A Taste of Texas. Liz Talley

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Название A Taste of Texas
Автор произведения Liz Talley
Жанр Современные любовные романы
Серия
Издательство Современные любовные романы
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781472026804



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boy sighed, dropped to his knees and began scooping up the dirt. He tossed it out into the grass. “I wish. She’s making us live here. I don’t even know for how long.”

      “Oh,” Brent responded, watching the boy as he labored. His reddish-brown hair was cut short, almost a buzz cut. Freckles dotted his lean cheeks and for a kid his age, his shoulders were pretty broad. He’d moved with a natural grace, like an athlete. Like Brent had always moved. “What’s your name? Since we’re going to be temporary neighbors.”

      “Henry.”

      “Hmm…I wouldn’t have taken you for a Henry.”

      The boy gave him a lopsided smile. “My mom likes Henry David Thoreau. I got my name from that dude.”

      “You look more like a Hank,” Brent said offhandedly, picking up the base of the broken planter, stuffing the flower’s roots into the scant soil and setting it aside.

      “Like the baseball player I saw a show on. Hank…”

      “Aaron?” Brent finished for him.

      “Yeah, that’s the guy. Cool. I can use that name here. No one knows me yet.”

      “Well, you better ask your mom about that. You know moms.” Henry was funny. Brent liked kids better than he liked most adults.

      Henry picked up the ball and rolled it around in his hand before sending it airborne. He caught it neatly. “Yeah, my mom can be crazy about stuff like that. About sports and stuff. She doesn’t think sports are important.”

      Brent feigned horror. “What’s wrong with her?”

      The boy shrugged. “I don’t know. I’m good at them. I play football, baseball, basketball and soccer. I even took karate before my dad died. I liked kicking boards and stuff. It’s pretty cool.”

      The boy tossed the ball as easily as he’d tossed out information. He’d lost his dad. Tough for a boy like Henry. He seemed headstrong and sturdy, the kind of boy who needed a firm hand. A good mentor. A man to toss the ball with.

      The boy threw the ball and caught it in one hand, slapping a rhythm Brent couldn’t resist.

      “You know, I could get my glove, and we could toss the ball around,” Brent offered. “But first you better make sure it’s okay with your mother.”

      The boy’s eyes lit up. “Awesome.”

      “So go ask.”

      Something entered Henry’s eyes. A sort of oh, crap look. “Um, it’s okay. She’s making bread or something like that.”

      The boy’s gaze met Brent’s and a weird déjà vu hit him. The kid’s eyes were the color of cinnamon. Like eyes Brent had stared into a million times. He glanced at the gate that had been locked for over ten years. The gate that led to the Tulip Hill Bed-and-Breakfast on the other side of the fence the boy had climbed.

      “Your mom, is she by any chance—”

      “Henry Albright! Where the devil are you?” The woman’s voice carried on the wind into the Hamiltons’ backyard.

      “Oops, that’s my mom. She’s gonna be mad. I’m not supposed to talk to strangers,” Henry said, scrambling toward the fence.

      Brent closed his mouth and watched as Henry ducked beneath the redbud tree before grasping one branch and swinging himself toward the brace on the fence. His worn sneaker hit perfectly and he arched himself so the other landed beside it. But the boy hadn’t been fast enough.

      The gate opened with a shove because the grass had grown over the once well-worn path.

      Henry froze and so did Brent.

      A woman stood in the opening. Her curly red hair streamed over a blue apron that was streaked with flour and she wore a frown. Brent allowed his eyes to feast on her, for she was sheer bounty. Her cinnamon eyes flashed, her wide mouth turned down, but the body outlined in the apron was lush and ripe from the long white throat to the trim ankles visible beneath the flowing skirt. Bare feet anchored themselves in the healthy St. Augustine.

      Rayne Rose.

      Brent swallowed. Hard.

      “Hey, Mom,” Henry said, dropping to his feet. “This is—” Henry turned to him. “Hey, I don’t know your name.”

      Brent didn’t move, just watched Rayne as she registered his presence. He could see her tightening. See her shock. See her try to recover.

      “Brent,” she said.

      Something tugged within him at his name on her lips. Her sweet lips. The first ones he’d ever kissed.

      “Oh, you know him. Good. We were gonna play a little baseball,” Henry said, trying to slide past Rayne into the yard of Tulip Hill. She caught his shoulder.

      “I don’t think so,” she said, looking at the boy. “You are not supposed to wander off. And you are not supposed to talk to strangers.”

      “But you know him,” Henry said, shrugging his shoulders in that devil-may-care manner all boys had.

      “But you didn’t. Pick up your glove and get in the house. You have some reading to do before we register you for school tomorrow.” Her words were firm but there was a softness in her manner, in the way she patted the boy’s shoulder.

      “But, Mom, I—”

      “No arguing, Henry.”

      A mulish expression crossed his face. “Fine. But I don’t want to be called Henry. From now on, I’m Hank.”

      Aggravation set in on Rayne’s face. He’d seen it every day on the face of his own mother. “Hank?”

      “Yes,” the boy said, disappearing behind the fence. “I want to be Hank. I hate being Henry. That’s a nerdy name.”

      Rayne closed her eyes. Then opened them again. She looked at Brent. “I’m sure this is your doing?”

      Brent shrugged and thought about crawling under the porch. “Sorry.”

      Her response was to laser him with her normally warm gaze.

      “Nice to see you, Rayne,” he said.

      She stared at him for almost a full minute before speaking. “Stay away from my son.”

      She turned and tugged the gate closed behind her.

      And that was it.

      That was how he became reacquainted with the only girl he’d ever loved.

      CHAPTER TWO

      RAYNE SLAMMED THE GATE and stood a moment, trying to stop her insides from quivering.

      Brent Hamilton had always done that to her. She’d been eleven when it had first happened. She’d spied him doing push-ups from over the fence. It was the first time she’d even noticed a boy’s muscles, and she’d stared for about ten minutes before he’d caught sight of her sprawled in the tree watching him. She’d scrambled down and disappeared, much too embarrassed to confront the boy who’d been her friend from the day she’d climbed out of her parents’ VW van, tripped up the front steps of her aunt’s house and noticed a boy throwing acorns at wind chimes.

      Brent was still a good-looking son of a bitch with a rippling body and overtly masculine aura. But the emphasis should be on the son-of-a-bitch part.

      She wasn’t a silly little girl, so she willed her shaking legs to obey and marched toward the peeling porch.

      Henry stood there, arms crossed, brow wrinkled. He opened his mouth. “Mom, I want—”

      “Don’t start, Henry. You violated a big rule, buster. Haven’t we talked about this before? You climbed into a stranger’s backyard.”

      “I didn’t