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The Kidnapped Christmas Bride (Taming of the Sheenans Book 3)(19)

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Trey had been her only one.

Although once she married Lawrence, she would have obviously had to make  love to him. She suppressed a faint shudder. She hadn't been looking  forward to that.

Although she was pretty sure he had.

She crossed her arms over her chest, hiding her breasts. "Did any of your brothers ever leave a robe behind?"

"Nope, but I did find an old wool cardigan. It's huge, XXL, and rather moth eaten but it could be a robe on you."                       
       
           



       

"I'll take it. Thank you."

She was in the kitchen filling her cup when he returned with a grey, beige and cream knit sweater with an Indian motif.

"That's beautiful," she said, taking the wool sweater from him and examining the intricate Indian design.

"My great Grandmother Cray made it. My mother said she made hundreds of  sweaters and blankets during her life to help pay bills. Cormac has been  able to track down a few in antique stores and on eBay as her stitches  and designs are different from the Coastal Salish, but this sweater has  been in the family forever. It was probably made for one of my uncles,  or even my great grandfather."

"It should be in a museum."

"No, it shouldn't. It was made for family, it should be worn by family."

"But I'm not-"

"Yes, you are. You're my family. You'll always be family to me."

She undid the sturdy buttons and slipped one arm in and then the other.  The sweater was heavy and long, and a little bit itchy, but it was a  Cray family heirloom, and she could feel the history in it, and the  love.

Her eyes suddenly burned and she looked down, focusing on working the  wood buttons through the holes. "Do you ever think about that side of  your family?" she asked, voice husky. "Do you ever think that maybe the  reason you felt like such an outsider in Marietta was because you take  after the Crays? That maybe you were never meant to be cooped up in  classrooms and offices but outside … free?"

He didn't immediately answer and she looked up, to find him staring hard at her, a strange expression on his face.

"What?" she whispered. "Was that a bad thing to say?"

"My mom used to say that," he said quietly. "She said that Troy and I  might be identical twins, but he'd inherited the Sheenan blood and I'd  inherited the Crays." His mouth curved but the smile didn't reach his  eyes. "Every time I got in trouble when I was little, every time my dad  took the belt to me, or a switch, she would apologize to me, saying that  we needed to forgive my father for not understanding who I was, and  being unable to recognize my spirit."

His powerful shoulders shifted uncomfortably. "I didn't know what to  think when I was younger. Dad didn't recognize Mom's Native American  heritage. He didn't want a wife that was ‘mixed', and forbad her from  telling us stories about Indian folklore and customs. But now and then  when I couldn't sleep, I'd go find her, and inevitably those were the  nights my father was out and my mother would be awake, staring out the  window, looking westward."

Trey glanced down at McKenna, expression pensive. "I didn't understand  then how deeply lonely my mother was. She never talked about her  loneliness but looking back, we all see it-her sons-and it's hard to  realize how much she gave to us and how little she got back-"

"I don't think that's a fair assessment," McKenna interrupted. "Children are not responsible for meeting their parents' needs."

"Maybe not when they are young, but by high school, I should have been  more aware, more sensitive. Instead I was at my most rebellious."

"Because you were a teenager, filled with testosterone!"

He shrugged. "I wish you could have heard her stories. I wish I had  recorded them or written them down because on those nights when my  father was gone, she would talk about the Salish, the Kootenai and the  Pend d'Oreille Tribes and how their beliefs about life were so different  from the righteous Christians that only talked to God in Church. She  said for the Flathead tribes, spirit was everywhere, and that all things  were connected and to be respected, plants, rocks, animals, people. She  said it was hard to find peace when one simply used things selfishly,  and never gave back to the earth. She said the land wasn't there simply  to be stripped, but to be protected. The trees and animals have a right  to exist. Man is to recognize the spirit in each of them."

McKenna swallowed around the lump forming in her throat. "But you didn't  need to record her stories to remember them. You've remembered."                       
       
           



       

"I miss her."

She went to him then, and wrapped her arms around his waist and held  him, hugging him, knowing he needed to feel her-his mother's love-and if  he couldn't have that, he could have her love.

Because she would always love him.

And she had always seen his spirit-and it was good. Yes, he had a wild  streak, and he might not ever be completely tamed, but maybe that was  who he was meant to be? Beautiful, fierce, and protective.

"She's still with you," McKenna whispered. "Especially here. I can feel her here."

Trey wrapped his arms around her and held her for a moment, before placing a kiss on the top of her head and breaking free.

"There is supposed to be a storm coming in tonight," he said gruffly.  "I'm going to go have a look at the generator, make sure it's in working  order." And then he was gone, disappearing quickly out the front door.

*

It'd been a dry and cold December in much of Montana, with freezing  conditions but very little snow. It had snowed hard early in the month  but whatever remained in the valleys was now compacted and brown.

With Christmas Eve just three days away, everyone was ready for fresh  snow, saying it wouldn't be Christmas without a dusting of powdery  white, but the storm coming was supposed to be a big one, with a foot or  two of snow falling steadily throughout the night, making it difficult  for the snowplows to keep up.

A foot of snow was a lot for Cherry Lake, and the record for heaviest  snowfall in one day was sixteen inches back in December of 1929. No one  wanted a foot of snow, not so close to Christmas when there was still so  much shopping to do and last minute presents to mail.

Trey chopped more firewood and had the generator ready, then stood in  the kitchen with McKenna making a list of emergency supplies, although  neither of them were too worried, having grown up on isolated Paradise  Valley ranches where winter storms routinely knocked out power, forcing  families to adapt and make do.

McKenna wanted more milk and eggs, bread, lunchmeat and cheese along  with tea, hot cocoa and ingredients for simple dinners for the next  couple of nights.

Trey added candles, flashlights, and batteries. He glanced at the list  and then to the living room where Trey was stretched out by the fire,  staring at the tree. "What about stockings and presents for TJ?" he  asked, dropping his voice. "We don't have anything for him, do we?"

"I have gifts for him in Marietta, not here," she said.

"But we're here … unless you're thinking you want to head back early?"

She glanced outside, at the sky, which was patchy with clouds. It didn't look bad now. "Try to beat it, you mean?"

"We wouldn't beat it. We'd be driving through it."

She wrinkled her nose. "But why do that? There's no reason to take extra  risks when we could have a cozy Christmas here. We just need to do some  shopping, pick up a few things so he has a stocking for Christmas  morning and some gifts to open."

Trey nodded and McKenna checked her smile as Trey added, Buy Toys and Wrapping Paper, to the bottom of their list.

"I could even do some shopping if you wanted to take him to a matinee  movie," she said. "I know there's a theatre showing kids movies in  Bigfork. I could drop you two off at the movies and then shop and get  all the errands done and then come back for you."

"Or we could divide the errands up and I go do some shopping for TJ now,  and then come back and get you two, and then we all head to Bigfork."  He looked at her, expression earnest. "It's not that I don't trust you  to buy good things, but I really want to pick out something for him,  some toys for him from me. Haven't been able to do that since he was  born."

His words made her chest tighten and ache.

She loved how much he loved their son. "That's a great idea," she said.  "You shop, I'll make him lunch, and that way when you return, we'll be  ready to go."

*

Trey knew he didn't have a lot of time to shop and it'd been years since  he'd been able to buy gifts for TJ and McKenna. As he drove to Cherry  Lake he tried to remember all the shops downtown, thinking there had to  be a toy store somewhere. He couldn't recall seeing one, but that hadn't  been their focus when they'd gone shopping yesterday.