A Home For Hannah (Reunion: Hannah, Michael & Kate #1) Read online




  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  Excerpt

  Dear Reader

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Books by Pat Warren

  About the Author

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Epilogue

  Copyright

  Hannah sat up quickly,

  nearly dropping her teacup.

  There were photos of the familiar farmhouse, with a smiling young couple standing alongside the front porch, and another snapshot of the children with a big sheepdog, as the voice-over told the story of the accidental death of the father, coupled with the grave illness of the mother, causing the separation. Then suddenly a slender woman with dark hair and deep dimples was talking—the mother who’d never stopped searching for the three children taken from her so long ago.

  Hannah blinked back a rush of tears, staring at the remembered features, scarcely changed by the years.

  They told me you were dead. Oh, God!

  Could this be happening?

  Dear Reader,

  Brides, babies and families…that’s just what Special Edition has in store for you this August! All this and more from some of your favorite authors.

  Our THAT’S MY BABY! title for this month is Of Texas Ladies, Cowboys…and Babies, by popular Silhouette Romance author Jodi O’Donnell. In her first book for Special Edition, Jodi tells of a still young and graceful grandmother-to-be who unexpectedly finds herself in the family way! Fans of Jodi’s latest Romance novel, Daddy Was a Cowboy, won’t want to miss this spin-off title!

  This month, GREAT EXPECTATIONS, the wonderful new series of family and homecoming by Andrea Edwards, continues with A Father’s Gift. And summer just wouldn’t be right without a wedding, so we present A Bride for John, the second book of Trisha Alexander’s newest series, THREE BRIDES AND A BABY. Beginning this month is a new miniseries from veteran author Pat Warren, REUNION. Three siblings must find each other as they search for true love. It all begins with one sister’s story in A Home for Hannah.

  Also joining the Special Edition family this month is reader favorite and Silhouette Romance author Stella Bagwell. Her first title for Special Edition is Found: One Runaway Bride. And returning to Special Edition this August is Carolyn Seabaugh with Just a Family Man, as the lives of one woman and her son are forever changed when an irresistible man walks into their café in the wild West.

  This truly is a month packed with summer fun and romance! I hope you enjoy each and every story to come!

  Sincerely,

  Tara Gavin, Senior Editor

  Please address questions and book requests to: Silhouette Reader Service

  U.S.: 3010 Walden Ave., P.O. Box 1325, Buffalo, NY 14269 Canadian: P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ont. L2A 5X3

  A Home For Hannah

  Pat Warren

  This book is dedicated to B. J. Gifford

  for a friendship I treasure

  Books by Pat Warren

  Silhouette Special Edition

  With This Ring #375

  Final Verdict #410

  Look Homeward. Love #442

  Summer Shadows #458

  The Evolution of Adam #480

  Build Me a Dream #514

  The Long Road Home #548

  The Lyon and the Lamb #582

  My First Love, My Last #610

  Winter Wishes #632

  Till I Loved You #659

  An Uncommon Love #678

  Under Sunny Skies #731

  That Hathaway Woman #758

  Simply Unforgettable #797

  This I Ask of You #815

  On Her Own #841

  A Bride for Hunter #893

  *Nobody’s Child #974

  † A Home for Hannah #1048

  *Man. Woman and Child

  †Reunion

  Silhouette Romance

  Season of the Heart #553

  Silhouette Intimate Moments

  Perfect Strangers #288

  Only the Lonely #605

  Silhouette Books

  Montana Mavericks

  Outlaw Lovers #6

  PAT WARREN

  is a mother of four and lives in Arizona with her travel agent husband and a lazy white cat. She’s a former newspaper columnist whose lifetime dream was to become a novelist. A strong romantic streak, a sense of humor and a keen interest in developing relationships led her to try romance novels, with which she feels very much at home.

  Don’t miss the second book in Pat’s REUNION miniseries, MICHAEL’S HOUSE. This stirring, heartfelt story is coming to you next month in Silhouette Intimate Moments!

  Prologue

  Frankenmuth, Michigan—Winter, 1972

  He is such a good man, my Lance. He works so hard that he’s always tired. I, too, am weary after a long day in the fields alongside him, then tending the house and cooking the meals, watching over the children. But I don’t complain except occasionally here in my journal, where I pour out my thoughts while the house sleeps.

  Lance is strong and determined to make a success of the farm he inherited from his parents. But two years of drought and poor crops have drained the little savings we had. Now we’re mortgaged to the hilt, and I worry about that, about the effect on my family. The children are so sweet, such a help. Michael just started high school, yet he does the work of someone twice his age and still keeps up with his studies. Hannah’s just turned eight, but her gooseberry pie’s better than mine and she sews like an angel. Our beautiful Katie’s only six, yet she feeds the chickens, gathers the eggs and has a smile for everyone. They’re all healthy, thank God.

  It’s me who’s been feeling poorly lately with this cough that won’t ease up. Ah, but I’m young, barely thirty-two; I’ll be fine come spring. This winter’s been a harsh one. Mother says it’s the last one she can handle. She needs sunshine, so she’s returning to New Mexico. She hasn’t been the same since Papa died. “Julia, “ she tells me, “I’m only half-alive without him.” I understand, for I’d feel the same if I lost Lance.

  The hour’s late and I should be in bed. The house is asleep and peaceful, except for the wind moaning through the attic. Rex, the sheepdog, and I are the only ones still awake by the dying embers of the fire. I like the quiet, watching the snow fall outside, feeling safe. My constant prayer is that this year the spring rains will bring us an abundant crop so that we can get out of debt and Lance won’t have to work so hard.

  We married young, barely out of high school, but I’ve never regretted a day of it. So tall, so blond and fair, Lance is beautiful. So different from me with my dark hair and tan skin that he says he envies so. I tell the children that I believe in destiny, in fate. This is the life I was born for, to be mother to them and wife to Lance.

  I love them all so. Nothing will ever part us.

  Chapter One

  Boston, Massachusetts—December, 1995

  The host of the national television show had just the right mix of charm and sincerity, Hannah thought. The program, “Solutions,” was very popular, asking the viewing audience to call in to help solve a mystery or to assist in reuniting families separated for a variety of reasons.

  In her Boston home, Hannah lay stretched out on the couch under an afghan, just getting over a bad head cold. Outside, an early-D
ecember snowstorm had marooned all but the truly adventurous. Glad to be inside where flames licked at the hickory logs in the fireplace, she took a sip of honeyed tea and turned her lazy attention to the silver screen.

  The current search, according to the host, was for three children who’d been separated from their hospitalized mother over twenty years ago, taken from their farm home in Frankenmuth, Michigan, by the Child Protective Services. Pictures flashed on the screen of a fair-haired, long-legged boy who’d been fourteen at the time, a thin, sad-eyed girl of eight with dark hair and a pretty, blond six-year-old girl with huge blue eyes.

  Hannah sat up quickly, nearly dropping her teacup. There were photos of the familiar farmhouse with a smiling young couple standing alongside the front porch, and another snapshot of the children with a big sheepdog as the voice-over told the story of the accidental death of the father, coupled with the grave illness of the mother, causing the separation. Then suddenly, a slender, mature woman with dark hair and deep dimples was talking, introducing herself as Julia, the mother who’d never stopped searching for the three children taken from her so long ago.

  Swallowing around a lump in her throat, Hannah blinked back a rush of tears as she leaned forward, staring at the remembered features, scarcely changed by the years. They told me you were dead. Oh, God! Could this lovely person really be the mother she’d last seen being taken away in an ambulance? Could this be happening?

  All too soon, the segment ended, and the announcer implored anyone who knew anything about the whereabouts of any of the three children to please call the number at the bottom of the screen. With trembling hands, Hannah reached for the pad and pen on the end table and scribbled down the number.

  Struggling with a jumble of emotions, she sank back into the couch, picked up the remote and clicked off the set. Her mother, alive and searching for them all these years. Unbelievable. What had happened to big brother Michael and to little Katie? Over twenty years, such a long time ago.

  Closing her eyes, Hannah let herself remember.

  Boston—Three years earlier

  With an eye on her rearview mirror, Hannah Richards made an illegal left turn into the narrow driveway leading to the parking lot behind the stately old brick building that now housed law offices. She’d gotten lost twice on the way over, despite the City of Boston map that lay in wrinkled abandon on the passenger seat. The snow that had been gently falling earlier in the day had changed, becoming wet and thick, delaying her further. If there was one thing Hannah hated, it was to be late.

  Squinting around the nearly useless windshield wipers, she brought her Volkswagen to a screeching stop next to a red Mercedes convertible she wouldn’t be able to afford if she worked ninety hours a week. One day, Hannah promised herself as she pushed her glasses higher up on her nose.

  Pocketing her keys, she finished the last few bites of the apple that was today’s lunch, along with a cinnamon roll she’d eaten as she’d searched for the address. Hannah was used to eating on the run, had in fact been doing it for years. She wiped her mouth with a tissue, wrapped the core in it and stuffed the mound in the already overflowing ashtray.

  Perhaps she should have parked in the circular driveway by the front door, she thought, peering out and noticing that the back lot hadn’t been shoveled except for the short walk leading to the stairs. Her new black boots were a bit slippery, not broken in yet. She hadn’t thought to bring a hat, and the snow was really coming down out there. She hadn’t seen her friend and mentor, Will Grover, since his wife’s funeral two years ago, and she didn’t want to show up looking like someone the cat dragged in. Hastily, she grabbed her shoulder bag, held it over her head and started for the back stairs.

  The swirling snow, lifted by a chill wind, hit her the moment she stepped out. Head down, she circled a black van parked alongside the walk with its motor running and back doors open. She was nearly to the stairs when suddenly she collided with someone big and solid. Her feet flew out from under her, her shoulder bag went flying and she landed somewhat ungracefully on her backside with a yelp.

  “Damn,” Hannah muttered to herself, more annoyed than hurt.

  The large box that the man had been carrying fell also, its contents spilling onto the snowy pavement. Embarrassment flooded her cheeks as Hannah saw heavy law books dropping into squishy snow piles with a wet thud. Chagrined, she looked up.

  Lord, but he was tall, was her first thought. “I’m so sorry,” she murmured, scrambling to pick up the books, hoping they weren’t ruined. “I should have been watching where I was going.”

  “It’s all right,” Joel Merrick said, offering her a hand and helping her upright. She’d whirled into him so quickly he hadn’t had a chance to dodge her. He reached for a heavy volume she rescued, and his hand closed over hers. Soft, small, almost delicate bones. His thumb at her wrist felt her pulse jerk in response.

  He watched her remove snowy oversize glasses and noticed that her eyes were a warm brown, the color of good brandy. There wasn’t a speck of makeup on her face that he could see. She didn’t need any on skin the color of a freshly picked peach. He saw awareness register before she turned aside. “Are you always in such a hurry?” he asked.

  “No, I…” Actually, Hannah knew she was the type who seemed to rush from appointment to appointment, always in a hurry, with never enough hours in the day. She saw no reason to tell that to this stranger. “I am running a little late today.”

  She’d told Will she’d meet him at one on Saturday afternoon at his office. It was half an hour past that, and now she’d be even later. She bent to pick up another book, her booted feet nearly slipping again.

  Joel stopped her with a steadying hand, took the book and tossed it into the box, his eyes assessing her. Her auburn hair was pulled back from her face and wound tightly into something he’d heard called a French twist. The black leather boots and jacket looked new; the soft gray turtleneck and slacks she wore beneath seemed a bit prim. She stared up at him as his gaze skimmed her mouth, full and moist enough to set a man to fantasizing how she’d taste.

  “I’ll get the rest, Red,” he told her, wondering what she’d do if he thrust his hands into all that thick hair and sent the pins flying.

  Hannah took a moment to study him as she brushed snow from her slacks. Snowflakes dotted his curly black hair worn a shade longer than most of the proper Bostonian men she’d met so far. He was obviously not a law associate of Will’s but rather a deliveryman loading books into the waiting van. Besides, he looked too rugged to be confined behind a desk with his climber’s boots, jeans and plaid flannel shirt beneath his open sheepskin jacket.

  “I’m holding you up,” she said, nodding toward the van.

  He grinned down at her, tightening his grip on her arm. “I think it’s the other way around.” Standing this close to her, he inhaled the unexpected scent of apples and cinnamon. He found it more enticing than a costly perfume.

  His accent was more Western sounding than the broad a’s of the East Coast, so he probably wasn’t from around here. Still, he had a killer smile, and Hannah thought he damn well knew it. His eyes were dark blue and challenging, with a hint of amusement. There was a stubborn slant to his square, unshaved chin. She usually didn’t think much of that look, but found it oddly appealing on this man.

  She gave herself a mental shake. What on earth was she doing standing here staring at a deliveryman as if she were interested in starting something? She shook his hand off. “I believe I can stand alone now, thank you all the same.”

  Still smiling, he cocked his head. “You’re a feisty one, aren’t you?”

  Hannah decided not to respond to that. “I’ll pay for any damage to the books,” she told him, stepping aside and retrieving her shoulder bag.

  “I’m sure they’re fine.” He reached to brush a snowflake from her cheek..

  Her first instinct was to swat his hand aside, thinking the gesture a shade too familiar for two strangers. But she decided that cool
y ignoring him would work much better. “Well, if you’re certain…”

  “Of course, you really knocked the wind out of me.” Still grinning, he rubbed his chest. “Listen, Red, what do you say we go have lunch and talk over possible internal damage? I know this great little place around the corner. The clam chowder’s homemade.”

  “Thanks, but I’ve already had lunch. And my hair isn’t red, it’s auburn.” She settled the strap of her bag on her shoulder as she again glanced pointedly at the van. “I wouldn’t want to be responsible for you losing your job.”

  She thought he worked for a delivery service, Joel realized. He was about to correct her assumption, then decided to let the scene play itself out. Both as an attorney and as a man, Joel Merrick had learned that it gave you an advantage over your opponents if you retained a piece of knowledge they’d not yet discovered.

  “That’s very considerate of you.” He nodded toward the two-story brick building. “Are you looking for an attorney?”

  “No. Actually, I am an attorney. I’m here to see Will Grover. We’ve been friends for years.”

  Joel kept his features even as he mentally calculated who she was. Hannah Richards, Will’s protégée. His partner had mentioned that Hannah was in town and would be stopping by to see if she wanted to rent their spare office. Privately, he’d thought that they didn’t need the rental income, nor did they need another attorney around. They got along just fine. Knowing how fond his partner was of Hannah, he hadn’t voiced his opinion. Now that he’d seen her, he was glad he hadn’t.