âI wondered if you had a suggestion for something Silver wants for Christmas,â Wade said. âSomething sheâs been really longing for?â
âShe wants a dollhouse,â Connie replied. âAn original one thatâs hers alone.â
âYes, now I remember her mentioning that. Maybe I could build one?â He began structuring it in his mind. It would be a replica of this house. âYouâre quite something, Connie,â he said, admiration flooding him. âYouâve got all of us learning new ways to deal with each other. I appreciate your help.â
âI havenât done anything special.â Connie kept her head bent, but her red cheeks told Wade everything he needed to know. âIâm just the nanny.â
âHardly,â he said as he walked out of his office to find Silver.
He realized how true it was. Silverâs nanny had become necessary to all of them. Connie wasnât just doing her job. She was enriching their livesâ¦.
likes variety. From her time in human resources management to entrepreneurship, life has held plenty of surprises.
âHaving given up on fairy tales, I was happily involved in building a restaurant when a handsome prince walked into my life and upset all my career plans with a wedding ring. Motherhood quickly followed. I guess the seeds of my storytelling took root because of two small boys who kept demanding, âThen what, Mom?ââ
The miracle of Godâs love for His children, the blessing of true love, the joy of sharing Him with othersâthat is a story that can be told a thousand ways and yet still be brand-new. Lois Richer intends to go right on telling it.
âDo you think Daddy got my letter yet, Connie?â
Connie Ladden couldnât bear to quash the hope shining in Silver Abbotâs glossy blue eyes, so she brushed the riot of blond curls away from her fourâalmost fiveâyear-old chargeâs face and eased onto the bed, next to the little girl.
âRemember, I showed you on the map how far away Argentina is?â
âUh-huh.â Silver nodded solemnly.
Too solemnly for Connieâs liking. Silver wanted her daddy, and after two months as nanny for the delightful child, Connie thought Wade Abbot needed to act more like a father and be here for his precious daughter. Still, her job was to help Silver with her life as it was, not the way they wished it could be.
âWell, itâs only been about a week since we mailed it, sweetie. Argentina is a very long way for a letter to go.â
Thanks to the courierâs emailed confirmation of delivery, Connie knew the package with Silverâs recorded message had safely arrived at its destination. But she didnât want to say that. Connie hadnât yet met Silverâs father, and she wasnât sure how Wade Abbot would react to his daughterâs latest communication.
âItâs been ten days. I counted.â Silver frowned. âDavid, at my preschool, told me email is very fast. Do you know how to do email?â
âYes.â Connie smiled at her serious look.
âYou could have sent my letter that way, couldnât you, Connie?â
âI guess I could have. But think how nice it will be for your daddy to get an envelope from home, from his own little girl.â
David Foster, Mr. Abbotâs lawyer and Silverâs guardian, had made it clear when he hired Connie and provided Wade Abbotâs email address that Silverâs father did not want to be distracted by everyday minutiae. Wade Abbot was in Argentina on a very tight schedule. It was urgent that he bring in the project on time for Abbot Bridges, Inc., according to David. The way heâd phrased it had led Connie to deduce that the company stood to lose a substantial amount of money and perhaps forfeit future contracts with the Argentinean government if the deadline was missed.
âYour daddy might not have had a chance to open it yet.â
ââCause heâs so busy.â Silver sighed. âI know.â Resigned, she snuggled into her bed and drew her puffy pink quilt up to her chin.
Connie bent to kiss her good-night a second time, unable to resist the downy softness of Silverâs rounded cheek or the delight of another hug.
âCanât we have just one more story, Connie?â The chubby arms refused to release her neck. âPlease?â The beguiling smile begged her to relent.
âYouâve already had three stories, munchkin. Now itâs bedtime. You know my rules.â Connie rubbed her nose against Silverâs, unclasped her grasp and tucked her arms beneath the pink quilt patterned with fairy princesses. Tiny silver bells attached to princess shoes tinkled softly. âWe have a lot to do tomorrow. Itâs our bird-watching day. I want to find out more about the hummingbirds here in Tucson. You need to rest those baby-blue eyes so youâll be able to point them out.â