Chapter 7
SEVEN
Hattie
“You’re fully booked from now until January?” Lynda put a mug of tea in front of Hattie. “That’s quite an achievement. Also, a lot of pressure on you.”
They were sitting in the Petersons’ cozy farmhouse kitchen and thanks to a generous helping of Lynda’s apple and ginger cake and the warmth from the range cooker, Hattie was finding it harder and harder to stay awake.
Her head felt fuzzy and her limbs were leaden.
She could barely string a sentence together.
Still, it was good to be with Lynda, who always made her feel as if she was doing a great job and not just hanging on by a thread.
“I don’t know about an achievement. It’s a relief, that’s for sure.” She suppressed a yawn and tried not to slur her words. “Providing we don’t have staff issues, the inn should be fine for a few months.”
“I’m sure the inn will be fine. It’s you I’m worried about.”
“Me?” Hattie took a sip of tea to wake herself up. She was reaching the point where she was going to have to slap her own face or go and stand naked in the freezing air. “Why are you worried about me?”
“Because you’re twenty-eight years old and you’re working yourself to the bone,” Lynda said. “You’re about to fall asleep in my kitchen.”
“Your kitchen is comfortable. Also, I didn’t have a good night.
Delphi’s had this cough and then last night she had a bad dream, so I caved in and let her sleep in my bed.
” Was that an awful thing to do? When she was pregnant she’d read every parenting book she could lay her hands on, but after Delphi was born there had been no time.
Now she was making it up as she went along.
“She wriggles and sleeps across the bed. Every time I fell asleep last night she rolled over and woke me up. Also, she kept stretching out her arms like a starfish and smacking me in the face.”
“Believe it or not I remember those days well.”
“Really?” As hard as she tried, she couldn’t imagine Noah in any form other than a disturbingly attractive adult male.
“On second thought, forget the tea.” Lynda gently removed the mug from her fingers and gestured to the sofa in the corner of the room. “Close your eyes for five minutes.”
“Oh, I couldn’t. It wouldn’t feel right.” But that didn’t mean she wasn’t tempted. She’d reached the point where she would have killed for just one hour of undisturbed rest.
“I think you’ll find it will feel just fine.” Lynda urged her gently out of the chair and toward the sofa.
“I should probably be getting back. I still have to decorate the library. It’s the last room I need to do.
I should have done it before now, but things got away from me.
I have a group of friends checking in—they’re a book club—” her head swam a little “—which made me think maybe we should make that a regular thing locally. Your book club meets in people’s houses on a Wednesday, isn’t that right?
You could use our library. Sorry, how did I get onto your book club?
What was I saying?” She stopped, her mind suddenly blank.
“You were telling me you need to decorate the library for guests checking in, and I’m telling you that you’ll do a better job if you’re not falling asleep on your feet.
” Lynda plumped a couple of cushions on the sofa.
“When I was a young mother the hardest thing was accepting help, but things were better when I did. Put your head down just for five minutes, honey.”
Hattie felt a rush of love and gratitude.
It had been so long since anyone had fussed over her, and she enjoyed the novelty of being the cared for and not the carer.
Sometimes doing everything on your own was hard.
It meant you were constantly on alert, never completely able to allow your mind to shut down.
And there was no doubt it would be a treat to just close her eyes for five minutes. But still she couldn’t quite forget her responsibilities. “Delphi—”
“I can watch Delphi. I’m just pottering around here cooking and the child is happy enough over there, so snatch a few minutes while you can. I wouldn’t be surprised if she falls asleep, too, right where she is.”
Hattie glanced at her daughter.
Delphi was sitting cross-legged on a large cushion, two of Panther’s kittens in her lap and her favorite soft toy dinosaur on the floor next to her. She looked completely content and Hattie knew that any suggestion that perhaps they should be going home would be met with protest.
Beyond the windows snow fell, blurring the outline of the mountains behind.
Would it hurt anyone if she just closed her eyes for a moment?
“She’s fine.” Lynda reached for the throw draped over the back of the sofa. “It’s been a while since I’ve looked after a five-year-old, but I’m sure I still have what it takes. It will be good practice for when I’m a grandmother.”
“You’re going to be a grandmother?”
“One day, hopefully. Now lie down and rest.”
Did Noah know he was supposed to be producing a grandchild?
She was too tired to unravel the meaning from the words and somehow Hattie found herself sliding off her shoes and curling up on the sofa. Her head sank into the pile of soft cushions and she was instantly asleep. She didn’t even feel Lynda tuck the soft throw around her.
She woke to the sound of voices and lay there, disoriented.
Still half asleep, her brain kept trying to drift off again.
“Between running the inn and being a mother—and excelling at both—there is nothing left for herself. The girl is exhausted and that’s not good for anyone. Something needs to be done.”
“She’s not a girl.” This voice was deeper. Rougher. Noah. “She’s a woman.”
“I’m glad you’ve noticed. I was starting to wonder if you had eyes in your head.”
“Don’t meddle, Lynda.” Roy this time. “Leave it alone. It’s not your business.”
“I’m making it my business.” Lynda managed to raise her voice without actually raising her voice.
“She’s as good as family and Lord knows she needs people who are as good as family because she doesn’t have any actual family.
But she has us. And don’t tell me to leave it alone, Roy Peterson, because I will not leave it alone. ”
“Maybe she won’t appreciate your interference.”
“Or maybe she’d be grateful for it. Just because someone doesn’t ask for help doesn’t mean they don’t want it or need it.
Particularly women. Women are so used to coping that sometimes they don’t even realize there’s another way.
We’re going to show her there’s another way.
Good. So that’s agreed. You’ll take her out, Noah. Thursday works for me.”
“Excuse me?”
“I’ll have to babysit, obviously. Thursday is a good night for me. Tuesday is my choir practice and Wednesday is book club. The weekends are Hattie’s busiest time at the inn, so I’m thinking Thursday is the night that works for all of us.”
“Anything else?” Noah’s tone was somewhere between aghast and amused. “Would you like to pick a restaurant? Give me a script?”
“You can choose the restaurant, as long as it’s somewhere fancy.
No burger joints, and nowhere too noisy.
You need to be able to hear yourselves talk.
Take her somewhere she needs to dress up a little and eat food she doesn’t cook for herself or the child.
And as for a script, I’m sure you can formulate a sentence if you put your mind to it, but if you need some hints then I’d suggest you give her an evening where for once she isn’t an innkeeper or a mother. ”
Lynda was trying to fix her up with Noah.
This was mortifying.
Hattie was fully awake now, but she kept her eyes tightly closed because this was not the time for them to know she’d overheard the conversation. Behind her closed lids she burned with embarrassment.
If she’d felt awkward around Noah before, it was going to be so much worse now. Particularly as he wasn’t exactly jumping at his mother’s suggestion.
“Mom—”
“Don’t mom me in that tone.”
“I’m a grown man.” His tone was surprisingly patient in the circumstances. “I don’t need my mother to organize a date. I can organize my own social life, thank you.”
“Well, forgive me for not knowing that. I can only go on the evidence before me, which is that you’re slower moving than your father.”
“I moved at the exact pace that was right for me,” Roy protested, and Noah reached across the table and helped himself to a slice of cake.
“And I’m doing the same.”
“When you decided to move back here, we were delighted of course. But I don’t like to see you sacrificing your own social life for this place. And I’m your mother. It’s not a crime to want to see you happy.”
“I’m happy.” There was a pause. “Has it occurred to you that she might not want to spend an evening with me?”
“You’re a grown man, as you keep pointing out, so I’m sure you’re big enough to handle rejection if rejection is coming your way.”
Now would be a good time to wake up, Hattie thought, before the conversation got worse.
Fortunately for her, Delphi stirred at that moment and Lynda immediately stopped the conversation.
“The little one is awake. Who knew Panther would make such a good cushion? There, honey, come to Lynda and have a big old hug. How do you feel about chocolate milkshake?”
Hattie opened her eyes in time to see Delphi wrap her arms around Lynda’s neck and rest her head on her shoulder as she was carried to the kitchen table.
“Noah, you hold her for a moment while I make the milkshake. I need two hands for the task.” She handed Delphi over and Noah took her, settling her on his arm.
Delphi thrust her soft toy dinosaur at him.
“He’s called Huge.”
“Good name.”
“He’s a diplodocus. He has a very long neck. See?”
Noah gave Huge his undivided attention. “I do see.”
“I sleep with him.”
“That must be comforting. He doesn’t wake you up?”
Hattie, who had woken to find Huge wedged under her back on more than one occasion, thought she should probably be the one to be answering that question.