stood. âBesides I thought you were dating Tammy Zimmerman.â
So Rachel was paying attention. Heath had wondered.
âWe went out a couple of times,â he admitted. âSheâs free on Sunday nights.â
âHowever, Iâm not,â she said and quickly retreated into the kitchen.
Heath was forced to wait several minutes before she returned, this time with his dinner. She set the steaming plate of lasagna in front of him and wordlessly turned away.
âYouâre avoiding me, Rachel,â he said, watching her.
She froze, her back to him. Slowly she turned around. âI am not.â
âWhy wonât you go out with me?â
She shook her head as if he were the saddest excuse for a man sheâd ever seen. âYour problem, Heath Quantrill, is that youâre spoiled rotten. Everyoneâs catered to you your entire life. I wonât, so get used to it.â
âWhatever,â he said with no emotion. âBut if you arenât avoiding me, then you set a time and day.â
She opened her mouth to speak, then closed it.
âCould it be that what I said is true?â
âSaturday morning at eight,â she snapped. âYou can take me to breakfast.â
âFine,â he murmured, feeling a sense of triumph. âIâll come by the house to pick you up.â
Five
B randon Wyatt was at a complete loss. He stood in the middle of his yard, the milking pail in his hand, while he mulled over recent events. Joanie had left a message on his answering machine, their first communication in nearly a week, informing him that sheâd canceled their session with Dr. Geist. He shouldâve been shouting with glee; instead, he feared the worst. It almost seemed as if Joanie was giving up on them, giving up on a reconciliation.
Heâd consented to the counseling sessions in an effort to save their marriage. But at the time, he wouldâve agreed to stand on his head in the middle of the highway if it brought his family back. He didnât mean to be obstinate with Dr. Geist or with Joanie, but it seemed ridiculous to be making lists and talking around their problems instead of tackling them head-on.
Joanie kept saying she wanted him to change, but he didnât know how. Didnât know what heâd done that was so terrible. He hated the fact that he came away from every session feeling lower than when heâd gone in. Heâd hoped they would learn to communicate better, learn to share their hopes and feelings, but that wasnât the way things had turned out. Dr. Geist had them talking about personality types, strengths and weaknesses and while that was all well and good, it didnât help him tell Joanie how he felt about their marriage.
A drop of rain splashed his face, and he realized heâd stopped midway between the barn and the house, a pail of milk in his hand. He had chores still to do, although with the crops harvested, the strenuous work was done. Yet he hardly had the energy to finish even tasks as simpleâand necessaryâas feeding the animals. He felt as bad now as he had when Joanie and the kids first left.
He fed the milk to the pigs and worked outside until lunchtime. The minute he walked into the house, the phone rang. Depressed as he was, he didnât bother to answer, preferring to let the machine catch it. After bolting a quick sandwich, he went back outside and had almost completed his daily chores when he saw the car approach. He paused, the pitchfork still in his hand, when he realized it was Joanie. A twinge of excitement was quickly followed by a deep sense of dread. Her coming probably meant bad news. His biggest fear was that she was going to tell him she wanted to go ahead with the divorce.
He shoved the pitchfork into the hay, determined to accept whatever she decided. For all intents and purposes, they were living like a divorced couple, anyway.
Joanie parked the vehicle, and with a heavy
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