“It is. I like it.”
“Glass is like people,” he said, holding up a piece. “If you just glance at it, you see one thing, but if you really look inside—” he held it toward the light “—you see all kinds of nuances and textures.”
She ran her finger over the swirled design, wondering what he’d seen inside her. “What kind of glass is this?”
“Baroque.” He slid the large piece back into the rack, then selected another. “This is water glass.”
Christine looked at the texture appearing like raindrops.
“And this is a smooth ripple. Here’s an opal glass, bull’s-eye, English muffle and cathedral glass.”
“You’ve lost me.”
He lowered the glass and then stepped closer and tousled her already messed hair. “No, I haven’t. You’re right here. See.” He stepped closer and gave her a quick hug.
The embrace surprised yet pleased her. Will looked different in the studio, as if he were in control of his life. She saw confidence, and a look on his face that intrigued her—pride and a kind of wholeness. She wished she felt that way.
“You love this work,” she said. “I can see it on your face.”
“I do. It’s like cheating. I earn a living doing something that I have to do because I can’t help myself.”
“That’s not cheating. It’s finding the right job.”
He patted a stool beside the tall raw-wood table. “Sit here.”
She slid onto the stool, and he leaned his hip against the table.
“Have you found the right career?” he asked.
“I like to think so. When we do a good job and make the client happy, I can sit back and see the result of my work. It feels good.”
“That’s what counts.” He shifted away, but his response left her questioning her own decisions. She saw a specific difference between Will’s attitude toward his work and hers.
“Would you like to see how I do any of these things?” He motioned toward the projects scattered around the room.
“I’d love to, but I think we’d better get going. I’m nervous about leaving my grandmother too long.”
He nodded, then reached beneath his worktable and pulled out a large folded paper. “A pattern I’m designing. I’ll show you back at the house.”
“I’d like that,” she said. “Let’s go. We still have to stop at the grocery store.”
As the words left her, her cell phone played its familiar tune. She dug into her pocket, curious yet concerned. “I left the number with Grandma. I hope she’s okay.” She stared at it, afraid to answer.
“You’ll know, if you answer that thing.”
The melody stopped when she hit the green button. “Hello,” she said, expecting to hear her grandmother’s voice, but who she heard instead gave her a start. “Dad. Where are you?”
She heard the upset in his voice, and she listened as her pulse pounded in her temple.
“You’re in Florida? Why?”
Her stomach tightened as her world crumpled. She turned her head toward Will, unable to believe what she’d just heard.
She closed her eyes, then opened them again. “My mother fell and broke her hip, jogging.”
Chapter Four
Christine watched Will’s jaw drop. “Your mother broke her hip jogging? Where?”
“On the ship’s promenade deck.” She crumpled back onto the stool. “I can’t believe this. This is a bad dream.”
Will rose and rested his hand on her back. His warmth rushed through her. “I’m sure she’ll be fine. She’s in Florida, you said. Don’t worry about—”
“Not that. I’m stuck here, Will. Don’t you understand? I need to get back to my job. I thought I’d be home in a few days. Now what?”
She could see he’d been taken aback. His dark eyes flashed with disbelief, and she tried to recover from his look. “Naturally I’m concerned about my mother, but like you said, she’ll be okay. I just wasn’t planning on something like this happening.”
“We don’t plan for bad things to happen, Christine, but they do.”
She stared at him, wanting to say something, to explain, to have someone understand her stress, but she knew it was useless. Will didn’t know her at all. He had no idea about her work or how hard it was to stay at the top. “I’ll figure out something.”
Will pulled his hand away, leaving a cold spot where warmth had been. Her mood felt the same. Without expecting it, she’d enjoyed the outing and new experience of the snowmobile, but now the fun had faded.
She rose from the stool. “We’d better get moving. I’m sure my grandmother is upset about this, too. Daddy called there first. I know Grandma’s fine, but she’ll be worried about me.”
“That’s just like your grandmother,” Will said, walking ahead of her and snapping off the lights. He tucked the folded paper inside his jacket and waited at the door for her, his hand on the knob.
Outside, the wind seemed colder than it had felt earlier. Christine sank onto the sled, scooted back and waited for Will to climb on and help block the bitter air. Tears filled her eyes, and she brushed them away with her gloves. She felt sorry for herself, and she hated the feeling. Lord, I’m trying to make this a go. I want to be thoughtful and compassionate, but this isn’t helping.
God’s voice didn’t fill her head with an answer. The only sound she heard was the rev of the engine as they sped away. She wrapped her arms around Will’s trim waist, his broad shoulders blocking the wind—just as he seemed to want to protect her from her problems.
“Hang on,” he called.
That’s what she needed to do—hang on. But to what?
When Will stopped outside Doud’s Mercantile, Christine saw a smart-looking snowmobile on display. “They sell sleds at the grocery store?”
Will grinned. “No. It’s for the Christmas Bazaar the first weekend in December. They hold a fund-raiser, and the prize is this sweet-looking baby right here.” He gave the sled a pat. “It’s the best of its line.”
“It’s really nice. Tell me what to do, and I’ll donate to the fund-raiser, but I never win prizes. If I do, I’ll give the sled to you.”
Will gave her shoulder a squeeze.
Christine flew through the grocery store, paid for the purchases, donated to the fund-raiser, then headed back to her grandmother’s in silence, her mind having slipped back to her problem.
The fun had vanished from the trip as quickly as the sun had hidden behind the heavy clouds and refused to come out. The cold penetrated her body, as did her dismay, and she felt icy to the bone.
Will put away the sled while Christine hurried into the house. She dropped her packages on the kitchen counter, then rushed toward the living room while she pulled off her coat. When she came through the doorway, her grandmother’s concerned eyes lifted to hers.