Barbara Wallace – I Do...: Her Accidental Engagement / A Bride's Tangled Vows (страница 14)
Sam’s eyes widened and Julia laughed again. “All in good time, Joe. For now, I’ll take the poop duty.”
Sam stood quickly and handed Charlie to her. “I’ll clear the dishes.” To her surprise, he placed a soft kiss on her mouth. Charlie giggled and Julia felt her world tilt the tiniest bit.
“Right,” she said around a gulp of air. She met Joe’s gaze as she turned for the house and he winked at her. Right. Sam was her fake fiancé. Of course he was going to kiss her sometimes. They’d discussed that it was all part of the act. It didn’t mean anything.
At least, not to her.
Right.
She changed Charlie’s diaper on the floor of Sam’s living room. Unlike her cozy apartment filled with well-worn flea-market finds and hand-me-downs from her mother, the furnishings in this room appeared very new and hardly used.
A sleek leather couch faced an entertainment center with an enormous flat-screen television and several pieces of stereo equipment. He had a few books scattered on the shelves, mainly fly-fishing manuals and guidebooks for the North Carolina mountains. A couple of pieces of abstract art hung on the walls. Unlike her family room, there wasn’t a single framed photo of any of Sam’s family or friends.
Julia loved the reminders of each stage in Charlie’s life on display around her house. It was as though Sam didn’t have a personal life. Maybe it was just a guy thing, she thought, but then remembered how Jeff had documented each of his research trips with photos spread around their condo in Columbus.
Maybe not.
She pulled on Charlie’s sweatpants and watched as he scrambled to his feet and headed back toward the kitchen.
“Hey, little man, where are you headed in such a rush?”
Joe picked him up as Charlie answered, “Ou-side,” and he planted a raspberry on the boy’s belly, making him laugh out loud.
“I’ll see you later, gator.” Joe put Charlie on the ground and he made a beeline for the back of the house.
“It was nice to spend time with you.” Julia gave the older man a quick hug.
“I hope it’s the first of many dinners. I’d love to meet your family while I’m in town. Sammy said your mom is famous around here for the animal shelter she runs.”
“It was a labor of love after my dad died.” The thought of Joe Callahan and her mother getting together made her want to squirm. Keeping their respective families separate would make the summer much simpler. The complications of this arrangement were almost more than she could handle.
“I meant what I said at the restaurant,” Joe told her. “Sam will protect you and Charlie. I don’t know the details of your custody arrangement, but I believe that boy is better off with you than anyone else in the world.”
Julia blinked back sudden tears. “Thank you. I better go track him down.”
Joe nodded. “Good night, Julia. I’ll see you soon.”
The front door shut behind him, and Julia thought about Joe’s last words. Charlie was better off with her. She had to believe that. He belonged to her and she to him. Nothing and no one was going to change that.
She turned for the kitchen just as Charlie’s high-pitched scream came from the backyard.
Julia raced onto the patio, following the sounds of her son’s cries, her heart pounding in her chest.
Sam stood in the backyard, cradling Charlie against his chest with one arm. With his free hand he waved the tongs she’d used for the meat. A large gray dog hopped up and down in front of him.
“What happened?” Julia yelled as she sprinted down the back steps. “Is Charlie hurt?”
At the sound of his mother’s voice, the boy lifted his tear-streaked face from Sam’s shoulder. “Ball, Mama. No doggy.” He pointed a slobbery finger at the Weimaraner running circles in the yard, the deflated bouncy ball clamped in his jaws.
His eyes never leaving the dog, Sam scooted closer to Julia. “Charlie’s fine. Take him back to the house. I’ve never seen this animal before. He could be rabid.”
Charlie shook his head. “No doggy,” he repeated. “Charlie ball.”
Julia looked from her son to Sam to the dog bounding and leaping, his stubby tail wagging, clearly relishing this impromptu game of keep-away. Rabid? Overenthusiastic and in need of some training. Not rabid.
Julia had grown up with a variety of animals underfoot. Her dad had been Brevia’s vet for years, and the shelter her mother had built and run after his death attracted animals from all over the South. Her mom’s ability to rehabilitate strays was legendary—Vera had even written a dog-behavior book that had become a bestseller a few years ago. Julia might not be the expert her mother was, but she had a fairly good sense for reading canine energy. And every inch of the Weimaraner was shouting “let’s play.”
“Sam, the dog isn’t going to hurt you.”
“It bared its teeth. It’s a lunatic.”
“You’ve never seen it before?” Julia moved slowly forward.
“No. I told you to get back on the porch. I don’t want you or Charlie hurt.”
She gave a quick whistle. The dog stopped and looked at her, its tail still wagging.
“Julia, you can’t—”
“Drop it,” she commanded, her finger pointed to the ground.
“Dop.” Charlie mimicked her. “Charlie ball.”
The dog waited a moment then lowered the lump of plastic to the ground.
“Sit.”
The dog’s bottom plopped to the ground.
She held out her palm. “Stay.”
She took a step toward the dog. His bottom lifted but she gave a stern “No,” and he sank back down.
“I’m sorry about your ball, sweetie,” she told Charlie.
“Bad,” he said with a whine.
“Not bad, but he needs someone to help him learn.”
As she got nearer, the animal trembled with excitement.
“You shouldn’t be that close.”
“Do you have any rope?”
“I’m not leaving you out here. I’m serious. Back off from the dog.”
“What is your problem? This dog isn’t a threat.”
“You don’t know—”
As if sensing that her attention was divided, the dog stood and bounded the few feet toward her. The skin around its mouth drew back and wrinkled, exposing a row of shiny teeth.
“Get back, Julia. It’s snarling.” Sam lunged forward, but before he got the animal, the dog flopped at Julia’s feet and flipped onto his back, writhing in apparent ecstasy as she bent to rub his belly.
Sam stopped in his tracks. “What the...?”
“He’s a smiler.”
“Dogs don’t smile.”
“Some do.”
Charlie wriggled out of Sam’s arms and, before either of them could stop him, headed for the dog. “Good doggy. No ball.”
Julia put an arm around Charlie, holding him back, as Sam’s breath hitched. “You shouldn’t let him so near that thing.”
She offered what she hoped was a reassuring smile. “My mom runs an animal shelter, remember? Charlie’s been around dogs since he was born. I’m careful to supervise him and make sure he’s safe.” She tickled her fingers under the dog’s ear and got a soft lick on her arm for the effort. “This boy is gorgeous.”
“A good-looking animal can still be crazy.”
Julia’s shoulders stiffened. “What makes you think he’s crazy?” Before he’d left for good, Jeff had said something similar to her. He’d told her she was beautiful but a nut job. He’d thrown in a dig about her intelligence as icing on the cake.
Her mother was the expert on stray animals, but Julia knew a thing or two about being damaged on the inside. Her gut told her this dog had a heart of gold.
“He snarled at me.”