Luke's #1 Rule

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Luke's #1 Rule Page 1

by Cynthia Harrison




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Praise for Cynthia Harrison

  Luke’s #1 Rule

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Book Group Discussion Questions

  A word about the author...

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  “Uh.” Luke stood there like an idiot.

  “I’m Luke Anderson. Your mom wanted some landscaping work done?”

  The goddess in blue jeans nodded but still didn’t open the door. “Yeah, she mentioned something about that. I’ll give her a call to see what’s going on.”

  She left him on the porch, just like a smart city girl should.

  She came back a few minutes later with a phone to her ear.

  “Well, he’s here now.”

  She rolled her eyes at him.

  She listened for a few minutes and then said, “Fine,” before disconnecting. She didn’t seem happy about it, but she opened the door and let him in.

  “You’re Luke? From Blue Lake?”

  He nodded, hardly hearing what she said because her voice so low and sweet caught and held him.

  “I’m Chloe. We have a cottage there. I love your summers.”

  “It’s a great little town.” The only thing missing: a woman just like Chloe.

  Chloe nodded.

  He gazed down at her bare feet. Her toenails were painted a light shade of pink, each toe perfect, like a little pearl.

  “So you’re staying with us?”

  The business person in Luke stepped out to take the place of the love-struck teenager. “I need to write up an estimate, and if she’s cool with that, I’ll get the job done.”

  “Oh, she’ll be cool with it.”

  Praise for Cynthia Harrison

  “Cindy Harrison’s new novel, LUKE’S #1 RULE, again well displays her talent for taking ordinary people and events and spinning them into a tale that holds the reader tightly engaged without excess or trickery. You will quickly make friends with her characters and cheer them on to a satisfying but real-world conclusion.”

  ~Bob Baker, author

  ~*~

  “Cindy Harrison’s newest book LUKE’S #1 RULE is an engrossing tale about what happens when a confirmed bachelor meets a beautiful woman with seriously inconvenient baggage: kids. Engaging, fun, and thought-provoking without guile or melodrama; real-world folks dealing with real-world problems.”

  ~Phillips T. Chene, author

  ~*~

  “LUKE’S #1 RULE, by Cynthia Harrison, is an engaging novel that shows how broken hearts can be mended, how love sometimes has to break the rules, and how seemingly hopeless situations can bloom with grace and joy. The characters are real people with real problems, yet manage to find their way to the basic goodness within. You’ll love Luke and the two little boys who change his life.”

  ~Veronica Dale, author

  Luke’s #1 Rule

  by

  Cynthia Harrison

  Blue Lake Series

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Luke’s #1 Rule

  COPYRIGHT © 2014 by Cynthia Harrison

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: [email protected]

  Cover Art by Angela Anderson

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Mainstream General Edition, 2014

  Print ISBN 978-1-62830-588-0

  Digital ISBN 978-1-62830-689-7

  Blue Lake Series

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  To my very own blended family,

  especially my sons Mike and Tim,

  who in no way resemble their fictional counterparts.

  Chapter One

  “I need you to stay.”

  Chloe Richards pushed back a wave of irritation. She wanted to snap at Rob, but since he signed her paychecks, she silently counted to ten instead.

  “I’m leaving,” she said, edging toward the elevator. She pulled her phone from her coat pocket to check the time. If she didn’t leave right now, the boys would eat dinner without her.

  “Just this once, would it kill you to share a meal with clients?”

  “We had a deal.” Her contract clearly spelled it out: she found the clients, put the IT teams together, and planned the programs, but she left the office every day in time to have dinner with Josh and Tommy.

  After she belted her jacket a little more tightly than necessary, she pushed the elevator button and nodded toward the conference room. “We’re done in there. The only thing you need to do now is enjoy your evening. I’ll be back in the morning.”

  The elevator door opened, and she stepped inside. Rob grabbed the door, forcing it to stay open.

  “I don’t like fielding questions about the system without you there to answer the technical stuff.” He was a large man, but he whined like a small child when he didn’t get his way. Luckily, she knew how to deal with little boys.

  “Talking points on index cards in your inner suit pocket.” She had written out those cards for Rob; she’d seen him stick them in his pocket. If he hadn’t studied them, that was his problem. She forced herself not to check the time on her phone again. “The reservation is for seven, and if you leave now, you might make it downtown on time.” Rob stubbornly held the elevator door. If he didn’t let go in thirty seconds, she’d personally peel his fingers from the cold steel.

  “How am I supposed to explain a system I don’t understand?”

  “Your job is not training. Your job is projecting confidence, prestige, and success.”

  The client flow from the conference room had begun. Rob plastered a fake smile on his face and swept his arm toward the elevator, inviting them in. Chloe, squeezed between suits, was relieved that at least she was headed in the right direction. Still, Rob’s stalling tactics rankled.

  As the elevator stopped, the clients made their way outside to the waiting town car. She headed to the parking garage at the back of the building, but Rob grabbed her arm. “Just give me the short version of what the hell is going on.” When she tried to jerk her arm away, he leaned in and tightened his grip. It hurt. A lot. But she would not give him the satisfaction of showing it.

  She stared at Rob’s hand on her arm. They were still in the lobby, and she didn’t want to make a scene, so she spoke quietly. “Let go.” Rob released her arm, shoving her away in the process. She caught herself before she stumbled and fell. He glanced toward the limo, then back at her.

  “You disappoint me, Chloe.”
>
  This time she didn’t try to hide her bad attitude. “You own this company. It’s in your best interest to make the clients feel comfortable about the quality of our people. You don’t have to think. We do it for you.” So she was a little irate. Paying him back for the manhandling he’d just given her. Chloe turned toward the back hallway that led to the parking garage. It took every bit of self-control she could muster not to tell Rob to take a fast train to hell.

  ****

  Beer in one hand, Luke Anderson sat with his dad, watching the Detroit Tigers play the last inning of their opening day game against Boston. At the bottom of the ninth, Boston needed to score two runs to tie the Tigers.

  “Come on,” his dad said to the relief pitcher. “Wipe the floor with them already.” As if on command, Boston hit into a double play, and the Tigers won their season opener. Luke and his dad hit high fives. His dad yelled “Woot!” which brought his mother out from the kitchen. He really hoped she wouldn’t ask him about that job downstate again.

  “Good. We can eat now,” she said.

  Luke could smell the garlic and tomatoes in his mom’s pasta sauce. He looked forward to this weekly home-cooked meal. He didn’t do dinner much at his place. The occasional steak on his grill was about all he could manage. That and open a can of green beans. So he really enjoyed the food, at least until his mother started in on the downstate job again.

  “My friend, Ursula, she’s one of the summer people, but she’s moving to Blue Lake. She needs so much yard work done on her winter home before she can sell it and move permanently up here. And then of course she’ll use you for lawn and snow removal once she’s a full-time resident.”

  Luke swiped at the last of his sauce with a bite of garlic bread and chewed. He hated saying no to his mom, but by the time he swallowed, he’d pulled his resolve together. “No.” He got up from the table and bent to kiss her cheek. “Sorry.”

  “What? You’re not staying for cake? I made chocolate. Your favorite. And I was going to pack up the leftovers for you.”

  He stood in the kitchen while the conflict played out in his head. If he stayed, she’d probably bring up Ursula again. But she’d probably pack up an extra piece of cake for him to take home, too. He sat.

  Luke watched his mother cut the cake. Nice thick slices. Across the table, his father cleared his throat. Oh no. His father was in on it, too?

  “Son, a week’s wages downstate is nothing to turn down without even taking a look at it.”

  Luke’s mom set a large piece of cake before him. He wasn’t hungry for it anymore.

  “I just wish I knew why you are so set on not going.” His mom said this sadly, before biting into her own slice of cake.

  He didn’t want to go downstate because he liked it here in Blue Lake. He had his business. His house. His friends. He kept busy. Not so busy right this minute, but soon mud season would be over and he’d be rich with work again. The way he liked it.

  “I planned to use this week to do some repairs on my house.” An extremely lame excuse, as both his parents knew. He’d lived in the house for two years and had done nothing to enhance its bare bones. He had not even painted over the pink bathroom. He had almost no furniture, and he’d never thrown a party because he didn’t really have dishes or wine glasses or chairs for people to sit in. He saw his pals at Eddie’s on Friday nights, all of it good enough for him.

  “What do you think of the new flat screen?” His dad seemed to change the subject, but Luke knew it for what it was. A tactic.

  “Nice. I might get myself one.” He had the money. His parents might think he needed the work, but he didn’t. He heaved a sigh and said, “I think Abby lives down near Sterling Pines.”

  Nobody said anything for a minute.

  Luke took a bite of cake. It cheered him instantly. And he knew his folks would stop bugging him after he admitted why he did not want to travel two hours south.

  “Abby and Bella moved to Ohio last Christmas. Abby’s getting married. I didn’t want to tell you.” Mom looked upset; Dad shook his head in disgust.

  “It’s already been more than two years. You have to accept the situation. Bella is not your child. She’s gone. And good riddance to Abby. I never liked her.”

  His parents had doted on his girlfriend and her sweet little daughter. They’d all hoped for a wedding that had never happened. When Luke popped the question, Abby had dropped her bomb. She’d met someone else. She wanted him to move out of the condo.

  At first he’d tried to see Bella, but Abby didn’t think it was a good idea. And one summer day he’d shown up and the condo sat empty. For sale. But his dad was right. Long ago. He had to put his past behind him, where it belonged.

  “Okay,” Luke finally said. “I’ll check out the job downstate.”

  ****

  Chloe propped herself on a twin bed, one arm around each boy on either side. Josh held the book and Tommy turned the pages, so she had both hands free to snuggle them close. Tommy’s eyes closed before they finished the last chapter in The Mouse and the Motorcycle, but Josh took over the page and turned it without missing a beat.

  When they finished, she gave Josh a squeeze before picking up Tommy for the short trip to his own bed on the other side of the night table. She tucked her little guy in, kissed him, and then turned to Josh, who watched her every move through sleepy eyes.

  “Love you, honey, sleep tight.” She pulled his blanket up under Josh’s chin the way he liked it and kissed him goodnight.

  After standing at their bedroom door for a minute drinking in the still life of her two sons at rest, she went into the kitchen to pack lunches for the next morning.

  Her mother already stood at the kitchen counter slathering jam onto bread. Chloe pulled a couple of apples out of the fridge and washed them at the sink.

  “I’m taking the job in Seattle,” Chloe said, turning off the faucet and drying the apples with a fresh towel. Today had been the first time Rob had ever gotten physical with her, but his discontent with her need for family time had been escalating for months.

  Her mother sucked in a deep breath. “Is this because I’m selling the house and moving to the cottage?”

  “No, Mom. Of course not.” It was partly that. She’d felt abandoned when her mom had first told her. But now, it made things easier, her conscience lighter. “It’s my job. That’s all this is about.”

  “What will Spence say?”

  Chloe shrugged. Her ex had remarried, had a baby on the way, and was totally immersed in his new life. She liked Spence’s wife, Bettina. She was sorry Bettina had to put up with Spence, but Chloe deserved a new life, too. She’d been living with her mom for four years, saving every penny she could. She had many, many pennies. And while her mom had been supportive and helpful, especially with the boys, it was time for everyone to move on. This had always been part of the plan.

  “When will you tell the boys?”

  “I’m going to wait until summer vacation.” Every day she grew more confident that the next move for her family meant accepting the position in Seattle.

  “If this is about money—”

  “It’s not.” It was. Chloe didn’t want her mom offering to give her the house again. She lived on a fixed income and needed the profit from the house as a cushion for her golden years. “I just need to stand on my own now. It’s time.”

  The Seattle position paid enough for her to offer Stoner Spence a deal he would be unlikely to refuse. It paid enough for her to set up college funds for the boys. It paid enough for her to hire a nanny. Enough for a nice house in a good neighborhood with excellent schools, even at Seattle prices.

  They finished making lunches in silence, but Chloe felt her mother’s disappointment and disapproval anyway. If her mother knew half of the stuff Spence was into, she’d call child services. Which is why Chloe didn’t tell her mom. Spence had been to rehab for pain pills and alcohol and straightened out for a while, but he’d been backsliding since the marijuana laws lo
osened. He said the herb calmed him. He even claimed he had a prescription for it. He smoked it in a pipe like Sherlock Holmes. Never around the boys, he promised. But she could smell the bud on his breath every time she got within an arm’s length of him.

  Chloe was not opposed to pot smoking. She’d been to college. She’d experimented but didn’t like how it made her feel, the opposite of calm. So, sure, let Spence smoke his days away while his women support him. But not around her children. And Bettina, who Chloe loved and trusted because she loved Chloe’s boys, promised that Spence never smoked around the children.

  “I’ve got someone coming over tomorrow to cut down that old tree in back,” Ursula said. “He’s going to replace the fence, too. He’s going to bunk in the basement for a week.”

  “A strange man is coming to stay here for a week?”

  “He’s not a strange man. He’s Luke. My friend Wanda’s son. Has his own business in Blue Lake.”

  Chloe nodded. She knew Wanda. She’d never met the son, but Wanda would have raised him right. And Mom’s house needed work to get it up to code.

  “I always wanted you and the boys to have this house, Chloe.”

  “Mom, please. I have been saving money for four years. I’m set. Honestly.” Her mom didn’t know she still paid the mortgage on Spence’s house. “Sell your house and use some of the money to go to Hawaii.”

  Her mom silently wiped bread crumbs from the countertop.

  “Or go crazy at the casino.” That suggestion received a reluctant chuckle.

  ****

  Luke threw some work clothes in a duffle, loaded tools into his truck, and struck out for Detroit.

  As he drove south, the scenery got less and less familiar. He’d never come downstate before, never had a cause to. Crazy traffic, stores everywhere. He spotted three Walmarts in a five mile stretch, with subdivisions, gas stations, and fast food places squashed in between. People actually chose to raise their children here. He pitied them.

  Sterling Pines, just another cookie-cutter town. And there weren’t any pines that he could see, not many trees at all except those growing in people’s yards. Where were the marshlands? Where were the woods? Where was the green space? The whole picture gave him a bad feeling.

 

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