Agent Daddy. Alice SharpeЧитать онлайн книгу.
peeled for her broken-down heap beside the road as he drove into town, but he hadn’t seen it.
He pulled into the parking lot twenty minutes late, grabbed his hat and the baby and dashed through the rain to the front office. A few minutes later he had a visitor’s pass and directions to the afternoon kindergarten. Happy to be out of the car seat, Colin hung on to Trip’s collar, his small legs clenched tight around Trip’s torso, making little excited noises as they hurried.
The kindergarten was off by itself at the end of a long hall. When Trip finally reached the door, he paused to catch his breath and peer into the classroom.
This close to Christmas break, the room was festooned with chains of colored paper and hanging snowflakes. Toy-cluttered shelves rimmed the perimeters, easels stood ready for young Picassos. Children’s books were scattered across a circular rug in the middle of the room, and a fuzz ball in a cage next to the window gave a small exercise wheel a workout.
No teacher, no Noelle. Now what?
Part of him wanted to slink away. He was sure the teacher would have “suggestions” to fix whatever she thought he was doing wrong with Noelle, and he was just as sure he didn’t want to hear them. This was a new teacher, barely here two weeks, a replacement for the last teacher who had left when her husband fell ill. That teacher had bombarded him with unsolicited advice.
Colin grabbed at a painting pinned to the wall and ripped off a corner, stuffing it into his mouth with lightning speed. As Trip rescued the rest of the painting from sure destruction and pried the paper out of Colin’s mouth, the baby squealed—he might be small, but he had a mind of his own and the lungs to back it up.
At the sound of Colin’s cry, Trip detected movement in the back of the room and watched as a woman seated at a desk he hadn’t noticed before raised her head from her folded arms. She looked around blankly, blinking a few times until her gaze fastened on him and Colin. Like a shot, she was on her feet, speaking before she’d taken a step, straightening her ruffled white blouse, patting her hair, smiling.
“Mr. Tripper? Hello, welcome, I’m Ms. Bishop—Faith Bishop. I’m sorry, I…well, it looks like I nodded off.”
At the sound of her voice, Colin swiveled in Trip’s arms to face her, his noisy protest dissolving into a drooly grin and a series of coos.
At six foot three inches, Trip was used to towering over people, but this woman was truly petite, small-boned and delicate. She had a heart-shaped face, clear blue eyes, a delicate nose and surprisingly full lips. Wavy tendrils of wheat-blond hair escaped a little knot at the nape of her neck. Tiny silver earrings, no ring on any finger, slim hands, silver watch. He detected a slight limp, barely noticeable. He placed her in her midtwenties.
As she neared, the overhead fluorescent lights illuminated three or four fading scars on the left side of her face. He realized he’d been staring when her hand flew to her cheek, fingers barely grazing the scars before continuing on to push a few strands of hair behind her ear. It looked like a subconscious and recurring gesture.
Meanwhile, Colin was becoming increasingly hard to keep hold of, as he wiggled and kicked and stretched tiny arms toward the teacher. The cries morphed into squeaks of delight and anticipation as she stopped a foot or so away.
“You have to be Colin,” she said to the baby. “Your big sister told me all about you.”
Trip wondered what else Noelle talked about. She was pretty quiet around him, though he was beginning to sense a slight thaw.
The woman took the baby’s hands in hers and smiled up at Trip. “It’s very nice to meet you, too. Thank you for coming in.”
Colin had almost squirmed his way into her arms by now, and laughing, she took his weight. “Persistent little guy, isn’t he?”
“You have no idea.” Taking off his hat and running his fingers through his short hair, he added, “I’m sorry we’re late. The babysitter didn’t show up.”
“Oh, that’s okay,” she said as she gently disengaged Colin’s hands from her hair. She peeled the baby’s damp jacket off of him and dropped it on a pint-size chair.
“She’s usually pretty conscientious,” he added, determining at that moment to swing by Gina’s place on the way home and make sure she hadn’t taken ill. “I know I’m not supposed to bring another child to a meeting, either, but there wasn’t a choice.”
“It’s not a problem,” she said. “Let’s go back to my desk and talk about Noelle.” Effortlessly hitching Colin on her right hip, she led the way to her desk. For a small woman with a limp, she had a great walk, enhanced by the snug fit of her trousers and the way her blouse nipped in at the waist.
“Where is my niece?” he asked as he took off his leather jacket and hooked it on the back of a chair at the side of her desk. Sitting down, he crossed Levi’s-clad legs, and perched his rain-speckled hat on his knee.
“I sent her to the library with an aide.” She scooped up a few plastic shapes and scattered them in front of Colin. The baby squealed in delight as he pounded his hands and scattered them.
“You’re sure good with kids,” he said.
“It’s a plus in my occupation.”
“Do you have any of your own?”
She seemed to flinch at his question, but answered quickly enough. “No, but my brother and his wife have seven-month-old quadruplet girls. I’m very close to them.”
“Local?” he asked, thinking of that flinch. After ten years in the Bureau, he’d learned to read people pretty well and to trust his instincts. Those instincts now said there were nuances here that aroused his curiosity. Ms. Bishop might look put together on the outside, but inside, he’d be willing to bet, there were troubles.
He instantly chided himself. He wasn’t an agent anymore and she wasn’t a desperado. What had driven him to invade her personal space by asking about children? He made a mental note to knock it off.
“No, my family lives up closer to Seattle, in a little town called Westerly.”
“I imagine you’re planning to go home for the holidays,” he said, unsure why he kept questioning her, just intrigued by the undercurrents.
She blinked a time or two and said, “No, not this year,” and in what appeared to be a blatant attempt to get the discussion back to him, added, “I want to be honest with you. Even though I’ve only been in Shay a couple of weeks, I’ve heard quite a bit about you.”
“Uh-oh.”
“Don’t look so nervous.”
“Where did you hear about me?”
“Here and there. The teachers’ lounge.”
“Gossip,” he said.
She shrugged. “I wouldn’t call it that. Concern for Noelle, intrigue over you—”
“Me?”
She titled her head. “You’re a hometown boy who left the family ranch and joined the FBI. Plus you’re a bona fide hero.”
“That hero stuff is way overblown,” he said, repositioning his hat, hoping she’d let it drop.
“Modesty aside, you saved everybody on an overturned bus right here in your own hometown. That’s heroic.”
“Not everyone,” he said, glancing away from her blue eyes and down at Colin. The baby had abandoned the blocks and now lay sprawled against Faith’s breasts, fingers curled in her ruffled blouse, eyes drooping, perfectly content. What male wouldn’t be in such a position?
“I didn’t know,” she said gently. “I was under the impression everyone got out.”
“There was an older woman trapped under a seat—” He stopped talking again as his nostrils seemed to fill with the smell of gasoline,