"Mom, is Cole kind of
like a dad," my four-year-old son, Danny, asked as I reached to turn off
the light on the night table next to his bed.
I'd just finished tucking him in and kissing him goodnight on the forehead.
I'd just finished tucking him in and kissing him goodnight on the forehead.
"Sweetie, it's late. We
had a big day."
"Don't you like him,
Mom?"
"Well, yes, he's very nice,
but..."
"Maybe if you asked him
he'd be a dad."
"Um...I don't think so,
sweetie. Cole is...just a person who works for us." Alone in my kitchen with a cup of decaf at the table, I wondered what to make of the day's events. But before I could figure anything out, my cell phone rang. "How was your boat ride?" my best friend Rose asked.
"Marvelous," I
said, which was true. Cole and taken Danny and me on an early evening dinner
excursion on the Lady Belle, the last
paddle wheeler to work the Mississippi River in our area. "But I can't
believe I'm..."
"What? Falling in love
with your landscaper?"
"It's so unreal."
"He's not just an
intenerate day-laborer working for minimum wage, Cindy. He has a degree in
horticulture, he owns his own business, he's single, and he's wonderfully
handsome. Danny likes him, doesn't he?"
"Danny thinks Cole
Spencer hung the moon."
"Well, girl! There you
go."
I'd inherited a rambling
Victorian home from my aunt and a modest sum of money. The home itself needed
minimal repairs but the sprawling yard was a disaster, practically a jungle.
Aunt Martha, a die-hard recluse, tended her home well, but not the yard.
I hired Cole Spencer to restore
the yard, and I hoped by next spring to turn part of the home into a summertime
bed and breakfast to help supplement my school teacher's salary.
Cole's handsome good looks and easy smile attracted me at first sight. Me. Amber Murphy. Thirty-four. Three years a widow. A scary thought leaped into my mind: Could Cole Spencer be the second soul mate of my life?
Cole's handsome good looks and easy smile attracted me at first sight. Me. Amber Murphy. Thirty-four. Three years a widow. A scary thought leaped into my mind: Could Cole Spencer be the second soul mate of my life?
That's not happening! I told myself
Then last night our
professional relationship changed in a stunning way. On my front porch, just
after Danny raced into the house, Cole kissed me in the moonlight, and my blood
pounded.
I can't be falling in love.
I mean, I finally had my
life neatly laid out. My inheritance from Aunt Martha had left me in good
financial standing. Running a bed and breakfast, if only during the summer,
would take loads of time and energy. Not to mention the time and energy it
takes to raise an overly active four-year-old boy. I needed no more
complications in my life.
At breakfast the next
morning, Danny asked, " Mom, can Cole take us to the circus?"
I smiled. "I don't
think so, sweetheart. He's already done enough for us."
Which was true. Cole had rid
my lawn of dandelions, crabgrass, and moles. He'd trimmed the trees and planted
bushes and shrubs around the entire house. Lately, he talked of building a
gazebo where my summer guests could enjoy a cup of coffee after breakfast.
"You're pretty, Mom.
I'll bet if you ask him..."
I tousled my son's reddish
blonde hair. "Eat your breakfast."
Later that morning, Cole
showed up at my front door with two hydrangeas, one in each arm. "Thought
I'd plant these on either side of the porch," he said, smiling his easy
smile. "They're free. They'll bloom next spring."
As he set the plants down, I
stepped out of the house onto the porch.
I heaved a big sigh.
"Cole, we need to talk."
"I know," he said
sheepishly, burying his hands deep in his jeans pockets. "I was way out of
line last night." The sunlight slanting onto the porch gleamed off his longish
brown hair. "The last thing I should be doing is kissing a client."
"Or delivering free
plants to her house."
He nodded. "Very
unprofessional conduct."
"Her life is mapped
out," I said. "She doesn't need any complications."
"Right. No complications
for either of us."
My feet shuffled. "But
this...situation is partly her fault. I'm willing to admit that," I said looking at him. So handsome!
"The worst part of it
is she's so very, very beautiful," he said, his gaze landing on me. "Like
a spring rose."
Cole and I stood staring at
each other, our eyes locked. My heart started that pounding. His Adam's apple
bobbed. "There's a circus in town this weekend," he said.
"I thought you and Danny..."
"I thought you and Danny..."
Before he could finish or I
could answer, he wrapped me in his arms and kissed me ever so softly and slowly on the lips, and a warm glow swept over me.
Behind the screen door, I heard Danny exclaim, "Oh wow! We get to go to the circus!"
Behind the screen door, I heard Danny exclaim, "Oh wow! We get to go to the circus!"
Cole smiled. "What does
your mom say?"
Complications,
unprofessional conduct, life mapped out—none of it mattered. I smiled back and
tried to still my pounding heart. "I love a circus," I said.
The End
Enjoy Reality! Contemporary YA fiction with an impact. Don't wait! Visit: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Jon+Ripslinger
Enjoy Reality! Contemporary YA fiction with an impact. Don't wait! Visit: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Jon+Ripslinger