Threads of Hope: Quilts of Love Series (10 page)

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Authors: Christa Allan

Tags: #Christian Books & Bibles, #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #United States, #Religion & Spirituality, #Fiction, #Christian Fiction

BOOK: Threads of Hope: Quilts of Love Series
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Nina spotted a quilt whose funky design and colors she was certain Aretha and her little decorator-self would adore. It would be a perfect birthday present for her because Nina knew that it was a luxury she wouldn’t buy for herself right now. Standing in front of the hot pink and lime green paisley print quilt, Nina was the first bidder and realized she had no idea how much she should bid. She looked around for people wearing “We Care” pins, which meant they were volunteers attending the benefit to help with the auction.

A few couples moved past her, and she spotted a lapel pin on the tuxedo of a man who stopped to bid on the giraffe quilt next to her. He was still writing on the bid sheet when she tapped on his shoulder. “Excuse me. I’m sorry to bother you, but I wanted to bid on this for a friend, and I saw your lapel pin—”

When he placed his pen down on the bid sheet to look up, there was the shock of mutual recognition as Greg Hernandez and Nina O’Malley stood face-to-face.

13

Brady, she expected to see. Greg Hernandez? Not so much.

And Greg Hernandez in a tuxedo? Not so shabby. In fact, she wanted to slap herself for the flicker of warmth she was certain flushed her face. Even if she did find him surprisingly attractive, she certainly did not want him to feel even a stitch of satisfaction to see it reflected in the blush on her cheeks.

They both tripped over their words like wires stretched across their mutual discomfort at finding themselves where they would not have wanted to be.

After swatting a few syllables in one another’s direction, Nina managed a coherent sentence. “I didn’t know you worked here,” she said.
Another deserved slap for a ridiculous comment. Aretha, anytime you want to make an appearance and save me would be fine
. She shifted her weight ever-so-slightly to give her other foot a reprieve from the tingling that led to total toe numbness and would make a speedy escape improbable. “Volunteer, I meant I didn’t know you were a volunteer.” What she really wanted to say was that she was stunned to find him at an event supporting anything AIDS-related.

“Well, I didn’t know I was one either until a week or so ago,” Greg said. “It’s given me something to do and kept me out of trouble.” He smiled and added, “So far.”

“There you are,” the voice of relief tinged with frustration, sailed above the heads of the cluster of people. It originated from a woman who snaked her way through a cluster of sequined gowns against a backdrop of black tuxedos. Her cropped platinum hair seemed as no-nonsense as the simple black sheath she wore. Nina had heard about the death of his parents, so she knew whoever this was, she wasn’t his mother. Her eyes flickered on Nina for only a moment, then she handed Greg a plastic cup and a bottle of water the size and shape of a coffee thermos. “Who’d want to go hiking with that?” She emphasized
that
and pointed to the container she’d given him. “Glass water bottles? Better off putting it in a can,” she harrumphed.

Greg laughed. “You’re the queen of practical. Thanks for the water.” He set the cup and bottle down on the table next to them. “Did you need me for anything?”

“Crystal was following me. She had a question about taking orders from people who don’t win the auction.” She looked over her shoulders and back at Greg. “Guess she got sidetracked.” Turning her attention to Nina, she said, “You’re bidding on that one? Good choice,” she said and walked off.

As she threaded her way back through the crowd, Greg watched her and shook his head, an amused smile on his face. “That was Martha. Her group made that quilt. She left so quickly, I didn’t have time to introduce you.”

“Oh, so you’ve been to this benefit before?” Nina said, trying not to lick her dry lips and wondering if her breath reeked of the grilled garlic-infused cilantro shrimp she’d sampled earlier.

Two women who walked over to look at the quilt squeezed past Nina, pushing her within inches of Greg. In high school,
she dreamed of being this close to him. Close enough to punch him, which she knew would have hurt her more. Physically. She contemplated other ways of marring the face that so many girls in school wanted pressed against their own. After her brother died, she abandoned what she considered the smoke and mirrors of praying to an invisible God. But the one prayer she let escape her lips was that Greg Hernandez know pain. The gut-altering pain that she experienced.

Greg twisted what, at first Nina thought was a wedding band, but the ring was on his right hand instead of his left. “No, I haven’t. My sister invited me, and Martha, well . . .” He stopped, drank some water, and looked into his cup as if expecting to find the rest of his sentence there. Greg set the cup on the table and when he looked at Nina, he said, “Anyway, I doubt you’re interested in a rambling narrative about how I came about being here. What about you? Were you here last year?”

Nina wished he hadn’t sounded so much like a polite customer service rep, trained to ask scripted questions.
Really? This is the second time you’ve seen one another in years. Why are you expecting more than feigned interest?
She considered an equally vague answer, but why? What were the odds their ships would dock at the same port? Might as well go for honest. “I wasn’t here before either, and the only reason I’m here tonight is because I’m on assignment. Not that I don’t think this is a worthy cause, but charity events, you know the who’s who doing the what’s what, aren’t the stories I write.” She moved to the side to avoid a possible collision into Greg, letting a couple holding hands and reeking of fresh love walk by. “I’d rather do more investigative reporting. But . . . my editor gave me the tickets. And, she’s not someone I want to annoy by refusing. In fact, I wouldn’t doubt she’s the reincarnation of General
Patton, the female version. She’s demanding and driven, and that’s as diplomatically as I can describe her.”

A carousel of expressions moved over Greg’s face as she spoke. From expectant to thoughtful to confused to amused. She didn’t remember being humorous. Perhaps the orchestra tuning up in the ballroom lent a dramatic backdrop to her tale of woe. Otherwise, what was that flicker of a smile?

“Oh, so you’re a reporter. Local news station?” He poured himself more water.

“I’d rather be behind a camera than in front of one. No, I work for a local magazine called
Trends
. You might not have seen it yet if you just recently moved.”

Greg almost choked trying to swallow his water. “Excuse me,” he coughed out.

Nina opened her purse to find a tissue to hand him when she heard Aretha calling her. “Nina, look who I found.” Her relief withered faster than a Southern girl in the Georgia sun when she looked up to see Elise trailing behind her friend. “Oh, great. Speak of the devil . . .” she said as she handed Greg the only thing she could dredge up, a napkin from Starbucks. “I’ll tell her I’m interviewing you, which, of course, I planned to do next anyway, and maybe she’ll march off in another direction.”

He started coughing again.

If Greg had known that being a volunteer would provide him the front-row entertainment about to unfold before him, he would have signed on without his sister’s persistence.

“If you’re going to be there, you might as well have something to do and not wander around aimlessly,” Elise had told him when she handed over his pin.

At first, he thought it was her ploy to assure that he’d show up. But walking in tonight, he realized that, by giving him a mission for the evening, she saved him from the awkwardness of feeling alone in a room full of people.

He expected to feel a bit awkward without Lily. He didn’t expect that he would feel that way standing near the woman he least expected to see there. What made meeting her all the more uncomfortable was his realization that, even before he knew that he knew her, she’d captured his attention. Greg remembered thinking that only a woman as beautiful as she was self-assured would be able to pull off wearing a quirky, but stunning vintage dress to such an occasion. He would have never guessed that the girl he humiliated on the floor of his high school cafeteria would be the woman admired in the ballroom of a grand hotel.

It was reassuring that she was equally startled to see him. Of course, based on what he suspected was her perception of him—arrogant, spoiled, and unfeeling—her surprise didn’t surprise him. The last time they’d seen one another was her appointment at the vet clinic with her dog, the squirmy dachshund that she’d named after some city. He didn’t have a reason to discuss his daughter or his wife. Had he, she might have been less shocked.

When she started explaining her reason for being at the benefit, Greg thought her working for Elise would be too coincidental. Then, as she continued to talk, the notion became less unlikely. Describing her editor as demanding came close to Elise, but he almost couldn’t stop himself from laughing aloud when she mentioned
Trends
. Then, as if on cue, his sister appeared. At first, he thought the comedy of errors would be amusing. But seeing the change in Nina’s demeanor, the way she squared her shoulders and tugged on the pearl drop she
wore, centering it in the hollow of her neck, he sensed a pending disaster. But the iceberg had moved in too close, and the ship was about to crash.

The petite woman his sister followed scanned him from head to toe, then turned her attention to Nina. “Elise and I bumped into each other at the pasta bar. And almost literally.” She laughed.

Nina did not. With Elise a few steps away, Nina flipped a hand in his direction. “Aretha, this is Greg Hernandez. Aretha is my roommate. And this is—”

“There you are,” said Elise.

Greg glanced at Nina and saw her open her mouth to answer, when Elise added, “Have you seen Peyton? I thought he’d be with you.” Elise peered over her brother’s shoulders as if she’d spot her husband hiding behind him. And before he could reply, his sister looked at Nina. “I’m sorry. I must seem so rude. Aretha told me I had to see your dress. It’s lovely, just as she said.”

Elise placed her hand on Greg’s shoulder. “I didn’t know you knew my brother.”

The words
my brother
hurtled into Nina and if she didn’t soon salvage the emotional wreckage, she would be crushed beyond recognition. She willed herself into composure, clasped her hands in front of her to still their trembling. Standing between Greg and Aretha, she heard the gasp of one and sensed the flinch of the other. Nina had looked at neither one of the two as her mouth and lips formed syllables into words and pushed them out to answer Elise.

Nina’s face paled and Greg winced when she said, “I didn’t either.”

Elise looked from her to Greg and back again, the question on her face unanswered.

“Excuse me, please. There’s something I must attend to,” Nina said and walked away from her boss, her friend, and her betrayer.

14

Somewhere between moving her arm out of reach of Greg’s grasp, Aretha calling her name, and the ladies’ room, which was her intended destination, Nina slammed into Brady Lambert. Make that Brady Lambert’s camera lens.

She pressed her hands to her throbbing forehead, squeezed her eyes to ease the stinging, and hoped whatever she exclaimed at the moment of the crash didn’t require a censor.

“Whoa! Ma’am, are you okay? I didn’t see you . . . you walked by so fast.”

She felt herself wobble, and Brady placed his hands on her shoulders. “I’m fine. I’m fine. I just need to sit down . . . somewhere . . . ladies’ room . . .” Something inside her welcomed the pain. It trumped the assault she felt her heart had just taken.

“Nina? Are we doing this camera collision again?” He sounded on the verge of annoyed, but Nina saw his expression soften when he looked at her. Brady cupped her head in his hands. “I’m so sorry. Here,” he gently held her wrists, “let me see the damage.”

If he could truly see the damage she felt, her body would be pumping fountains of blood. At least when he sees the tears in my
eyes, he won’t know they were already there
. Nina slowly lifted her head as he moved her own hands away from her face. She hated and welcomed that his touch moved through her like a warm current. It had been a long time since he had held her so gently.

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