if he wasn’t. He wasn’t going to be interested in a woman like her, and she sure didn’t want to get involved with a man like him. Or any man. She was very happy being single and in control of her life.
“You guys ready?” she asked as she pushed open the door.
None of their responses were very enthusiastic. Sandy felt a twinge of guilt. She’d uprooted her kids from everything they’d ever known. It was the right decision, she reminded herself. They would adjust. Being raised in a small town like Glenwood was better for them than a big city like Los Angeles. Still, the guilt persisted. She knew it would be hard on them. The move was going to be hard on her, too. But doing the right thing usually was.
She stepped into the house. The foyer was huge, larger than their old living room had been. The house was dark. Dust covered the hardwood floors and cobwebs hung from the ten-foot ceiling. But the structure was stunningly beautiful.
Sunlight filtered through a crack in the drapes, highlighting the fancy molding and the curved staircase that led to the second story. The old place needed a good cleaning and a coat or two of paint. They could easily get that done before the movers arrived with their furniture.
“Mom?” Blake said, tugging on the sleeve of her red T-shirt. “What’s that over there?” He was pointing to a far corner of the foyer where something small and dark moved.
“I’m not sure.”
“I’m getting out of here,” Lindsay said.
“Don’t be ridiculous,” Sandy said. “It’s nothing.” She started walking toward the small shadow. “It’s just—”
The shadow moved toward the light. Sandy, Nichole, Blake and Lindsay screamed in unison.
Kyle was halfway up the front-porch stairs before they finished screaming. He raced across the porch, flung open the door. Four people turned toward him—four pairs of eyes begged for help. As he hurried toward Sandy and her kids, he instinctively went for his pistol. There was nothing at his hip except for his jeans. Damn.
“What is it?” he asked. Everyone answered at once.
“That thing there,” Sandy said, pointing behind her. She shivered.
“Totally gross,” Lindsay agreed.
Nichole moved closer and clutched his leg.
“It’s coming toward us,” Blake cried.
The four of them shrieked and descended upon him. Sandy pressed against his left side. Lindsay huddled behind his back. Nichole kept a hold on his right leg, while Blake held on to Sandy.
Kyle almost didn’t mind. Having Sandy plaster herself against him gave him a nice warm feeling in his belly...and a few inches farther south. She stared up at him with her big green eyes. Mascara darkened her lashes, but other than that, she didn’t seem to be wearing any makeup. He liked the freckles scattered on her nose and the way her normally firm mouth quivered at the corners. She smelled nice, part floral fragrance, part something a little more sensual. He could feel her breasts, and one hipbone. Her legs brushed against his and he wished he were wearing shorts instead of jeans.
But there were children present, he reminded himself. So he turned his thoughts from the very enticing Sandy Walker to the large empty room in front of them. Aside from a few cobwebs and some dust, he couldn’t see anything to get excited about.
“What are we hiding from?” he asked.
Sandy pointed toward the corner. “That...that thing!”
He squinted, trying to see into the shadows. One of the shadows moved. “It’s a mouse.”
“Oh, God, I know. The place could be infested with them. I hate rodents. Mice, rats. Yuck.”
Yuck? Sensible Sandy had said yuck? He liked that.
Kyle tried to take a step, but they wouldn’t let him. “I want to go check it out,” he said, trying to free himself from Nichole. She just held on tighter. Her small hands clutched at his jeans as if she would never let go.
“Why?” Sandy asked. “I’ll have to call an exterminator.”
“You can’t kill it, Mom,” Lindsay said from behind him.
“Fine, then it can live in your room,” Sandy snapped.
“Mo-om!”
Nichole glanced at her mother. “Mommy, don’t hurt the mouse. Please.”
“Honey, you don’t understand. We can’t live with it running around. Mice are dirty. They get in the food and they could make us all sick.”
Nichole’s eyes, so like her mother’s, darkened with tears. “You can’t kill it.”
“Ladies,” Kyle said. They ignored him.
“We’ll talk about this later,” Sandy said.
“That means the mouse is going to die for sure,” Lindsay grumbled.
“Ladies,” he repeated.
“You don’t know everything,” Sandy said, her voice strained. “There are humane ways to get rid of mice. I don’t want to see it killed any more than you do, but it and its friends cannot live here with us.”
“The mouse has friends?” Nichole asked.
Kyle raised his right hand to his face, stuck his thumb and index finger in his mouth, then blew hard. The piercing whistle silenced them instantly.
“Now that I have your attention,” he said, “will everyone please take one step back and let go of me?”
Sandy stared up at him for a moment, blushed, then quickly moved away, brushing her hands against her shorts. “Sorry,” she mumbled, obviously flustered. “I guess we overreacted to the mouse.”
He wanted to tell her that she didn’t need to apologize. He’d liked her pressing up against him. It did him good to know she wasn’t as completely in charge as she wanted the world to think. It also evened the score a little. She’d been tying him up in knots since the first time his brother Jordan had brought her home sixteen years ago.
Something about her had set his adolescent heart on fire and he’d never forgotten her. Still, this wasn’t the time or place to review old memories.
Kyle glanced around the empty foyer, then at the small mouse that had returned to its nest in the corner by the stairs. “I want to look over the rest of the house before you get to work,” he said.
Sandy bristled. Her spine stiffened and her hands curled into fists. “I’ve already had the house inspected,” she said, staring at him. “The man told me the building was in excellent condition and that the only problem I should expect would be cleaning up after a lengthy vacancy.”
Kyle tried to remember if she’d always had this much trouble accepting help. He couldn’t say for sure. Maybe it was something she’d learned while she was gone. “Did he say anything about mice?” he asked.
She hesitated. “Well, no. He probably thought they were normal for as long as the house has been vacant.”
“You want to be by yourself when you find out what else this guy considered normal?”
“Oh. I hadn’t thought of that.”
He grinned. “So you don’t mind if I check out the rest of the house?”
Her hands relaxed. “Um, no. Thanks. I appreciate the help.”
“I’m not staying in here with that,” Lindsay said, pointing at the mouse’s nest.
“Why don’t you kids wait outside while your mom and I check things out,” Kyle said. The children didn’t budge.