And Chloe wished she could make everything better for him.
“That young man is a super worker,” Thelma told her, winking at Jimmy. “Helped me roll out the pie dough.”
Chloe squeezed his shoulder. “That’s great, Jimmy! I’ve never been able to make a decent pie crust.”
“Cold water’s the secret,” Thelma continued as though they were old acquaintances. “Ice cold. Otherwise the shortening melts down, makes it tough and the crust falls apart.”
“I’ll try to remember that.” She bent down, closer to Jimmy. “You getting hungry?”
“I’m afraid I’ve given him quite a few samples of the pie fillings,” Thelma confessed. “I knew something was off with the banana cream. So we had to taste that one at least three or four times.”
“It was good,” Jimmy finally offered.
“It smells delicious,” Chloe agreed with a smile for the older woman. “Do you always make this many pies at a time?”
“We have a bake sale every year to raise money for the Angel Tree.” She paused, then quieted her voice. “It’s for the holidays, you know.”
Chloe guessed the fund was to buy toys for children who wouldn’t get them otherwise. And she appreciated Thelma’s discretion around Jimmy. He’d had more than his share of untimely discoveries.
“Since Evan didn’t introduce us, I’m Thelma, the housekeeper. My husband, Ned, is the… well… he’s pretty much the everything-else man. Keeps up the gardens, the cars, whatever needs fixing.”
“I’m Chloe Reed. I work for Holden Wainwright.”
Thelma started to reach out her hand, then realized it was covered in flour. “Pleased to meet you. And I’ve thoroughly enjoyed meeting Jimmy. Ned’s eaten so many of my pies over the years, he automatically says they taste good no matter what I put in them. The Mitchell men don’t like their pies too sweet and Jimmy here helped me balance out the lemon meringue.”
Jimmy wasn’t distracted, though. His expression was pensive, anxious, worried. And Chloe felt sure he must be exhausted. As kind as Thelma seemed, she was another stranger.
“Would you mind if we walk around the grounds?” Chloe queried.
“Fresh air might do you both good.” Thelma dusted the flour from her hands, then wiped them on her apron. “Back door’s right over here. You’ll find doors in most every room on this level—French doors open out from the front room. And upstairs, there’s even a door that leads out and down the staircase from the bedrooms. There’s three sets of stairs in the house.” She pointed to the one in the kitchen. “We call this one the back stairs. Used to be just for the servants. As for all the doors, I guess a few hundred years ago people felt they might need to get away in a hurry.” She chuckled. “There I go, running off at the mouth. Takes a little while to get the feel of the place, but then it seems right homey.”
“I’m sure it is,” Chloe agreed, edging toward the door.
Thelma smiled. “There’s a nice swing out back. Actually two. One on the porch, another under the oak tree. Can’t miss either.”
“Thank you.” Chloe still gripped Jimmy’s hand as they stepped outside. The air was clean, tinged with the faint aroma of burning leaves. She guessed that out in the country people didn’t have to worry so much about air pollution.
“Let’s find the one under the tree,” Chloe suggested. As Thelma had said, it was easy to see the glider swing. It sat beneath a tall oak tree that had already lost many of its leaves. Jimmy clung to her hand as she guided him to the cozy-looking spot.
Once seated, Chloe gently urged the glider into motion. “We can rest before dinner if you’d like to.”
“Then what?”
Immediately, she wondered if the child had guessed or overheard Evan’s intentions. “Then we’ll be all stuffed and we’ll get a good night’s sleep.”
“Here?”
“Sure, big guy. That’s where we are.”
Shoulders hunched, Jimmy’s head dropped forward, his shiny hair nearly obscuring still-childish features. “I like sleeping in my own room.”
A room he would never again occupy. The house was being sold, along with the majority of its contents. Only photos and sentimental items were being boxed up for storage. All of Jimmy’s life, all of his memories. The thought dried her throat, stung her eyes. But Jimmy didn’t need sympathy. He needed someone strong to lean on. If that wasn’t going to be Evan Mitchell, that left only her. Despite being solely responsible for her mother’s care, Chloe couldn’t abandon this boy. Even if it meant taking on a forceful, obstinate man like Evan Mitchell.
Dinner was more formal and somber than Chloe expected. Thelma served them in the dining room, then retreated to the kitchen to eat dinner with her husband. And Evan Mitchell wasn’t a very entertaining host. He sat at the head of the table, while she and Jimmy faced each other across the long, banquet-sized table.
Thelma had served them each generous helpings of stew, along with freshly baked biscuits.
“Thelma’s oven must stay busy,” Chloe ventured. “She was making pies and now these biscuits.”
“Umm,” Evan replied so sparsely, he might not have even spoken.
Chloe smiled encouragingly at Jimmy, then tried again. “I understood that your father lived here with you.”
“It’s the family home. We share it.”
“Isn’t he joining us?”
Evan looked annoyed by her questions. “He’s hunting quail with friends out near the Markham ranch. They make a day and night of it.”
Chloe dipped her spoon into the savory stew. “This is delicious. Don’t you think so, Jimmy?”
He scrunched his narrow shoulders together, the sweep of his dark hair hiding his eyes. “Guess so.”
Trying to lighten the glum atmosphere, Chloe took some butter for her biscuit. “Have Thelma and her husband been with you long?”
“Curious, aren’t you?” Evan replied. Then he glanced over at Jimmy. “They’ve been here as long as I can remember.”
“Came with the house?” she questioned, hoping to infuse some cheer into the conversation.
Evan looked at her as though she’d suggested swallowing a bucket of mud.
“Just kidding, of course,” she tried to remedy. “I haven’t had any experience with household employees.”
“They’re not just employees,” he replied sharply. “They’re family.”
Chastened, Chloe stirred her spoon aimlessly. “Of course.” If not for Jimmy, she would have fervently wished for a hole to appear in the floor so she could vanish.
Silence reigned, interrupted only by the scrape of spoons against the bowls. The clinking of china when a coffee cup was returned to its saucer. The last time Chloe had felt this uncomfortable at a dinner table, she’d been twelve years old and painfully aware of the boy sitting across from her. He was fourteen and she had a terrible crush on him. In turn, he considered her a complete nuisance. Seemed she hadn’t progressed much from then.
Thelma eventually cleared their dishes and then brought in dessert plates. “Lemon meringue,” she announced. “Had some good help making this one. Wasn’t hard to decide which one to keep for dessert.”
Jimmy glanced at the housekeeper, a furtive, slightly pleased look.
Thelma winked back at him.
Chloe wished the width of the table weren’t so broad.