
Montana Twins
Autore
Charlotte Maclay
Letto da
18,3K
Capitoli
15
Chapter One
âIâm going to be a father.â
Still stunned by the news, Sheriff Eric Oakes sat down heavily in the swivel chair behind his desk, trying to figure out how it had happened. Or if it could possibly be true.
His brother Rory, who had just come into the office, looked at him as if heâd lost his mind. âYouâre kidding.â
âTwins. Girls.â
âHey, I didnât even know you were seeing anyone. How come youâre keeping secrets fromââ
âNo, itâs not like that. Itâs likeââ He was stammering almost as much as the woman whoâd called him with the news a few minutes ago. âTheyâre my sisterâs kids.â Three months old, the woman had said.
Rory frowned, and a hank of his dark hair slid across his forehead. In a futile gesture, he shoved it back into place. âHave you been nipping at that bottle you keep in your bottom desk drawer? You donât have a sister. Two brothers, me and Walker. Unless olâ Sharpy has had a sex change I donât know aboutââ
âNo, thatâs not it.â Eric pushed back from his desk, stood and paced across the room to look out the window onto the town of Grass Valley, Montana, located not far from the Canadian border.
Small was the only way to describe the town.
Roryâs veterinary clinic was down a side road a block away, across from Doc Justineâs medical clinic where Roryâs bride, Kristi, worked as a nurse practitioner, helping her grandmother, the long-time town doctor.
On the main street there was a garage with rusty old heaps parked around it, a drugstore that sold more ice cream than prescriptions, and a general store. The saloon with a tattered banner that announced âGood Eatsâ was the only place that ever drew a crowd, except for the nearby church.
Crime wasnât a big issue in the community. A few Saturday-night drunks to fill his two jail cells now and then. Traffic accidents on the highway that called for him to respond. Occasional reports of cattle rustling or adolescent vandalism. A safe place to live.
And to raise kids, he thought as a lump formed in his throat. Heâd always wanted children. A family of his own.
He turned back to his brother. âSome woman called a couple of minutes ago, a Laura somebody from Helena. She says my mother had another baby after she abandoned me.â It was no big deal to tell Rory heâd been dumped by his mom. Roryâs mother had done the same thing to him. Thatâs how theyâd both ended up at the Double O Ranch as foster kids to Oliver Oakes, whoâd eventually adopted them and another kid, their brother, Walkerânicknamed Sharpy because heâd once shot himself in the leg. Walker was running the ranch nowadays.
âAccording to this woman, my sisterâs name was Amy Thorne, and she had twins a couple of months ago. Then she died.â Still incredulous about the phone call, he shook his head. âShe wanted me to have the babies. Be their dad. Apparently Iâm their only living relative.â
âSomebodyâs putting you on.â
âI donât know. This Laura person sounded pretty legit.â Except sheâd been nervous, stuttering and stammering as she tried to tell her story.
âNo, itâs got to be some kind of scam. Did she ask for money? Child support?â Rory hooked his hip over the corner of Ericâs desk and crossed his arms. His Native American heritage sometimes gave him a brooding look, but since discovering that he had a son and his recent marriage to the boyâs mother, Kristi Kerrigan, Rory had been all smiles. Until now.
âThe whole phone call kind of caught me off guard,â Eric said. He was still shaken, half disbelieving the news yet wanting it to be true. âBut no, she didnât say anything about money.â Not that he could remember, at any rate. âSheâs going to bring the twins up here tomorrow.â
âAnd just hand them off to you?â
âI donât know. She said something about interviewing me.â Which didnât make a whole lot of sense. Either he was the twinsâ uncle or he wasnât. And if he wasnât, that woman wouldnât have bothered to call and make him identify himself by his birth name, Eric Johnson. A name he hadnât used since he was fifteen and Oliver Oakes adopted him. Eric had celebrated his thirty-second birthday last fall out at the ranch. Walkerâs wife, Lizzie, had baked the most lopsided cake heâd ever seenânot that he or anyone else had cared. Devilâs food with chocolate frosting was hard to beat whatever the shape.
He shoved his fingers through his hair, shorter than Roryâs, more brown than black and several shades lighter. Now that he was trying to explain this baby situation to his brother, it sounded pretty damn crazy. Maybe it was a hoax. One of those adolescent games when a kid calls someone and asks if their refrigerator is running. When the victim says yes, the kids giggle and say youâd better catch it before it runs out the door. A silly, harmless prank.
But his caller hadnât sounded like a kid. More like a woman with a sultry voice who hadnât wanted to call him at all.
And the story of his mother, who had run through boyfriends like water through a sieve, sounded legit, too. She could have gotten pregnant again.
God, could it be that all these years heâd had a sister who he didnât even know existed and now she was dead? Heâd never have a chance to meet her. Or talk to her. Why hadnât she come looking for him sooner?
Or could that call have been nothing more than a cruel trick? The woman the same kind of person who would abandon her own kid?
Tears stung at the backs of his eyes as memories assailed him. Heâd been ten years old and standing in the parking lot of a fast-food hamburger joint. Looking for his mother and her current boyfriend. Looking for their car. He knew where it had been parked. It wasnât there anymore. Heâd had to go to the john. Theyâd left without him. God, heâd felt so alone. So hurt.
How could any mother do that to a kid?
He hadnât had a sister then. Heâd been an only child, crowded into the back seat of the car along with everything they owned, and making it a point to stay out of reach of his momâs boyfriend. The guy had big meaty fists, Eric remembered that. And he knew how to use them.
A sob rose in his throat.
The office door opened to admit a current of fresh spring air along with Roryâs wife, Kristi, and their son, Adam.
Swiping the back of his hand across his face, Eric struggled to pull his emotions back under control.
âHi, Uncle Eric.â The dark-haired five-year-old made a beeline for the nearest jail cell and began to swing on the door, peering out through the bars.
âWhere did I put that key?â he asked, playing the game he and the boy had started recently. âIâve caught me a monkey and I need to lock him up.â
The youngster giggled and made scratching gestures under his arm pits. âHoot-hoot-hoot.â
Kristi stood on tiptoe to brush a kiss to her husbandâs cheek. âTed Pomperan is at the clinic with a dog that cut its foot.â
âOkay, Iâll be right there. Ericâs been telling me heâs going to be a daddy. Twins, he says.â
âGirls,â Eric added. If the tale was true.
âYouâre kidding!â Kristi whirled toward him, her eyes widening. âI certainly hope you plan to marry the woman.â
âWell, no. I mean, I donât even know the woman. She just called a couple of minutesââ
âIâd say you know her plenty well enough if sheâs going to have your babies,â Kristi insisted.
Adam piped up. âDoes that mean Iâm gonna get some more cousins?â
âSheâs not going to have my babies. Theyâre already three months old. And they might not even beââ
âSo she hadnât told you she wasââ
âRory!â Eric came around the desk, caught Rory and Kristi by their respective elbows, ushering them toward the door. âGo take care of your canine patient, and in the meantime will you please explain the situation to your wife so she doesnât think Iâve committed some mortal sin.â
âIâm not sure I get the picture myself,â Rory complained.
âNeither do I. With luck, when the woman shows up tomorrow with the twins, Iâll be able to figure out whatâs going on.â Assuming she comes at all.
Rory opened the door for his wife.
âYou be nice to the woman, Eric Oakes,â Kristi admonished him. âIf sheâs had your babies, sheâll be feeling very vulnerable and unsure of herself. I know thatâs how I felt when I came back to Grass Valley and had to face Rory and tell him about Adam.â
Exasperated, Eric said, âTalk to her, bro.â He eased them out the door, closing it behind them and drew a deep breath.
Incredible. Was he really about to become a father of two baby girls?
Which reminded him that he didnât know squat about babies and diapers and bottles or any of that stuff. How the hell was he going to manage if it came to that?
Turning around, his gaze landed on Adam, who was still behind bars.
âYour folks just left.â
The boy lifted his shoulders in an easy shrug. âThe door locked itself. I canât get out.â
âRight.â He headed for the ring of keys hanging on a peg behind his desk.
Not only did he know little about caring for babies, he wasnât all that sure heâd be able to handle a couple of girls Adamâs age when the time came. And God help him, when they became adolescents, his goose would be cooked.
If they were his nieces and he was about to become their daddy.
âI DONâT KNOW how you can give away those sweet little babies.â Barbara Cavendish shaded her eyes against the morning sun as Laura loaded the twins inside her SUV for the trip to Grass Valley.
âItâs what their mother wanted. Amy made that abundantly clear.â A knot formed in Lauraâs throat at the mere thought of handing the twins over to a perfect stranger, even if he was their only living relative. And she fully understood that in her motherâs heart, sheâd already claimed the twins as her grandchildren.
Laura tried for a brave smile as she adjusted Amandaâs car seat, then reached across her to the second car seat and caressed the blond fuzz on Rebeccaâs head. Sheâd never seen two more beautiful babies, small for their age but absolutely perfect in every way. She desperately hoped that once their uncle Eric met the twins he wouldnât feel the same way about them as she did. There was no law that said he had to raise them. He could easily reject the idea once he realized what it entailed.
âYou know I loved Amy as if she were my own child,â her mother continued. Barbara Cavendish had taken Amy into her home and heart as an abused foster child when the girl had been only ten years old. Laura had become her big sisterâa role sheâd loved and continued as best she could after Amy had moved out on her own. âIâm just not sure she was thinking clearly, wanting to give her babies away to a complete stranger when she knew youââ
âHer half brother, Mom.â
âWho she didnât even know existed until she rummaged through that shoe box of things her mother left her. I wish you hadnât hired that private detective to find the man.â
In more ways than Laura could count, she wished that too. âI promised Amy Iâd follow her wishes if I could.â
During Amyâs last trimester of pregnancy, it had become clear she wouldnât be able to continue working as a waitress, and the complications of Amyâs diabetes made the pregnancy high risk. She was told she could die.
Not wanting to burden Lauraâs mother, who tended to be overly protective, Amy had moved in with Laura. Soon after that sheâd discovered she had a half brotherâthe twinsâ only living blood relative.
Then the worst had happened. Amy slipped into a coma before she gave birth to the twins. Only the doctorâs quick action, taking the babies by cesarean section, had saved them. Amy had given her life for the children she never had a chance to hold.
Preparing for that contingency, sheâd left written instructions for Laura to follow, signed and notarized, as binding as any will. Find Amyâs half brother, if she could. See if heâd be a suitable daddy. If not, Amy wanted Laura to raise her babies. In the end, the decision would be Lauraâs.
It had taken the private detective three months and several thousand dollars to locate the man. Five hours from now, give or take a little, Laura would actually meet him.
âIn spite of the rocky road sheâd traveled, Amy believed families ought to stick together,â Laura told her mother. âI suspect you were the one who taught her that.â
âI donât know, dearââ
âMom, I have to do this. I gave my word of honor.â Straightening, she rested her hand lightly on her motherâs shoulder, trying to reassure herself as much as her mother. âChances are a sheriff in a town like Grass Valley has a beer belly, chews tobacco and has only a passing interest in the offspring of a woman he never knew. Iâll have an easy decision to makeâhe obviously wonât be a fit father for the twinsâand my conscience will be clear.â
Failing that, her last, best hope would be that Eric Oakes wasnât marriedâat least the detective hadnât uncovered any evidence of a woman in the picture. Amy had been adamant that she didnât want her babies raised by a single father. She didnât trust any man that much.
Laura hugged that thought tightly to her as she kissed her mother goodbye and climbed in behind the steering wheel of the SUV. Amanda and Rebecca were already her life, the children of her heart.
Because she couldnât bear children of her own, they were her one best chance to be the mother she longed to be. They could ease the ache that had been with her since that terrible accident when sheâd been sixteen years oldâan accident that had been her fault. Oh, she hadnât been driving the pickup truck filled with a half dozen cheering high school friends when a speeding car crashed into them.
But climbing into the back of that truck after their team had beaten the town rivals had been her idea. Sheâd carry that guilt with her forever.
Her hand trembled as she twisted the key in the ignition. Anxiety about what would happen in Grass Valley dried her mouth like a summer drought turns a prairie to dust.
The early-morning sky was a pale blue, the air crystalline clear. The temperature would probably reach seventy-five degrees, typical for July.
Normally she loved driving across Montana during her time off from teaching high school history and government. Sheâd even been known to go hiking on her own or camping with friends. But this tripâand what might followâshe dreaded at a deeply personal level.
She could lose the babies she had come to love with the intensity that only a mother could possess.
AS SHEâD EXPECTED, six hours later and three stops for diaper changes and bottles, she discovered Grass Valley was little more than a wide spot in a very narrow road.
Laura slowed as she entered the town. Eric Oakes had told her to meet him at his house, so she cruised past the few buildings that lined the main street, noting a couple of women visiting in front of the general store. An older man coming out of the saloon waved at Lauraâprobably mistaking her vehicle for someone elseâs. She caught sight of the sheriffâs office, a short, stout building that wouldnât even intimidate a jaywalker.
Then she saw the quixotic roadside mailbox, a prisoner in a bronze striped uniform escaping through the roof of the jail. Eric had said sheâd have no trouble finding his place.
Drawing a deep breath, she turned into the long driveway leading to a two-story house. Modest by most standards, the best feature was a porch that stretched the full width of the house and was positioned to catch the morning sun. Two wicker chairs promised comfort while watching the sun rise.
A big cottonwood tree shaded portions of the front yard, and beyond the house stood a small barn and corral. A pair of sorrel horses raised their heads to check on her arrival.
Laura didnât want to think about how much Amanda and Rebecca might someday want their own horses or have a swing hanging from a sturdy tree branch. Her townhouse didnât have room for a corral, and the trees were mostly poplars, impossible to climb much less swing from.
When she pulled to a stop, a man came out of the house, the screen door bumping closed behind him as he walked down the steps toward her with an easy stride. Tall and lean in his khaki uniform, he wore a badge pinned to his broad chest and a pager on his belt that was no larger than a trim size thirty-two.
Sheâd really been counting on a beer belly.
Checking first to see that the twins were still sleeping, she got out of the car.
âAfternoon,â he said in the same clear baritone sheâd heard on the phone, a tone that held a note of caution.
She nodded. âSheriff Oakes.â His hairâthe color of a sand dune after a rainstormâwas cut short, probably to tame the natural waves rather than from any desire to appear military. Crinkles fanned out at the corners of his eyes, as though heâd spent a lot of time squinting into the Montana skyâor laughing. His face was tanned, his jaw square, his lips set in a firm, skeptical line.
âMost folks just call me Eric. Weâre pretty informal around here.â He glanced toward the truck. âYouâve got the twins with you, MsâŚuhâŚI didnât get your whole name.â
âLaura Cavendish. Theyâre in their car seats.â
âI wasnât a hundred percent sure youâd show up.â
âI said I would.â
âWell, letâs take a look at âem.â He gestured toward the back seat.
She bristled. âThis isnât like picking out a good horse, you know.â
His pale-blue eyes narrowed and darkened with suspicion. âI didnât think it was, Ms. Cavendish. But they are my nieces, arenât they?â
âApparently.â More than anything in the world, Laura wished they werenâtâwished the detective had made a mistake and traced the wrong man. But heâd assured her that wasnât the case.
âHow did you find me, anyway? Johnson is a pretty ordinary name.â
âI had your date and place of birth from your sister, which I gave to the detective I hired. Since I knew you and she hadnât been raised together, we guessed you had landed in the foster care system somewhere.â The tricky part had been getting ahold of the adoption records. Laura hadnât asked the detective how heâd managed that.
He cocked his brow, then edged closer to her vehicle, peering through the tinted side window. âSo youâre pretty sure Iâm the right guy.â
âYes.â She swallowed hard. If she simply got back in the truck and returned to Helena, no one would question that sheâd done as Amy had requested and decided their uncle wasnât suitable. The twins would be hers. âBut if youâre not interested in raising themââ
He grasped the handle and opened the door. Laura held her breath as he leaned inside.
âOh, my God.â He spoke as though his words were a whispered prayer and filled with awe. âTheyâre so little.â
Through the crack, Laura saw him tenderly slip his finger into Rebeccaâs hand. The baby closed her tiny fingers into a fist around him and opened her eyes, looking up at Eric with her bright blue eyes. A bubble escaped her lips.
âHey, Tinkerbell,â he said softly. âThis lady says Iâm your uncle Eric. Whadaya think, huh?â
The magical exchange between the big, rugged sheriff and his tiny niece was so powerful, Lauraâs throat closed down tight, and she almost couldnât speak. âThat one is Rebecca. The other one is Amanda.â
âHow do you tell âem apart?â
âRebeccaâs left eyebrow arches a little more than Amandaâs does and her ears stick out a tiny bit more. Sheâs also more wakeful than her sister.â Somehow, from almost the first moment following their birth sheâd been able to tell the twins apart without checking their ID bracelets. The hospital nurses had been amazed. âOther than that, theyâre identical.â
âIâll say.â
A light breeze ruffled Lauraâs hair, shifting it along the back of her neck, and she felt a chill run down her arms. âI think we ought to take the girls inside. Theyâre still a little fragile.â
He backed away from the truck. âOh, yeah, sure. Come on in.â
âYou get Rebecca, and Iâll go around to the other side to get Amanda.â
âYou want me toââ He blanched as white as if sheâd asked him to pick up a deadly snake. âIâve never held a baby that tiny before. Iâm not sure I know how.â
Heâd better learn how in a hurry if he expected Laura to even consider leaving the twins in his care for as little as two minutesâforget the rest of their lives.
âHere, let me.â She edged past him, acutely aware of what a big man he was. His aura expanded around her, stealing inside her personal space, leaving her feeling slightly breathless. Unsnapping the car seat harness, she lifted Rebecca and gave her a quick kiss. âCome on, Becky. Meet your uncle Eric.â She held out the baby to him.
He hesitated.
âShe wonât break as long as you donât drop her.â
âI wonât,â he promised.
She laid the baby in his arms. âKeep her head propped up. Donât let it fall back.â
He looked as awkward as a boy at his first dance, standing as stiff as a robot, not knowing quite what to do with his hands, his expression frozen with fear. Even so, Laura saw he was gentle. His big hand cradled the back of Rebeccaâs head, his arm held her firmly against his chest.
Not that that meant heâd be a good daddy for the long haul.
âNow, hold her carefully,â she warned him again. She hurried to the other side of the SUV, quickly extricating Amanda from her car seat. The infant stretched and yawned, then let out a tiny cry of complaint. âSorry I had to wake you, Mandy. Youâre fine, really you are.â She grabbed the oversize diaper bag and rejoined Eric, who hadnât budged. âWe were going inside?â
âRight.â He eyed Laura, then looked down at Rebecca. âI was wrong before. Sheâs not Tinkerbell, sheâs Stinkerbell. And I think sheâs leaking.â
âOh, dear.â She stifled a smile at his horrified look. âWell, letâs get her inside, and Iâll change her diaper. That probably means Mandy is about to let loose, too.â
Eric didnât look at all pleased with the prospect. His easy walk that sheâd noted earlier turned to a tiptoe race up the porch steps. Despite that, he took the time to hold the door open for her.
An officer of the law and a gentlemanâshades of the old west.
For a bachelorâs place, the living room looked neat, and the heavy leather couch and recliner gave the room a masculine flavor. In lieu of any feminine touches, there was an overflowing bookcase stuffed with mystery, adventure and science fiction titles, a big-screen TV and a stereo sound system that would rival an outdoor amphitheater. It looked like a case of a boy with plenty of expensive toys.
Noting the row of huge silver rodeo trophies on the mantel above the natural rock fireplace, Laura suspected Ericâs music of choice would be country-western. She wondered how he was at two-stepping. Not that she was an expert. Just the opposite. But the dance had always looked like fun.
Holding Amanda in one arm, she pulled a receiving blanket from the diaper bag with her free hand and spread it on the center cushion of the man-size couch. She put Amanda down and reached for Rebecca.
Eric passed her the baby, thinking how odd the situation felt. A woman in his house and two tiny babies so small he could probably cradle one in each hand like a football if he wasnât so darn scared heâd drop one.
No question, he was going to need a crash course in infant care if they had any chance of surviving under his roof after he was on his own with them.
A father ought to know something about taking care of his kids.
If indeed he was a relation at all. He had the feeling he should be waiting for another shoe to drop, one that resembled a complicated con job intended to raid his bank account.
How could anyone know how much heâd always wanted a family of his own?
He watched Lauraâs swift, confident movements as she changed the babiesâ diapers. Her head was bent over them, allowing her hair to slide forward, hiding her face behind a ginger-blond screen. Her hairdo was practical, only long enough to reach the angle of her jaw, one of those styles that brushed into place with a few strokes or little more than a shake of her head. But it seemed to shine in the reflected light of the room as though someone had turned a golden spotlight on her.
Her clothes were practical, too. A businesslike navy jacket over a light yellow blouse and navy slacks. Sensible shoes. A long way from a femme fatale or what heâd imagine a scam artist would wear.
She dressed as primly as every social worker heâd ever known as a kid, but something was different about her. When she held one of the twins, murmuring sweet, loving sounds, her smile glowed from the inside out. She had some kind of a special connection to these babies. Eric wasnât sure what.
Granted, he wasnât a big-city cop. But heâd had a fair amount of police training and pretty good instincts. Despite her very attractive packaging, this woman was hiding something.
âExcept for knowing my birth name, what other proof do you have that these babies are any relation to me at all?â
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