A Baby And A Wedding
Page 1
A BABY AND A WEDDING
A short story following THE FORGOTTEN CHILD
By Lorhainne Eckhart
Other Books by Lorhainne Eckhart
A Father’s Love
The Gift
The Forgotten Child
Fallen Hero
The Search
The Awakening
The Choice
Lost and Found
Merkaba
The Captain’s Lady
Box Sets
The Friessen Legacy Series
Walk the Right Road Series – Danger ~ Deception ~Devotion: A Box Set
Praise for Works by Lorhainne Eckhart ...
A Father’s Love ~ I LOVED this story. It was very heart warming. It’s the kind of story I think every father should read to their children.
Mimi
The Forgotten Child ~ READERS FAVORITE 5-Star Review: A real page turner with … a fast moving plot. A must read!
Reviewed by Brenda C. for Readers Favorite
Danger Reunites a family ~ The Search
Nancy Radke
This was a very compelling and well written story. I couldn’t put in down and finished it in two days with off and on reading.
Bonnie – Amazon Reviewer
The Forgotten Child ~ Wonderful ~ Really hit home when Trevor came into the picture with autism. Real dramatic issues that could happen. Great plot! Expertly crafted.
Short Stuff ~ Amazon
Lorhainne has a way of making you crazy about her characters, whether it’s hating them or loving them...on the edge of my seat for both and can’t wait for the next.
Amazon Reviewer ~ Skybabe
Main Menu
Start Reading
Afterword
Other Works by Lorhainne Eckhart
About the Author
Contact Information
Copyright Information
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Emily frowned as she leaned against the round, white beam on the front porch and stared at the rusted-out 70s Ford truck, an old Ford Escort and a wagon once pulled by a team of horses, all parked in front of the two-storey Victorian house, which was now her home. Brad was in the north field with the vet, who was checking the herd of cattle, taking blood samples and deworming them. This was something he took care of every summer.
Emily had meant to speak with Brad about the junkyard that was parked in front of their house; not because it had just moved there, but due to it having always been in that exact spot since the first day she arrived here, to apply for the job of caregiver to Trevor.
Not one of those vehicles had moved and, if she remembered correctly from what Brad had said, they never would. The truck hadn’t moved in over five years, Emily was sure, and the broken-down car belonging to Cliff, one of the hired hands, was another eyesore. Apparently, the wagon had always been parked there since Brad had taken over the ranch from his father, Rodney.
Emily rubbed her swollen belly, which was expanding faster than she’d expected since she was only five months pregnant. Normally the vehicles wouldn’t bother her, but with the wedding only a few days away, Emily wanted the house and its surroundings to be perfect. Yet, Brad didn’t seem the least bothered by the junkyard of rusting metal. To her it was an eyesore, but his answer was to toss a tarp over it, while reminding her that being pregnant made her “pickier than usual.” That was, word-for-word, what he had said the night before when she’d been sitting on his lap, leaning into the comfort of his wide chest, surrounded by his strong arms, after Katy and Trevor were tucked up in bed.
Normally, the couple acted like two teenagers, holding hands and touching every time they were in the same room together. Emily couldn’t get enough of touching Brad. But after he called her picky, she’d stiffened and tried to slide away. He, of course, held onto her and wouldn’t let her go; sliding his hand under her pink T-shirt, over her rounded belly, and upwards, caressing the outline of her lacy bra and teasing her sensitive nipples until she leaned back against him.
Brad knew just how to touch her and have her melting against him. He had lifted her long, dark hair, exposing her creamy, pale neck, and kissed her until his lips reached her earlobe, which he gently nipped as he used his other hand to spread her legs and run his fingers…
“What are you doing?”
Emily jumped inside. Her eyes widened at her soon-to-be-husband, who rested one booted foot on the bottom step of the porch and was watching her in such a way that he knew exactly where her mind had wandered.Her face warmed and she covered her cheeks with the palms of her hands.
Chuckling, Brad strode up the steps until he loomed over her. He lifted her chin up so that she couldn’t hide her face from him. Emily stepped closer until she was pressed against his hard, muscled thighs. Sliding her hands over his strong, broad shoulders, Emily linked them around his neck while she rose up on tiptoes, loving how tall and good looking was this man whom she loved so deeply. His whiskey-colored eyes twinkled mischievously as he slid both of his hands down and around her derriere, cupping both cheeks and pressing her closer to him.
Emily pulled Brad’s head down to kiss him, but he had no intention of letting her off that easy. “Uh, uh,” he said, “first I want to know what caused that faraway, dreamy look on your face and made you blush just now.”
She thought he was breathtaking, even when teasing her; his solid jaw and sharp, square features, and weathered lines around his eyes. He was still the most handsome man she’d ever seen. But he was a devil too, in the way he goaded and played with her, both in and out of bed.
The passion that burned between them sizzled to the point that anyone within a fifty mile radius felt the sparks, as was pointed out by Brad’s foreman, Cliff, who had said on more than one occasion that the couple made it damned uncomfortable for anyone to be in the same room alone with them. And that was why he always slipped away.
But Emily couldn’t help it. Brad twisted her insides up with such longing that everything else became secondary when she was with him, except for the kids, of course. The children, too, were caught up in the joy and love that now filled this house. After all, it wasn’t that long ago that Crystal had finally left, taking her lies and deception with her. The entire farm had breathed a sigh of relief on that day.
“You,” Emily breathed, answering Brad’s question. She felt herself being pulled into the mischievous twinkle that lit his eyes.
“Me, what about me?” he asked.
Now he definitely was teasing. Emily couldn’t help it when her face warmed. He was a fiend truly, in how comfortable he felt talking about their intimacy. She was only just beginning to crawl out of her prudish shell, and Brad took great joy in dragging her out faster than she wanted.
“What you did yesterday, here on the porch, to me. That’s what had me… you know…” She couldn’t say it.
Brad must have realized it, as he slid both hands up her back, over her shoulders and pressed them to her cheeks, holding her face up for him to sample her lips, as if she was the most precious thing in the world. He leaned in, his lips molding themselves to hers perfectly as she opened her mouth for him. Lord, how the man could kiss! That alone made her knees weaken.
The porch step creaked and a heavy thud rocked Emily’s insides. A man chuckled and she jumped, trying to pull away from Brad, but he wouldn’t relinquish his hold. She turned and blinked at the very tall, rugged-looking cowboy who was standing on the bottom step. A canvas bag rested on the whitewashed porch.
“Hate to interrupt, but it was getting kind of embarrassing to watch,” said the man.
The stranger wore a ratty, tan cowboy hat that shadowed his eyes, but the crooked grin he flashed was
identical to Brad’s. Emily was positive that she was gaping. The man tilted his hat back and looked at her with a pair of light brown eyes that let her know he wasn’t a man to be trifled with. He had a square jaw on his hardened face that was etched with tiny lines, which showed he worked outdoors. But make no mistake, thought Emily, as she leaned in closer to Brad, this cowboy watching her was a devastatingly handsome man.
“Jed, I’d like you to meet Emily. Emily this is my baby brother, Jed.”
Brad didn’t let her go. Instead, he wrapped both arms around her waist as she turned to face his brother. Pulling her against him, he rocked softly back and forth.
“Jed, it’s wonderful to meet you,” said Emily. “Would you like a coffee or maybe I could make you a sandwich? I was going to start something anyway.”
Brad squeezed her waist and she stopped talking, because she was rattling on. He knew she did that when she felt nervous—nervous for being caught necking by his brother. Unlike Brad, Emily couldn’t just shake it off. He knew her so well that it terrified her sometimes. It was as if he knew her better than she knew herself.
Jed must have understood, because he grinned again and lowered his gaze from her burning cheeks. “Emily, if it isn’t too much trouble, I am hungry. I haven’t eaten. Drove straight through to get here, so I’d be much obliged for a sandwich and cup of coffee.”
“N-no trouble at all,” she replied.
Emily stepped away from Brad, who finally relinquished his hold, perhaps because he saw the relief that she knew must show on her face; allowing her to escape and regroup.
“Em, we’ll be right in.”
How she loved to listen to his deep, baritone voice. As Emily stumbled through the doorway, she let out a breath that she hadn’t even realized she’d been holding. As she strode into the kitchen, she gave herself a talking to, because in the next few days the house would be full of Brad’s family for their wedding on Saturday. This nervous bride needed to get her ducks in a row and kick-start her hard fought-for self-confidence once again, or she was going to be a bumbling mess by the time Saturday arrived.
The phone rang and Emily’s insides shook. She grabbed the phone before it made another sound and woke Katy, who was upstairs napping. “Hello?”
“Emily, this is Dean.”
Emily froze with the empty coffeepot in her hand. Her imagination immediately leaped to worrying thoughts since Dean, the principal of the new school that Trevor had joined, had never called her at home during the day before.
“Is everything alright?” Emily asked with a shaky voice. Her heart seemed to thud so loud for a second that all she could hear was the roar of the blood pumping through her veins.
“Oh, Emily, I didn’t mean to worry you,” he replied. “I was wondering if maybe we could meet sometime today? There’s a matter I’d like to discuss with you, and I’d rather not over the phone.”
Emily immediately felt contrite, knowing how she overacted to everything at the drop of a hat lately. She needed a warm bath and a book, or maybe just a walk in the fresh air, and then perhaps she’d feel more like herself, instead of a pregnant woman about to be married in two days’ time.
“Yes, of course. I could come right now if that would work.” She glanced at the clock. “I could be there in half an hour?”
“That’s fine, Emily. I’ll see you then.”
Emily dropped the cordless phone, which she had talked Brad into buying, onto the counter. He’d said that a cell phone was enough of a cordless phone for him, so Emily had begged. In the end she had showed him that the idea wasn’t so bad, except lately she kept losing the cordless phone, which she blamed on pregnancy hormones and how forgetful she’d become.
Without a second glance, and lunch and coffee forgotten for Jed, Emily grabbed her purse and the keys to Brad’s truck. Dashing out the door and turning the corner, she bumped into Jed.
“Whoa there, little lady,” he said in the same deep voice as Brad. His rough, calloused hands gripped her shoulders, and then he stepped back, dropping his arms to his side.
Brad’s teasing glance immediately changed as he stepped around his brother, with a questioning glance at Emily and her flustered appearance.“Em, what’s going on?”
She shifted her gaze between the two brothers, who were both watching her as if they expected her to go off the deep end at any moment.
“Dean Banks phoned from Trevor’s school. He asked me to come in now and see him.”
Brad snatched the keys out of her hand. “Why?”
“I don’t know. He said it was something he couldn’t discuss over the phone.”
“Whoa, hang on a second, is there a problem?” Brad asked.
The man could get annoyed faster than a nest of angry hornets, and Emily realized that she was giving him the wrong impression. Jed was watching her in a way she couldn’t read at all.
“No, he said it was nothing to worry about,” she replied. “He just didn’t want to talk over the phone.”
Emily really wanted to get going because it annoyed her when she didn’t know what she was walking into. Her mind would conjure up half a dozen problems before she even arrived at the school.
“Well, for one, you’re not going, and he shouldn’t have called you and asked you to come down.” Brad walked to the front door, where he’d tossed his tan cowboy hat, and pressed it on his head.
Emily felt her stomach pitch in a freefall of hurt. “Why, because I’m not Trevor’s mother?”
Brad froze, before turning around slowly to face her.
Jed glanced over his shoulder at his brother, and said, “If you’ll excuse me, I think I’ll go check out the horses.” He stopped just in front of Brad, and shook his head before continuing to the door.
Emily crossed her arms and frowned, at which Brad raised his eyes to the ceiling. She was blinking hard, past the burning in her eyes, unable to believe what he’d said. Emily had looked after Trevor and loved him more than any mother could. She had fought for help for the boy, who had been diagnosed with autism.
“Jed, hold up a second!” Brad called to his brother, who had one foot out the front door.
Emily turned her back on him, unable to keep her tears from leaking out. She started to walk towards the back stairs that would take her upstairs to their room, but a hard hand clamped her shoulder and spun her around.
“Emily, for God’s sake, knock it off,” said Brad. “That’s not what I meant. And, just so you know, you are Trevor’s mother. But, look at you; you’re five months pregnant, tired and you overreact to everything lately. We’re getting married in two days. I don’t want you driving. That’s what I meant. And I mean to have a talk with Dean to ease up on you. Look, you were ready to bolt out the door without saying a word, and what about Katy?”
Emily wiped away the last of her tears before a fresh batch started. “I’m sorry. I don’t know what’s the matter with me, but I’m going, Brad. I’ll wake up Katy and take her with me.”
“No, you’re not! Jed, how would you feel about sticking around here and keeping an eye on Katy? Her room just happens to be your old room when you were a kid.”
Brad didn’t turn around as he spoke, but looked at Emily as he ran his fingers through her long, brown hair, and brushed it back over her shoulder.
“Suppose I could,” Jed replied in a drawl as he leaned in the doorway with his arms crossed, watching them as if they’d just provided him with his entertainment for the day.
Emily gripped her purse. Brad took her hand in his and led her out of the house, but she stopped as the screen door smacked shut behind them. “Oh, I almost forgot,” she said, starting to go back. “Jed, I’m so sorry. I said I’d make you lunch and coffee...” That’s all she managed to say before Brad lifted her up and carried her down the steps to the truck.
Jed shook his head and watched as his brother carried the very pretty, brown-haired lady who would soon be Brad’s wife while speaking to her in a sharp, irritated voice.
/> “He’ll be fine. Jed’s a big boy and can feed himself,” Brad said as he deposited her in his fancy new black truck and shut the door.
Shaking his head again, Jed jumped when he heard a whimper behind him.
“Mama?”
There stood a little blonde, curly haired girl with big blue eyes, staring up at him. Jed didn’t have a clue what to do.
Chapter 2
Trevor had started kindergarten earlier that year at Forward Thinking a new school, located just outside Hoquiam. He went four days a week with ten other students. When Emily had researched the schools with their autism consultant who Brad hired to runTrevor’s autism programming, Dean Banks a principal met with Emily, Brad and their consultant and how a custom designed program for Trevor based on his needs was in line with the new education model for the 21st century, which Forward Thinking was designed around.
Because this was the first year that the school, opened its doors away from the regular public system, it was small, with only a hundred kids in attendance. What set the school apart were the ‘personal learning paths,’ which were co-created between teacher and child, instead of having predesigned courses. For a child with autism, that was ideal.
Brad ushered Emily into the small community school, to which he and his ranch hands had donated time, money and labor to help renovate. They wandered into the small, front office and Brad rapped his knuckles on Dean’s open door. The man was hunched over his desk.
“Is there a problem, Dean?” he asked.
The man bolted upright. “Oh, heavens, no,” he said. “I wanted you to see Trevor’s breakthrough. His educational assistant, John, has been working with your consultant on a social program, building a bridge with the other children. I didn’t want to spoil the surprise, but Trevor and a little girl named Sylvia have been paired. Working together over the last week, Trevor has expressed interest in Sylvia, beyond parallel play and he is using his words.”
Dean stood up and walked around his desk. Tall and lanky, the man was balding in spots, so he shaved his head. Brad thought he was one of those men who made you feel good just by being around them.