Kitabı oku: «A Forever Family Collection», sayfa 21
CHAPTER TWELVE
LUKE couldn’t believe what he’d just witnessed. Abby—the person who loved her child more than anything—had just run out on him.
She was just his mother all over again. Running out on her child when he needed her most. What kind of parent did that?
His reaction was instantaneous. He moved over towards the examination couch and put his hand in Reuben’s. He was still anesthetised, still sleeping. He would have no idea what had just happened. The little boy’s skin was cool, so he brought his other hand over and gently rubbed some heat into him.
He was aware of the guarded looks around him. The unspoken messages passing between the various members of staff.
Toni, the nurse, touched his shoulder. ‘Do you want to go after her?’
‘No.’ His voice was brusque. He wasn’t going anywhere. His job was here, with Reuben.
Jonas looked up from where he was extracting the bone-marrow aspirate. ‘I’ll be finished in a few minutes. Then we can wake Reuben up again.’
Luke captured the look in his eyes. The knowledge, the expertise.
Jonas was still looking at him, his voice quiet. ‘It happens quite a lot, you know.’
‘People run out on their kids?’
Jonas arched an eyebrow at him, before he looked downwards again, slowly removed the needle from Reuben’s hip and pressed down firmly on the site.
‘No. Parents panic. This might seem like a relatively simple procedure. But the results mean a whole lot more. Sometimes the magnitude of the situation doesn’t hit a parent until they’re in here. And they realise that the result of this test could be the difference between life and death for their child. You said you’ve been through this before. You should understand.’
Lord, the man was brutal. He didn’t mince his words. Should he really be working in a place like this?
Luke bit his lip. He lifted his hand and stroked Reuben’s fine blond hair and ran a finger gently down his cheek. This little boy needed someone. This little boy needed him.
Jonas covered the area with a dressing, snapped off his gloves and walked around the bed towards Luke. He pressed a firm hand on his shoulder. ‘Once she’s calmed down, Abby will be distraught about what just happened. If you know her at all, you know that about her.’
Something twisted inside him. He was a doctor. He knew the signs. He should have recognised them quicker. Abby had had a panic attack. She hadn’t run out on her child. She would never run out on her child. So why was he so furious?
Luke ran his fingers through his hair. ‘I can’t leave Reuben. I need to be here for Reuben.’
The anaesthetist gave him a nod. ‘We’re done here. I’m just waking him up. Why don’t you wait until he comes to, then go and find his mom?’
He nodded as she removed the anaesthetic mask. ‘He’s had some local anaesthetic in the site and he’s been given some pain relief so hopefully he’ll be quite comfortable when he wakes up. You can let us know if he needs anything else.’
Luke nodded slowly. The air in the room was quiet, his large hand was still holding Reuben’s small one—and he’d no intention of letting go.

Abby felt the cool breeze rustle through her hair. She could hear the sounds of bubbling water. Her heart had stopped clamouring. Her head had stopped spinning. She could finally breathe again. Where was she?
She slowly lifted her head from between her knees. She was outside the hospital entrance, in the gardens at the front, sitting on one of the benches next to the ornamental fountain. How had she got here?
She put her hands on her waist, arched her back and took a deep breath. It was a beautiful warm sunny day but she was cold. Her hand touched the thin blue scrubs she was wearing. They were damp. No wonder she was cold.
Her mind shifted and things came back into focus. Oh, no. Reuben. How was Reuben?
She jumped from the seat, but her legs were unprepared and they buckled underneath her. She had to get back up there. She had to see how her son was. Her eyes turned towards the hospital building. The light was reflecting off the tinted glass windows, causing it to blind her. A tall figure was striding purposefully across the grass towards her. She raised her hand to shield her eyes from the sun.
Luke. Her insides curled. What must he think of her? She cringed as she remembered the look on his face when he’d told her about his mother and the day she’d run out on Ryan when he’d been having his bone-marrow aspiration done. The disgust. The absolute disgust and contempt he’d felt. And now he’d feel that way about her.
She pushed back against the hard wooden bench. Would he yell? Would he scream at her? He couldn’t possibly make her feel any worse than she did now.
The figure came into focus. Like her, still dressed in the hospital blue scrubs. His tall frame blocked out the sunlight as he came towards her. She could stop squinting now and focus on his face.
It was blank. Unreadable. Had something happened to Reuben?
‘Luke…’
His hand reached out and touched her shoulder. ‘Reuben’s fine, Abby.’ He’d sensed her immediate fears and quelled them. He removed his hand and sat down next to her, the bench shifting underneath her at the weight, his hands clasped in front of him.
‘I don’t know what to say. I don’t know what happened in there. I couldn’t breathe. It was claustrophobic. I thought I was going to be sick—or pass out.’ The words shot out, one after another.
His hand reached over and touched her leg. It was warm, providing heat through her sweat-drenched scrubs. ‘You had a panic attack, Abby.’
She shook her head. ‘That’s ridiculous. I’m a doctor. Why on earth would I have a panic attack?’ But even as she said the words of denial, the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle started to fall into place.
‘Because you’re not a doctor here, Abby.’ He waved his arm towards the building. ‘This isn’t Pelican Cove. Here you’re a mom, with the possibility of a sick child. That’s why you had a panic attack.’ His lips turned upwards in a rueful smile. ‘It doesn’t have to make sense, you know.’
She groaned. ‘I think I’m going to be sick.’ She ducked her head down between her knees, waiting for the wave of nausea to pass again. Luke’s hand was on her back, stroking her neck.
He was touching her. He wasn’t shouting. He wasn’t yelling. She felt the tears brim in her eyes. What did that mean?
Her head flipped back up and she took a deep breath. She studied his face carefully. ‘You must hate me.’
He shifted uncomfortably. ‘What makes you say that?’
‘The way you looked at me when I left the room. I saw you. I could see in your eyes how you felt about me.’
Luke leaned forward and put his head in his hands.
She kept talking. ‘I’m sorry, Luke. I know you told me about your mom leaving Ryan. I never, ever thought I would do the same thing.’
‘What do you want me to say to you, Abby?’
‘That you don’t hate me—that you forgive me.’
Silence. Luke was studying the ground at his feet. ‘I don’t know if I can say that.’ His words were quiet, whispered. ‘You reminded me of every reason why I hate my mother today.’
Abby’s voice caught in her throat. She couldn’t hide the desperation in her voice, she was clutching at straws and she knew it. ‘Do you think it’s possible she had a panic attack too?’
Luke threw up his hands in exasperation. ‘The woman would have to feel some kind of emotion to have a panic attack, Abby.’
‘How can you say that? How can you know that? Did you ever speak to her about it?’ She was tired, tired of Luke for judging her and judging his mother.
He jumped up from the bench. ‘Talk to her about it? You must be joking. If I wanted to talk to my mother about Ryan dying I’d have had to schedule an appointment in her diary!’
Abby could feel the anger rise in her veins. She jumped up too. ‘And you think I’m like her? I’m like your mother? Do you know what I saw in that room, Luke? Do you know what’s been haunting my dreams for the past few nights? Coffins. Little white coffins. Little white coffins being lowered into the ground. And it kills me. I wake up and for a second I don’t know if it’s real or not. And it takes me a few seconds to separate fact from fiction. And every time it happens I wonder if it’s a premonition. And here…’ she thrust a finger toward her chest ‘…right here, I know that if Reuben dies, I want to die with him.’
Luke opened his mouth and then stopped. The pieces of the jigsaw puzzle in his mind finally slotted into place. This was it. This was what it felt like to have two people more precious to you than anything else in this world. This is what it felt like to have two people you would offer to sacrifice your own life for. To take their place—no matter what.
Abby stood before him, her pale skin almost translucent, her eyes strained, her hair in disarray and a multitude of tears spilling down her cheeks. She had never looked more beautiful and it twisted something deep inside his gut.
He took her arm and led her back to the bench, giving them both a few moments to collect their thoughts. He took a deep breath. ‘You’re not my mom, Abby.’
‘But do you hate me? Will Reuben hate me?’ Her bottom lip was trembling.
‘Reuben doesn’t even know, Abby. He’s upstairs with Toni right now. I told him you’d stayed with him and went to the hospital store for a popsicle. He’ll be expecting you any minute.’
She heaved a sigh of relief. The weight that had been pressing down on her chest beginning to subside. ‘Thank you. Thank you, Luke.’
He saw her turn towards him, her face determined, her eyes steady. ‘Why are you here? You gave up on me. You gave up on me and my ideas about a family for us. You wouldn’t even try. I wasn’t important enough for you to give us a shot.’
He shook his head, ‘No Abby…’
But she stopped him. ‘Why now, Luke? Why, when I’m probably at the most difficult stage in my life? Why have you decided you want to be part of my life now?’
She went to open her mouth again but he raised a hand to stop her. ‘Let me speak. I’ve made a huge mistake. A mistake that started five years ago. I wanted you to be free to have a family of your own, the family you’d always dreamed about and the family that you deserved. I’ve made such a mess of this. These last few days, spending time with you and Reuben has been the best time of my life. I feel as if I’ve finally seen what a family could be, what a family should be. And I know, more than anything, that’s what I want. I love you, Abby. I want you as my family, you and Reuben.’
He heard her sharp intake of breath. ‘How can you say that after what just happened? How could you even contemplate loving me?’
‘Because I never stopped. I love you, Abby. I love you and Reuben. I want to be part of your lives.’
‘I love you too, Luke.’ She shook her head. ‘But this is just too hard.
‘It isn’t too hard.’ His voice was determined. ‘We won’t let it be. You don’t have to do this alone. Let me be there for you, for you and for Reuben.’
She shook her head. ‘No, Luke. I can’t expect that from you and why would you want to?’ Her voice rose in confusion. ‘You can walk away and not look back. You don’t owe us anything.’ His hand rested on her shoulder and her head automatically leaned towards it, finding comfort in its warmth. She placed her own hand over his. ‘You’ve already been through this, Luke. You had a brother that you loved and lost. I couldn’t ask you to do that again.’
He shook his head. ‘This is different. I was a child myself back then, with two parents who couldn’t deal with the situation. I’m an adult now, I’m free to make my own choices. And this is the choice that I choose to make. I only wish I’d been smart enough to be with you from the start of this. I don’t want to walk away. I might not be Reuben’s father but I know what’s here…’ he pointed towards his chest ‘…in my heart. For you and for him.’
‘But how can you?’ Her voice wavered. ‘How can you choose to do this again?’
‘Because the love always outweighs the pain.’ His voice was quiet and determined. ‘No matter what I went through with my brother, it was worth it. He was worth it. I have millions of fabulous memories of our time together. And if you told me right now that I could have my life again, with or without him in it, I would choose him every time.’
He put his finger under her chin and lifted her head towards him. ‘We don’t know what will happen with Reuben. But how much joy has he brought you, Abby? Isn’t he worth it?’
A single tear slid down her cheek. ‘Of course he is.’
‘Then all I’m telling you is that you don’t have to do this alone. Because I think that you’re worth it, Abby. I think that Reuben’s worth it too.’ He slid a finger through her blonde hair. ‘You know what they say—for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health.’ His voice was trembling now; she knew what he was trying to say.
Her eyes were heavy with tears and she swallowed the lump in her throat that was the size of baseball. ‘Can we do this in baby steps?’
‘We can do this anyway you like.’
EPILOGUE
‘I THINK I need an eternity ring.’ Abby twisted the single diamond on her finger with the plain gold band underneath.
‘What makes you think that?’ Luke turned to face her, hoisting his hand under his head.
Abby stretched out on the blanket, lying on the grass in front of their house. She smiled as she watched Reuben play with his new brother. Austin, or the ‘tiny terror’ as they’d nicknamed him, was more than a match for his older brother. At the age of two, his ambition in life appeared to be to wreak havoc wherever he went. He’d only been with them for three weeks and so far he’d wrecked the sofa, gouged a hole in the dining-room table and trailed a black felt tip-pen along the pale cream wall in the hall.
Reuben was doing well. He’d had another course of treatment and been in remission for over a year. His energy had returned in leaps and bounds and he’d been over the moon at the prospect of a little brother.
She lifted her hand and let the sun’s rays catch the diamond on her finger, glistening against the dark green grass. ‘Some women get an eternity ring after they’ve been married a number of years. Some women get an eternity ring after the birth of their first child.’ She waved her hand across the grass. ‘Well, that’s been over a year now, and I’ve got two kids, so cough up, mister.’
Luke reached his hand up and pulled the parasol a little lower, hiding them from the boys. ‘Is this negotiable?’ A wicked smile danced across his face. ‘I might have bought you an alternative present.’
She sat upright. ‘What do you mean?’
He took her hand in his and pulled her upwards, leading her towards the front door. She watched as he opened the cupboard directly inside the front door and heaved out a huge flat brown box, sliding it carefully across the floor.
Abby was amazed. When had this arrived? And how had she missed it? ‘What is this?’ she asked curiously.
‘Open it and see.’ He pulled a pair of scissors from the drawer of the dresser that sat in the corridor.
She bent down and snipped at the heavy-duty string that was wrapped around it, peeling back the cardboard layers.
‘Wow.’
A perfect round stained-glass window. To match the one at the other end of the upstairs corridor. But this one didn’t have yellow daffodils and bluebells. This was the one she’d always imagined. This had a dazzling display of multicoloured freesias—colours that would send rainbow streams of light down her corridor.
‘Oh, Luke, it’s just perfect. More perfect than any ring could be.’ Abby trailed a finger across his bare chest. The fire hadn’t stilled between them, it just seemed to burn brighter and brighter.
‘Good. Because I’ve been trying to keep that a secret for over a month. Now, what do I get in return?’ he whispered in her ear.
Abby wriggled closer, loving the feel of his body against hers. ‘Why, Dr Storm, you get me and two very noisy little boys—your very own fan club.’ And she planted her lips on his, sealing their love with a kiss.

The Cattleman’s Ready-Made Family
Michelle Douglas
To the Valley Girls for the support,
the laughter and the champagne.
CHAPTER ONE
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A TREE CHANGE?
Do you long for fresh air and birdsong?
Do you relish fresh-picked produce?
Do you hunger for a gentler pace of life?
RENT A FARMHOUSE FOR $1 A WEEK!
If you’re a community-minded family, why not rent a farmhouse for $1 a week in beautiful Bellaroo Creek?
We can promise you a fresh start and genuine country hospitality.
CAMERON MANNING PACED from the fence to the empty farmhouse and back again. He checked his watch. The second hand hadn’t moved much from the last time he’d looked. With a curse, he threw himself down on the bench, squatting beneath one of the Kurrajong trees that screened this farmhouse from the rest of his property, and drummed his fingers against his thigh.
Where was the woman?
The slats of the bench, badly in need of a nail or ten, bit into his back. It would’ve been more comfortable to sit on the veranda, but here the deep shade screened him. It’d give him a chance to contemplate his new tenants unobserved.
He scowled. If they ever turned up.
To be honest, he didn’t much care if they did or not. All he wanted was Tess Laing’s signature on his contract so he could hightail it out of here again. He had work to do. Serious work.
He leaned forward, steepling his hands under his chin as he glared at the farmhouse. Now that he had the cattle station on the western edges of his property sorted and in the capable hands of an under-manager, and he and station manager Fraser had dealt with all that needed overseeing for the operation of the sheep station and the planting and harvesting of the wheat crop, the only item left remaining was the canola contract.
He needed that locked in.
Once it was he’d be free to leave this godforsaken place. He’d shake off the dust of the poisonous memories that not only plagued his dreams at night but his waking hours too.
He leapt up, a familiar bitterness coating his tongue and the blackness of betrayal settling over him like a straitjacket. For the first time in his life he understood his father’s retreat from the world. He recognised the same impulse in himself now. He gritted his teeth. He would not give into it.
Blasting out a breath, he glanced at his watch. 3:30 p.m. The woman had said she’d arrive somewhere between two and three o’clock. He slashed a hand through the air. Lucky she wasn’t an employee.
Lucky for her, that was. He could fire an employee. He wrenched his gaze from the forty hectares of lovingly improved land that stretched out behind the farmhouse. Land he’d spent the last two years painstakingly improving—turning the soil, digging out rocks, fertilising…backbreaking work. And now…
He seized the contract he’d tossed onto the bench, rolled it up and slapped it against his legs. Once it was signed he could shake the dust of Bellaroo Creek from his feet for good. After that, his mother could deal with the new tenants.
And good luck to them.
He paced some more. He threw himself back to the bench and kept his gaze firmly fixed on the road and not on those contentious forty hectares. Finally a car appeared at the end of the gravel road, moving slowly—a big, solid station wagon.
Cam didn’t move from his spot in the shade, not even stirring when the breeze sent a light branch dancing across his hair, but every muscle in his body tightened. He dragged in a breath and counselled patience. He would explain the inadvertent mix-up to Tess Laing. He would patiently explain that a mistake had somehow seen his forty hectares included in her lease on the house. He would get her signature to turn those forty hectares back over to him. End of story.
If the mix-up had been inadvertent—an honest mistake. Bile burned his throat. Honesty and his family didn’t necessarily go hand in hand. He expected betrayal from Lance. His nostrils flared and his lips thinned. He would never underestimate his little brother’s treacherous resentment again. He would never again trust a word that spilled from Lance’s forked tongue. But his mother, had she…?
An invisible hand tried to squeeze the air out of his lungs, but he ignored it to thrust out his jaw. Mistake or not, he needed that land. And he would get it back. He’d talk this woman out of whatever ridiculous hobby farm idea she’d come out here with. He’d offer her a fair price to lease the land back. He’d make whatever bargain he needed to. His hand curled around the contract. Once he had her signature, Kurrajong Station’s obligations would be met. And he’d be free to head off for the far horizons of Africa.
Lance, Fiona and his mother could sink or swim on their own.
The car finally reached the farmhouse and pulled to a halt. He rested his elbows on his knees, eyes narrowed. Would she be some hard-nosed business type or a free-spirited hippy?
Three car doors were flung open and three passengers shot out from the car’s interior like bottled fizzy water that had been shaken and then opened—a woman and two children. All of them raced around to the front of the car and bounced from one foot to the other as if they’d been cooped up for too long.
He studied the woman. She didn’t look like a hard-nosed businesswoman. She didn’t look like a nature-loving hippy either. She looked…
In her red-and-black tartan skirt, thick black tights and black Doc Martens she reminded him of a ladybird. Her movements, though, were pure willy wagtail—light, graceful…cheeky. In fact, she looked like a university student. He sat up straighter. She couldn’t be old enough to have two kids!
He turned his attention to the children—a boy of around seven and a girl a year or two younger. He had a vague recollection of his mother mentioning their ages as being a real coup for the school. It was the main reason the committee had chosen this family from the flood of applicants.
A frown built inside him. They might be a coup for the school, but right now they were a disaster for him.
Finally he allowed himself a grim smile as the woman shook out her arms and legs as if she’d spent too many hours in the car—granted it was a bit of a hike from Sydney to Bellaroo Creek—and then moved to rest her hands on the front fence, a child standing either side of her. Her dark hair shone in the autumn sun. It made him realise how brightly the sun shone in the soft autumn stillness of the afternoon.
The boy glanced up at her, indecision flitting across his face. ‘What do you think?’ He glanced back at the cottage. ‘Did you know it would look like this?’
Cam pursed his lips at the edge of disappointment lacing the boy’s words. The little girl moved closer to the woman as if seeking reassurance. Cam straightened. If they hated the place they’d happily sign the whole kit and caboodle back over to him! That’d solve everything.
‘I had no idea what it’d look like.’
Her voice sounded like music.
She beamed down at the children and then clasped her hands beneath her chin. ‘Oh, but I think it’s perfect!’ She knelt on the ground, heedless of the danger to her tights, to put an arm about each of them.
The little girl pressed in against her. ‘Really?’
‘You do?’ The little boy leaned against her too.
‘Oh, yes!’
Cam wondered where she came by such confidence and enthusiasm. She was from the city. What did she know about country living?
Unless she’d known about those forty hectares before times and knew of their value. Unless Lance had already got to her, somehow. Unless—
‘Look at the size of the yard. Just think how perfect it’ll be once we’ve mown the lawn and trimmed back that hedge of…’ She gestured with her head because it was obvious she didn’t want to let go of either child.
‘You don’t know what it is,’ the boy accused.
‘I have no idea,’ she agreed with one of the widest grins Cam had ever seen.
Plumbago. He could’ve told her, but something hard and heavy had settled in his stomach. He could’ve at least mown the lawn for them, couldn’t he? He might’ve been flat out with organising the cattle station, the wheat crop and mustering sheep, but he should’ve found the time to manage at least that much. He mightn’t want these new tenants—his mother had manipulated him superbly on that front—but that wasn’t this woman’s fault, or her children’s.
‘But won’t it be fun finding out?’
‘I guess.’
‘And just imagine how pretty the cottage will look once we’ve painted it.’
She was going to paint his cottage?
‘Pink!’
‘Blue!’
‘Cream!’ She grinned back at the kids. ‘We’ll draw straws.’
He hoped she rigged that one.
The little girl started to jump up and down. ‘We can have chickens!’
‘And a dog!’ The little boy started to jump too.
‘And a lemon tree and pretty curtains at the window.’ The woman laughed, bouncing back upright. ‘And…?’
‘And we’ll all live happily ever after,’ they hollered together in a chorus, and Cam found he couldn’t drag his eyes from them.
It was just a house on an average acre block. But it hit him then what this property represented. A new start. And he knew exactly what that meant.
With everything in his soul.
The woman clapped her hands, claiming his attention once more. ‘I think we should sing our song to our new perfect home.’
And they started to sing. The children held a wobbly melody and the woman harmonised, and they so loved their song and grinned so madly at each other that Cam found his lips lifting upwards.
‘The house loves us now,’ the little girl whispered.
‘I believe you’re right.’
‘I love a veranda,’ the little boy said and Cam knew it was his way of saying he approved of the house…of their new start.
The woman smiled that smile again and Cam had to shift on his bench. ‘Right,’ she said, dusting off her hands, ‘what we need now is the key.’
That was his cue.
He hadn’t meant to sit here for so long watching them without declaring himself. He’d only thought—hoped—that a moment’s observation would give him the measure of his new tenants. Except…He found himself more confounded than ever.
‘That’d be where I come in.’
Both children literally jumped out of their skins at his abrupt declaration and he found himself wishing he’d cleared his throat first to give them warning of his presence.
The little girl ducked behind the woman, her hands clutching fistfuls of the woman’s shirt. The boy wavered for a moment or two and then moved in front of the woman, face pale and hands clenched, but obviously determined to protect her. It was a simple act of courage that knocked Cam sideways. His heart started to pound.
The woman reached out and tousled the boy’s hair and pulled him back in against her. She kept her voice solidly cheerful. ‘Aha! You’ll be our emissary from the town.’
Not quite, but…‘I have your key.’
‘Good Lord!’ She planted her hands on her hips as he emerged more fully into the sunlight. ‘Look at the size of you. I bet you’re a big help to your mum.’
And beside her both children immediately relaxed, and he found himself careful to keep the smile on his face and to move towards them slowly. ‘Actually, I guess I’m your landlord. I’m Cameron Manning.’
She frowned. ‘I thought Lorraine…’
‘My mother.’
‘Ah.’ She nodded, and then a cheeky grin peeked out. ‘The mother you’re such a big help to, no doubt.’
Actually, there was every doubt in the world on that head.
‘I’m Tess, and this is Tyler and Kristina—Ty and Krissie for short—and we’re very pleased to meet you.’
She held out her hand and he moved the final few feet forward to shake it. With such dark hair—nearly black—he’d thought she’d be pale but she had skin the colour of deep golden honey. Her palm slid against his, smooth and cool. Large brown eyes surveyed him with undisguised intensity as if attempting to sum up the man beneath the bulk. She smelled of liquorice and cool days, and when he finally stepped back Cam found his heart pounding.
‘Can you ride a horse?’ Tyler asked, awe stretching through his voice.
‘I can.’
‘I want to be a cowboy when I grow up.’
‘Then you’ve come to the right town,’ Cam said, though he could hardly believe that he spoke them. He hadn’t meant to be so welcoming. He’d meant to be businesslike and brisk. But that boy had stepped in front of his mother when he’d thought she’d needed protecting. There were grown men who were afraid to take Cam on physically. At six feet three and sporting the kind of muscles that hard work on the land developed, he understood that reluctance.
He was big and he was strong. Yet, still, this little boy had faced his fear and Cam couldn’t ignore that.
‘Auntie Tess—’ the little girl tugged on the woman’s sleeve ‘—I’ve gotta go.’
Auntie? She wasn’t their mother?
‘Right.’ She stared at him expectantly. ‘The key?’
He recalled how he’d considered talking them out of this property. The contract he’d left sitting on the bench fluttered in the breeze. He considered Tyler’s act of courage and Krissie’s excitement about chickens and the way Tess had quieted the children’s fears with a song.
A new start. He knew all about the need for those.
He fished the key out of his pocket and handed it over.
The three of them raced to the front door of the old farmhouse. Cam retrieved his contract and then stood under the Kurrajong tree and dragged in a breath. Okay, the house was neither here nor there. he had no plans for it. Those forty hectares, though, did matter and he wanted—needed—Tess’s signature on the dotted line.