âYeah,â he said. âDo you mind?â He made it plain from his tone of voice that, since it was his truck, he was damn well going to smoke in it.
Madelyn faced forward again. âIf you mean, does the smoke bother me, the answer is no. I just hate to see anyone smoking. Itâs like playing Russian roulette with your life.â
âExactly. Itâs my life.â
She bit her lip at his curtness. Great going, she thought. Thatâs a good way to get to know someone, attack his personal habits.
âIâm sorry,â she apologized with sincerity. âItâs none of my business, and I shouldnât have said anything. It just startled me.â
âWhy? People smoke. Or donât you associate with anyone who smokes?â
She thought a minute, treating his sarcastic remark seriously. âNot really. Some of our clients smoke, butnone of my personal friends do. I spent a lot of time with my grandmother, and she was very old-fashioned about the vices. I was taught never to swear, smoke or drink spirits. Iâve never smoked,â she said righteously.
Despite his irritation, he found himself trying not to laugh. âDoes that mean you swear and drink spirits?â
âIâve been known to be a bit aggressive in my language in moments of stress,â she allowed. Her eyes twinkled at him. âAnd Grandma Lily thought it was perfectly suitable for a lady to take an occasional glass of wine, medicinally, of course. During my college days, I also swilled beer.â
âSwilled?â
âThereâs no other word to describe a college studentâs drinking manners.â
Remembering his own college days, he had to agree.
âBut I donât enjoy spirits,â she continued. âSo Iâd say at least half of Grandma Lilyâs teachings stuck. Not bad odds.â
âDid she have any rules against gambling?â
Madelyn looked at him, her mouth both wry and tender, gray eyes full of a strange acceptance. âGrandma Lily believed that life is a gamble, and everyone has to take their chances. Sometimes you bust, sometimes you break the house.â It was an outlook she had passed on to her granddaughter. Otherwise, Madelyn thought, why would she be sitting here in a pickup truck, in the process of falling in love with a stranger?
I T HAD BEEN a long time since Reese had seen his home through the eyes of a stranger, but as he stopped the truck next to the house, he was suddenly, bitterly ashamed. The paint on the house was badly chipped and peeling, and the outbuildings were even worse.Long ago heâd given up trying to keep the yard neat and had finally destroyed the flower beds that had once delineated the house, because they had been overrun with weeds. In the past seven years nothing new had been added, and nothing broken had been replaced, except for the absolute necessities. Parts for the truck and tractor had come before house paint. Taking care of the herd had been more important than cutting the grass or weeding the flower beds. Sheer survival hadnât left time for the niceties of life. Heâd done what heâd had to do, but that didnât mean he had to like the shape his home was in. He hated for Madelyn to see it like this, when it had once been, if not a showplace, a house no woman would have been ashamed of.
Madelyn saw the peeling paint, but dismissed it; after all, it wasnât anything that a little effort and several gallons of paint wouldnât fix. What caught her attention was the shaded porch, complete with swing, that wrapped all the way around the two-story house. Grandma Lily had had a porch like that, and a swing where they had whiled away many a lazy summer day to the accompaniment of the slow creak of the chains as they gently swayed.
âIt reminds me of Grandma Lilyâs house,â she said, her eyes dreamy again.
He opened her door and put his hands on her waist, lifting her out of
Guillermo Orsi, Nick Caistor