like a tri cycle has three wheels.”
“Good to know.”
Before the children could say anything else, the older woman
came back through the door leading out of the treatment room, her features set
in a rueful smile.
“Looks like we’re on our own for dinner, kids. Your dad is busy
fixing an injured dog and he’s going to be a while. We’ll just go catch some
dinner and then head back to the hotel for homework and bed.”
“You’re staying at the Cold Creek Inn, aren’t you?” Caidy
asked.
The other woman looked a bit wary as she nodded. “I’m sorry.
Have we met?”
“I’m Caidy Bowman. My sister-in-law Laura runs the inn.”
“You’re Chief Bowman’s sister?” There was a definite warmth in
the woman’s voice now, Caidy noticed wryly. Her charmer of a brother often had
that effect on those of the female persuasion, no matter their age.
“I am. Both Chief Bowmans.” With one brother who was the police
chief and the other who headed up the fire department, not much exciting
happened in town without someone in her family being in the thick of it.
“How nice to meet you. I’m Anne Michaels. I’m Dr. Caldwell’s
housekeeper. Or I will be when he finally gets into his house. With the maids at
the inn cleaning our rooms for us, there’s not much for me to do in that
department. Right now I’m just the nanny, I suppose.”
“Oh?”
The woman apparently didn’t need any more encouragement than
that simple syllable. “Dr. Caldwell is building a house on Cold Creek Road. He
was supposed to close on it last week, but the contractor ran into some problems
and here we are, still staying at the inn. Which is lovely, don’t get me wrong,
but it’s still a hotel. After three weeks, all of us are a little tired of it.
And now it looks like we’ll be there until after the New Year. Christmas in a
hotel. Can you imagine such a thing?”
Maybe that explained the man’s grouchiness. She felt a little
pang of sympathy, then she remembered how he had basically shoved her out of the
treatment area. No, he was probably born with that temperament. He and Festus
would get along just fine.
“It must be very frustrating for all of you.”
“You don’t know the half of it. Two children in a hotel, even a
couple of rooms, for all those weeks is just too much. They need space to run.
All children do. Why, in San Jose, the children had a huge backyard, complete
with a pool and a swing set that rivaled the equipment at the nearest park.”
“Is that where you’re from, then? California?”
Anne Michaels nodded and Caidy thought she saw a note of
wistfulness in the woman’s eyes that didn’t bode well for the chances of Dr.
Caldwell’s housekeeper-slash-nanny sticking around in Pine Gulch.
Anne watched the children, who were paying them no heed as they
played a game on an electronic device Ava had pulled out of her backpack.
“Yes. I’m from California, born and bred. Not Dr. Caldwell.
He’s from back East. Chicago way. But he left everything without a backward look
to head west for veterinary school at UC-Davis and that’s where he met the late
Mrs. Caldwell. They hired me to help out around the house when she was pregnant
with little Jack there and I’ve been with them ever since. Those poor children
needed me more than ever after their mother died. Dr. Caldwell too. That was a
terrible time, I tell you.”
“I’m sure.”
“When he decided to move here to Idaho, he gave me the option
of leaving his employment with a glowing recommendation, but I just couldn’t do
it. I love those children, you know?”
Caidy could relate. She loved her niece Destry as fiercely as
if the girl were her own. Stepping in to help raise her after her mother walked
out on Ridge and their daughter had created a powerful bond between them as
unshakable as the Tetons.
“I’m sure you do.”
Anne Michaels gave a rueful shake of her head. “Look at me,
going on to a perfect stranger. Staying at that hotel all