Barrett Cole

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Barrett Cole Page 15

by Christa Wick


  “That’s me,” Naomi snickered. “Hey, I’ve got to whiz really bad. Is the restroom working in this joint?”

  The cop pointed toward the back of the floor room. “That’s my partner, Mark, at the table.”

  “Cool,” Naomi answered, her gaze on the blonde as she locked the door.

  “That way,” the cop indicated. “If you still need to…whiz.”

  “Like you wouldn’t believe.” Naomi sauntered forward, drifting toward the table where the second cop had a high-end laptop open next to a combination printer and scanner.

  “Boyfriend is in custody,” Barnes advised. “I repeat, boyfriend in custody.”

  “Nice equip—”

  “Police!” the blonde shouted, grabbing Naomi’s right wrist and yanking it halfway up her back as she kicked out Naomi’s right ankle and slammed the teen chest first onto a second table set up with folders full of blank papers.

  “That’s it,” Quinn said, her voice taking on the numb tone of the prior night. “That’s really it.”

  “Love…” Barrett didn’t care if his cousin was right there or about Gamble and the detective up front or how many cops outside the van might hear him. He turned Quinn toward him and grabbed her shoulders. “You had to do this, love. She was never going to let you have a life. You heard that guy say she was going to stick around and mess you up…just like you thought she would.”

  Quinn stared at him, a dozen emotions running across her delicate features.

  “Don’t fade on me, love.”

  She shook her head, the motion releasing a flick of tears that landed and sparkled on her cheeks.

  “I’m not going anywhere,” Quinn answered, lifting her arms and wrapping them around Barrett’s neck. “Except home with you.”

  Chapter Twenty-One

  The faint jingle of silver bells woke Quinn. An even softer giggle followed the bells. Quinn forced her eyes open but didn’t lift her head.

  “I think we might have a fairy lurking outside our door,” Barrett whispered.

  Quinn propped herself up on an elbow, the nap officially over now that they were both awake.

  “It’s only a fairy if it has fairy dust,” Quinn said, her voice purposefully lifting to carry beyond Barrett’s old bedroom at the ranch house.

  A stampede of jingling bells and a three-year-old’s laughter disappeared down the hall. Like champagne bubbles, the sound of the toddler may have disappeared, but its effect lingered in Quinn’s smile.

  “Come back down here,” Barrett ordered, the command vibrating in his throat.

  She looked at him, one brow lifting in a challenging arc. If he wanted more time in bed with her, their bodies curled around one another, he had other options than a Sunday nap at his mother’s house. He could ask her to move in with him or not resist her getting an apartment instead of staying at the ranch in his old room as she had since Naomi’s arrest over a month and a half ago.

  Barrett drew his bottom lip into his mouth. Forgetting the reason behind her resistance, Quinn moved into the crook of his arm, her head pillowed by his shoulder, her arm across the brawny chest. She breathed deeply, still fascinated by the scent of him.

  On Barrett’s side of the bed, the clock switched from three twenty-seven to three twenty-eight.

  “People will be arriving soon,” she warned.

  “And?” He stretched the question out.

  She lifted up again, half her torso draped over his. She ran the tip of her finger against the stubble on his chin. He had been back in Willow Gap less than twenty-four hours after two days containing a fire on the eastern side of the state. He had come straight to the ranch house and stayed most of the evening, but returned to his house to sleep.

  “Aunt Dotty is one of those people. You’ll offend her sensibilities lingering in bed with a woman you’re not married to.”

  His gaze sparkled, the curve of his mouth turning dangerous with its sharp smile. “I’m pretty sure Dotty’s done a little more living than you give her credit for.”

  “Well, if we linger much longer, when we walk out there, you’ll be facing your aunt and uncle, Dotty, your mom, Jake and Leah, Sage and Ashley, Siobhan, Cassian, all of your brothers…maybe another cousin or two…”

  Finished, she drew a deep breath. “Wow, no wonder your mom was up at six cooking!”

  “Okay,” he relented, fingers lightly tracing Quinn’s spine. “I’ll get up—after you kiss me.”

  Her skin flushed head to toe at the bribe he demanded.

  “If I kiss you, it’ll be another half hour before we get out of bed.”

  It never stopped at one kiss. Not like it went further than that, but Barrett had a hundred ways to kiss her without ever dipping below her collarbone.

  He rolled Quinn onto her back, his body covering hers. She braced for the slow buildup of need that would stop just short of release.

  “There,” he said, planting a kiss on her forehead. “That didn’t take half an hour, did it?”

  “No,” she agreed with a pout.

  Settling back on her side, she watched him stand up and grab the toiletry bag he’d arrived with that morning. From the back of the bedroom door, he lifted the pressed shirt he’d also brought with him from his house.

  “I better make myself presentable.”

  With a wink, he left Quinn in bed dreaming after him.

  The silver bells returned and stopped centimeters before reaching the open door to Quinn’s room.

  “Is that a fairy I hear sneaking around the hallway?”

  Leah didn’t answer with a giggle. Still out of sight, she blew softly and unleashed a short-lived whirlwind of rose-colored glitter.

  “It is a fairy!” Quinn proclaimed, jumping from the bed into the hall to sweep the little girl up.

  Dressed in the same rose tones as her fairy dust, Leah squirmed and giggled, her tutu whispering along with the miniature bells on her tennis shoes. With her right hand curled into a tight fish she held against her chest, she used the other to clutch at Quinn’s shirt.

  “I caught you fair and square, little fairy.” Quinn blew a raspberry on the toddler’s neck. “Now you must use your magic fairy dust to grant me a wish!”

  Calming, Leah pulled her clenched hand away from her chest and carefully uncurled her fingers to reveal a small remaining pinch of the glitter.

  “Blow!”

  Closing her eyes, Quinn obeyed. Exhaling in one long breath, she removed every last particle of the fairy dust, each mote warmed by the wish that she would spend the rest of her life with Barrett Turk

  * * *

  “I hope everyone left room for dessert,” Lindy said, coming out of the kitchen with a platter covered from one end to the other with tiramisu.

  Ashley followed after her with a second platter of the dessert.

  “Since you’re eating for two,” Ashley teased as she set the dish down next to Sage.

  “Leah eating for three,” the toddler grumbled as her father slid a small slice onto her plate.

  “Three?” Jake asked. “How do you figure that, baby girl?”

  “Leah is three,” she answered then counted off on her fingers. “One, two, three.”

  A chuckle traveled around the table until it reached Aunt Dotty, who held up her hand.

  “No one touch the tiramisu,” she boldly ordered. “By that child’s logic, I’m eating for seventy-two. All the tiramisu is mine.”

  Leah looked to her left then her right. Seeing all the adults with their hands in their laps or hovering someplace other than the dessert platters, she shook her head.

  “Leah eating for one!”

  The chuckles turned to a chorus of laughter.

  When the noise died down, Barrett stood up and excused himself from the table.

  “I’ll be right back,” he announced.

  “Don’t be long, child,” Dotty told him. “I have something I want to say and, at my age, I’ll forget if you’re slow about whatever it is you are up to.”<
br />
  “One minute, I promise.”

  He returned a few seconds before the deadline, his cheeks pink and his hands buried in his pockets as he stood behind Quinn. She pushed his chair out and slid a little to her right to make room for his return, but he smiled and shook his head.

  “We’re all listening, Aunt Dotty,” he coaxed.

  The old woman pulled a white envelope out from under the table. Prolonging the mystery, no writing interrupted the plain surface.

  “Now, I didn’t say anything before now,” Dotty began. “But I took out an insurance policy on the construction site up at Jasper’s. What with the arson and the prosecutor working out a plea deal and everything, it took a while for the claim to be processed.”

  She tapped the envelope against the dessert plate, her bright blue gaze moving between Quinn and Barrett.

  “The insurer reimbursed me both costs and the value of the labor. I donated the labor portion to the Willow Gap Family Emergency Fund in Jasper’s name.”

  A murmur of approval circled the table.

  Dotty slid the envelope across the table toward Quinn.

  “I expect one day you and my grand-nephew will be married after he works up the nerve to ask. And he has a home already,” Dotty said. “But Jasper’s cabin was always a welcoming place the Turk family spent time at—all of it good. It would be nice if that continued.”

  Tears welling, Quinn shook her head.

  Hearing Barrett’s disappointed sigh, Quinn looked up, her mood swinging from elated to distressed so fast she could feel her brain sloshing around inside her head, her vision blurring as cold nausea crept through her stomach. What was it in Dotty’s words that had upset him? The statement that they would one day be married?

  “That’s nice and all, Aunt Dotty,” Barrett chuckled, pulling his hand from his pocket. “But you just stole all my thunder.”

  Quinn didn’t understand. Not even when he pulled his chair completely out of the way and got down on one knee.

  Only when he opened the black velvet box and she saw the diamond solitaire did the world begin to piece itself back together.

  “Quinn Whitaker, I love you and I want to spend the rest of my life with you.” He paused, looked straight into her with those deep green eyes.

  “Will you marry me?”

  She nodded, throat too tight for words. Then the tears started and she choked out a “yes” before melting into his arms.

  When Quinn could breathe again, Barrett led her over to Dotty, who squeezed them both in turn. She went from Dotty’s arms to Lindy’s then Sage, the faces becoming a fresh blur after that but everyone offering a hug or a kiss on the cheek.

  Making it back to her chair after everything had settled down, Quinn found that Leah had switched seats. The little girl brought a finger to her lips then motioned Quinn closer.

  “What is it, Honey Bee?” she whispered.

  Eyes glowing with remembered mischief, Leah pinched an edge of her pink sleeve to reveal a few specks of glitter still clinging to her outfit.

  “Did you get your wish?” she whispered back.

  Head bobbing, Quinn looked around the table at all the happy faces.

  “Yes, baby girl, I did. I got my wish and so much more.”

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  A perfect spring day blanketed the meadow in front of Lindy Turk’s ranch house. A hundred white folding chairs marched toward a newly constructed arbor garlanded with wildflowers gathered from the field. Two tents, one housing food, the other bridesmaids, offered shelter from the still gentle sun.

  Peeking through the tent flaps, Quinn spotted Sutton leading Leah toward her.

  Quinn breathed out. “Good, he found her.”

  “Clean, I hope,” Sage chuckled. “Or clean enough.”

  Quinn nodded. “Looks it.”

  Sutton marched the toddler up to the tent. Sage pulled the flap back just enough for Leah to enter, but the little girl planted her feet with a stubborn resistance.

  Turning to her uncle, Leah held up her fist then carefully opened it.

  Seeing pink glitter, he lifted his brows. “What’s that about?”

  “Fairy dust,” Quinn answered. “She wants you to make a wish.”

  Starting to roll his eyes, he dipped his head and rubbed a thumb against his forehead. When he looked up, he smiled indulgently at the little girl.

  “Tell you what, I’ll make an earnest wish if you promise to build a quartz radio with me this weekend.”

  “No soldering,” Sage warned.

  “Not at this age,” he agreed.

  Leah’s head moved back and forth from uncle to aunt to uncle again. Seeing the confusion on the little girl’s face, Sutton touched the piece of raw amethyst hanging from a silver chain around her neck.

  “This is a type of quartz,” he explained. “Using smaller pieces, we can pick up sound traveling through the air from hundreds of miles away.”

  Mouth forming a loose “O,” Leah held the amethyst up and looked between it and the glitter in her hand.

  “My rock is magic, too?”

  He snorted before half agreeing with her. “It’s as magic as your fairy dust.”

  “Deal,” she grinned, thrusting her hand closer to his face. “Now blow!”

  Closing his eyes, he took a deep breath that eased the tension sharpening his handsome features. Softly, he exhaled. When he opened his eyes, the glitter was gone.

  “Wonder what you wished for,” Siobhan smirked, sweeping past him in her bridesmaid gown to enter the tent.

  Leah waved a finger at her uncle. “Don’t tell her, Sutton.”

  “I’d sooner tell Betty Rae,” he whispered before planting a kiss on the little girl’s cheek as he handed her over to Sage.

  Quinn watched him walk away. The limp was gone, the step surer. Physically, Sutton seemed to have completely healed.

  “He’ll come back to us,” Sage said, her voice kept low so that the conversation remained between her and Quinn. “He’s just wondering where he fits after so many changes in his life and in the family.”

  Quinn nodded. “He belongs here.”

  “Hopefully he’ll figure that out soon,” Sage said. She wrapped her hand around Quinn’s elbow and turned her toward the center of the tent. “Let’s get that veil on you.”

  Ten minutes later, the music began. Siobhan was the first bridesmaid to leave the tent, her brother Cassian waiting just beyond the flaps to escort her up the aisle. Sage left next, her hand threading around her husband’s arm.

  Bright blue gaze shining with joy, Dotty wrapped her fingers around Jake’s bicep like a grappling hook, clutching and smiling as he carefully walked her up to the arbor and the chair placed in the matron of honor’s spot.

  “My turn!”

  Leah danced out of the tent, an old hand at scattering rose petals for the recent brides of the Turk family.

  “You look beautiful,” Sutton said, taking Quinn’s arm.

  She blinked, tears threatening, throat tightening. She hadn’t known how to reach her father for the ceremony. But, even if there was a chance of reviving a relationship that had died so long ago, Quinn wouldn’t want anyone other than Sutton walking her toward her future husband.

  “Thank you,” she rasped, then teased with a still scratchy voice. “Make me cry before I get up there and you’re in trouble, mister.”

  He shook his head.

  Reaching Barrett, Sutton handed Quinn off and took his seat.

  Barrett circled an arm around Quinn’s back as his fingers teased one of her hands away from the bouquet. He kissed her palm, Quinn’s entire body shaking.

  She had grown up as the girl who wasn’t allowed to have nice things. Now, with Barrett about to make her his wife, she had everything. Part of Quinn still expected a dozen Naomi clones to storm out of the tents and wreak havoc.

  But that part of her had become very small, just a few misfiring neurons that hadn’t received the message that life was great all day,
every day, because the man standing next to Quinn loved her with his whole heart.

  So did his family.

  “God never made a more perfect woman,” Barrett whispered, his lips brushing against the soft lace of her veil.

  “Or a more perfect man,” she whispered back.

  * * *

  Listening to the pastor was a harder task than Barrett could have anticipated. The problem was Quinn—beautiful, open, loving, and shaking with every muscle her body possessed.

  They just needed to get to the end. He could hold her then, kiss her, prove to her that everything between them was real and lasting.

  “I do,” Quinn said, their vows finished.

  “I now pronounce you man and wife. You may—”

  “Way ahead of you there, pastor,” Barrett said, lifting the veil and cupping Quinn’s beautiful face as a gentle breeze of laughter flowed around them.

  Leaning in, he felt a stillness spreading through her just as he had hoped. His lips touched hers. Quinn reached up and curled her hands atop his shoulders, her chest pressing into his.

  He risked a small bite of her full bottom lip, blood racing through his body. Barrett pulled back, the warm air that he and Quinn released like a part of their souls rising up to Heaven.

  “Thank you,” she whispered.

  Laughing, Barrett shook his head, his arms crazy with the need to hold her again.

  Walker clapped him on the back. Assisted by Sutton, Aunt Dotty rose from her chair. She folded her hands around Barrett and Quinn’s, the wise old eyes brimming with tears.

  Of all the things Barrett was proud he could provide Quinn with, he was most proud of what surrounded her at that moment—the love and comfort of his family.

  That love was the one thing that would never change.

  More from Christa Wick

  Visit christawick.com for author news, social media links, and a bibliography with store links.

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