measured.
“Fourteen.”
“Interesting age.”
“It is that.” Pete paused, then added, “But Jess isn’t too bad. Does us proud in school and on the farm. Like Marc, she got her mama’s brains.”
“I think you’re selling yourself short,” Kayla argued while the coffeemaker sputtered. “You seem pretty quick on the uptake, Mr. D.”
“Not like my wife.” Silence followed the assertion. He drew a deep breath, his gaze on his hands. “There was a brilliance about her.”
He missed her. Kayla understood loneliness, even in a room full of people. “How long were you married?”
“Seventeen years.”
Kayla frowned. Pete read her expression. “You aren’t from around here.”
“No.”
“Ari left about fifteen years back. Made for interesting talk.”
Ouch. “A dubious honor.”
“Yes.”
“But Jess…”
“Was an infant. Rough time, all around.”
“I guess.”
“But we did all right,” the older man testified. “Between Marc and me, we did okay by Jess.”
Kayla laid a hand over his. “I’m sure you did. She’s in school?”
“Freshman at the high school.”
“Does she play any sports?” Kayla rose as she asked the question. The coffeemaker had gone silent. Feeling at home, she retrieved two hefty mugs.
“Jess rides and does horse shows,” Pete explained. “Marc trucks her and Rooster around, using time he probably should spend here.” Pete raised his gaze to the sprawling farmyards. “A farmer only gets so many good days and fine weekends, but Marc had Jess on a horse before she could walk. She rides like she was born to the saddle.”
“That’s very cool.” Kayla weighed the time frame. Summers never had enough weekends to accommodate everything slated for good weather. Work, home repair, social functions. From Pete’s depiction of Jess’s pastime, Kayla caught a glimpse of the younger DeHollander’s conflict. He was a one-man band, without the juggling monkey. Filing the information, she raised a thick-based cup into the air. “Guys’ mugs. I love ’em.”
“Nothing fancy.”
“But they hold a solid cup of joe.” Kayla flashed him a smile as she poured. “Smells good.”
“You’re not going to lecture me on the evils of caffeine?” Pete teased, pretending surprise. “What kind of nurse are you?”
“The kind that picks her battles,” Kayla retorted. She crossed to the refrigerator and pulled out a plastic jug. “Besides, I’d have to point the same finger right back at myself. You buy milk?” She turned to face him. “When you’ve got all those cows?”
“Beef cattle.”
The deep voice startled her. She turned. Marc’s flat and unfriendly expression did little to enhance his gasp-out-loud good looks, and that seemed a crying shame. For a moment she wondered if God had been distracted by some urgent need when Marc DeHollander moved to the front of the “winning personality” line, then reminded herself that blaming God was unfair. Jerks generally achieved their status on their own, and most deservedly. She arched a brow his way.
“Dairy cattle give milk,” he continued, his stance rigid.
“They’re mammals,” she corrected. “They all give milk. Those of the female gender, that is.”
His expression toughened another shade. “Not for commercial purposes.”
“I see.” She slid her gaze to the pot. “Would you like coffee, Mr. DeHollander?”
The formal name tightened the hard set of his eyes, but his lips twitched. Either he’d actually considered gracing her with a smile or he had some mild form of palsy.
Kayla put her money on the palsy.
“I’ll get it.” He moved through the room with the outdoor elegance of a man comfortable with himself. He’d left his boots at the door and his socks were a heathered blend of brown, ivory and gray. They looked warm. Kayla eyed them with a hint of envy, then glanced up. “Excuse me.”
Marc didn’t bring his cup to the table. He stood with his back to the sink, arms folded,