Lost and Found Groom McLinn, Patricia (love books to read .TXT) đ
Book online «Lost and Found Groom McLinn, Patricia (love books to read .TXT) đ». Author McLinn, Patricia
At Martiâs final hushed words, a log shifted on their small fire and dimmed the flames.
Dale emitted a ghostly laugh, âAnd so youâre all doomedâcursed! Just like everybody in town saysâthe Far Hills Curse, thatâs why all those Suslands die like flies.â
âShut up, Dale,â ordered Amy. âYou donât know anything about itâyouâre not a Susland.â
âSo what. Neitherâs Luke!â
Luke calmly watched Dale and Amy, but contributed nothing to the dispute his name had been dragged into.
âHeâs a lot closer than youâll ever be, because heâs part of Far Hills Ranch.â
âBig deal. And Ellyn isnât evenââ
âHow could he not go back to his children?â Kendraâs voice trembled, but it seemed to be with outrage, not tears.
âMaybe he didnât know how to be a father.â Grif stared into the fire as he spoke. âSome men just donât.â
Marti licked her dry lips, tasting the whisper of winter coming. âThereâs one more part Iâve never told you before.â
All eyes turned to her.
âBut now . . . now I think I have to tell you. In case thereâs not another time . . . in case weâre not all together again.â
Marti swallowed and resumed her story-telling voice. âLeaping Star said one more thing to Charles Susland. âIf these wrongs are not righted in five generations of your blood, then they will never be undone, and Far Hills will be ever silent.â â
Amyâs wide eyes stared at her. âWhat does that mean?â
âIt means somebody who had Charles Susland as an ancestor needs to make right all those things he did wrong,â said Kendra. âBut there are others besides us, arenât there?â
Grif shook his head. âI remember Mom showing me a family tree. Lots of people died off young andââ
âJust like I said!â crowed Dale.
ââthat means the group of us sitting here are the last of Charles Suslandâs descendants. But even if you believe in this sort of thing, Aunt Marti, how could folks living now make right something that happened a hundred years ago?â
âIf I knew, Grif, Iâd do it, no matter what.â
By his widening eyes, she could see her nephew recognized her words gave away that she did believe.
âAll I know is that Amy and I are the last to carry the Susland name, but it will be our children, if we have any, and you, Grif, and you, Kendra, who must make sure the curse is lifted. Because youâre the fifth generation of Charles Suslandâs blood.
âYouâre the last hope of Far Hills.â
CHAPTER ONE
âI am not cursed.â
Kendra Jenner set the mug on the wood table with an emphatic clunk. The gesture lost a good deal of its effect because the mug resembled the head of a cartoon duck, complete with blue bill. It was her sonâs favorite.
âFirst of all, the entire idea of that legend is absurd,â Kendra declared. âAnd secondââ
âOh, I donât knowââ started her friend and neighbor, Ellyn Sinclair.
âAnd second,â Kendra repeated, âIâm not a Susland.â
âNot by name, but Charles was your ancestor, right?â
Kendra opened her mouth to reply, but a more pressing matter intruded.
âMoâ doose.â
Kendra looked at her son seated beside her at their kitchen table. Despite the familiar swell of love that always twinned with an ache of loss, she kept her voice light. âOnly if youâll drink it this time instead of using it as hair mousse.â
Matthew, his thick, dark hair displaying new and interesting spikes, ignored that caveat and returned to the heart of the matter, hands opening and closing as he reached for the mug. âMoâ doose.â
âSingle-minded child you have there,â Ellyn said with a smile from across the table. She had arrived early for their meeting, catching Matthew in the midst of a lunch where more food went on than in. Although Meg and Ben Sinclair were school-age now, as a widowed mother of two, Ellyn had taken in the situationâincluding, no doubt, Kendraâs frazzled stateâserved herself coffee and took a chair at a safe distance. âMust take after his mother.â
You wouldnât think so if you met his father.
The thought came before Kendra could stop it, and so did the ache. She pushed both away.
âDetermination is a good quality,â she said as she gave her son the mug. âBoth hands, Matthew.â
âDoose.â He drank loudly then raised his head to beam her a smile. âDank you.â
Matthewâs smile eased some of her tiredness. âYouâre welcome, sweetheart.â
âHello, sorry weâre late.â The back door opened to Marti Susland and her three-and-a-half-year-old daughter Emily.
âCome on in, Marti.â
Kendra had stopped calling Marti Susland âauntâ so long before she had come back to Far Hills to live that she couldnât remember exactly when sheâd started viewing the older woman as an equal. Maybe it had been when Amy died, leaving Kendra and Marti united in grief. Since Kendraâs return to Far Hills, she and Marti and Ellyn had formed a support system built on friendship and all being single parents.
âIâd like to blame it on trafficââ Kendra and Ellyn chuckled, since Marti lived just up the private road at the Far Hills home ranch. She shook her head, setting her mixed brown and gray chin-length hair swishing. ââbut I fear Iâm getting slower and slower. Sometimes keeping up with Emily makes me feel like Iâm a relic from history, instead of researching it.â
They were meeting today to organize their work on a freelance local history supplement to the Far Hills Banner, where both Ellyn and Kendra worked part-time. Using Martiâs research, Kendra would do the writing and Ellyn the graphics and layout. Kendra had the extra income earmarked for her sonâs college fund.
Matthewâs interest was riveted on Martiâs daughter, a dark-haired, dark-eyed sprite. He craned his head around the side of the high chair to call hello, then whipped his head back to his mother.
âDown. Down.â he ordered, already trying to undo the tray.
âFirst you need to be cleaned up, young man, or the first time you touch Emily the two of you will be permanently bonded.â Wiping the worst of the damage from Matthewâs scrunched up face and squirming arms, hands and
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