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The Ashtons - Cole, Abigail & Megan

The Ashtons - Cole, Abigail & Megan

Titel: The Ashtons - Cole, Abigail & Megan
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stairs, “has Cole been putting weight on?”
    Mercedes gave her a puzzled look. “I don’t think so. Why?”
    “Ah, well. Can’t win them all.” However this turned out, she could take comfort in one thing. Cole wouldn’t have forgotten her. “Here,” she said, digging into her pocket. “After you cut and run, you can go get Hulk out of the suvvy and put him in my room.”
    Mercedes accepted the keys. “Um…suvvy?”
    “SUV sounds ugly. Suvvy sounds cute.”
    “Suvvy. Right.” Mercedes shook her head, smiling—and impulsively reached out and hugged Dixie with one arm. “I’m so glad you moved back. Sorry for the reason, of course, but glad to have you close again.”
    “Me, too,” Dixie said quietly. “On both counts. Well.” She ran a hand through her hair, straightened her shoulders, and said, “How does that poem go? ‘Forward, the Light Brigade! Charge for the guns!…Into the Valley of Death…’ I can’t remember the rest.”
    Mercedes grinned. “Something about ‘cannons to the left of them, cannons to the right.’ I’m pretty sure Cole doesn’t have any cannons in his office.” She turned and rapped smartly on the door on her right.
    “I notice you’re not disputing the Valley of Death part.”
    Mercedes ignored that and opened the door. “Cole, our artist is here. Shannon’s sick, so I’ve got to man the tasting room in twenty minutes. I thought you might show her around.”
    “I’d be happy to,” said a smooth, almost forgotten baritone. “As soon as I…” His voice trailed away as Dixie stepped in behind Mercedes.
    He hasn’t changed. That was her first thought—and it was quite wrong.
    Cole was still lean as a whip with mink-brown hair cut short in an effort to tame the curl. He had neat, small ears set flat to the head, a strong nose and straight slashes of eyebrows. But the face that had been almost too good-looking eleven years ago had acquired character lines that rubbed off a bit of the gloss.
    Then there was the way his mouth was hanging open. That was definitely different. She liked it.
    Dixie smiled slowly, hardly noticing when the door closed behind Mercedes. “Hello, Cole.”
    Cole’s face smoothed into a professional smile. “Welcome to The Vines. As I was saying, I’d be glad to show you around…as soon as I’ve killed my little sister.”
    Dixie burst out laughing. “And here I’d been thinking you’d be all cold and businesslike.”
    “And I know how you feel about businesslike. I’ll try to avoid it.” He gave her a thorough, up-and-down appraisal that stopped an inch short of insult. “You’ve always tended to run late, but eleven years is excessive, even for you.”
    She shook her head. “You aren’t going to fluster me that way.”
    “I can try.”
    Time to switch topics, she decided, and glanced around the office, which was ruthlessly neat everywhere except for the big, dark-wood desk. A spotted canine head poked around the corner of that desk, brown eyes looking at her hopefully. “Oh!” She bent, smiling. “Who’s this?”
    “Tilly. She won’t let you pet her.”
    “No?” Challenged, she held out her hand for the dog to sniff—and the animal cringed back out of sight behind the desk. “She is timid, isn’t she?”
    “That, yes. Also neurotic and not too bright,” he said, reaching down to fondle the animal Dixie couldn’t see. “Tilly’s scared of storms, other dogs, birds, new people, loud noises—you name it, she’s afraid of it.”
    Dixie moved around to the side of the desk so she could see the dog. “She’s some kind of Dalmatian mix?”
    “That and greyhound, the vet thinks, with maybe some plain old mutt mixed in. I found her on the side of the highway about a year ago.”
    “How in the world did you get her to go with you if she’s scared of everyone?”
    He glanced down at Tilly, his smile amused—and slightly baffled. “She seemed to think she’d been waiting for me. I stopped, opened my door, and she jumped in.”
    Dixie shook her head. “She is female.”
    “But not my usual type.” His crooked smile hadn’t changed—a downtuck on one side, uptilt on the other, as if he were wryly hedging his bets. “All right, Tilly, that’s all. Lie down.” Amazingly, she did. He looked back at Dixie. “Are you waiting to be invited to sit down? By all means, have a seat.”
    Dixie thought that the dog seemed just Cole’s type—obedient. Consciously virtuous, she forbore to mention that as
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