A Brush With Love

A Brush With Love Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: A Brush With Love Read Online Free PDF
Author: Rachel Hauck
Tags: Fiction, Romance, Contemporary, Ebook, Christian, Short Stories (Single Author)
corner of the county, the winter light masked by rain-weighted clouds, she wanted nothing more than a long, hot bath and her bed.
    Bridgett informed her she was sharing a room with one of the bridesmaids, Miranda Shoemaker. Ginger didn’t mind as long as she had her own bed.
    To be her charming, make-them-beautiful self, all she required was a good night’s sleep. The bridal party wouldn’t need her tonight, so she hoped to excuse herself after introductions and slip off to her room.
    Tracie Blue always knew that about her. Ginger needs her sleep. She made sure she had her own space on the touring buses.
    Now, driving the twenty miles down a desolate highway through a frigid, icy monsoon, Ginger exhaled the day’s tension, and Tom drifted across her mind.
    He was back in town.
    Ginger gripped the steering wheel a bit tighter, shifted in her seat, and adjusted the seat belt of her ’69 VW Bug.
    How could that fact make her heart smile after twelve years? Years in which he’d not once contacted her.
    Nevertheless, his presence changed everything about this weekend. She’d signed on as the stylist, to be a person behind the scenes, detached from the wedding, the guests, and the celebration. That was fine with her. She’d perfected that persona while working for Tracie.
    But now, a small part of her wanted to be a woman, not just a servant, and to be seen by him . She had visions of participating in the wedding festivities, and they disturbed her. Rattled her well-built, well-structured emotional barriers.
    She’d only felt this way one other time in her life. In high school. When Tom Wells Jr. was her calculus study partner. Grrr , this whole thing irritated her, making her feel like an emotionally trapped seventeen-year-old.
    Around the next bend, between the skinny pines and live oaks, Ginger spotted the golden lights of the plantation house, glowing like a low moon rising on the thin, wet, dark horizon.
    She pulled around the curved driveway, parked, and dashed to the veranda, the rain easing off as the storm clouds inhaled for a second breath.
    She was a professional. Just the stylist. Detached and aloof, a hired hand.
    Shivering in the dewy, cold air, Ginger rang the doorbell, fixing on a smile when an older woman in a maid’s uniform answered the door.
    “Hey, I’m Ginger Winters. The stylist.”
    The maid stood aside. “They’re in the drawing room.”
    “Thank you.” Ginger stepped inside, offering her hand. “And you are?”
    “Eleanor.”
    “Eleanor. Nice to meet you.”
    The woman’s stern expression softened. “Yes, you too. This way.” She led Ginger through a small, formal living room and a massive library, then down a short corridor where laughing male and female voices collided.
    Eleanor paused at a set of double doors. “Tonight’s dinner is buffet, on the sideboard. Help yourself.”
    “Thank you.” Ginger hesitated as she stepped from the marble hallway onto the plush emerald-and-gold carpet, scanning the room. No one noticed her. But that wasn’t unusual.
    A pale glow from the teardrop chandelier hovered above the room as if too good for the thick, heavier gold light emanating from the wall sconces and table lamps. On the farthest wall, deep-red curtains framed a working white stone fireplace. Despite its size, the drawing room was warm and cozy, inviting.
    Come on in. Even you, Ginger Winters.
    Several women sat reclined on a matching set of whitesofas by the fireplace, wine glasses in hand. The fire crackled and popped, the flames stretching into the flue.
    But the sofas by the fire were not for her. The beauty of the fireplace aside, Ginger avoided flames of any kind. From bonfires to matches, lighters, and sparklers, to men who made her heart feel like kindling.
    Speaking of men, she’d not spotted Tom yet. To her right, she saw the groom, Eric, with several others watching ESPN on a large flat screen.
    To her left was Bridgett and a mix of folks talking at the wet bar. There
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