for her to decide if he was angry about her talking to Duncan. And, frankly, she didn’t care. This wasn’t about him.
“Duncan,” she said, “I know a very long rhyme. A poem about baseball.”
He nodded for her to continue.
“You’d like baseball. It’s all about numbers.” She drew a diamond in the air as she talked about the bases and the pitcher and the batter. “Four balls and three strikes.”
“Three strikes and you’re out,” he said.
“You’re right,” she said. “This poem is called ‘Casey at the Bat.’”
He lay back on his pillow to listen while she recited the poem she’d memorized in fifth grade. The rhyming cadence lulled him, and Duncan’s eyelids began to droop.
When she had finished, he roused himself. “Again.”
She started over. By the time she finished, he was sound asleep.
Leaving his door ajar, exactly the way she’d found it, she went down the hallway to the bathroom. Like every other part of the house she’d seen, the room was sorely in need of fresh paint. But it seemed clean and had an old- fashioned claw-footed tub. Fantastic! One of her favorite pastimes was a long, hot soak. And why not? It wasn’t as if she could make Blake Monroe dislike her even more. Besides, she didn’t know when or if she’d ever have the chance to luxuriate in a tub again.
As she filled the tub, fears about her uncertain future arose. No money. No job. No home. She had only enough gas to get back to Raven’s Cliff. That would have to be where she started her new life, maybe working as a waitress or a short-order cook. She had experience at both from when she was putting herself through college.
Stripping off the sweatpants and T-shirt, she eased into the hot, steamy water.
Damn it, Marty. This is all your fault. Her brother had popped back into her life just long enough to wreck everything. When he’d showed up, she should have thrown him out on his handsome butt. Should have, but didn’t. Water under the bridge.
After a nice, long soak, she climbed out of the tub, somewhat refreshed, and padded down the hallway to her “shabby chic” room.
The door was open, just the way she’d left it. But something was different. At the foot of her bed was the canvas suitcase that had been in the back of her car. Had Alma trudged all the way down the road to get it? She opened the flap and took out a nightgown.
“Madeline Douglas.”
She turned and saw Blake standing in the doorway. He tossed the keys to her car to the center of the bed. “You shouldn’t leave these lying around.”
“I didn’t.” The keys had been on top of the bureau in her room. Inside her room! Even if the door was open, he shouldn’t have barged in uninvited.
“You’re hired,” he said without smiling. “We’ll talk in the morning.”
The door closed behind him.
Chapter Three
The next morning, the skies outside Madeline’s bedroom window were clear, washed clean by the rain. And she tried to focus on the sunny side. She had a job and a place to live. Working with Duncan provided an interesting challenge. For now, she was safe.
The dark cloud on her emotional horizon was Blake Monroe. A volatile man. She didn’t know why he had changed his mind about hiring her and decided it was best not to ask too many questions. He didn’t seem like the type of man who bothered to explain himself.
Entering the high-ceilinged kitchen, she smiled at Alma, who sat at the table, drinking coffee and keeping company with a morning television chat program on a small flat- screen.
“I’m hired,” Madeline announced. “I can’t thank you enough for telling me about this job.”
“Congrats.” Using the remote, Alma turned down the volume. “How about lending me a hand with breakfast?”
“Sure.”
She turned and confronted a mountain of dirty dishes, glasses, pots and crusted skillets that spread across the countertop like a culinary apocalypse. It appeared that Alma hadn’t wiped a single plate since they’d moved into this house.
How could anyone stand such a mess! Madeline rolled up the sleeves of her daisy-patterned cotton shirt, grabbed an apron that was wadded in the corner of the counter and dug in.
“You haven’t changed a bit,” Alma said. “Even as a kid, you were good about cleaning up.”
Maybe even a teensy bit compulsive. “Is that why you thought of me for this job?”
“I don’t mind having a helper.” Alma shuffled toward the butcher-block island and leaned against it. Though she was completely dressed with hair and makeup done, she wore fuzzy pink slippers. “Did you sleep well?”
“Took me a while to get accustomed to the creaks and groans in this old house.” Once during the night, she’d startled awake, certain that someone had been in the room with her. She’d even imagined that she saw the door closing, which made her wonder. “Does Duncan ever sleepwalk?”
“Not as far as I know, but I wouldn’t be surprised by anything that kid does. Or his father, for that matter.”
“Is Blake difficult to work for?”
“A real pain in the rear.”
Yet, he put up with the mess in the kitchen. “How so?”
“In the past year, he went through two other housekeepers and four nannies.”
“Why?”
“His lordship is one of those dark, brooding, artistic types. Real moody. Gets caught up in a project and nothing else matters. He forgets to eat, then blames you for not feeding him.” She patted her sculpted blond curls. “It’s not part of my job description to keep track of his phone calls, and most of the business contacts go through his office in New York. But if I forget a phone call, he blows a gasket.”
“He yells at you?” Madeline was beginning to feel more and more trepidation about this job.
“Never raises his voice,” Alma said. “He growls. Real low. Like an angry lion.”
With Blake’s overgrown dark blond mane and intense hazel eyes, a lion was an apt comparison. As Madeline rinsed glasses and loaded them into the dishwasher, she said, “I looked Blake up on the Internet. He does amazing restorations. There were interior photos of this gorgeous hotel in Paris.”
“Paris.” Alma sighed. “That’s what I expected when I signed on as a housekeeper four months ago. Trips to Europe. Fancy places. Fancy people. La-di-dah.”
“Sounds like a lovely adventure.”
“So far, I’ve been at the brownstone in Manhattan and here—Maine. I mean, Maine? The whole state is about as glamorous as a lumberjack’s plaid shirt.” She paused to sip her coffee. “Let’s hear about you, hon. How’s your big brother, Marty?”
At the mention of her brother’s name, Madeline almost dropped the plate she was scrubbing in the sink. “We’ve kind of lost touch.”
“Good-looking kid. A bit devilish, though. Didn’t he get into some kind of trouble with the law?”
She heard Duncan counting his steps as he came down the hall to the kitchen and assumed his father wasn’t far behind. “I’d rather not talk about Marty.”
“It’s okay.” Alma patted her arm. “I won’t say a word.”
Duncan preceded his father into the kitchen. His clothing was the same as last night: a long-sleeved, striped T-shirt and jeans. At the table, he climbed into his chair and sat, staring straight ahead.
Alma went into action. She measured