Love Under Two Mavericks Cara Covington (best ereader for pc txt) š
- Author: Cara Covington
Book online Ā«Love Under Two Mavericks Cara Covington (best ereader for pc txt) šĀ». Author Cara Covington
āThese can be preserved, too, canāt they? Michaela asked.
āJordan has a friend who does that,ā Grandma Kate said. āIt can be put into a glass case and hermetically sealed.ā
āThen I could set it out, put it on display. It would be a way to honor him, wouldnāt it?ā
āIt would, indeed.ā
āIāll ask Jordan and if heās willing, Iāll give it to him before he leaves today,ā Michaela said.
āI like that you want to see to things as soon as possible,ā Grandma Kate said.
Michaela grinned and gave voice to the words that came to mind. āAs Momma used to say, I know the names of the days of the week, and someday isnāt one of them.ā
āIāll have to remember that one,ā Grandma Kate said.
āWords I live by, unless thereās a reason not to,ā she said.
Michaela uncovered the small jewelry box her mom cherished, though she didnāt think there was a precious gem in the bunch.
In the box lay a brooch, a piece she remembered well. About the size of silver dollar, it was gold in color and had imitation pearls in the shape of a star. She blinked back tears. āI canāt believe she kept it!ā
āFrom you?ā Kate asked.
āYes. I bought this for her one Christmas, with money Iād made helping after school.ā She set it back inside the box. As she set the box on the table to take to her bedroom, something in the trunk caught her eye. Michaela picked up one of the three stacks of letters that were in a corner in the bottom. Wrapped with a bit of faded red ribbon, there were no envelopes. But she recognized her fatherās handwriting.
āLove letters?ā There were a lot of them, and they appeared to be in chronological order. āI donāt understand. Dad didnāt ever go anywhereāwell, not after he came back from Vietnam, and these were written after that.ā
āSo, he wrote them while he was here, going to bed each night with your mother, sitting across the breakfast table, day by day.ā
Grandma Kateās words settled gently in her heart. āIā¦I never saw tenderness from him, particularly. I left for college when I was eighteen and never came back to live until Jake called me to tell me he was ill.ā
A handkerchief filled her wavery vision. Michaela accepted it from Grandma Kate. She took a moment to clear her vision. āIt gives me such a sense of joy to think that there was another side to him and that he would take the time to write love letters to my mom. Iāll have to read these. I think Iāll set them in Danielās box, and when I feel up to itāand when I have a good supply of tissuesāIāll read them.ā
āThat sounds like a plan. Now, I donāt know what kind of records are in that box marked āFarm Business,ā but while my husbands ran our ranch, I took care of the paperwork. So I might be able to help you.ā
āI donāt have any idea whatās in there, either, but I definitely welcome your help.ā
Much later, she was sitting in her dining room after inspecting the wonderful job everyone had done on the house. Michaela told Lewis and Randy about the discoveries sheād made that dayāand not just the emotional ones. Sheād been right in that, after her brother died, Harold Powell had scaled back his operation considerably. After her mother passed, heād stopped altogether. He sold off the rest of his cattle and taken a lower price on his last crop of corn, because the rancher who bought it had had to harvest the crop himself.
āThis is good information,ā Randy said. He and Lewis had finished scanning the documents sheād handed them. āWe now know the last year the tractor worked was 2013. Weāll want to have it looked at by a mechanic before we try to start it.ā
āOh, speaking of that,ā Michaela pulled over one more item that sheād kept out to show them.
āThe ownerās manual for the tractor! Perfect.ā Lewis grinned. āThis really helps. Your father bought it in 2000. Likely no warranty left, but this is golden.ā
āI also discovered that, the last few years, Jake was helping Dad with his taxes and keeping track of his bills.ā She looked at the guys. āI donāt think I understood just how good of a friend heād been to Dad.ā
āWell,ā Lewis said, āthatās how Kendalls do things.ā
āIt is,ā Randy agreed. āBut of course thatās the Benedict way, as well.ā
Michaela smiled. Sheād heard those mottos on more than one occasion. āJessops are like that, too, Iāve heard.ā
Both men smiled in response to her quip.
āWhen youāre ready to think about going forward, farming, ranching, whatever, weāll have some additional information for you.ā Lewis met her gaze and held it. āDo you trust us, baby girl, to do that for you? To talk to those in the families who are working the land and to get up to speed on the breeds of cattle that do the best, as well as the feed crops and grasses that work?ā
Here they were, at her dining room table, looking ahead to an evening with Randy and Lewisās family. Sheād told them everything sheād learned during her amazing time with Grandma Kate.
She had shared her body with them and found she really wanted to share oh, so much more. She looked from one to the other then tilted her head to the side. She hadnāt planned to be the first one to say it and certainly hadnāt thought sheād say it yet. The words, it seemed, had a mind of their own and came out, soft yet clear, and they rang with the truth.
āOf course, I trust you. I love you. I love you both.ā
Chapter Sixteen
Michaela hadnāt known what to expect as a response to her unplanned and somewhat bald declaration of love.
Her heart overflowed when Lewisās eyes teared, when he slid his chair back and then plucked her right
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