He nodded, still looking doubtful, and started around the third floor. Holding her breath, she followed him. She ran a clean work site—her father had always insisted on that. He wouldn’t find any junk around to complain about.
Ryan’s attention to his inspection gave her ample time to take a look at the man he’d become. The seriousness with which he seemed to take his job was new. The Ryan she remembered had never taken anything seriously, but he’d always seemed able to charm his way out of the trouble his recklessness had gotten him into.
She wasn’t surprised by the neat blue uniform with the Suffolk Fire Department patch that fit his tall figure so well. All the Flanagans had been wedded to the fire department. There’d never been much doubt as to what Ryan would do with his life.
He turned toward her as they reached the stairwell again, smiling. She had to fight not to respond too warmly to that smile. Ryan had added some breadth and height since high school, and the sense of maturity combined with his uniform made a powerful package.
“Looks like you’ve got everything under control up here. Shall we check out the rest?”
She could breathe again. She nodded and started down the stairs, feeling him behind her.
“My apartment on the second floor is completely finished and we’re moved in. It’s not necessary for you to go through that, is it?” She paused, looking up at him.
“I don’t think—” His gaze fixed on something over her shoulder, interrupting the words.
She turned. Mandy stood there, hand on the door-knob, looking at them with a grave, questioning expression in her dark-brown eyes.
Laura reached her in a few steps and touched her daughter’s curly brown hair. “It’s okay,” she said, signing as she did so. “I’m showing the fireman around. There’s nothing to worry about.”
She looked toward Ryan. If she saw pity in his eyes, she’d let him know what she thought about that.
But Ryan was squatting to a five-year-old’s level, and she read only friendliness in his face.
“Hi. My name’s Ryan.” He finger-spelled the name carefully. “What’s yours?”
He spoke naturally, apparently copying what she’d done, and she appreciated that. With her two hearing aids, Mandy might be picking up something.
“My daughter’s name is Mandy.” She continued to sign as she spoke. Mandy should never feel left out.
“You know sign language.”
“You don’t need to sound quite so surprised.” He grinned. “Firefighters need to be able to communicate with people we run into on the job. Unfortunately you’ve seen almost my whole vocabulary.”
Ryan seemed to have turned into a responsible member of society. Maybe she should stop thinking of him as the reckless, laughing kid he’d been in high school.
She gave Mandy a little push toward the apartment. “You finish your picture. We’ll probably be done by then.”
Ryan waved to her. “Bye, Mandy.”
When the door closed behind her, the smile slid from his lips. “She’s a beautiful little girl. Has she been deaf since birth?”
“Yes.” She started down the steps, hoping he’d take the hint. Her personal life was off limits.
“Her father?”
Apparently Ryan wasn’t good at taking hints.
“My husband died a year ago.”
“I’m sorry.” He stopped next to her at the bottom of the stairs, and she was aware of how tall and solid he was. “It must be rough, trying to handle everything on your own.”
Her smile felt frozen. “Not at all. At least, not if we can finish this up so I can get back to work.”
He should have taken offense at that, but he just studied her for a moment, his deep-blue eyes intent but friendly. Then he nodded.
“Okay. Let’s take a quick look around the downstairs.”
“Fine.”
She followed him through the downstairs living room, mentally chastising herself. He’d just been expressing sympathy. She had to stop being so sensitive about her independence.
They pushed through the swinging door to the old kitchen, and she wrinkled her nose. She’d done nothing here yet, and the cracked linoleum and rusted sink rebuked her.
They reached the back door without speaking. Ryan pulled the door open, stepped onto the back porch, and frowned at the stack of wood and construction rubbish piled against the wall.
“I know,” she said quickly. “It shouldn’t be there.”
“It’s a hazard.” His tone was uncompromising.
“I ordered a Dumpster last week. I don’t know why they haven’t brought it yet.” It was yet another of a long string of things that had gone wrong recently.
“Do you want me to call them? They might move a little faster at a request from the fire department.”
“No.”
He was just being nice, she reminded herself. She didn’t need to bite his head off.
“I’ll take care of it,” she added more evenly. “They promised me it would be here days ago.”
He nodded, scribbling something on a sheet and then handing it to her. “This just confirms that we’ve spoken about it. If the situation isn’t remedied in a few days, we’ll have to cite you.”
“Don’t worry.” Her lips were stiff. “It will be.”
He studied her for a moment and then gave her that slightly lopsided smile she’d once yearned to see.
“Don’t look so worried. This is just a formality. I’m sure you’ll take care of the problem.”
She forced a return smile. “Thanks.”
He stepped off the porch. “My name and number are on the form. If you’d like me to get after the trash company, just give me a call.”
“I can manage.”
She could do whatever she had to do, despite the addition of Ryan Flanagan to the list of factors complicating her life since she’d taken on this project.
Her daughter’s future depended on her success with the building. She couldn’t count on anyone else for help—not her family, not her in-laws, not God.
A fierce wave of maternal love swept through her. That didn’t matter. For Mandy, she could do anything.
Ryan piled into the truck behind his older brother, Seth, heart pounding as it always did at the shrilling of the alarm. He glanced at his watch. Six-thirty. Fire could have caught people asleep at this hour of the morning.
Seth, taking his new rank of lieutenant very seriously, was listening to the info coming in on his radio.
“Three-fourteen Delaware Street. Isn’t that the place you inspected yesterday?”
“Yes.” Ryan’s nerves clenched. “Woman and a child in residence. A deaf child.”
He hadn’t gotten their images out of his mind yet. Laura McKay, with that mop of wiry dark hair springing out around her grave, determined face. Her daughter, Mandy—brown curls, her mother’s dark eyes, and those two hearing aids in her small ears.
“What did you find wrong?”
“Trash on the back porch that should have been in a Dumpster. That’s it.”
He