Read Rabbit Creek Santa Online

Authors: Jacqueline Rhoades

Rabbit Creek Santa (7 page)

BOOK: Rabbit Creek Santa
10.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

This was something Elizabeth knew about the young woman, but never understood. She'd asked over and over, but Lindy would always say, 'Joey's fine. We're fine. I'm fine.' Maybe she would tell them now.

"I'm a young widow. I don't fit with the unmated, because I have Joey," Lindy began and it all came pouring out; how lost and alone she felt, how she no longer knew where her place was in the pack.

"Well, hell," Ruby laughed when she'd finished. "That's an easy one. You belong with all of us. It's true," she said belligerently when Maggie frowned at her simple answer, "Look around this table. We got old." She flicked her thumb at Maggie. "That's her, not me. We got young. We got some with pups, young and grown. We got some without pups, not now nor in the past." This time she reached for Maggie's hand and squeezed it affectionately. "Harmony here's our widow, though I heard tell she's seeing some bookkeeper from over the mountain." She winked at Harmony.

"He's an accountant, I'll have you know and it was supposed to be a secret, Ruby."

"If you wanted it a secret, then you shouldn't have told Ruby," Gwenna laughed.

"It wouldn't matter anyway. Not in Rabbit Creek," Elizabeth laughed and squeezed Lindy's shoulder. "You're the only one who's managed to keep one from us and it's one you shouldn't have kept.

"I'm still new at this myself," the Mate went on, "so I can't speak to how it is in other packs, but in Rabbit Creek, you'll find a place if you'll just let us in."

"You won't fit with all of us all of the time. Gwenna don't ask me and Roy to go dancin' down at the Blue Moon Saloon, but that don't mean we can't talk about what we got in common. We got no room for lone wolves here. Next time someone comes knocking, you answer the door. You hear me?" Maggie beckoned to Gwenna. "Why don't you totter off on them high heeled shoes and get our Lindy here something to eat."

"I brought cookies," Lindy sniffed. "It's not much and I left them in Travis' truck."

Maggie passed her another tissue. "There you go. Cookies are always welcome, but they'll not do anybody any good sittin' in Travis' truck."

"I think that's my fault," Elizabeth said, "I'm sorry if I hurt you, but you've got to tell me what I did before I can say I'm sorry for it."

At that moment, Max walked in with a crying Joey snuggled against her chest. She saw Lindy's tear stained face and waited until the Mate nodded before she spoke.

"The Alpha asked me to bring Joey in to play with the other pups, but he keeps crying and asking for something and I don't know what it is." She turned Joey in her arms. "Tell your Mama, honey. Tell her what you want and I'll get it for you."

"Piyo," Joey wailed
, which brought on a fresh bout of tears from his mother.

 

Chapter 8

 

Travis started across the yard and saw Lindy running from the house. She had no coat and her high heels weren't made for running through the snow. She fell, got up and started running again. By that time Travis was running, too.
She fell again before he got to her. He picked her up out of the snow and began brushing it off her hands and hair.

"Are you crazy, woman? What the hell's the matter with you?"

"Yes. No. I was a little, maybe. Oh Travis! It was a mistake, all a big mistake. I didn't know. I didn't see. I wouldn't listen. I had dozens of chances and I turned away. I'm so ashamed."

"
I don't know what you're talking about. You've got nothing to be ashamed of," Travis said, taking his jacket off and wrapping it around her. "I'll get you in the truck, get the heat on and come back for Joey. We can talk when I get you home."

"I can't, Travis, I can't
. I have to stay. Maggie says I have to show them I can answer the door when somebody knocks."

Her face was ravaged with tears
. Her nose was red. Her cheeks were blotchy. She'd been crying for some time. What had they done to her in there? She was crying so hard, he could barely understand what she said, but he got the part about answering the door.

"The hell you will," he growled.

He scooped her up into his arms and strode back to the house, following the trail Lindy'd made through the snow.

"Travis, you've got to listen to me," Lindy cried. She had her arms around his neck and was sobbing into his
shoulder.

"I will, sweetheart, I will, but there's something I've got to do first."

His wolf was snarling, snapping to get out. He wanted blood. So did Travis. When he couldn't reach the doorknob without setting her down, he stepped back and kicked the door in.

 

"Whoa, shit," Henry said from the window of the barn where he'd been relaying the events in the yard. Things weren't going as planned. "Travis just kicked in Roy's back door. I think you better get in there, Marshall."

 

"Good Lord, son, you ever hear of knockin'," Maggie said when the door crashed open. She didn't seem surprised or upset.

"Maggie Cramer,"
Travis snarled, "You and Roy have been good to me since I came here, but you make my woman cry like this again and I don't care who you are or who your friends are…" he glared at the women around the table including the Mate… "That goes for every damn one of you."

The Mate went to speak, but Maggie stopped her. "We won't be making her cry again
. No sir, I don't think we will." She sounded surprisingly docile.

The whole time he was talking, Lindy kept saying, "No, Travis, no."

"Yes," he now told her firmly. "You aren't opening anybody's damn doors. They don't get to make those decisions. The Alpha does.

"It's okay, Lindy honey, we got his message and so should you."

Maggie was smiling and so was the Mate and Travis couldn't figure out why.

A young man walked into the kitchen. "What the hell's going on in here?"

"It's okay GW. Nothin' Roy can't fix."

Travis put Lindy down and walked up to the man who'd been playing fast and loose wi
th his woman. "You GW?"

The tall and rangy wolver
nooded. "Yep, that's me…"

"You stay away from my woman, or I'm the wolf that's going to rip you
r throat out." Travis hauled back and slammed his fist into GW's face. "When I have time. And yeah, that was a Challenge. You shouldn't be toying with any woman, but particularly not this one. Got it?"

"No!" everyone shouted at once, but the loudest roar was Marshall's.

"They're not going to treat her like this," Travis was shouting at Marshall. "They've got no right. Look at her. Look what they did." He pointed to Lindy who was leaning against the counter looking horror stricken. "I won't let anybody treat her that way. If they can't take us as we are, we'll find a pack that will. I'll take her and the pup back to New Hampshire if I have to. At least there I'll know they'll be welcome and appreciated." His mother and sisters would be glad to have her.

"The hell you will." Marshall spoke to Travis, but he was looking at the Mate.
This was exactly what he'd warned her about.

Wolvers were
coming from all over the house, crowding in the doorways and looking over each other's shoulders to see what the commotion was about. Their wolves sensed the hostility and were excited by it.

Elizabeth stood and waved her hands. "It's okay
, Marshall. Really. Everyone, it's okay. Someone go get Max. Gwenna get some ice for GW. Lindy, you and Travis go upstairs to the bathroom. Lindy needs to wash her face."

"What the hell was that for?" GW was holding his face and glaring at Travis.
He started to rise, but Marshall's signal held him where he was.

"Enough," Marshall said, "GW, I'll explain it later. Travis, take Lindy upstairs."

"I'm taking her home," Travis said stubbornly.

"You're taking her upstairs," Marshall said with such Alpha force the whole crowd quieted. He relaxed. A little. "Clean her up and give me a minute to get to the bottom of
this."

"
Bathroom's second door on the right," Maggie said and then she laughed. "Clean her up and that's all you do. We got cubs in the house."

Like Moses at the Red Sea, Marshall moved his hands and the crowd parted to allow the couple to pass and waited silently for them to disappear up the stairs.
Their Alpha offered a hand and pulled GW to his feet.

"No more to see here," he called to those waiting as he led
GW outside to explain the misunderstanding. He glanced at the damaged doorframe and shook his head.

"What's the matter with these cubs," he sighed.

Maggie laughed. "You ain't old enough to be sighing over what the younger ones do. You still remember what it was like to be young."

"I wasn't like this," he said at which everyone who remembered the young Marshall laughed.

"You used to challenge over a nickel dropping heads or tails afore you rose to your great heights. You boys made your mama cry with your tusslin', 'specially when you fought each other. It just feels different now that you're at the other end of the stick." The older woman laughed and turned to the Mate. "His daddy had to knock their heads together more than once as I recall."

When everyone had settled down and gone back to whatever they were doing,
Ruby drummed her hands on the table and cackled gleefully.

"Maggie, this here's the best damn Christmas party you ev
er had."

 

Travis practically dragged Lindy up the stairs and into the bathroom. The idea of packing her and Joey back up to New Hampshire was looking better and better. What was the matter with these wolvers! Maggie was grinning like madwoman and her friend Ruby was bouncing in her seat like she was at a basketball game. The rest of them weren't any better. They were all grinning ear to ear as if breaking Lindy's heart were entertainment.

Even the Mate was smiling, though at least she had the decency to try and hide it.
They were crazy, every damn one of them.

He sat Lindy down on the toilet seat and grabbed a washcloth from the stack on the shelves built into the wall.
He rinsed it with cold water and began applying it to her face.

"You're angry," she sniffed.

"Of course I'm angry," he nearly shouted and then caught himself and finished in a lower tone. "Not at you. Aw, Lindy honey, look what they did to you."

"They didn't do it. I did," she said and then her eyes filled up again.

"Don't now," Travis said firmly. "No more crying, sweetheart. I won't let them hurt you anymore."

Lindy didn't cry, but she didn't give up either. "They didn't hurt me. Well, they did, but… Travis, listen!" she said sharply when he looked like he would interrupt.

"That's more like it." He smiled and set the cloth in the sink, then leaned against it and folded his arms across his chest. "Okay, I'm listening. Spill."

Lindy shook her head
in tolerant exasperation. "In a few months, Joey's going to be getting time-outs when he's naughty," she began and paused when she saw Travis' smile widen.

He was thinking of Joey's cussing vocabulary. "Those time outs might come sooner than you think. Go on, I'm listening. Joey, time-outs."

She sighed. "Joey'll be hurt. He'll probably cry, but it's good for him. He has to learn."

She squinched her eyes shut and Travis thought she might cry again. "I had to learn and it hurt."

"They had no right…" he began.

"They had every right
, Travis. I wasn't holding up my end within the pack. I was selfish and I hurt them with it. Don't be angry with them. It was my fault." She told him what they'd said and lowered her head. "Now you know what kind of person I am."

Travis lifted her chin with his finger. "Stop it. You got lost for a
while, that's all. You didn't see the ones who were trying to help and you turned to someone who wasn't."

Lindy looked at him strangely. No one had mentioned that. "Who, Travis? Who wasn't trying to help?
"

Travis shook his head and smiled. Lindy really was a sweet thing. She wouldn't see it.
"GW, sweetheart. The reason he only comes around when he has time is because he's seeing someone else. Maybe two or three for all I know. It's not right, Lindy. A decent wolver should give you all his attention." He put his hand against her cheek. "I'm sorry, honey," he lied through his teeth, because he wasn't sorry at all that his rival was a shitty wolver, "But that wolver isn't looking for anything permanent. You need to stay away from him."

Lindy smiled and Travis decided that despite the red eyes and blotchy nose
, that smile made her beautiful. He thought it meant she understood what he was saying about his own intentions, but then the smile turned into a giggle and the giggle became a full throated laugh and he was suddenly afraid this might be the same thing as her somewhat hysterical crying. Worse, what if she was laughing at his intentions?

"Sweetheart, w
hat is it?" he asked, wondering if he should call the Mate. He wasn't equipped to handle this sort of thing. His anger had carried him through before but this… She was pointing at him and gasping with her laughter.

"You… You thought…Oh, my God, Travis… you thought…"

"What, sweetheart? Tell me!"

"You thought GW and me…" She took a deep breath, trying to control the laughter and then she sobered. "Is that why you hit him?" she whispered.

"Yes, that's why I hit him!" he shouted, his anger returning. "If he were a decent guy, I'd stay out of it," he lied and then spoke the truth, "Look, you and Joey deserve someone who'll look out for you all the time, not just when he has time."

Lindy started laughing again, but it was sweet laughter because she was pretty sure she understood what he was trying to say.
"Stop! Stop! Travis, GW is Maxine's mate. You know, Max, who watches Joey while I'm at work. GW has his own family to look out for. He doesn't have much time."

Travis had been ready to argue with her,
to put his foot down as a matter of fact. His mouth was open. He'd drawn in his breath, but no words came out.

"Yep, poor GW's down there wondering why he got hit
," Lindy laughed. She got up, looked in the mirror, frowned, and splashed more cold water on her face. "I'm sorry Travis. It was all just a little overwhelming and then when the Mate told me…"

"Hurry up! I gotsta pee," squeaked a small voice from the other side of the door.
A little hand slapped the door about halfway up, making it rattle at the hinges and lock.

"Told you what?" Travis asked hurriedly while the little hand kept slapping. He wasn't sure he wanted know. He'd already kicked in Maggie's back door and punched an innocent wolver in the face. What else could go wrong
?

"Mama says I can't pee off the porch like Billy 'cause I ain't built with a spigot and Miz Ma
ggie says you been in there long enough," called the squeaky voice. "Miz Elizabeth says I gotsta mind my manners, so please," she yelled not sounding very mannerly at all, "Get outta there afore I pee the floor!"

"Can we talk about the rest later
? Please, Travis?" Lindy whispered. "We really do need to get downstairs before everyone starts to leave or...talk." She glanced at the door, "I really don't want an audience."

Travis nodded and unlocked the door.
"Guess we're both going to be eating a little crow down there."

"No,
" Lindy laughed, "I only have to open doors. You have to eat the crow."

A little girl
came bursting through as soon as he opened it. Her pink underpants were already to her knees as she pushed past Lindy and hopped on the toilet ignoring the two grownups. She sighed with relief as the urine flowed in a gushing stream. Emergency past, she now felt comfortable to speak.

BOOK: Rabbit Creek Santa
10.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Devil's Charm by Sam Crescent
Born to Fight by Mark Hunt, Ben Mckelvey
Signs from Heaven by Phaedra M. Weldon
Seducer by Flora, Fletcher
How to Meditate by Pema Chödrön
Rundown by Michael Cadnum
My One Hundred Adventures by Polly Horvath
Vulcan's Fury: The Dark Lands by Michael R. Hicks
An Early Winter by Marion Dane Bauer
Dead Man's Wharf by Pauline Rowson