Read Sugar And Spice Online

Authors: Joanne Fluke

Tags: #Mystery, #Romance, #Thriller, #Crime, #Contemporary, #Chick-Lit, #Adult, #Humour

Sugar And Spice (30 page)

“Wait. There’s more. On Saturday afternoons, they have to go shopping with her and carry her packages.”

“No way Larry and I want to do that!” Gary made a face that perfectly expressed his feelings. “But I still hate to break up Mr. Sherwood and Miss Jansen.”

“So do I, but it won’t be permanent. They’re doomed to get together eventually. But not until we’ve won our bet.”

Julie was snuggled warm in Matt’s arms, half-watching the movie. Normally, she would have been engrossed in the silver screen classic, but the beating of Matt’s heart was so comforting, she just wanted to close her eyes, relish the moment, and dream of the future. If Matt asked her to marry him, she’d say yes. There was no doubt about that. They were perfectly compatible, and she was perfectly in love. All she had to do was hope that Matt was beginning to feel the same way.

Her sleepy mind drifted off to thoughts of a perfect wedding. Matt stood in the front, unbelievably handsome in a black tux, waiting for his bride. And there she was, a lovely vision in a white lace tablecloth and tiara. One hand rested on her father’s arm, and the other was holding a beautiful bridal bouquet of dandelions.

Dr. Caulder was officiating. She hadn’t known he had the authority, but it wasn’t surprising with the long string of initials after his name. And there was her mother in the front row, smiling and happy in a lovely dress, sitting next to Joy.

Julie turned slightly so that she could see her bridesmaids. There was Serena, looking quite lovely in her school uniform. Her partner was Spenser, one of Matt’s groomsmen, and he cut a dashing figure in his hockey gear. Hope was the flower girl, holding a white basket of pine needles to strew in her wake, and one of the twins was the ring bearer. Julie wasn’t sure which twin it was, but that didn’t really matter because he was much too old for the honor anyway. The other twin, Gary or Larry, whichever this one wasn’t, would be really upset. Julie didn’t see him and suspected he’d stayed in his room to pout. She should have invited him, because he might just come here to disrupt the whole thing and…

“Miss Jansen?”

Julie’s eyes flickered, and she did her best to banish him from her dream. This was her wedding. He shouldn’t be here if he couldn’t behave.

“Miss Jansen?”

There was no help for it. She had to take time to explain that there could be only one ring bearer per wedding and he’d just have to wait until the next faculty member got married.

“Something’s wrong, Miss Jansen!”

Julie sat up with a start. Gary or Larry was leaning over the back of the couch and he looked worried.

“What’s wrong?”

“Gary’s not in his bed. He isn’t in the bathroom either. Spenser and I checked.”

Julie glanced at Matt. He was sleeping peacefully, his chest rising slowly up and down. His hair was tousled like a little boy, and he looked years younger than he did when he was awake. “Matt?” she said, reaching out to shake his arm. “Wake up, Matt. We need you.”

“What?”

Julie could barely believe her eyes when Matt straightened up, blinked twice, and was fully alert. “What is it, Larry?”

“I just told Miss Jansen. I woke up and Gary wasn’t in his bed. Spense and I looked, but he’s not in the bathroom. We wanted to search the house, but Spense thought we should come and get you first.”

“Spenser thought right. Has Gary ever done any sleepwalking?”

“I don’t think so.”

“That’s good. It’s cold out there.” Matt turned to Julie. “Would you check the front door, Miss Jansen? I threw the deadbolt when we were all in for the night. If it’s still locked, that means Gary’s somewhere inside. I’ll go check the back door with Larry.”

The door was securely locked, and Julie gave a huge sigh of relief. She was very glad Gary hadn’t gone out in the dead of winter. The wind had kicked up, and it was howling so loud, she could hear it inside the snug walls of Aames House. While she was there, she pulled back the curtains and checked the thermometer mounted on the outside frame of the window next to the door. It was eleven below zero, and she hoped Gary hadn’t gone out the back way.

“The bolt was still thrown.” Matt came back looking relieved.

Julie nodded. “Same with the front door.”

“Good. That means he’s got to be here somewhere. Will you check the downstairs, Miss Jansen? And when you’re through, come up and find us. We’ll be checking all the vacant rooms on the second floor.”

“While you’re at it, you’d better check the girls’ room. Gary could be there.”

“Why would he be in the girls’ room?” Larry wanted to know.

“He could have gotten up for some reason and taken a wrong turn when he tried to get back to your room. This is the first night we’ve spent at Aames House, and he’s used to being in the dorm.”

Matt gave her an approving smile. “I wouldn’t have thought of that, but you’re right. We’ll check the girls’ room last. No sense in waking them up if we find him somewhere else.”

When Matt and Larry had gone up the stairs, Julie headed for the kitchen. Aames House was designed like a very large private residence with more upstairs bedrooms than the normal-size family would require, but with a single kitchen, a giant living room, a dining room that would easily seat twenty, and several fully equipped offices for the convenience of working parents who had come to visit their children.

Julie switched on the kitchen lights and blinked in the sudden flood that illuminated the marble-topped counters and gleaming appliances. She’d expected to find Gary here. It was a natural place to look. She hadn’t forgotten her nights as a child and the times she’d stolen downstairs in the middle of the night for a snack.

But Gary wasn’t in the kitchen. That was apparent at a glance. Julie checked the pantry and even opened the broom closet, but no one was hiding there.

The laundry room was next, and then the dining room. Julie went through the offices and even double-checked the living room, but Gary was nowhere to be found. She was halfway up the stairs when she heard Matt start to laugh. They must have found him!

“Gary!” Julie arrived at the boys’ room in a rush and hurried to put her arms around him. “Thank goodness you’re safe. We were worried about you.”

Gary squirmed slightly and Julie let him go, suddenly remembering that ten-year-old boys didn’t like to be held for long. She turned to Matt. “Where was he?”

“Under his bed. He must have tumbled out, rolled under it, and fallen asleep again.”

Once the boys were back in bed, Julie and Matt went back downstairs. Matt checked the doors again, to make sure they were secure, and Julie folded the afghan and placed it on the back of the couch.

“Now that the crisis is over, I think I’d better call it a night,” Julie said. “The girls slept right through everything and they’ll probably be up early tomorrow.”

“You’re probably right. I’ll just stay here for a while and see if I can find some late news. I’d really like to hear the weather report.”

“Mostly overcast, temperatures below zero, and variable winds,” Julie recited.

“And that means it’ll be sunny, unusually warm, and perfectly calm?”

“You got it,” Julie said, blowing him a kiss before she headed up the stairs to the guest room she’d staked out as her own.

Chapter Six

It was the kind of perfectly beautiful winter day that painters loved and weathermen hated. The temperature had climbed to slightly above thirty degrees and the sunlight gleamed on the icy banks of snow, making them shimmer as if they were studded with diamonds. The icicles that hung from the stark black branches of the trees glistened like silver Christmas ornaments, and brightly colored winter birds flitted from branch to branch turning black and white to Technicolor.

Hannah turned into the driveway that led to Lakes Academy. It was the fourth round-trip she’d made in as many days, but she really didn’t mind. She opened her window to enjoy the fresh pine scent that Christmas trees in warmer climates could never begin to replicate when she noticed another more subtle scent on the breeze. It was that indefinable something that some people claimed they could smell when snow was on the way. Hannah could smell it, her grandmother had taught her, and she hoped that the winter storm wouldn’t hit too hard. It would be a pity if Julie, Matt, and the kids were snowed in and she couldn’t carry out the Christmas plans she’d made for them.

Hannah had just pulled up and was preparing to unload when she heard the sound of childish laughter on the wind. Curious, she got out of her truck and followed the sound through the tall pine trees to Aames House. It seemed to be coming from the rear and Hannah walked around the red brick structure.

What she saw when she came around the corner made her blink several times in surprise.

Julie and Matt were helping the kids make snowmen, but they were unlike any other snowmen Hannah had ever seen. They had the traditional stacked snowballs—a large one for the body, a medium one for the chest, and a smaller one for the head. But instead of white snowmen, these icy creations were in rollicking colors. One snowman had a red body with a yellow chest and an orange head. Another had a green body with a peach middle and a blue head. The one that they were working on now had a blue body and a yellow chest. Hope was rolling the head, and it was still white.

“Is this the right size?” Hope called out, sitting back on her heels to look at her work.

“Perfect,” Matt replied, and he helped Hope move the head to a small gardener’s tarp that had been spread out on the snow at the foot of the uncompleted snowman.

“What color do you want for his head, Hope?” Julie asked.

“I want purple.”

“I need the grape, please,” Julie called out to Spenser, who was holding a tray containing several thermoses.

Spenser hurried over with a thermos, and Hannah watched as Julie shook it. Then she uncorked it and poured a thin stream of liquid all over the top of the snowman’s head until it was streaked with purple.

A few moments later the color began to spread, and within a minute or two the snowman’s head resembled the top of a huge grape snow cone.

“Okay?” Matt asked Julie.

“Go ahead. It should be cold enough by now.”

Matt lifted the slightly irregular ball of snow and carefully placed it on top of the larger yellow ball. “That does it, except for dressing them. I found some old hats and scarves.”

“And I found some little pinecones we can use for the eyes,” Serena said.

“Let’s wait until after lunch to do that. I want to make sure they’re frozen hard.” Julie turned to Spenser.

“Will you bring in the thermoses, Spenser?”

“Sure, right after I take a picture to send to my mom. I sent her an instant message about the snowmen, and she wants me to e-mail some photos.”

“Okay. Come in when you’re through then.”

Julie headed for the back door with Matt and the kids, and that was when she spotted Hannah. “Hi, Hannah. Did you see our snowmen?”

“I did. They’re pretty colorful characters. How did you do that?”

“Jell-O. The kids got tired of eating Jell-O with fruit cocktail for lunch, so we thought we’d use it up another way.”

“Very clever. I had no idea it would color the snow that evenly.”

“Neither did I, but I hoped it would. And believe me, it took some doing! The temperature of the Jell-O

liquid has to be just right, and the snow needs to be really icy. I don’t think I would have figured it out if I hadn’t spent one whole summer at Eden Lake Bait and Tackle making snow cones.”

“I’ll do the sandwiches, Miss Jansen,” Serena offered, catching up with them. “I know you want to talk to Miss Swensen.”

“Thanks, Serena. I was going to make peanut butter and jelly on toast.”

“Okay. I’ll make the toast, Joy can spread the peanut butter, and Hope will put on the jam. Gary and Larry can set the table and pour the milk.”

“There’s a big box of cookies in the back of my truck if someone wants to go out and get them,” Hannah told Matt.

“It’s the box with the cutout handles. The bakery boxes are filled with Blue Blueberry Muffins for tonight’s dessert and they can come in too.”

Matt turned around and motioned to Spense, who’d just finished taking his pictures. “We’ll rinse out the thermoses, and then Spense and I’ll carry them in.”

Hannah waited until the back door had closed behind the kids and Matt, and then she turned to Julie.

“So?”

“So what?” Julie started to grin.

“So how’s the romance going?”

Julie’s grin faded abruptly. “It’s not,” she said.

“You had a fight with Matt?”

“Oh, no. It’s nothing like that. It’s just that we can’t seem to get any time alone. Every time we think we’ve got them all settled down and tucked in for the night, one of them wants something or other.”

“I think that’s pretty common with kids. They want to be the center of attention twenty-four hours a day. I remember Andrea saying that it was really hard to get any time alone with Bill after Tracey was born. And you and Matt have that problem times six!”

“That’s true. I really didn’t think the kids would be that needy, but I guess it’s understandable. I’d feel pretty lonely too if I had to stay at boarding school over Christmas.”

“You do have to stay at boarding school over Christmas.”

Julie laughed and Hannah was glad. Andrea’s high school friend had looked just a bit depressed.

“I wonder if it bothers Matt as much as it bothers me,” Julie mused. “I’d come right out and ask, but I think that’s a little blatant, don’t you?”

“Maybe,” Hannah conceded, although that was probably what she would have done in the same circumstance.

“Why don’t you ask him for me? You can kind of approach the subject obliquely, so he won’t know I asked you to.”

“You mean I should be tactful?”

“Exactly.”

Hannah sighed. If Julie expected her to be tactful, she was in deep trouble. She’d been told often enough by many people that there wasn’t a tactful bone in her body.

“Will you at least try to find out?”

How could she resist a plea like that? Hannah caved in without a whimper. “Okay. I’m not very good at things like that, but I guess I can try.”

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