of course.â Marie let herself be pulled into a quick hug, fighting the urge to push away. This was good. She should practice letting people touch her again.
As long as it wasnât Seth.
âI didnât expect to see you here.â Cadenâs bright eyes flashed toward Seth, then to Father Chuck, who earned a quick nod and a wider smile as he excused himself to prepare for the service. âYou didnât come back to the shop yesterday, so I assume you found Arethaâs.â
âYes. Thank you for the directions. I did.â She waved a hand over her shoulder toward Seth. âWe found some great pieces.â
âIâm so glad.â
An awkward silence settled over them before Marieâs childhood training kicked in. âIâm so sorry. Where are my manners? Caden, this is Jack Sloane. He owns the Red Door Inn.â
Caden and Jack shook hands vigorously as she smiled. âIs that what youâve named it? The Red Door?â
âWould seem so.â Jack chuckled.
Cadenâs cheeks, rosy from the morning breeze, drooped. âBut the door isnât red, is it?â
Jack all-out hooted at that. âNot yet, my dear. Not yet.â As he wiped his eyes, he continued, âThis is my nephew Seth. He and I have a lot of work to do on the old house before we open.â
Caden waved at Seth, flashing her teeth at him. âWhen will you open?â
âIn May.â
The smile faded, leaving Caden with scrunched-up eyebrows. âMay? Thatâs two months away.â
Jack nodded with a wide grin while Marie pressed her hand over the stone rumbling in her stomach. Why did Caden seem worried that they wouldnât be able to get the doors open in May? Of course they could get the inn ready. Right?
âWell, Iâm sure itâll be lovely.â Caden nodded towarda row of redheaded little boys and girls standing at the stairs leading up to the front door. âWould you like to sit with us?â
âAre they yours?â Marie clapped a hand over her mouth. If her mother was still alive, sheâd have been mortified. A lady didnât say things like that. She didnât act surprised at the thought of having half a dozen kids.
The other womanâs laugh filled the churchyard. âOh, no. Theyâre my nieces and nephews. Thatâs my brother and his wife over there.â
Flames brushed from Marieâs collarbone up to her ears. âOf course.â
âSo, would you like to sit with us?â
Marie stared at Seth, who had twisted toward his uncle, his shoulders pulling tight against his button-up shirt. Those shoulders probably took up more than their fair share of a church pew.
âThat would be very nice.â
But as they settled into the wooden pew, worn smooth over the years, those imposing shoulders were right in front of her. Jack turned and gave her a smile, but she could only glare at the back of Sethâs head as it blocked her view of Father Chuck.
Why was he always in her way? And he was far too close for anyoneâs comfort.
A little finger poked her leg, and she glanced at the child sitting next to her. With red braids and freckles dancing across her nose, she was as close to a living version of Montgomeryâs fictional orphan as Marie had ever seen.
âIâm holding the hymnal, so youâve got to turn the pages.â
âWhat?â
The girl shook the book in her hands, yellowed pages flapping as the melody from the piano began to fill the square room. âItâs two pages. You have to turn the page when itâs time.â Her little eyes squinted hard as if she wasnât sure Marie was up to the job.
âAll right.â She leaned toward the girl and lowered her voice, but it still filled the silence in the split-second pause before nearly one hundred people began singing.
Every eye within a two-row radius spun toward her.
Every eye except the ones right in front of
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