Married In Montana (At The Altar Book 1) (12 page)

BOOK: Married In Montana (At The Altar Book 1)
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Mrs. Blyton's face lit up.  "Really?  A baby?  When?"

"April," Savannah answered with a grin.  "It works out just perfectly that I'm only teaching the first semester."

"It does!"  Mrs. Blyton looked at Scott.  "I guess we'll need to find a way to get along now.  I can't have the father of my grandchildren hating me."

Scott was taken aback.  "I never hated you!  I thought you hated me with your constant talk of me killing Savannah."

"Oh, that was just to warn you not to do it.  If you thought if she died, I'd immediately point the finger at you, you'd be more protective of her."

Scott shook his head.  "I will never understand how the female mind works."

"You don't have to."  Mrs. Blyton hurried over to hug her daughter.  "I'm thrilled for you.  I really couldn't be happier."  She turned to Scott, hugging him as well.  "Just be good to my daughter and grandbabies.  I won't ask anything more of you."

Savannah smiled as she watched her mother and Scott embrace.  She wanted there to be peace between them.  If not for her sake then for the baby's. "Will you come out and visit us when the baby's born?"

"Of course, I will."  Mrs. Blyton smiled.  "I'll have to bring Joe with me, though.  We're getting married."

Savannah jumped to her feet, hugging her mother again.  "Oh that's wonderful, Mama!  Nothing would make me happier."

Scott watched mother and daughter together, pleased with his life.  He'd gone to Lachele with a hole in his life that desperately needed to be filled.  She'd done so with a vengeance.  Even though Savannah would be working for a while, he wouldn't change a thing about her.  She was the woman he needed, just as she was.

Epilogue

 

 

Sam wandered into Lachele's home office.  "What are you working on?" he asked. 

Lachele looked up from the scrapbook that was open in front of her.  She'd pasted down pictures of Scott and Savannah separately and then a wedding picture.  She had just finished adding the picture the couple had mailed them of their new baby, Kaeden. 

"I'm updating my scrapbook with our first Matchrimony grandbaby.  Isn't' he adorable?"

"Now, Lachele, you know you can't just adopt every baby that comes from a Matchrimony match as our grandbaby.  Think of how many gifts you'd be buying at Christmas."

Lachele's eyes lit up at the thought.  "I really don't see why I can't.  You always tell me to do whatever makes me happy.  Having dozens of grandbabies will make me happy."

Sam shook his head.  "With as quickly as those two had a baby, there would be way too many.  I'm going to have to put my foot down, Lachele."

Lachele threw her head back and laughed.  "I don't know who you think you're married to, Sam Simpson, but you know that's not going to work on me.  I'll collect all the grandbabies I want.  Tyson isn't having babies fast enough to suit me."

"He and his wife could be popping out five kids a year, and it wouldn't be fast enough to suit you."  Sam sighed, knowing he'd lost the battle.  "We have any weddings coming up?"

"Oh, there are more in the works.  You know there are always more in the works."  She smiled contentedly.  Matchrimony may have seemed silly at first, but her services were now in demand.  Word had spread quickly about how good she was at taking random strangers and turning them into a happy couple.  Who didn't want to be happy?

 

*****

 

Savannah laid Kaeden in his crib and slowly tiptoed out of his room.  He was a good baby, already sleeping through the night at six weeks old.  She had the baby monitor on, just in case, but they'd rarely used it at night.  During the day was a different story, though.

Kaeden seemed to understand that his mama was his entirely from the time his daddy left in the morning until he got home in the afternoon.  During those hours he was demanding and needy.  Once his father stepped through the door at the end of the day, he was angelic again. 

Scott was waiting in the hall.  "Is he asleep?"

Savannah nodded.  "He is.  I don't know why he's so good when you're here and so needy when you're not."

"He knows his daddy needs his mama too.  So he's sharing.  He gets you during the day, and I get you all night long."

"That works for me."  She held the remote for his monitor in her hand.  "Let's go soak in the hot tub for a little while before we head to bed."

Scott led the way down the stairs.  "Have you heard from Lachele?"

"She called today.  She got Kaeden's picture in the mail, and she wanted to tell me that he's the first of her Matchrimony grandbabies."  She grinned.  "I love that crazy purple haired woman."

"What's not to love?"

"Has Jake decided yet if he's going to call her?"

Scott shrugged.  "We only talked about it that once, but I think he's leaning toward it.  He wants to make sure whomever he marries isn't just interested in him for his money, and he doesn't know how to do that any other way, except deceiving his bride.  Deception isn't an option."

"Well, I hope he goes to see her soon, because he would make a good husband."  She shucked off her clothes and climbed into the hot tub, sighing with pleasure as the water surrounded her.  "I needed this."

"I'll call Jake tomorrow, and encourage him to get in touch with her.  Would be a lot of fun to double date, don't you think?"

Savannah nodded.  "As long as we can find a sitter I trust."  So far she hadn't even bothered to look.  He was her baby and her responsibility.

"Maybe we should have his new grandmother do it."

Savannah laughed.  "I can just picture it.  'Hey, Lachele.  I think you should fly to Montana this weekend to babysit.'"

Scott grinned.  "She'd do it."

Savannah sighed happily.  "She would.  But we're still not going to ask." 

"You never like my good ideas..."

Meddling in Manhattan

Book Two in At the Altar

By Kirsten Osbourne

 

Chapter One

 

Addie Myers leaned forward across the table, talking animatedly about her work.  She was doing the only thing she'd ever really wanted to do, and she wanted to share it with the world.  She loved being excited about her work, unlike so many of the young women she knew.  Just then, she was sharing it with the most recent man her roommate, Jennifer, had set her up with.  "So every weekend, I teach a class in a different kind of craft to mothers and children.  A kind of mommy and me class for crafts."

Bob continued acting as if he was paying attention, by staring straight at Addie's cleavage as he'd been doing the entire night.  "Sounds cool."  He'd said very little else in the hour and a half she'd spent with him so far.  She was glad they had met at the restaurant, so she wouldn't have to let him escort her home.  That would just drag out the time she was forced to spend with him.

She took another bite of her lasagna, trying to continue the conversation, but getting more than a little annoyed with the man.  "What do you do for a living, Bob?" 
Do you have a job, Bob?  Do you work with the mob, Bob?  Please don't make me sob, Bob.
When she was bored, she always made up rhymes in her head.  It made her happy.

Bob tore his eyes away from her chest and finally met hers. She was certain it was the first time all night.  If she asked him what color her eyes were, he'd probably respond with a guess as to her bra size.  What a boob.  "Huh?  Did you ask me something?"

Addie closed her eyes and mentally counted to ten.  "I asked what you do for a living?"  It was a pretty typical first date question.  She hoped he'd prepared an answer. 

Bob shrugged, his eyes going right back to her breasts.  "I'm a mid-level manager for a paper company.  We do stationery and that kind of thing.  Kind of boring really."

What a shock.  Boring Bob has a boring job.
She put her hand over her mouth to stifle the giggle over her rhyme.  "Sounds fascinating," she lied.  "How do you know Jennifer?"

"Oh, she's dating my brother.  She didn't tell you?"

No, she didn't tell me.  She also didn't tell me you were so obsessed with a woman's mammary glands, you were incapable of having a conversation.  It's hard to believe that sweet Andrew has such a lecher for a brother.
"I see."  She finished her meal in silence, wondering if Bob would ever be able to tear his eyes away from her chest long enough to carry on a conversation.

After the waiter inquired whether they wanted dessert, she sighed.  "I think maybe I should get a sticker with an eyeball on it to put on my chest, don't you?" 

Bob shrugged again.  "I guess so."

"That way we could make eye contact."  She stood and picked up her purse.  "I'll catch a cab.  Good night, Bob.  Thanks for the delicious meal and the titillating conversation." 

Addie rushed out the door to the street, holding her hand up for a taxi.  It was a cold March evening, and it had started to snow.  She loved snow in November.  By March?  She was ready to never see another snowflake again.  She climbed into the back of the taxi.  "Where to?"

"Greenwich Street."  She leaned back, trying to block out the smell of stale smoke.  Closing her eyes she thought over her boring date.  Why did her roommates insist on boring men for her?  Did she really seem that boring?  She knew she worked more than her share, but boring?  She didn't think she was that boring.

When they'd arrived at her apartment she'd paid the cab driver.  For a minute, she just stood there in the snow, her face raised to the heavens.  Why was finding a good man so difficult?  She had a degree in marketing, was a successful business-woman, not bad to look at...especially her breasts apparently.  Why did she attract men like Boring Bob the Boob?

She'd never been anyone's idea of a sex object, though.  She had dark blond hair and green eyes.  She was slender, but not model slim.  Like every other woman in the country, she wished she was thinner.  No, she wasn't drop-dead gorgeous, but she didn't make small children run away in tears either.

She sighed and headed toward the main entrance of her apartment building.  When she reached the apartment she shared with three other women who were also in their twenties, she unlocked the door, praying she'd be alone for a few minutes.  That was a date she needed some time to recover from. 

Her roommate Danielle was sitting on the couch with a tub of popcorn watching
Notting Hill
.  She looked up at Addie.  "Another bad date?"

Addie sank down onto the couch and took a handful of popcorn, even though she wasn't at all hungry.  "It was awful.  His name was Bob, and he spent all night starting at my chest.  Boring Bob the Boob."  She rolled her eyes.  "What's wrong with me that I keep ending up with creeps like him?  All I want is a regular guy who will treat me right and love me.  Do they still exist?"  She sure hoped they did, because she didn't want to spend the rest of her life alone.

Danielle paused
Notting Hill
on a close up of Hugh Grant's face.  "You really want to know what I think?"  Danielle was a petite blond who made Addie, at five foot four, feel like a giant.  She was just tiny.

Addie took another piece of popcorn and chewed it slowly while studying her friend's face.  "I don't know.  Do I want to know what you think?"  Danielle was working on her masters in psychology, and often her opinions hit too close to home. 

"I think you're letting people set you up who have no business finding their own man, let alone one for a friend.  You need a professional."

Addie let out a bark of laughter.  "What?  You mean like a dating website?  There's no way!"  She'd heard too many stories of creepy men who met women through dating sites. 

"No, I mean like a professional matchmaker.  A woman with a PhD in psychology who has a proven track record."

"Yeah, like someone like that exists."  Addie rolled her eyes at the very idea of someone with that kind of education wasting her time matching people.  It would be ludicrous!

Danielle grinned.  "Well, I just happen to know someone..."  She turned sideways on the couch so she was fully facing her friend.  "You know I'm doing my internship this semester with this bigwig relational psychologist?"

"Yeah..."

"She's got a matchmaking business on the side.  It's called Matchrimony.  Isn't that an awesome name?"  Danielle was obviously excited at the idea.  "What she does is she finds people, and after extensive interviews, she pairs them up.  The catch is they meet
at the altar
.  So like you for instance, you have a business here in the city, so she would either find you someone who works really close to here, or doesn't mind relocating.  Then you'd see him for the first time while you're walking down the aisle.  She's got a great success rate."

Addie shook her head adamantly.  "There's no way!  I let people set me up for dates and look at the freaks I end up going out with.  Imagine what would happen if I let someone find me a husband, and I had no veto power.  I couldn't do it!"

"Will you at least agree to meet her?  I promise, you'll love Dr. Lachele.  She's sweet and quirky and has purple hair.  What more could you ask for in a matchmaker?"

"I don't think so.  Thanks for the suggestion."  Addie stood up and stretched.  "I'm going to go take a bath, and wash the feel of Bob's eyes off my body.  I'm going to take my iPad in there and watch a movie, so I may see you later, but I may not."

"Have a good bath!" Danielle called out as Addie disappeared into the bathroom.  She stared at the door for a minute after it closed.  Addie
needed
Dr. Lachele.  More than anyone she'd ever met.

 

*****

 

Jake Roberts ignored the ringing of his phone.  He was in the middle of a scene where a dragon was tamed by a beautiful princess.  When the ringing stopped and started again immediately, he let out a growl and snatched his cell phone up, not bothering to check the caller ID.  "What?"

"Sorry to disturb you.  It's Scott."

"Is it important?  I'm in the middle of a scene."  Scott was his best friend, but he really wasn't in the mood to be disturbed by anyone just then.

"Want to call me back when you're done?"

Jake sighed.  "No, I'll get back to it.  What's up?"  He wandered into the kitchen of his small house and snagged a Coke from the fridge, glancing out the window.  It was dark.  How had that happened? 

"Savannah wanted me to invite you over for dinner tomorrow night.  She said that you're just to the point in your book that you are probably forgetting to eat again."

Jake started to protest, but he was sure Scott could hear his stomach growling, so there was no point.  "Sure.  I can do that.  What time?"  He did need to eat, and he loved his best friend's new wife.  Besides, he hadn't seen their baby in a couple of weeks.  He needed to take the little rug rat a couple more books.

"About six?"

"I'll be there."  Jake hung up without another word.  He needed to get some food in him and finish his scene.  He felt drawn back to the computer as if it was a magnet, but stopped and shook his head.  "No.  I need to eat first!"

Wandering back into the kitchen, he checked the refrigerator.  There were more Cokes but little else.  Opening the freezer, he hit the jackpot.  A frozen pizza.  While it cooked, he could finish up his scene.  Perfect.

 

*****

 

Jake got to the ranch just before six the following evening.  He banged on the front door, a gift for the baby under one arm, and a dozen daisies in his other hand.  Savannah opened the door with the baby cradled in one arm.  She took the flowers and inhaled deeply.  "Thank you, Jake."  She stood on tiptoe and kissed his cheek before wandering into the kitchen to put the flowers in water.

Jake knew her well enough to know to follow her to the kitchen.  "How old is Kaeden now?"

"Three weeks."  She expertly put the flowers in water using only her free hand.  Carrying them to the table, she put them in the center.  "There.  Perfect."  Glancing down at the baby, she smiled.  "He's asleep.  I'm going to put him down."  She wandered to one of the small bedrooms on the first floor of the huge ranch house and put Kaeden in a bassinet before closing the door softly, careful not to wake him. 

"I made a bison stew," she told Jake as she wandered back into the dining room.

"Oh, yum.  I need something hot!"  He looked out the window.  It was snowing again.  He was sick of the snow.  "Where's Scott?"

"He's taking a shower.  He'll be down in a minute."

They chatted about his book and the baby for a few minutes until Scott joined them, his hair still damp from the shower.  "Hey, Jake."

Jake nodded to Scott.  "I've decided to run away with your wife.  You want us to take the baby or leave him with you?" 

"Oh, leave him with me," Scott said.  "I know she can live without me, but she won't last without the baby."

Savannah laughed, as she served the stew into bowls which she carried to the table.  "I made a loaf of fresh bread to go with it."

Jake was practically drooling.  "I need a woman to take care of me.  I don't care what she looks like just so long as she remembers that I need to be fed every few hours."

Savannah and Scott exchanged a look.  "I think you should talk to Lachele at Matchrimony," Scott told him.  The two men had been best friends since childhood, and he knew if anyone could convince him to do something as stupid as calling a matchmaker, it was Scott.

Jake laughed.  "Sure."

Savannah leaned forward.  "We're serious.  Jake, you don't trust anyone, because you're afraid all women are after your money.  If you meet at the altar, that worry is gone.  Why not at least talk to her?"

Jake looked back and forth between the two.  "Well, I know it worked for you two, but really?  How could she possibly find a woman for me?"  A woman who would put up with being ignored ninety percent of the time for a computer.  Women just didn't go for that kind of thing.

"Just ask her!" Savannah insisted.

Jake sighed.  "Fine.  I'll call her as soon as I finish my book."  He had at least two weeks to go on it.  They'd probably forget by then.

Savannah shook her head.  "After dinner."

"It'll be too late in New York to call after dinner."

She gave him the woman look that Jake knew meant she knew he was just making excuses.  "I'm not going to let you forget on purpose, Jake."

"Forget on purpose?  What does that even mean?"

"Jake?  You're calling her after dinner."  Savannah handed him the plate with the bread on it, and he took a piece, recognizing the futility of arguing. 

 

*****

 

Addie wove her way through the restaurant.  Danielle had texted her that she was waiting at a booth in the corner.  She spotted her friend's blond hair, but who was with her?  Wait...hadn't she said the woman she worked for had purple hair?  She frowned, but decided to give her friend the benefit of the doubt. Maybe Dr. whatever-her-name-was had forgotten her lunch and hadn't wanted to eat alone.

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