Linda Winstead Jones

Lucky's Woman


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his home office, holding his ear to the phone and listening to it ring on the other end. One, two, three rings. He was wondering where Sadie could be so early on a Monday morning, and trying to decide if he wanted to leave a message on the machine or not, when someone answered.

      “Helloooo.”

      Great. Just what he needed. “Hi. Is your mommy—”

      “My name’s Grant,” the overly enthusiastic young voice proclaimed.

      “Yes, I know. I—”

      “I have a baby sister,” Grant said enthusiastically. “She’s new. Her name is Reagan.”

      “Yes, I—”

      “I like her, but sometimes she stinks.”

      There should be a law against three-year-olds answering the telephone. “This is Uncle Lucky,” he said quickly and precisely.

      “Hey! You gave me a toy gun for my birthday!”

      “Yes, I did. Can I—”

      “Daddy only lets me play with my toy gun sometimes, not always. When I’m the Incredible Spiderman I don’t need a gun because I have my spidey powers.”

      Lucky sighed, and gave up on his hopes of talking to Sadie anytime soon. “No, Spiderman doesn’t—”

      “The Incredible Spiderman!” the kid corrected with enthusiasm. And then he started making what were probably supposed to be spidey sounds.

      “Can I speak to your mother?” Lucky spoke loudly to be heard above the din.

      “You didn’t say please.”

      “Please.”

      “She’s changing a diaper right now. I have a baby sister! Her name is Reagan. Sometimes she stinks.”

      Grant could be amusing, but he was getting repetitive and that was never a good thing. “If you’ll take the phone to your mother, I’ll bring you some candy next time I visit.”

      Grant paused for a split second. “M&M’s?”

      “Whatever you want.”

      Suddenly Grant’s voice was distant, as the kid held the portable phone away from his mouth and called, “Mommy! It’s Unca Lucky!”

      A few moments later, Sadie uttered a breathless “Hello?”

      Without responding to the greeting, Lucky said, “You let a kid who’s barely three years old answer the phone?”

      His old partner laughed. Man, there were days when he missed that laugh more than he dared to admit. “He taught himself. What can I say?”

      “You can start by telling him not to give his name over the phone until he knows who he’s talking to.”

      Sadie sighed. “Thanks for letting me know. I’ll take care of it. Nobody told me two kids would be ten times as much work as one. Twice as much I expected, that makes sense, but…I swear, Lucky, I have completely lost control.”

      Sadie had lost control the minute she’d hooked up with Truman McCain, but that was an argument she didn’t want to hear. “I know the feeling. Heather left a couple of days ago.” Saturday afternoon, to be exact.

      “Why?” Sadie managed to sound outraged, even though she had never liked Heather and hadn’t been shy about saying so.

      “She said I’m commitment phobic.”

      “Well,” Sadie said, less outrage in her voice, “you are. I mean, you and Heather were together for what, five months? That’s the longest I’ve ever known you to stay with one woman.”

      “Siding with the enemy?”

      “You didn’t love her, and I can tell you’re not all that upset that she’s gone. You’re just peeved because she left first. She wasn’t right for you, anyway. She was like all your other women—drop-dead gorgeous and shallow and temporary and not too smart. Maybe you should let me pick the next one.” There was more than a touch of humor in her voice as she made that ridiculous suggestion.

      Lucky heard Grant’s insistent voice in the background.

      “You will not bring this child candy next time you visit,” Sadie declared, the tone of her voice changing dramatically. “Do you have any idea what Grant’s like when he ingests too much sugar?”

      “Oh, yeah. I was at the birthday party, remember?” Lucky hadn’t missed any of Grant’s birthday parties. Sadie’s husband, Truman, who was now sheriff of the small county where they lived their chaotic and ideal life, had once been suspicious of Lucky’s motives where Sadie was concerned. In nearly four years Truman had come to accept that his wife and the man who had once been her partner were just friends. The best of friends, but still…just friends.

      It was only on the bad days that Lucky acknowledged that he had once been a little bit in love with Sadie. On the worst of days, he wondered if he still was.

      “When are you going to come see the baby?” Sadie asked. “She’s beautiful.”

      “I hear she stinks.” In spite of the bad mood he’d been in when he’d made this call, Lucky smiled widely.

      “I have air freshener. Just don’t wear your best suit.”

      “Warning noted.”

      “So,” she continued, “when?”

      “I don’t know.” He wasn’t very good company for anyone these days. “I’ve been spending a few days at home, and Cal has me training a handful of new guys this week. After that, who knows?”

      The Benning Agency had grown since Sadie’s departure. Flynn Benning still owned the agency, but he was rarely around anymore. He had his hands full with a new family and a new career. Teaching, of all things. Cal ran the show, and there were now more than twenty agents—men and women—employed by the once small agency. They were thinking of branching out and opening an office in Nashville, or maybe Atlanta. It had even been mentioned that Lucky might head up a Nashville office, since he kept a house less than an hour away. Most of the others lived near the main office in rural Alabama, but Lucky liked to get away from it all when he wasn’t working a case.

      He’d been asking himself lately—did he want to head up the Nashville office, if it came to that? It sounded an awful lot like a real job.

      “You have to be here for Thanksgiving,” Sadie said. “The new house will be finished by then, and I have great holiday plans.”

      “Like you don’t have your hands full enough as it is. What happened to ten times the work with two kids?”

      “It’ll be a lot of work, it’ll be a huge hassle. I know that. But I want a big, traditional Thanksgiving in my new house,” Sadie insisted. “And you have to be here. It just wouldn’t be the same without you.”

      Lucky hated to admit that he needed anything, but he needed Sadie in his life. He even needed Grant and Truman and the new baby. The situation was almost ideal. He could visit whenever he wanted, share their perfect little family life for a while and then leave the chaos and go back to his well-ordered life, where nothing ever stunk and he never had to say please to get what he wanted.

      Crap. Maybe Heather was right.

      “I gotta go,” Sadie said too quickly. “Spiderman is climbing on the kitchen table.”

      In the background, Grant protested, “The Incredible Spiderman!”

      “Thanksgiving!” Sadie ordered, and then she severed the connection.

      Thanksgiving was less than two months away. He really should visit before then to see the new baby and take a present for smelly little Reagan, and maybe he would. But he suddenly hated the idea of showing up alone again, to be a fifth wheel in Sadie’s family life. Or worse, showing up with a woman who was exactly