from his life behind bars. Regina Nash pushed through the cabin door, her arms wrapped around another of those small crates. Several more wisps had escaped her hairpins, giving her a not unattractive look of disarray. Such an intriguing mix of confidence and vulnerability.
Adam decided it would be an insult to offer her a hand since she had been so insistent earlier that she could handle things herself. Instead he stood where he was, crossed his arms and enjoyed the view.
As she stepped from the porch, Regina’s gaze met his and she paused mid-stride. A what-are-you-up-to-now look crossed her face.
When he broadened his smile, she jutted her chin up and stepped forward with an almost convincing air of nonchalance.
She’d only progressed a few paces when Jack dashed around the side of the cabin on a direct collision course with her.
“Whoa, there, son.” In two steps, Adam had snagged the boy, lifting him off the ground with legs still pumping.
Jack squirmed a minute longer, then seemed to realize what had just happened. “Gee, Mr. Barr, I’m awful sorry. I—”
“Put him down!”
Adam, who’d been in the process of doing just that, stiffened. What had put the flint in her tone now? He’d just averted a catastrophe involving her precious photographic plates. Instead of gratitude, though, she looked at him like a lioness whose cub had been threatened.
“I said, put him down,” she repeated.
Adam set the boy down and raised his hands, palms out.
Jack scuffed his foot in the dust. “I’m sorry, Aunt Reggie. Didn’t mean to come barreling around like that.”
Regina took a deep breath and smiled at her nephew. “Of course you didn’t. Just try to be a little more careful next time.” She hefted her load. “Now, go on inside. Mrs. Peavy has your breakfast ready.”
“Yes ma’am.”
As the boy sprinted up the porch steps, she turned back to Adam, her expression more defensive than apologetic. “If you’ll excuse me, I have to finish loading the wagon.”
Adam watched her walk stiffly by, and wondered what had set her off.
* * *
Reggie could feel Adam’s gaze follow her all the way to the wagon. She knew she’d overreacted, but she wasn’t about to apologize.
Seeing him hold a squirming Jack in his clutches had reminded her of what his mission was. If things didn’t go the way she’d planned, he could very well haul Jack away, kicking and screaming in protest, stealing him out of her life forever.
She would do well to keep that in mind over the coming days.
Reggie handed the box to Ira, then turned to find Adam still watching her.
“What time would you like to head back to town?”
Surprised and relieved he hadn’t mentioned her earlier outburst, Reggie smoothed her skirt. “I was thinking we’d pack up right after lunch. I want to get back before dark, but I don’t want to get there too early.”
“Why’s that?”
“Well, for one thing,” she said with a smug smile, “I want to make sure you stalwart hunters don’t miss the opportunity to feast on the wild game you bagged last night.”
He grimaced, but Reggie noticed the amused glint in his eye.
She pushed a lock of hair off her brow. “Mainly, though, it’s because I’d prefer it if you four would go straight to your quarters this evening and not mingle with the townsfolk more than necessary.”
He raised a brow. “If you’re planning to keep us sequestered for the duration, I’m afraid you might have a mutiny on your hands.”
Reggie waved a hand airily. “Don’t be silly. I’m just talking about today.”
He didn’t seem reassured by her statement.
“Tomorrow is Sunday,” she explained patiently, “and I’m thinking we can all go to church together.” She paused and raised a brow. “I trust that won’t be a problem for anyone?” Any man who wanted to be a part of her and Jack’s life would have to do more than give lip service to his faith.
“We’ll be there.”
Was that annoyance in his expression aimed at her question or her insistence on taking the lead?
Not that it mattered. “Good. At least when we formally introduce you as friends of my grandfather, they’ll be seeing you all in a charitable, God-fearing light.” She pointed at him. “But it’s important that we present a united front, that we all tell the same story.”
Adam raised his hands. “You won’t get an argument from me on that score. I’ll make certain everyone follows your lead.”
She nodded. “Now that that’s settled, shall we join the others for breakfast?”