Czytaj książkę: «Her Unlikely Family»
Her Unlikely Family
Missy Tippens
To my husband, Terry, who has read every word
I’ve ever written.
To my children, Nick, Tyler and Michelle,
who have cheered me along on this journey.
To my parents, Frank and Cellia Conley; my sister,
Mindy Winningham; and all my extended family
who love me no matter what.
And to God for giving me the stories.
Contents
Acknowledgments
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
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Thank you to Ted Kohn, Joni Kost, Kerry
Lipscomb and Beth McLear for research
assistance.
I owe so much to my critique group, Belinda
Peterson, Maureen Hardegree and Meg Moseley,
for hours of work on this manuscript.
I’m grateful to Georgia Romance Writers—
especially Anna DeStefano for lessons in
persistence and Sandra Chastain for first
recognizing my stories as inspirational romance.
Thanks to The Seekers for encouragement and
laughter. And to FHL, W.O.R.D. and the F.A.I.T.H.
bloggers for prayer and support.
Special thanks to Emily Rodmell and
Krista Stroever for making my dream
of publishing come true.
Chapter One
If there was one thing Josie Miller knew, it was the smell of a rich man. And whoever had just walked into the diner smelled like Fort Knox.
She sniffed the aftershave-tinged air once again and, following her nose, popped up from behind the counter with the half-filled straw dispenser in hand. She spied the man leaning into a booth, wiping the seat with a napkin. When he sat, she got a glimpse of his face and nearly dropped the straw holder.
Black hair, black golf shirt and black mood—if the slant of his brows meant anything—said he might very well be trouble.
“I’ll be right with you,” she said as she spun around and hurried through the swinging door into the kitchen.
“Bogey at table one,” she warned the girl at the dishwashing sink.
Lisa, up to her elbows in suds, gave Josie a typical teenager roll of the eyes. “Huh?”
“I think it’s your uncle.”
Genuine fear replaced Lisa’s insolent expression. “No way!”
“Tall, dark, smells expensive?”
Lisa shook the bubbles off and dried her hands. “That could be anyone.”
“Not my regular clientele.”
“Does he have black hair and blue eyes?”
“Yes on the hair. I’m not sure on the eyes.”
“All the girls at school say he’s too gorgeous for words.”
Josie opened the door a crack and took a quick glimpse. “Definitely gorgeous. In a stiff, formal kind of way.” The kind of man who had never interested her. “Hurry, look. He’s thumbing through his wallet.”
Lisa peeked, then groaned and began to chew on her black-polished fingernail. “What am I going to do?”
Josie was wondering the same thing. She’d let down her guard after two weeks and had assumed the guy would never show up. “Go tell him you’ve found a job and want to stay.”
“He won’t let me. He’ll make me go back to that school.”
“I thought you said you got kicked out,” Josie said.
“I did. But his little donations to fund new buildings can work wonders.” She started pacing, running her fingers through her spiky green hair. “I’ll die if he sends me back there.”
“Calm down, Lisa. If the man’s as bad as you say, surely he’ll leave without a fuss.”
“You don’t know my uncle Michael.”
No, but she knew his kind. Work and money meant everything. She could also hear the snob alert clanging in her head. “You’re dealing with a pro, here.” Josie smoothed her hands down the front of her uniform, then grabbed a piece of bubble gum from the shelf over the sink. “I’ll give him a taste of what he’d expect from a small-time waitress, and he’ll be out of here in a flash. Leave the man to me.”
Michael H. Throckmorton III leaned his arms on the table, then thought better of it. He’d already had to wipe crumbs and grease off the cracked vinyl seat of this fine eating establishment, Bud’s Diner.
A bald old man—Bud?—covered in sweat, wearing a filthy apron, squinted at a blaring TV perched precariously on a shelf in the corner. When a commercial came on, he turned and began raking a metal spatula across the sizzling surface of the grill.
The air, thick with the overpowering smell of grease, nearly choked Michael. A fly buzzed on the window ledge. He couldn’t imagine how the place had passed health-department inspections.
Tuning out all but the task before him, he examined the outdated photograph of Lisa he always carried in his wallet. She was only fourteen at the time. A time when she used to laugh and tease him. When she used to hug him.
No time for nostalgia. It’s unproductive.
Besides, Lisa’s generous hugs were a lifetime ago, and so much had changed.
“What can I getcha?”
Rings adorned almost every finger—and the thumb—of a hand holding a stubby pencil poised over a pad of paper. Silver charms and beaded bracelets jangled on the woman’s wrist. His gaze moved beyond multiple necklaces and gaudy dangling earrings to her face. A pretty face, once you got past the loud jewelry.
The petite waitress had what appeared to be pinkish-colored hair. Or was the light giving it that strange cast? He narrowed his eyes, studying the shade.
She popped her gum, then forced a smile, looking anything but friendly. “Did you want to order?”
“Bottled water, please.”
“No bottles. Just tap.”
He needed to order something. Anything. The latest report from the private investigator led right to this greasy spoon.
“You know, we scored a hundred percent on our last inspection.” She pointed her pencil at a certificate on the wall by the door.
Though he was perfectly within his rights as a customer to worry about such things, his face heated. He hadn’t meant to offend with his hesitancy. “Fine. I’ll have a glass of ice water with lemon. And…” He flipped open a menu and ordered the first item that caught his attention. “A grilled chicken sandwich with lettuce and tomato.”
“Fries with that?”
“No, thank you.”
She grinned. “Where’re you from?” Then she snapped her gum again.
If she would stop that annoying chewing, she’d have a nice mouth.
Her brown eyes sparked, as if she could read his mind.
“I’m from Charleston,” he finally answered.
“So you’re in Gatlinburg on vacation?”
He nailed her with his oft-used intimidating expression, the one that cowed most people. “Actually, I’m looking for my niece. Lisa Throckmorton.” He showed her the picture. “Have you seen her?”
“I can’t really say.” She didn’t flinch. The woman was either good at hedging, or she was telling the truth. And she obviously wasn’t easily intimidated.
“This photo is two years old,” he said. “She threatened to dye her hair green the last time I talked to her. I have no idea whether or not she followed through.”
“So what did you tell her?”
“Pardon me?”
“When she threatened about her hair. What did you say?”
He ran his hand through his own hair, determined to get the waitress back on track. “Never mind that. She’s a runaway.”
“Oh, that’s too bad.”
He scooted the picture across the table. “She’s been missing nearly two weeks, but we think she may be close by. I plan to find her and take her home.”
“Take her home, huh? How old is she?”
“Sixteen.”
The waitress’s eyes filled with suspicion. “Not quite old enough to be off on her own. Why’d she run away?”
If he didn’t know better, he would think her tone held accusation that he was a poor guardian. But she wouldn’t have any idea he was raising his sister’s daughter.
“It’s really none of your business,” he said. “She has a family who loves her and wants her back.”
“So you won’t answer my question, huh?”
The impertinent waitress had just about frayed his last nerve. Not what he needed while wasting precious time. He glanced at his watch, thinking for a split second of the weekly loan committee meeting he was missing. “No, I won’t answer it.”
The woman’s gaze bore into his as if she were trying to decipher his thoughts. The air between them crackled with unspoken censure, and for a moment he feared she could see through to his worry that he was failing his sister yet again, even now, after her death.
He shook off the crazy, morbid thought. “So, have you seen my niece?”
“She may have passed through.” She stuck the pencil behind her ear. “Gotta put your order in.”
She walked to the end of the counter, leaned across it and yelled, “Grilled chick, dressed,” to the man with the shiny forehead and five-o’clock shadow. The sweaty cook acknowledged the order with a jerk of his head and then eyed the waitress; some kind of message seemed to pass between them.
Michael sat back in the booth, crossed his arms and settled in. He wasn’t going anywhere until he found out if the message had anything to do with Lisa. She wasn’t going to spend one more night alone on the streets. He would find her, even if it meant having to eat another meal in this dive.
After Josie delivered Michael’s water, she made a bee-line to the kitchen.
Lisa stood beside the door, chewing on her fingernail. “What did he say?”
“He’s searching for one Lisa Throckmorton, sixteen-year-old runaway.” She arched her brow at the supposed recently turned eighteen-year-old. “You showed me a fake driver’s license.”
“I’m sorry. I was afraid you’d send me back if you knew.”
“You’re right about that. I could probably go to jail for harboring a minor.”
Lisa squinched up her nose. “You didn’t tell, did you?”
“No. But I was tempted. You’d better not lie to me again.”
“I won’t. I promise.” She held her fingers up in a Girl Scout promise. “Did he leave yet?”
“No. He ordered a sandwich.”
“Great. Now I’m stuck here. I was invited to a gallery opening tonight up at the craft school.”
“This is serious, Lisa. I really should tell him you’re here. He must be worried sick.”
“Please, please, pleeease don’t. I guarantee you he’s not worried. He’d rather be off counting his money right now.”
Josie spun her Mickey Mouse watch around—7:00 p.m. “I want you to tell me the truth about your uncle. He didn’t seem like the monster you’ve painted him to be. He came all the way from Charleston looking for you, after all.”
“I told you before. He doesn’t want me. He shipped me off to boarding school a year ago, only a week after my mom died.”
“Well, maybe he thinks that’s best. The school has a really good reputation.”
Lisa’s eyes brightened, and she blinked away tears. “He doesn’t want me, okay? I heard him tell my grandmother the day after the funeral.”
Josie wanted to shake the man. “Does he call you or visit?”
“He always cancels. He’s too busy. And I hate that place.”
A sixteen-year-old girl whose mother had just died shouldn’t be shipped off to boarding school. She should be with her family. And Josie knew all too well about craving attention from family.
“What’s your uncle like? Not as a parent. As a person.”
Lisa rolled her eyes. “He’s always on the straight and narrow. Churchgoing. Law-abiding. Serious.” She thought for a second. “He, like, owns the bank. He’s worked there since he was five or something.”
“Sounds like a good role model to me.”
“You promised me, Josie.” She backed away, as if heading for the door. “If you tell him, I’m out of here. ’Cause he’ll send me right back to that horrible place and all those snobby kids who won’t have anything to do with me.”
“And you’ve told him how they exclude you?”
“I think I mentioned it.”
“You think?”
“I did tell him about the three girls on my floor who’ve spread lies about me. But he didn’t believe me, because he knows their parents really well.”
Well, that decided it. Josie wasn’t about to turn the girl over to an uncle who would deny a problem and pack her off to school with kids who mistreated her.
Then again, she probably shouldn’t take Lisa’s word for it. Josie would stall answering his questions about Lisa’s whereabouts until she could find out for herself what kind of guardian he was.
A serious, law-abiding banker, huh? He would be as easy to read as Bud’s menu.
Michael finished the last bite of his sandwich and had to admit the chicken was tender and spiced to perfection. However, after the exhausting day he’d spent driving without stopping to eat, anything would have tasted good.
The waitress with Josie printed on her name tag jangled as she hurried toward his table, waving a slip of paper. “I’ve got your check right here.”
She certainly was trying to rush him out the door.
He wasn’t budging. “I think I’d like some dessert. What’s the chef making today?”
The woman snorted a laugh. “Chef? If Bud over there is a chef, I’ll eat my orthopedic shoes.”
He glanced down at the old-lady shoes, which suited her personality about as well as a tiara on her head would. “Believe me, Josie, I had already deduced he wasn’t trained at Le Cordon Bleu.”
She smiled, but the tilt of her brows made her seem confused. She touched her name tag. “You know my name. What’s yours?”
“Michael Throckmorton.”
“Well, you’re a funny man, Mike.”
“It’s Michael. I’ve never been called Mike.”
“But Michael sounds so stuffy.”
“Maybe I am stuffy. Now, what’s on the dessert menu today?”
With a mischievous gleam in her eye, she parked one hip on the edge of his table, leg swinging, and pointed to the far wall. “The dessert menu’s on that chalkboard. Same today as yesterday and every day for the past year or so. Pecan pie, apple pie or chocolate cake?”
“Make it apple, with black coffee.”
“I figured you for an apple-pie man. Coming right up.”
Now what was that supposed to mean? “Would you please ask Bud to come take a look at this picture of Lisa when he gets a moment?”
“He’s real busy. But I’ll try.” She shoved her pencil, not behind her ear this time, but into her bird’s nest of a hairdo, then moved to wait on another table where she flirted with two men in dirty work clothes.
In observing her at a distance, he decided that somehow, miraculously, she equaled a whole lot more than the sum of her parts. Extreme jewelry, plus funky hair and rubber-soled shoes equaled…attractive waitress.
How could that possibly be?
When Josie returned with Michael’s pie and coffee, she slid into the booth across from him. She blew a pink bubble, then popped it with a loud snap. “So, tell me about you and your niece. Are you helping her parents search for her?”
He lifted Lisa’s photograph and stared at the innocent, trusting smile. A smile that used to come so easily before her mother’s drinking had gotten out of hand.
“My sister, Patricia, was a single mom. She died in a car accident a year ago.”
“Oh, no. Don’t tell me it was a drunk driver.”
“Yes. Her.” Way to go, Throckmorton. Tell her your life history, why don’t you?
His unintentional revelation was greeted with silence. And a pitying look—which he detested.
“Anyway, she specified in her will that I be named guardian,” he added.
“Why’d she pick you?”
He bristled. “Why not me?”
“Well, you appear to be single.” She waggled her left ring finger. “No ring.”
Yes, he was single. Definitely single since Gloria had dumped him. “An unmarried man can be a suitable guardian.”
“I didn’t say you were unsuitable. I’m just wondering why she chose you.”
Josie was acting a little too interested. As if she was stalling.
The longer this woman gave him the runaround, the more likely it was he would be stuck in Gatlinburg, missing his appointment with Tom Mason. And Throckmorton’s Bank needed Mason’s company to take out that construction loan.
He checked his watch. “You know, I really want to find her and get back to Charleston. I have an important meeting tomorrow. Do you have any idea where she could be?”
“So this is all about getting back to your important meeting, huh?”
He sighed. This woman was impossible. Since when was it a crime to work hard? “No. It’s about making sure my niece is safe. About getting her back to school—and round-the-clock supervision—where she belongs before she makes a stupid mistake.” Like her mother made sixteen years ago.
“What kind of mistake?”
“Some of her friends thought she might have left with an older boy. A troublemaker.”
Josie thought about her one encounter with the troublemaker boyfriend and said a quick prayer of thanks that the creep had ditched Lisa and hit the road—even if he had “borrowed” her car.
She figured another prayer for guidance wouldn’t be a bad idea either since Michael Throckmorton didn’t seem as awful as Lisa had made him out to be. In fact, he seemed downright concerned. Except for wanting to get back for a meeting. That bothered her.
But maybe she should at least let him know Lisa was safe.
But then Lisa would feel betrayed and might run again.
What a mess.
“You know, Mike, if you’ll hang around until I’m off tonight, I might be able to help you.”
His all-business, I’m-in-a-hurry-to-get-out-of-here scowl lit with a hint of hope. “I knew it. You do know where Lisa is.”
“Order’s up,” Bud called.
What should she do? Mike obviously cared for his niece. Maybe he just didn’t know how to show it. “Okay, I admit I’ve met her, and I can tell you she’s safe. But she doesn’t want to see you.”
He winced at the truth. “She’s made that fairly clear.”
Bud impatiently clanged the little service bell and nodded toward a customer. “Hamburger’s getting cold.”
“Look, I need to get back to work. I’m pulling a double, so I don’t get off till ten.”
She hopped up and went to pick up the order, but when she turned to take it to the table, she glimpsed the back of Mike’s broad back as he disappeared through the swinging door into the kitchen.
By the time she caught up to him, he stood alone in the middle of the spick-and-span room. Lisa was nowhere in sight.
“She’s not here.” He sounded deflated.
“No. But like I said, she’s safe.”
He zeroed in on the exit leading to the alley. “If I don’t find her, I’ll meet you outside at ten. But I expect some answers.” In four strides of his long legs, he was out the door, his head snapping left and right to search the darkening alley.
Bud stuck his head into the kitchen, saw the intruder was gone and said, “She left with Brian after he delivered the bread.”
“Do you have any idea where they went?”
“No.”
A flutter of panic beat against Josie’s chest. “What if she ran again?”
A worried look deepened his wrinkles, but he shrugged. “The girl’s your mission project. Not mine.” The door flapped closed as he went back to the dining room and his grill.
Josie wondered if protecting Lisa had been the right thing to do. Instinct had told her the girl needed some time away from peer pressure family pressure, and the burden wealth could put on a person—just as Josie had needed at that age. Lisa needed time to figure out who she was and what she wanted out of life.
But Josie had thought she was dealing with an unwanted eighteen-year-old. Now she had to find a way to prevent the girl from running away again while being responsible to the hunky uncle. Maybe she could hold him off until she talked to Lisa—providing Lisa showed up at home that night.
Lord, I thought You sent Lisa to me like You sent the other runaways. I thought You wanted me to help her. But I don’t have any business keeping her from an uncle who seems to care about her.
God had sent Lisa to her for a reason. She simply had to figure out what that reason could be.
Michael hunkered down in his car. The late March temperature had dropped and couldn’t be over forty. Not exactly what he’d dressed for earlier in the day, back before he’d known he would have to hang around to deal with a frustrating waitress as the only link to his niece.
He had a view of the front of the diner and of the alley leading from the back. So far, he’d only seen customers come and go. No sign of Lisa.
He pushed the button to light his watch. Eight past ten and still no sign of Josie, either.
The woman certainly worked hard. Unless, of course, she’d spent her time warning Lisa not to come back to the diner. The fact that Josie had misled him earlier didn’t bode well for how truthful she would be tonight.
The fact that Lisa had told Josie she didn’t want to see him didn’t bode well either.
A sigh escaped from some weary place deep inside. How was he supposed to deal with a teenager who was so rebellious she broke every school rule twice? Surely the school, with female role models like her teachers, was better than his bachelor home. Once again, he would have to find a way to get Lisa reinstated.
He steeled himself for her objections. He would find her and take her back where she belonged. Maybe someday she would thank him for it.
The door of the diner opened, and Josie, without any wasted movement, walked toward his car. Before he knew it, she had climbed in and shut the door.
“Hi, Mike. Nice night.”
“Would you care to join me?”
“I thought you’d never ask.” Light from a streetlamp spilled into the car, illuminating her sassy smirk.
He stopped himself from telling her she had a nice smile, even though she did have a very nice smile. Instead, he sat in silence, turning to the quiet neighborhood outside, remembering the more touristy area a few blocks away where shops sold handmade candles, homemade fudge and funnel cakes. Why would a teenager head to this town?
When he recalled the many wedding chapels in the area, his gut clenched. “I’m not too late to keep her from trying to marry the punk, am I?”
“No. The guy dumped her. But—”
“So you do know about him.” Anger pushed away the chill in the air. “What else have you kept from me?”
“It’s not like I—”
His cell phone rang. He unclipped it from his belt. Caller ID showed it was the investigator. “Throckmorton.”
“They traced your niece’s car to a town in North Georgia,” the man said. “A young couple was seen getting out. We’re not sure if it’s Lisa. The female’s hair is black.”
“Did you call the police?”
“A patrol car is on its way now.”
“Georgia, huh? What about credit-card activity?”
“None since the day she disappeared.”
Michael drummed his thumb on the steering wheel. “Okay. Thanks.”
“I’ll call as soon as we find her.”
Snapping the phone closed, he watched Josie. She had her legs crossed, foot jiggling. She spun her bracelets around her wrist. Either the woman couldn’t sit still or she was nervous.
None of this made sense. Was Josie lying? He had thought for sure he was on Lisa’s trail. He prayed he was right.
“So that call was about Lisa?” Josie asked.
“It was the P.I. I hired to locate her.”
“What did you find out?”
“He says Lisa may be in Georgia with a guy. Her car’s there, anyway.”
Josie sat up at attention, then frowned. “The creep took her car. So I assume he’s with someone else.”
“Took her car? Why didn’t she report the theft?”
“Lisa wanted to wait. She thinks he’ll bring it back.”
“Could he have come back for Lisa today?”
“Well, she was here at dinnertime. But she lit out once she saw you.”
He breathed in through his nose, trying to control the urge to yell. “You mean to tell me she was at the diner, and while you chatted and stalled, she snuck away again?”
“No, I—Do you think she could have gotten to that town in Georgia in the three hours since you got here?”
“I have no idea.”
She clicked her fingernails on the leather interior, then opened her door. “Let me run and get a phone directory, then make some calls.”
He reached over her to close the door. “Wait just a moment.”
Josie, who’d been jerking him around all evening, was trying to make an awfully sudden exit. And now she acted as if she feared Lisa had run away again? Well, he would bet the last dollar in Throckmorton’s Bank that Lisa wasn’t in Georgia with her car.
“I want you to tell me the truth, and tell me right now,” he said.
“I have told you the truth. She’s most likely still here. Then again, I’m not positive.” She reached for the door handle. “Let me try to find her and talk her into meeting with you.”
“No. You’ve had your chance. Tell me where to look.”
“Come on, Mike, I promised her. You’re putting me in a tough position.”
“If you think you’re in a tough position now, wait until I have you arrested for kidnapping.”
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