shut and laid her head against his chest. “You miss them as much as I do.”
He rested his cheek against her hair. “Yes, I do.”
Remembering the secret Anne had shared about how Josh blamed himself for her grandparents’ deaths, Becki hugged him harder.
“Well, well, well,” a familiar voice drawled from the direction of the door. “Settling right in, I see.”
Becki sprang from Josh’s arms. Smoothed her hair. “Neil? What are you doing here?”
“I thought you might need some help moving in.” His muddy-blond hair was moussed back, his shirt and pants perfectly pressed, his polished shoes not the least bit appropriate for traipsing across the overgrown yard. His gaze drifted up Josh’s full six feet and narrowed on his face. Neil pushed up his glasses with a single finger to the bridge. “But I see you’re covered.”
Was it her imagination or were the two of them puffing out their chests like rival birds fighting over a mate?
Yeah, right. She let out a choked snort. Definitely her imagination.
“How did you find me? I mean...” She hadn’t given anyone from work her new address. The dusty barn air seemed to close in on her.
“Looked up the address on the internet. I remembered you mentioning your grandfather lived in Serenity.” Neil stepped closer, arm outstretched toward Josh. “Neil Orner.”
Josh gave Neil’s hand a swift shake. “Joshua Rayne.”
“Josh is my new neighbor and an old family friend,” Becki rushed to explain. “He was just comforting me over my loss.” She squirmed at how defensive that sounded. She didn’t owe Neil an explanation. They hadn’t dated for over three months. “Um, Neil is a colleague from work,” she said to Josh.
A muscle in Neil’s cheek ticked, but what did he expect her to say?
Josh hooked his thumbs in the front pockets of his jeans. “I don’t think Bec ever told me. Where is it you work?”
Neil inhaled, appearing to grow another half inch. “We work at Holton Industries.”
Josh’s jaw dropped a fraction, his eyes widening as he turned his attention back to her. “Industry?” He sounded skeptical. “I always figured you’d go into something to do with writing or graphic arts.”
He thought about her?
“You never went anywhere without a pad and paper.” A far-off look flickered in his eyes and a smile whispered across his lips as if he was picturing her as that tagalong girl again.
“That’s fine for a hobby,” Neil interjected. “But one can hardly make a living—”
“I don’t know. If you’re doing something you love, the rest seems to take care of itself.”
Becki’s chest swelled at Josh’s defense, but his quiet confidence didn’t seem to convince Neil. Of course, Josh had never needed much to be content, whereas Neil always wanted whatever seemed just out of reach. He’d admitted to being a bit of a runt growing up and seemed determined to put the ridicule behind him by latching onto the latest status symbols, which before they broke up had started to include an obsessive interest in her career decisions. That thought made her jittery all over again.
She closed the Cadillac’s door, willing steel into her backbone. “Well, with any luck I’ll find a job I love right here in Serenity.”
Josh rested his hand at her waist, and his touch calmed her instantly. He urged her toward the barn door. “No luck needed. We’ll pray you do.”
The confidence in Josh’s voice raised goose bumps on her arms. Stepping outside, she turned her face to the sun, wishing she could believe prayer would make a difference.
She once had. All those summers here, God had seemed so real. Even when He didn’t answer her prayer that she be allowed to stay with Gran and Gramps after the divorce, she’d clung to Gran’s assurances that God worked all things together for good. But how could any good come from letting Gran and Gramps die of carbon-monoxide poisoning?
Clearly, from the sour look on Neil’s face, he