Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

His Ordinary Life
His Ordinary Life
His Ordinary Life
Ebook307 pages6 hours

His Ordinary Life

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

When it seems like Del Calvert’s teenage son is somehow involved in a murder case, he’s thrown back together with his ex, Barbara. He’s ready to do whatever it takes to save his son and keep his family safe—and they are still a family. Being around Barbara again makes him realize how much he didn’t appreciate what he had when he had it.

Barbara Calvert is afraid to need anyone—especially the man who still holds her heart, whether he knows it or not. But with her son in a complicated situation that’s put their whole family in danger, she has no choice but to lean on Del and work together. Del wants a second chance, and while she doesn’t know if her heart can take being broken again, how can she not take a risk on the man she still loves?

Each book in the Hearts of the South series is a standalone story that can be enjoyed in any order.
Books in the series:
Book #1: Truth and Consequences
Book #2: His Ordinary Life
Book #3: Hold On to Me
Book #4: Anything But Mine
Book #5: Memories of Us
Book #6; Hearts Awakened
Book #7: Fall Into Me
Book #8: Facing It
Book #9: Uncovered
Book #10: Gone From Me
Book #11: All I Need

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 21, 2017
ISBN9781640633070
His Ordinary Life

Read more from Linda Winfree

Related to His Ordinary Life

Titles in the series (11)

View More

Related ebooks

Romance For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for His Ordinary Life

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    His Ordinary Life - Linda Winfree

    Table of Contents

    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

    About the Author

    Discover more Entangled Select Contemporary titles…

    Home is Where the Heat is

    Spring Secrets

    The Negotiator

    Three Simple Words

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

    Copyright © 2008 by Linda Winfree. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

    Entangled Publishing, LLC

    2614 South Timberline Road

    Suite 109

    Fort Collins, CO 80525

    Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

    Select Contemporary is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

    Edited by Anne Scott

    Cover design by Fiona Jayde

    Cover art from iStock

    ISBN 978-1-64063-307-0

    Manufactured in the United States of America

    First Edition July 2008

    Rerelease August 2017

    Again, to Carol, for everything.

    To Anne, for helping to shape this book into what it is. (And for loving Del.)

    As always, for Rick.

    Chapter One

    You can’t stop me! Anger vibrated in the words, a suppressed rage that crept into the air and left an electric charge sizzling in the small kitchen.

    Blake, you’re not going. Barbara Calvert closed the dishwasher door and switched it on. It’s a school night.

    Barbara took a deep breath and turned to her sixteen-year-old son. Blake’s brown eyes shimmered with resentment, and the force of his temper manifested in the visible trembling of his arms and hands. For the first time, the sullen fury held a sense of threat and tendrils of fear uncurled in her stomach.

    Let that fear show? Not an option. She forced a calmness she was nowhere near feeling into her voice. You’re right. I can’t physically stop you.

    His throat worked with a hard swallow and a sharp stab of grief swamped her fear. Where was the dark-haired, dark-eyed little boy who’d thrown his arms around her neck and demanded kisses? She couldn’t find a trace of him in the young man before her, his chest heaving, his livid face flushed.

    Beyond the tall windows, rain frogs croaked in the still Georgia night, their carefree song an odd accompaniment to the silent battle stretching between mother and son.

    More color flooded Blake’s face and he tensed. Nerves taut, Barbara watched, sure he would storm out the back door. Instead, he burned her with one more hateful glare and brushed by her to rush out of the kitchen. The boom of his bedroom door slamming reverberated through the compact house. The windows rattled.

    Barbara sagged against the counter, her breath whooshing out in a shaky sigh. Her fingers trembled, and she pressed them to her forehead. She couldn’t handle this. She’d actually been afraid of her own child. Her son, her firstborn, who’d gone overnight from an active, happy-go-lucky boy to this surly, hair-trigger teenager. No, not overnight. This had been building for weeks. Months. Ever since Del had gone. But what had been an underlying resentment now seemed destined to railroad into a full-blown fury.

    She reached for the phone, the urge to lay this particular problem on Del’s sturdy shoulders overwhelming. Her still-shaky fingers froze on the receiver. Over a hundred miles away, living his footloose life of freedom in Atlanta, he would hardly be interested in her altercation with their son over whether or not he could leave the house on a school night.

    Angry bitterness trickled through her, the slow drip of poison she’d lived with every day since Del had walked out.

    No. She could handle this. She’d find a way.

    She lifted the phone, but instead of punching in her estranged husband’s number, she dialed her best friend. Melanie would help her come up with a plan.

    The robust aroma of fresh coffee curled in the warm night air and mingled with the sweet scent of blooming jasmine. Moths plinked against the porch light. Barbara tucked her feet beneath her in the chair and took slow sips of the steaming hazelnut brew. I don’t know what to do. He’s so angry.

    Melanie’s spoon clinked against the side of her cup. You could lock in him his closet.

    I wish. A slight ache pulsed between Barbara’s eyes, and with her free hand, she massaged the bridge of her nose.

    Come on, Barb, stop being so hard on yourself. You’ve done everything—set limits, enforced them, gotten him counseling. But face facts. You need help.

    And what would you suggest?

    You shouldn’t have to deal with this by yourself. Call your soon-to-be ex and tell him to get his sorry self down here.

    I can’t.

    You mean you won’t.

    That, too.

    What about your brother-in-law?

    Tick? Envisioning her husband’s tall, lean brother, Barbara sank lower in her chair, the wicker creaking. Shamed embarrassment curdled in her throat. Call Tick and ask for help with Blake after the way she’d acted? I don’t think I can do that.

    He cares about these kids. He’d help.

    Yes, but—

    But what?

    Lord, how to explain this? How to explain her too-clingy behavior since the separation? Her cheeks burned. No wonder everyone thought she’d pinned her hopes on Tick as a replacement for Del. Moving from one brother to the other, the gossips tittered. And the worst part was that she’d never entertained one romantic thought where Tick Calvert was concerned. Her focus had always, always been on Del. Tick merely represented the stability she craved for her children.

    And as badly as she hated to admit it, a way to get back at Del for not wanting her anymore.

    Barbara? Why can’t you call him?

    For heaven’s sake, Melanie, the man has a life. I can’t just call him up and say, ‘I can’t control my kid. Please help.’

    Then call Del.

    If it doesn’t get better, I’ll call him. When little demons were strapping on ice skates. If she asked him to come, he’d probably think she was angling for a reconciliation. She shuddered. He’d think she wasn’t sure about the separation or the impending divorce, and her hard-won pride couldn’t handle that.

    Promise?

    Promise. It would get better. She’d talk to Rachel Simmons, the school counselor, tomorrow. The idea warmed her, settling the nerves jerking under her skin. Calm, focused Rachel would have concrete suggestions and then Barbara would have direction. She needed that direction. Remembering the fury bordering on hatred in Blake’s eyes, she wrapped her arms around her midriff.

    She needed direction, because her son needed her.

    A dull thud jerked Barbara from a light sleep. She lay still, listening. Fingers of moonlight fluttered between the slats of her blinds and the leaves of the huge azalea outside her window tapped at the glass. Wind murmured beneath the eaves.

    The soft thunk tightened every muscle in her body. She pushed the comforter away, scooted to the edge of the bed and slid her feet into pink frou-frou slippers, a Mother’s Day gift from the girls. She slipped to the doorway, straining to hear something beyond the normal creaking of a forty-year-old house.

    Her mind conjured visions of masked rapists and murderers, her pulse thumping in her throat with uncomfortable force. Maternal instinct overrode self-preservation. Her children lay sleeping down the hall, on the other side of the living area, and she eased out of the bedroom, stepping around a creaky floorboard.

    The beaded lamp she always left burning cast a soft light from the living room. The mantel clock ticked in a hushed rhythm. Hugging the wall, she slipped into the living room and peered into the dining room. Empty. So was the kitchen.

    But the back door stood wide open. The glass-paned door swung in a soft arc, hitting the wall with a muffled bump.

    Oh God, someone was in the house.

    All thoughts of quiet fled her brain and she ran for the children’s rooms. With their low heels, the slippers hampered her, and she kicked them off. She snatched the cordless phone from its cradle on the hall table. Her sweat-dampened fingers slipped on the buttons, but she managed to punch in 911.

    On the second ring, a male voice answered. Chandler County Emergency. How can I help you?

    This is Barbara Calvert, 132 Lovers Lane Road. I think someone may have broken into my house.

    Are you in the house, ma’am?

    Yes. I heard a noise. The kitchen door is open. I’m checking on my children now. Please, God, let them be all right.

    Stomach clenched, heart racing, she flung the first bedroom door open and flipped on the light.

    Both girls slept. Anna lay curled in a tight ball, the coverlet up to her chin. Lyssa’s covers rested on the floor in an untidy heap, her long arms and legs spread out in her normal sprawling sleeping position. Barbara’s gaze darted about the room. The window remained closed, but the closet door was open, revealing only the girls’ bright clothing and long-abandoned doll collection. She turned the light off again.

    Assured of the girls’ safety for the moment, Barbara spun and crossed the hall to open Blake’s door. His lava lamp bathed the room in an eerie red glow. His bed was empty.

    Oh, God. The groan slipped past her lips and she sagged against the doorframe, eyes closed.

    Ma’am? Are you all right?

    No. She was far from all right. Her hands trembled, and her heart insisted on thudding an uncomfortable rhythm against her ribs. Moistening her lips, she straightened. Yes, I’m fine. My son isn’t in his room.

    Silence hummed over the line for long seconds, then the dispatcher spoke again. I’ve dispatched an officer. He should be there any time now. Would you like me to stay on the line?

    No, thank you. I’m fine. She disconnected. Anger roiled through her, a wild whitewater sweep. She was fine, but Blake was a different story. When she got her hands on him, she planned to ring his neck, despite the six inches and twenty-five pounds he had on her now.

    And his father was next in line. The anger deepened. Darn it, Del was supposed to be here. She wasn’t supposed to deal with things like maybe-intruders and rebellious teenage boys alone. He’d made promises, vows. He wasn’t supposed to up and decide she wasn’t enough anymore and walk away.

    Her son wasn’t supposed to turn into Rosemary’s baby overnight, either.

    Headlights swept the front of the house, bouncing down the hallway. She moved toward the front door, collecting her slippers along the way. With a deep breath, she flipped on the porch light and swung the door open. A Chandler County sheriff’s car sat in her driveway. The light breeze puffed a couple of stray leaves across the brick walkway and the doors opened.

    Her brother-in-law unfolded his long frame from the passenger seat, and Barbara wished for a hole, a paper bag, anything to swallow her so she didn’t have to meet those dark eyes so like Blake’s, didn’t have to look into the lean face so like Del’s and remember that she’d acted like the desperate almost-divorcee she didn’t want to be. She settled for drawing the collar of her pajamas closer.

    Barbara? What’s going on? Followed by a young deputy, Tick moved up the walkway with the loose-limbed stride all the Calvert men shared. She’d even begun to see traces of it beneath Blake’s teenage awkwardness.

    She brushed her bangs back, torn between anger and embarrassment, but still thankful for his steady presence. Blake’s sneaked out of the house. He left the kitchen door open and I thought someone was inside.

    Tick’s brows lowered and his jaw tightened. He did what?

    I just had the deadbolt replaced on that door. The other one stuck all the time, and I haven’t given him his key yet. I guess he left the door unlocked so he could get back in.

    That little sh—snot. Tick shook his head. He knows better than to do something like that.

    Barbara stifled a sigh. She’d thought so, too, except this was the second time in two months he’d done so. Thinking of that open door again, she shivered. Anything could have happened.

    Any idea where he might have gone? The young deputy waited, pen poised over a small notebook. He met Tick’s weary look and snapped the book shut.

    Barbara cupped her elbows with her hands. He wanted to go riding around earlier with some friends. I told him no because it’s a school night.

    So he decided to sneak out instead. Angry disgust colored Tick’s voice. Well, tell you what, Barbara, he’s got to come home sometime. How about if Troy Lee goes back on patrol, and you and I just wait for him?

    Are you sure? She eyed his pale face, the high cheekbones more prominent than she’d seen them before. He’d lost weight during that last undercover assignment with the FBI, and although he’d been home, working for the sheriff’s department for weeks now, he still bore a worn-down, pinched look.

    I’m sure. A strained grin quirked at his mouth. Trying to get rid of me?

    Of course not. She really didn’t want him to go. Once the anger receded, maternal worry would flood in, and she’d rather not sit around with the oh-my-Lord-what-ifs by herself.

    What friends was he going with?

    Anxiety flirted at the edge of her control. I couldn’t get that out of him earlier. He just kept saying ‘some of the guys’. Although I’m sure one of them would be Jamie Reese. They’re inseparable.

    Tick nodded. Okay, we’ll have dispatch put out an alert. He’s probably just hanging out, but that way if anyone comes across him, he’ll get dragged home. I’ll sack out on your couch.

    As he gave the deputy and the dispatcher a brief description of Blake, she stood shivering in the light wind, not from cold but from all the doubts and worries crowding in. Yes, he was probably just hanging out in quintessential small town Georgia, but things still happened here. Bad things. Her stomach cramped. He was sixteen, on the verge of manhood, only two years younger than Del had been when they’d married, but Blake was still a boy in so many ways.

    Hey, are you all right? Tick’s deep drawl dragged her back to the here and now. The patrol car reversed down the driveway.

    Gathering her thoughts, Barbara nodded. Want some coffee?

    Sounds great. As they moved into the house, he pointed at the phone in her hand. Shouldn’t you call Del?

    The despised bitterness scalded her throat. What good would it do? Tick’s eyebrows lifted, and she sighed. No sense in keeping him up, too.

    Tick rubbed a hand over his nape, a tense, uncomfortable gesture. Look, Barb, it’s none of my business, but all of this shouldn’t fall on your shoulders. And most likely, Del would want to know what’s going on. I know I would.

    She glanced at the microwave clock. One eleven a.m. Reluctance dragged at her. The last time she’d made a middle-of-the-night call to Del, when Anna had a particularly wicked stomach flu and begged to talk to her daddy, Barbara had obviously caught him in bed and not alone. The sound of rustling and a female voice filtering over the line had pinched her heart like getting fingers caught in a door hinge. She didn’t need a repeat performance, especially since the pain still lingered, pricking her at the most unexpected times.

    If Blake’s not home in an hour, I’ll call. She measured water and coffee into the percolator. Surely, he wouldn’t stay out later than two a.m. She rubbed a finger along the edge of an empty mug. In the intervening time, she needed to come up with an appropriate punishment.

    Hanging him up by his toes sounded good.

    She’d settle for his car keys and a month’s worth of extra chores.

    At two o’clock, once more she dodged Tick’s suggestion that she call Del. By three, the worry resided in her stomach in a thick, cold lump. Her fingers shaking, she pushed the phone at Tick. You call him.

    The sweet, subtle scent of Barbara’s skin filled Del’s nose. He nuzzled the tiny curve below her ear, cupping and shaping the warm weight of her breasts. With the first touch of her hands, arousal sizzled through him, and after her soft moan sent shivers along his skin, he pressed against her, his erection nestled between her thighs.

    Her fingers molded his rib cage and the muscles in his stomach jumped. Those seeking hands moved upwards, stroking across his pecs and nipples, and the ache in his gut reached unbearable status. Lord, he’d waited forever for this and the wanting was so strong his ears buzzed with it.

    The buzz grew louder, drowning out Barbara’s sigh, the sensations.

    Del opened his eyes and stared at the white popcorn plaster ceiling. The television cast a flickering blue light in the room. The phone buzzed, the insistent noise filling the air.

    A damn dream. Another freakin’, empty, almost-wet dream.

    Rubbing a hand over his eyes, Del sat up on the couch and reached for the phone. Hello?

    Del, it’s me, Tick said, tension apparent in his voice even over the long-distance line.

    A chill washed over him. His brother calling at—he glanced at his watch—three o’clock in the morning couldn’t be a good thing.

    What’s wrong? Awful possibilities flashed through his mind. Lord, Mama was sick. Or—

    I’m at Barbara’s.

    He was where? Del stilled, his lungs refusing to cooperate for a moment. Three o’clock and Tick was at Barbara’s. Oh, God, the kids. Oxygen rushing into his lungs, he shot to his feet, seeking his shoes. Something had happened to one of his kids. Or Barbara. Lord, no. He jammed his feet into the loafers and began searching for his keys.

    Tick’s voice filtered through his frenzy. …sneaked out of the house. We’re waiting up, but I thought you needed to know.

    "Who sneaked out?" His pounding heart eased, but dread continued to tingle along his nerves, making his fingers numb and heavy.

    Even Tick’s long-suffering sigh didn’t bother him. Blake. He and Barbara argued earlier, and when she got up, the back door was open and his room empty.

    You’re sure he left on his own?

    I checked outside. No footprints but his. He’s feeling his oats.

    How long’s he been gone?

    A couple of hours at least.

    Hours. So Barbara had called Tick first. He squashed the injured pride. It didn’t matter who she called first. Blake mattered. Any idea where he is?

    Barb thinks with some friends, riding around. She told him he couldn’t go since it was a school night. I’ve got an alert out on him, but I look for him to walk through the door any minute.

    Sneaking out of the house? Del shook his head. The boy could be obstinate—he was a Calvert, after all—but open defiance? That didn’t sound like Blake.

    How do you know what he’s like now? You’re not there. You bailed. The guilt jabbed at him with hot, sharp little pokers.

    Del?

    He rubbed a hand over his nape, wondering how many times Tick had called his name. I’m here. Let me talk to Barbara.

    A pause. She’s in the shower.

    The shower? His imagination kicked into overdrive. Why would Barbara be showering at three while waiting for their errant son to return home? Maybe she hadn’t had to call Tick. Maybe he’d already been there. Del shook off the wayward musings. He had no reason to believe there was anything between his estranged wife and his brother. Nothing except the fact that Barbara thought the sun shone out of Tick. Nothing but his brother’s penchant for blondes, coupled with what their sister Tori swore was a broken heart. Nothing but the whispered gossip he’d heard the last time he’d taken his mama to church, that Barbara was looking to replace him…with Tick.

    The tense muscles in his neck refused to give under his fingers. Tell Barbara I’m on my way. I should be there in a couple hours.

    You sure you want to drive down here? Barbara and I can handle—

    I want to be there. He pushed the words out between clenched teeth and tried to force the tension from his body.

    Sounding muffled and distant, Barbara’s voice murmured, Let me talk to him. He fought down a wave of anticipation while they shuffled the phone. Del?

    At the trace of tears in her voice, he closed his eyes. Are you okay?

    I’m fine. An icy edge joined the tears. There’s no need for you to drive—

    Can you tell me where my son is?

    A tight pause pulsed over the line. No.

    Then I’m coming down. We’ll deal with him together, present a united front.

    A united front? Bitterness hovered in her slight laugh. You’ve got to be kidding.

    A flush of shame burned his ears. He deserved the recriminations, hers and his. He’d broken their union. Look, I’m heading out now. I’ll see you in a couple hours. You have my cell number if you need me, right?

    The weird silence descended on the long-distance connection again, but he didn’t require words. She’d never let herself need him again. The phone crackled in his ear and she sighed. I have it.

    Good. See you in a while.

    The Porsche ate the miles, sucking up long stretches of near-deserted interstate. Both hands on the wheel, Del tried to convince himself sneaking out was a normal rite of teenage passage. The odds were Blake would walk through the door, no harm done except to his parents’ trust. His son would be okay.

    His mind wouldn’t listen. Memories rose of the summer nights when he’d sneaked away from his parents’ home, unable to stay away from Barbara Blake, afraid of the separation college would bring, afraid of losing someone else he loved. Warm nights and her scent on him, and later, having to tell his father he wasn’t going to college. And neither was Barbara, because he’d made her pregnant.

    His fault.

    Too many things could happen. A slide show of horrible possibilities flickered in his brain—car accidents, kids taking stupid risks and ending up dead. He pushed the gas pedal harder and the sports car sped through the night.

    The horizon had lightened to a thin, gray line when Del pulled into Barbara’s driveway a little more than two hours after he left Atlanta. He unfolded cramped legs from the low-slung car, and stretching, he studied his children’s home. The Arts and Craft cottage dominated the small lot. Since he’d taken the apartment in Atlanta, he hadn’t been past the front porch when picking up or dropping

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1