A Boy's Christmas Wish. Patricia Johns

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A Boy's Christmas Wish - Patricia  Johns


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old woman looked over at him, an arch expression on her face. When she saw Dan, she smiled and paused her steps.

      “Oh, hello, Daniel,” she said sweetly. “How are you doing?”

      “I’m good,” he said. There was something about Granny Thomas that brought out his manners. “How are you doing?”

      “Just fine, thank you, Daniel. Have a good day,” she said, gave him a cordial nod and started walking again.

      Dan heaved a sigh. She could be difficult when she was on some personal mission.

      “Granny,” he called again. “Where are you going?”

      “I’m going—” She stopped, frowned, shook her head. “I don’t remember. It’ll come back to me.”

      “Why don’t I give you a ride?” Danny asked. “It’s cold out.”

      “It’s not cold,” she said with a bat of her hand. “It’s winter.” As if the two things were separate experiences.

      “But Beth said she needed you for something,” he countered.

      “Oh...” Granny sighed. “Wedding plans, no doubt. You should be lending her more of a hand, young man.”

      She came to the door, and Dan leaned over and pulled the handle to let her in. Granny was spryer than most people knew, and she hopped up into the cab without difficulty.

      “Ralph didn’t do much for our wedding,” Granny said as she buckled up. “But those times were different. Men were expected to show up dressed in a suit. That was it. But these days, men are much more involved, Daniel.”

      She wasn’t going to let this drop, he could tell. Dan gave her a pained smile. He’d been pretty involved in planning their wedding five years ago. At least he’d thought he’d been. Maybe he was wrong about that.

      “And speaking of how times have changed,” Granny went on, “men are in the delivery room now.”

      She gave him another meaningful look, and Dan wished he could disappear into his seat. Fetching Granny had been a lot easier before Beth came back, when Granny would sit quietly in the passenger seat and murmur about how Ralph just hated it when she was late.

      “Have you considered moving the wedding date up?” Granny asked when Dan hadn’t answered. “I know this is delicate, dear, but I think it would mean a lot to Beth.”

      If only Granny remembered that Beth had been the one to dump him. This wasn’t just about him and Beth anymore—Luke was in the mix now. Dan signaled a turn onto the Thomases’ street.

      “We should probably talk about that,” he said diplomatically. It seemed easier to play along than to explain things and upset her. She wasn’t his grandmother. “Don’t worry, Granny. Everything will be okay.”

      Funny—that’s what he used to tell Luke when he’d cry for his mother. “Don’t worry, Luke. Everything will be okay.” And Luke would cry himself out in his father’s arms. Because Dan couldn’t promise that Lana would come back...ever. All he could promise was that one day it’d be all right. Or close to all right. Sometimes, that just had to do.

      Dan pulled into the Thomases’ driveway and got out first to give Granny a hand down. Then he accompanied her to the door. The early-afternoon sunlight sparkled on the snow. Granny opened the front door and went straight in.

      Beth stood in the living room, a slightly frantic expression on her face. She wore leggings and a knit turtleneck sweater that was an icy-blue color, bringing out the blue of her eyes as her gaze whipped between Dan and her grandmother. He wasn’t supposed to be staring at her, but he was. She was gorgeous, and an eight-month pregnant belly didn’t change that.

      “Granny!” Beth gasped. “I was looking for you. Where were you?”

      “I was just—” Granny frowned, shook her head. “I don’t know. I was out, I think. Oh, hello, Daniel.” The old woman turned and smiled at Dan. “That’s right. We were talking about the wedding, weren’t we? Why don’t I leave you two to discuss. I could close my eyes for a few minutes.”

      Granny bent to take off her boots. It took a few minutes for her to get out of all her winter wear, and as she quietly worked at it, Dan and Beth exchanged a look. Granny was getting worse—Dan could tell. She was more confused, and this time she’d wandered farther than the store. But his focus right now was on Beth and those fluid blue eyes and the way she cradled her belly with one porcelain hand... Why did she have to be so beautiful? Why couldn’t she have lost some of that sparkle over the last few years? It would have made her return easier for him, made her a little easier to file into the past.

      Granny finished hanging her coat and headed for the recliner.

      “Could I talk to you?” Dan said, nodding toward the kitchen.

      “Yeah, sure.” Beth looked at her grandmother for a moment, then sighed and led the way into the kitchen.

      “I had no idea she’d even left!” Beth ran a hand through her hair. “Abby dropped by and Granny was in the living room. We visited for a while, Abby left, and Granny was gone.”

      “Granny strikes me as the stealthy sort,” Dan agreed.

      “Where was she?” Beth asked.

      “On Butternut Street.”

      “That far?” Beth heaved a sigh. “We’re going to need to put an alarm on the doors or something.”

      “But that’s not all...” Dan wasn’t sure how to say this delicately, so he figured he’d just plow right ahead. “She’s stuck on this idea that you and I are getting married.”

      Color rose in Beth’s cheeks. “I’m sorry about that.” She shrugged faintly. “She’s been doing that ever since I got back. I must have sparked something.”

      “Have you tried telling her the truth?” he asked.

      “I did—when I first got back,” Beth said. “She was frantic, worried about me, obsessed with all the details involved with canceling a wedding... It only made things worse.”

      “I was afraid of that,” he admitted. “So what are we supposed to do?”

      “Play along?” She met his eyes uncertainly. “I know it’s a lot to ask. It’s the same idea as telling her that Grandpa has gone out for milk. It just seems to comfort her. It lets her stay in a happy place.”

      “And our wedding made her happy,” he concluded.

      “I never realized how invested she’d been,” Beth said. She smoothed a hand over her stomach, and he followed the movement with his gaze. “I mean, until her dementia got worse. With her mind going into the past like this, we’re getting to see how she felt about things...about people.”

      “About me?” Dan said, smiling wanly.

      “I suppose.” Beth laughed softly. “So what do you think? Are you willing to play along when Granny’s with us?”

      Dan sighed. He didn’t want to, but he doubted Beth wanted this, either. It was reliving a painful time in his own life to comfort Granny during this confusing time in hers. But Beth was right. If they simply told her the truth, it would only upset her. It would be cruel to do that repeatedly.

      “I could try,” he agreed.

      “So could I.” Beth sighed. “I do appreciate it. I know it’s a lot to ask.”

      Dan shook his head. “It’s a weird situation.”

      Beth turned away from him and opened a cupboard. She stretched to reach something, but her belly wouldn’t let her close enough.

      “What are you trying to get?” he asked.

      “Hazelnut spread,” she said, giving up. “I’m craving black forest cake like you


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