The Detective's 8 lb, 10 oz Surprise

The Detective's 8 lb, 10 oz Surprise by Meg Maxwell Read Free Book Online

Book: The Detective's 8 lb, 10 oz Surprise by Meg Maxwell Read Free Book Online
Authors: Meg Maxwell
“He’s so beautiful! Look at those cheeks!”
    Georgia laughed. “So pinchable! Not that I would really pinch them. I just love the baby-powder smell of him.”
    Clementine put on a pot of coffee and then she, Annabel and Gram sat at the round table after Georgia assured them she didn’t want help baking. “I hope we don’t wake him up with our gabbing.”
    â€œWell, I’ve only been his nanny for about twelve hours,” Georgia said, “but he seems to sleep like a champ in three-hour intervals.”
    Annabel added cream to her steaming blue mug. “It’s so good to see you back here. I still can’t wrap my mind around what you went through in Houston.” Annabel’s expression turned grim.
    Georgia cracked three eggs into the big silver mixing bowl on the center island. She didn’t want to talk about Houston, but she knew her family might need to. She’d told them everything yesterday after she left the police station, and their reaction, the fear and worry and sadness in their eyes, brought her to tears now. She blinked them away. It was over; she was here and safe. “Sometimes I can’t either. I’m just glad it’s behind me and that I’m home.”
    Essie stood up and walked over to Georgia, wrapping her arms around her granddaughter. “I know why you stayed quiet, Georgia. I understand you were worried about us. And for good reason. But if anything ever happens to any of you,” she said, looking at each of her granddaughters, “you speak up. If the police can’t help, you bring in your own cavalry—family, friends, people who love you. I know it’s easy to say in hindsight.”
    Each of them promised and Gram sat back down with her coffee, the conversation thankfully turning to Timmy’s cheeks again. For Georgia’s benefit, she understood. Of all the things Georgia knew for sure, it was that her family knew her inside and out. She’d told them she was pregnant and that Nick Slater was the father. They were giving her space on that too, not peppering her with questions. She sure appreciated that.
    She added the cocoa to the batter, closing her eyes and breathing in the fragrant scent that never failed to soothe her. Baking had always had that effect on her—since she was a little girl learning at her mother’s hip and then at her grandmother’s after her parents had died in a car accident when Georgia was sixteen. Essie Hurley had taken in the three Hurley girls and given them time and space to mourn. Though there were three small bedrooms on the second floor, the three grieving Hurley girls had wanted to share one room, to be close together in the dark of night after having lost their parents, so they’d taken the big attic bedroom. Their beds had been lined up next to one another, with Clementine, the youngest, in the middle.
    Like her sister Annabel, Georgia had found herself gravitating toward the kitchen but not watching step by step as Gram made her famed barbecue or pulled pork for po’boys the way Annabel did. Georgia had instead been glued to Hattie’s side. Hattie was Gram’s longtime assistant who baked for the restaurant. Cakes, pies, tarts, cookies. Back then, though, being a baker or pastry chef wasn’t even on Georgia’s mind. She had been something of a math whiz and knew she wanted to be involved in business, work in a sky-rise glass building and wear fancy suits with high heels to work the way businesswomen did in movies.
    And for a while she’d been happy, working her way up the corporate ladder in Houston. Until she started missing home, missing a quieter, slower, easier, nicer lifestyle. When she’d first gotten involved with James, she thought maybe she was just waiting for the right man. Now she shuddered to even remember that she’d thought he was Mr. Right.
    Some judgment.
    I promise you, little one , she said silently to

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