Eternity (Montgomery/Taggert 17) - Page 13

Carrie took the sailboat from the bag. “And this is for you.” Holding out the boat to the boy, she saw by his eyes that he very much wanted to take the present, and he even took a step forward, but then he stepped back and shook his head no.

“I brought it just for you,” Carrie said coaxingly. “My brothers sail ships from Maine to all over the world, and this is very much like one of their ships. I’d like for you to have it.”

The boy looked as though he were fighting some inner demon, fighting the part of him that so much wanted the toy, and fighting the other part of himself that for some reason wanted to refuse the boat.

At last the boy tightened his lips—and in doing so looked exactly like his father—and said belligerently, “Where’s Papa?”

“I believe he’s helping a man with my baggage.”

The boy gave a firm nod then ran out the door, obviously used to the broken hinge as he seemed to work it without nearly killing himself.

“Well,” Carrie said and sat down on one of the unbroken chairs. “I think he’s angry at me. Do you know why?”

“Papa said that you were going to be ugly and we weren’t to mention it. He said that lots of things were ugly, but they couldn’t help it,” the girl said, then cocked her head to one side as she studied Carrie. “But you’re not ugly at all.”

Carrie smiled at the little girl. For all that she couldn’t be more than five, she was certainly articulate. “It seems to me to be a little unfair to be angry just because someone isn’t ugly.”

“My mother is beautiful.”

“Oh, I see,” Carrie said, and she did see. If her own beautiful mother died and her father had married another beautiful woman, Carrie wouldn’t have been too happy about it either. If her father had remarried, she would have much preferred him to marry an ugly woman, a very, very ugly woman.

“You don’t mind that I’m not ugly, do you? I can be ugly if you want.” At that Carrie began to make faces, pulling her eyes down with her fingers, and pushing her nose up with her thumb.

The little girl giggled.

“Think Temmie would like me better if I looked like this?”

Giggling again, the child nodded.

“Why don’t you come here and let me brush your hair and you can tell me what you’re going to name your doll.”

When the child hesitated, as though trying to decide if this would be something her father would want her to do, Carrie withdrew her silver-backed hairbrush from her case. After a little gasp of awe at the sight of the pretty brush, the child went to Carrie and took her place between Carrie’s knees and allowed her to gently brush her hair.

“And your name is Dallas?” Carrie asked, stroking the child’s fine, soft hair. “Isn’t that a rather unusual name?”

“Mother said it was where I was made.”

“Like in a factory?” Carrie said before she thought, then cleared her throat, glad the girl couldn’t see her red face. “Oh, I see. What are you called? Dallie?”

The child seemed to consider that for a moment. “You can call me Dallie if you want.”

Behind her, Carrie smiled. “I should be honored to be allowed to call you a name that no one else calls you.”

“What’s his name?” Dallie pointed to Choo-choo.

Carrie told her. “It’s because the day my brother gave him to me, he sneezed many times. Do you know that since that day I don’t think he’s sneezed once?”

When Dallas didn’t laugh but nodded solemnly, Carrie felt a tug at her heart. It wasn’t right that a child as young as she was should be so serious. “There now,” Carrie said. “Your hair is very tidy and what lovely hair it is, too. Would you like to look?” When she held out a silver-backed mirror, the child took it and looked at herself as though she were studying herself.

“You are very pretty,” Carrie reassured her.

Dallie nodded. “But not beautiful. Not like my mother.” She handed the mirror back to Carrie.

What an odd thing for a little girl to say, Carrie thought as she looked about the cold, dreary little room. “Shall we see about dinner? What is there in the house to eat?”

“Papa said that you would make dinner. He said that you knew how to cook anything in the world and that you would never let us go hungry.”

Carrie smiled. “Then that’s what I’ll have to do.” Standing up, she went to the single cupboard and opened the doors. Her heart sank when she saw how little there was inside. The sight of half a loaf of stale bread, three cans of peas, and nothing else made a surge of anger at Josh shoot through her. Even if she were the greatest cook in the world, she wouldn’t be able to prepare a meal with these few ingredients.

Tags: Jude Deveraux Montgomery/Taggert Historical
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