Substitute Father. Bonnie Winn K.

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Название Substitute Father
Автор произведения Bonnie Winn K.
Жанр Современные любовные романы
Серия
Издательство Современные любовные романы
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781472025661



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hurt you.” Then he met the oldest boy’s eyes. “Why don’t you tell me what this is all about?”

      For a few moments the boy stood mute, his mouth set in a stubborn line.

      Luke, however, didn’t back down.

      Finally the boy wavered a fraction. “You didn’t need this stuff.”

      Seeing how frightened the children were, Luke kept his tone mild. “That’s not the issue. I want to know why you stole my groceries.”

      “They gotta eat!” the boy burst out.

      Luke stared at the child, a sickening pit forming in his stomach. “What do you mean?”

      “We don’t have no food,” the youngest boy explained.

      The pit in Luke’s stomach hardened. “Were you planning to take the groceries home to your parents?”

      The oldest boy momentarily looked panicked, then his mouth thinned again, a determined if futile gesture.

      The younger boy wasn’t as stoic. “We don’t have no parents.”

      For a moment, Luke just looked at the children. “Why don’t you tell me your names?” he urged finally, heartsick at their plight.

      “I’m Troy,” the youngest boy offered.

      Luke nodded, then smoothed one hand over the girl’s matted hair. “And how about you?”

      “Hannah,” she managed to say, her tears beginning to subside.

      Luke leveled his gaze on the oldest boy.

      Reluctantly the child spoke. “Brian Baker.”

      “And I’m Luke Duncan. Where have you been staying?”

      Brian’s gaze traveled to a few ragged sacks on the floor.

      Luke had to take a deep breath to hide his shock. Luckily the August nights were warm, otherwise the kids could have become seriously ill. Straightening up, he withdrew his cell phone. “I’ll call the police and get you some help.”

      “You can’t do that, mister!” Brian hollered, before Luke could dial.

      “You can’t!” Hannah echoed, then started sobbing again.

      “Whoa!” Luke replied. “I just want to get you some help.”

      “They’ll separate us!” Brian shouted. “We can do just fine on our own!”

      Luke’s gaze encompassed the bare, dirty space. “I can see that. But if your parents abandoned you—”

      “They didn’t!” Brian shouted in reply.

      “Mama died!” Troy told him. “She wouldn’t just go off and leave us!”

      Even more perturbed, Luke slowly lowered the phone. “When did she die?”

      “Couple weeks ago,” Brian answered sullenly. “They were coming to take us away when we left.”

      “Maybe the authorities had found relatives who could take you in. That doesn’t mean you’d be separated.”

      “They were going to put us in foster homes,” Brian replied. “Separate foster homes. We heard ’em.”

      “What about your father?” Luke asked gently.

      “He died a long time ago,” Troy told him solemnly. “When I was borned.”

      Luke glanced from face to face, seeing pain, terror and worse—a disheartening lack of hope. No doubt they were hungry and tired as well. “Okay, I won’t call the police. For now.”

      Brian looked suspicious but relieved.

      Luke considered his options and knew he had only one. “You’re all going home with me.”

      “We don’t want nothin’ from you,” Brian asserted. “We’ll pay you back for the food.”

      “I have a better idea. We’ll take the groceries to my house and cook some supper. Then you can help me figure out how to work my PlayStation.”

      Although Troy looked intrigued, Brian was still resistant. “We’re fine here.”

      Hannah hiccuped. “I’m hungry.”

      Obviously torn, Brian stared first at his younger sister, then at Luke.

      Taking charge of the situation, Luke tugged the cart from behind the curtain, turning it toward the door. After shifting the groceries, he picked up Troy and deposited him in the cart. Then he lifted Hannah to rest on his hip. Luke kept his tone mild as he met Brian’s gaze. “You coming with us?”

      With no other choice, Brian nodded.

      “Where are your things?” Luke asked.

      Brian shrugged and again Luke felt his heart constrict. Not even a change of clothes among them. “Traveling light has its advantages.”

      Brian nodded, but Luke could see the boy’s throat working, either from gratitude or shame. Casually, Luke draped one arm over Brian’s shoulders. “I’ll need your help to get the younger ones across the street.”

      Brian straightened up and nodded, obviously relieved to be assigned some responsibility. Briefly, Luke wondered at the hand of fate that had placed these kids in such a predicament. Then he concentrated on getting them out of the alley.

      It didn’t take long to get them into his Bronco. Luke wasn’t certain if it was fatigue or fear that kept the children quiet once inside.

      Within a few minutes, Luke drove the short distance from the grocery store, then stopped the SUV in front of his rambling, old Victorian home. The large house looked imposing, but he’d purchased it for a song, doing most of the renovation and restoration work himself. It had proven perfect for both his home and his veterinary practice, which was located in the front of the house.

      “You live here?” Troy asked, obviously impressed by the proportions of the house.

      Luke unbuckled their seat belts. “Yep. It gets kind of drafty in the winter, but otherwise it’s okay.”

      “Okay…” Brian repeated in awe, staring up at the third-floor dormer windows of the attic.

      Luke wanted to chuckle at their reaction, but realized the children would think he was laughing at them. Instead, he handed each one a sack of groceries, then shepherded them up the walk.

      Once inside, they stared upward at the impressively tall ceilings. Luke remembered a similar feeling when he’d first stepped inside the house. Then it was run-down, in danger of being condemned. But he had seen past the ramshackle condition to the possibilities contained beneath layers of peeling paint, torn wallpaper and threadbare carpet.

      “Put the sacks on this table,” Luke instructed, showing them an old drop-leaf hall table that had once belonged to his grandparents.

      Although they complied, each one was trying to take in the unusual house.

      “Who else lives here?” Brian asked, still gaping.

      Just then several dogs started barking ferociously. All three children turned to stare.

      “That you, Luke?” Wayne Johnson called out from the clinic portion of the house.

      “Yep! Come on out here.”

      Curtained French doors swung open. A fortyish man stepped out, wiping his hands on a towel. The volume of the dogs’ barking increased with the opening of the doors. Wayne carefully looked over the trio of children. But he didn’t show more than mild surprise. “Howdy.”

      The kids responded with a variety of greetings.

      “I don’t suppose you all are here to help me with the critters,” Wayne commented.

      Luke smiled, realizing his assistant