and tell Gramma Iâll be there in a few minutes,â Jessie urged.
âWe still gets to see Fwint tonight,â she heard Adam mutter to Braden and Bethany as they got off her bed.
âToo bad!â Ella couldnât seem to resist putting in just before the four of them left Jessieâs bedroom.
Jessie just hoped that sheâd gotten through to them about Flintâand that her words might entice Ella to be nice.
But she had to admit that if truth be told, she wasnât sure on which side of the Flint-leaving issue she would cast her own vote.
Because while she knew he would be leaving soon and that it was for the best, because she couldnât seem to contain her attraction to him, there was also a part of her that was clinging to every single minute she got to spend with him. A part of her that couldnât help feeling a little like Adam, Bethany and Braden did about how terrific he was.
A part of her that wanted him to stay around, too, probably more than her hero-worshipping kids did.
But for such different reasons.
Â
âHang on just a minute.â
Game night had been enough of a success that Jessie thought sheâd even seen Ella fight a smile or two during the course of it. But Kelsey and Coop had taken Anthony home an hour earlier, the last of the popcorn and cookies had been eaten, and her parents had offered to put the kids to bed while Jessie cleaned up downstairs. That was when Flint halted the process of urging Adam, Braden, Bethany and Ella to their rooms.
âI didnât want to distract them from their fun before, but I brought them each something,â Flint said to Jessie when she tossed him a quizzical glance.
âPresents?â Adam said excitedly.
âJust a little something,â Flint said.
Jessie had seen her sister slip him a brown paper sack from Anthonyâs diaper bag just before theyâd left, but sheâd had no idea what was in it. Flint had discreetly set it alongside the easy chair heâd been sitting in to play Candy Land. Now Flint had the sack in hand as three of her kids charged him and Ella looked on with barely veiled curiosity from a distance.
Flint opened the bag and took a small replica of a totem pole from it.
âAdam, this is for youâitâs a totem pole to watch over you.â
âIt gots a face like a man with a bird thingy for a nose,â the three-year-old marveled. âThe thingy is a beak,â Jessie said from where she looked on as curiously as Ella did.
âCan I play wis it, too?â
âYou can. You can ward off all sorts of aliens and attackers with that,â Flint assured before he took a beaded bracelet out for Bethany.
âThis will bring you good luck, Bethany, and I thought the beads were the color of your pretty eyes,â he said to the four-year-old.
âLook, Mama, are they the color my eyes are?â
âThey are,â Jessie assured, watching her daughter beam.
âThis is for Braden,â Flint said then, taking out a small, leather-wrapped hoop with webbing laced on the inside like an ornate spiderweb. âThis is a dream catcher,â he explained. âIf you put it near your bed it should help to catch some of the bad dreams before they can come to you in your sleep, so you wonât have so many of them.â
âIs that true, Mama?â Braden asked hopefully.
âI think we should give it a try,â Jessie said somberly, hoping anything would work.
âAnd last but not least,â Flint said as he handed the dream catcher to Braden and took a very small hand-painted oval box from the lunch sack, âthis is for Ella.â
The seven-year-old still might not have liked him, but she couldnât resist a gift. Showing some reluctance, she stepped up and accepted it.
âWhat is it?â
âOpen the box,â Flint advised.
When she did, she removed tiny stick dolls wrapped in brightly colored
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