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Happy Man
Happy Man
Happy Man
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Happy Man

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At his best friend’s wedding, Will Hunter plans to land the tall, redheaded bridesmaid. He’s called dibs, after all.

Katherine Noble might not be opposed to being...landed, but she has a thriving psychotherapy practice in Manhattan. Will, handsome and attractive as he is, has a
sheriff’s deputy job and serious attachment issues in his little town on the Connecticut River in Vermont.

Will can’t go. He has a mother, Elyse, who never leaves her mountain, not since the days when, as a young bride, she was captured and brutally tortured. Will’s not so
good, either...away from his home, in crowds, in the concrete canyons of the city.

But Will’s determination is strong, and Katherine’s love and faith in him have the power to heal. Together, they can defeat anything—even the monster who returns from Elyse’s past.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 28, 2015
ISBN9781940707594
Happy Man
Author

Rebecca Skovgaard

Rebecca Skovgaard is a midwife in Rochester, New York. She and her husband are raising (yes, still) their three children, who give them great pride. She believes that if you live in Rochester, you can never have too many spring bulbs in the garden or Christmas lights in the trees. Under the pen name Rachel Billings, she has published several erotic novels.

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    Happy Man - Rebecca Skovgaard

    Happy Man

    Rebecca Skovgaard

    Smashwords Edition October 2015

    Happy Man is a work of fiction. Names, characters, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination and are either fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

    No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without prior written permission from the copyright holder and the publisher of this book, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review. For information, please contact the publisher.

    This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    Copyright © 2015 by Rebecca Skovgaard

    All rights reserved

    Published by

    Whimsical Publications, LLC

    Florida

    http://www.whimsicalpublications.com

    ISBN-13 for print book: 978-1-940707-58-7

    ISBN-13 for e-book: 978-1-940707-59-4

    Cover art by Traci Markou

    Editing by Brieanna Robertson

    ---------------

    Acknowledgment

    In my work as a midwife, I’m surrounded by remarkable women. They are working women—midwives, physicians, nurses, patient care techs, and staff. They show up every day for something more than a paycheck. We’re on a shared mission—to do our best for the women and families we care for. It’s my honor to work with them, laugh with them, and, when it comes to it, cry with them.

    So here’s to you. Sit down. Put your feet up. Take a rest, because you deserve it. Find a little light reading. (Hint, hint.) Love you.

    ---------------

    Prologue

    35 years ago

    I have two things I’d like to ask you. Truman Hunter rowed them gently around Lake Fairlee, his shoulder strong enough now for this mild workout. Earlier in the summer, Elyse Fergus’s eyes had sparkled as she took the oars, knowing that it tweaked his sense of manhood just a little to sit there while she rowed. But he was healing, in more ways than one. Soon, he’d be able to go back to work. If he decided he would go back to work.

    A lot depended on how she answered his questions.

    The lake was still now, the sun just falling behind the mountains. She no longer had to lift a hand to shade her eyes to look at him, to see him in that deeply perceptive, accepting, and somewhat unsettling way of hers. He’d gotten used to her way. He’d gotten to like it.

    She was pretty as a picture, sitting there in her faded homespun dress, with the green of the mountains and the blue of the water as her backdrop. Her arms and legs were bare, tanned from a summer spent outdoors, toned from the work on her parents’ simple farm. Her hair, a lush, rich brown, was loosely restrained in a thick braid that fell to her waist. Her eyes were a deep blue that matched the lake, pure and innocent in a way he’d no longer even considered possible.

    Her lips were full and soft in the gentle smile she gave him now. They were sweet and welcoming when he kissed her, as he had, just once, last night when he’d walked her back up to her cabin after dark. For there were no motors on Fergus Mountain. No cars or tractors. No electricity either.

    She waited for him to speak. And would wait, he knew, silent and content, for as long as it took him to choose his words. The families who’d come to play at the lake were on their way home now for dinner. The silence was deep, broken only by the occasional creak of the rowlocks, the small splash of water as the oars dipped below the surface, and, from the trees on shore, the rasping hum of cicadas as they signaled the drop in temperature.

    First, I’d like you to let me show your work to my mother. She owns an art gallery in Washington.

    My work?

    Your weaving.

    She wouldn’t see it as art, but it was. She made scarves and stoles, cloths for tables, and light blankets. They were works of beauty.

    He hadn’t been to these Vermont mountains in the spring or fall or winter, but he knew what they would look like. He’d seen them represented in her work. Her summer weavings lovingly illustrated what he saw now—deep greens and blues with the occasional sparkle of white water or yellow sunlight. From her work, he knew what he’d see in autumn—the deep brown of the earth and the red, orange, and gold of falling leaves. In winter—the blue-white of the frozen lake and streams, the dark of night with a twinkle of stars shadowed by the skeletons of bare trees dolloped with snow. And in spring—bright yellow-green of new leaves, the pink blush of dogwood blossoms, and the jewel colors of hyacinths.

    They were nothing short of incredible works of art, and his mother would owe him forever if he brought them to her. And she’d like it even better if he brought Elyse to her, as his wife.

    And I’d like you to marry me.

    Truman—

    He’d been named for the president, the sponsor of the Marshall Plan that had his father working in France to help re-build post-war Europe. The war had interrupted his mother’s study of art history at the École du Louvre, but the recovery had brought her a love that had lasted his father’s lifetime. And a son whose name honored the man whose policies had brought them together.

    But the word sounded different when it passed Elyse’s lips—not so much a name as a declaration, a statement.

    Yes. That, too, a declaration.

    You know I don’t leave Fergus Mountain.

    You do, a little. You’re here on the lake with me. You’ve taken me into the village. But it doesn’t matter, Elyse. I can stay here with you.

    Her smile was just a little sad. Oh. I didn’t realize the FBI was opening a branch office in Fairlee Village.

    He grinned at her tease. I had a chat with the dean at the college across the river. I’ve begun to think maybe teaching suits me better.

    She shook her head. That’s too much for you to give up, Tru.

    He shook his head right back. It wasn’t, and he knew it. He’d come here in June, determined to spend his medical leave poking around a bit. He had a theory about a serial killing. It was a thought that had risen out of his prior case. That one had taken a particularly nasty turn.

    He’d needed to recover from injuries in the line, but more, he’d needed to recover his, well, his soul. That seemed too solemn a word for it, too laden with a concept of religion he wasn’t sure he’d been able to preserve, but it was the best he could do.

    An essential part of himself, of his humanity, had been left in the bottom of a mineshaft down in West Virginia. And he wouldn’t be a man unless he got it back.

    He’d found it, here, in these mountains, and with this woman. A certain salvation.

    She was wounded, too, in her way. Or constrained, at least, left unable to grow and blossom as she should. It was partly her nature, perhaps, to be hesitant in her approach to life, to be shy of folks. It was reinforced severely by the extreme isolation of her upbringing. Her parents were the only humans she’d seen until they first took her into the village when she was seven or eight.

    She hadn’t had a friend until, when she was fifteen, a girl named Melissa Hancock, also fifteen and vacationing with her family at a lake cabin, wandered onto Fergus Mountain.

    Melissa disappeared forever that summer. And Elyse hadn’t had another friend until three years later, when Truman came looking for the missing girl. He had a theory that Melissa had been a serial killer’s first victim, the kill that had given him a taste for murder. The death that wasn’t part of a pattern, because a pattern hadn’t been established yet.

    Truman had learned that Melissa had made friends with the girl who lived on Fergus Mountain.

    He’d climbed the mountain every day for a week before Elyse agreed to see him. On that first day, he sat for hours on the front porch swing, watching the rhythms of the farm, knowing she peeked at him from the dark of the cabin or the barn. He’d spoken with her father, Thomas, and explained what he wanted. Thomas said he didn’t think his daughter would want to speak with a strange man, nor talk about Melissa. It hadn’t gone well three years before, when the local sheriff had come looking to ask the same questions.

    On the second day, he changed his suit for dungarees and work boots. After sitting on the swing for an hour, he went to the barn and, awkwardly, using mostly just one hand, mucked out stalls. That week, by virtue of observation, he learned how to milk cows, prune fruit trees, and clear a field for plowing. On the third day, Elyse’s mother set a fourth place at the table. Each evening, before he walked back down the mountain, he took an hour on the swing.

    On the eighth day, Elyse came and sat next to him. After yet another hour of silence broken only by the creaking of the swing as Tru idly pushed it with his foot, she let him ask her about Melissa. And, over the next few weeks, she gradually led him around the town, showing him where she and Melissa had gone, what they’d done, and rowing him around the lake, pointing out cabins and describing the families who’d been there that summer three years back.

    And in that time, two not-quite-right souls had found some healing, some completion in each other.

    I don’t think I can be a wife, Tru.

    You can be my wife, Elyse.

    She touched her fingers to her lips. I’m afraid of…things.

    The small boat drifted as he feathered the oars. Yes. She was afraid of many things. But she managed to do with him what she’d never done before. She walked alongside and talked with a man. She introduced him to people in the village. She rode next to him in a car. She let him kiss her.

    You’re not as afraid when you’re with me.

    She looked away, to the mountains.

    He knew it was the kiss—and more—that she thought of.

    Were you afraid last night, when I kissed you, Elyse?

    She studied him. You know I wasn’t.

    If you want, I’ll take you to my room right now, and show you that you don’t have to be afraid of anything that happens between us.

    Her eyes were open, without guile. I think I might like that.

    Truman grinned. I think you’ll love it.

    They married that week, on the mountain. A few days later, Truman left for Washington. He took boxes full of Elyse’s work to his mother’s gallery and his case notes from the summer to his office.

    As he predicted, Isabela Hunter was entranced with Elyse’s art and anxious to meet her daughter-in-law. And also as expected, he confirmed his suspicions about the identity of the serial killer. He was writing up his report, his last act for the FBI, when his telephone rang.

    It was a voice he’d never heard on the phone before—Thomas, Elyse’s father. Elyse had disappeared.

    Chapter One

    Will Hunter tied his dog and best buddy, Beowulf, under a tree outside the gym at Oak Mill Basin High, leaving him plenty of rope to move, cool shade, and a bowl of water. With school out for the summer, the pick-up basketball league had added a Friday morning game. He was often coming off a night shift for it, but Sussex County, Vermont, was not such a rockin’ place that sheriff’s deputies were normally kept busy all night long.

    There were enough cars, motorcycles, and bikes outside the gym to guarantee a good number of players. They’d be short two of the usuals, he knew—his best human buddy, Leet Hayes, and Leet’s soon-to-be-adopted son Jace were busy. Leet was marrying Jace’s mom, Sadie, the next day. Leet had done an enviable job of ducking most of the wedding prep, but this close to the event, there were things even he, artful dodger that he was, couldn’t avoid. Sadie and her moms had him corralled, and Jace, too.

    Will, as best man, had responsibility for the party that night, but that was hours off. Besides, good music and plenty of beer out on the deck at the Tap and Mallet were really as wild as Leet wanted to get.

    The gym was hot with the first hint of true summer weather. He sat down next to a relative newcomer, the man who helped out on Sadie’s mothers’ goat farm.

    Hey, Cane. I’m surprised the women don’t have you hanging the farm with ribbons or arranging flowers or something.

    Yo. I told them I’d take care of the animals for them today, and I did. But I’m staying out of the girl stuff. They’re all at Leet’s place now, doing it up.

    That was really about the first time Will had heard Canaan string together more than a couple words with the occasional grunt. And another first occurred when Canaan, in deference to the heat, stood to strip down to his shorts.

    What the fuck, dude? What the hell is that?

    Canaan stood with his hands on his hips and a mild glare in his eyes. It’s the leg I got compliments of the Taliban.

    Shit, man. Will stood, too, with the same hands-on-hips posture, and eyed the sleek, high-tech metal prosthesis that ran from Canaan’s knee to the court shoe that covered the foot. You should have told me about that. I had you crawling through the woods at Leet’s house two weeks ago. With a freaking assault rifle.

    Yeah. And was there something wrong in the way I fulfilled my mission?

    Nope. Course not. But don’t you think I should have known?

    I don’t know. I do know I can’t go back and tell you. Anyway, what’s it matter?

    Will brushed a hand over his head and noticed other players were showing surprised interest as well. Doesn’t it matter to you?

    Only if you start calling me Peg Leg. Then I’d have to take you down.

    Will rolled a shoulder. Would that be every time I call you Peg Leg, or—

    The rest of the sentence was lost as Will found himself laid horizontal just a couple inches above the hardwood floor. In some kind of movement too quick for the eye to follow, Canaan had hooked his legs out from under him and put him flat out. He was saved from slamming against the floor when, at the last millisecond or microsecond or something, Canaan grasped his hand and stopped his movement.

    With their hands still clasped between their chests, Will looked up at him. Or just until you understand it as a term of endearment?

    Canaan dropped him none too gently the last two inches. You use a term of endearment on me, you’ll be slow to walk upright.

    We’ll see.

    Canaan rolled his eyes at that and Will, still on his back, had to give it to him. We gonna play, or what?

    Canaan pulled him to his feet. Will was a couple inches taller and maybe a few pounds heavier—but it didn’t look to cost the man any real effort. Play.

    Everyone in the gym had played with Canaan before. They’d known him as a tough, physical player, and he only had to run roughshod over his opponents a handful of times before they all stopped holding back during this game. It was one thing to give a handicapped player a break. It was another to let him steal the damn game.

    Will had been wise enough to team up with him and so hadn’t had to struggle with the issue. Victorious, they walked out of the gym together a couple hours later. Canaan owned one of the bikes and he walked it along to the tree to greet Beowulf.

    You’ll be at the Tap tonight?

    In a quick second, Canaan was on the ground with Beowulf over him chest to chest, having a good wrestle. Yeah. I’m Leet’s DD, right?

    If you don’t mind.

    No prob. I doubt anyone’s really going to tie one on.

    Not likely. We’ll be lucky to get rid of the women.

    The women were coming early for dinner, in place of a more formal rehearsal event. The original, more complicated plans had been for a May wedding with more of the bells and whistles. That had been put off when Leet’s first wife, who for three years had been thought dead, made an unfortunate though blessedly short reappearance. The ceremony set for tomorrow was simpler. Leet had given Sadie and the moms only two weeks to put it together. He was done waiting, he said. Will suspected there was a little, uh, procreative matter cooking that put some urgency behind it, too.

    Leet was nothing but happy. Will liked Sadie just fine, so he was all for it, too. It was good to have a buddy testing those waters first, looking out for some of the rough spots. Lately, Will’s mother was losing all subtlety about her desire for grandchildren. And he had to admit, Leet’s setup with Sadie and her two boys had some appeal.

    Beowulf took a breather and Will pulled Canaan to his feet. And on the subject of women—about the tall, red-headed volleyball player?

    Canaan raised a brow. Sadie’s friend Katherine? What about her?

    I’m callin’ her.

    Callin’ her? Like, dibs? We in high school?

    Just sayin’.

    Sayin’ what? You want her to bear your children, or you just want to be the first to ask her to dance?

    Dance? There’s going to be dancing?

    It’s a wedding, you dumb shit. I’m laying the floor for it this afternoon. Wouldn’t mind a hand with it either.

    Yeah, sure, but—you can dance, Peg?

    Will was quick enough this time to stop the blow, just barely getting a hand between Canaan’s fist and his own chest. Likely that meant Canaan wasn’t half trying. Still, he leaned into him, his eyes pretty fierce.

    I can dance, Hunter. And I’ll dance with anyone I want to, regardless of hair color. He turned and climbed onto his bike.

    Shit. You’ve got moves, don’t you?

    Canaan chuckled as he pushed off—the prosthetic leg not affecting him at all. At Leet’s, about two. You help me get the floor down, I’ll give you a salsa lesson.

    Will was left with Beowulf. Salsa. Shit. What the hell is salsa?

    Beowulf yapped.

    Not that. He’s talking about a dance.

    Katherine Noble had to put some effort into keeping her red head from turning enough to get a sneak peek at the clock on her desk. She wanted to be in her rental car now, headed up to Vermont in time to join her best friend Sadie, her family, and the groom that Katherine had yet to meet for their pre-wedding party.

    Elizabeth Baker’s fifty-minute appointment was the last thing between her and a very pleasant long weekend. She was Katherine’s only client who’d not been willing to reschedule when the short-notice invitation to the rearranged wedding had come.

    Elizabeth had her issues and Katherine truly was sympathetic. But really, it had to be today? The woman had a husband who loved her pretty well, whose good job allowed her to stay home to care for their two healthy, entirely cute children. Things weren’t perfect, and the sense of low self-worth that had colored her childhood was haunting her again, in large part because she’d given up the job at which she was so very competent.

    Katherine could help her. It wouldn’t take much for Elizabeth to change the patterns of thinking and behavior that kept her from finding happiness in her really quite privileged life. A life that many would envy.

    After four years of college and five more getting her PhD in psychology, Katherine had the skills. And she was happy to use them with Elizabeth, especially since clients like Elizabeth paid her bills.

    But she believed other aspects of her work—her volunteer job at a battered women’s shelter a couple evenings a week, the Tuesdays she spent at a children’s center, and her two Mondays a month at a women’s prison—really made best use of her abilities. It was at those sites that she saw people who truly needed her help.

    In comparison, the Elizabeth Bakers of the world had little to complain about. Still, Katherine enjoyed working with them—enjoyed seeing how the work she did with them could pay off in happier, fuller lives. Appreciated that it led to happier families, healthier children, a better future. All of that was good, and a good way to spend her day.

    Just not this particular day.

    Finding her discipline, she nodded encouragement as Elizabeth worked her way to a better life.

    Will knew he’d be late to the party at the Tap. The owners, Joe and Maura, would have it all in hand, so Will didn’t have to sweat it. But he pushed his four-by-four a bit as he drove up Fergus Mountain.

    After the game, he’d worked out in the weight room at the school gym. Then he stopped by the office to clean up his desk. He ended up spending more time than expected. His on-duty partner, Paul Weber, asked Will to cover him while he went with his wife for their prenatal ultrasound. That led to a celebratory lunch at the pizza shop in the Basin with Paul and a couple other deputies—it was a boy, after all. Then he’d helped Canaan lay the dance floor out near Leet’s pond. Leet and Jace had been let off their leashes in time to heckle when Cane had put on some music and tried getting Will to swivel his hips. They’d had a beer together then, in their last quiet moments with all three of them single men.

    So he was later than he’d meant to be taking supplies up to his mom. She’d e-mailed her list to Power’s Grocery so they had the order ready. Then he stopped by the post office for the packages that had accumulated over the last week.

    Few citizens of Sussex County would recognize his mother if they saw her, but her textile art was recognizable and highly prized worldwide. Her weaving was built on natural wools from Vermont sheep and goats. But she special-ordered unique yarns and dyes from all over the world. Though she hadn’t left her mountain in nearly two decades, the world came to her through the Internet.

    As always, she heard his truck come up the road and was there in the yard to greet him. The same was true for Beowulf’s brother, Spinner, and their mother, Lucy. Beowulf was out of the truck ahead of Will, giving a polite canine greeting to Lucy before running and wrassling with Spinner.

    Human mother and son, both tall and lithe, held each other in a prolonged hug.

    Hello, Will. She smooched his cheek.

    Mom. He held her a bit longer, looking her over. She was still beautiful and fresh, with eyes that sparkled and cleared only for him and the occasional visit by his paternal grandmother. For all others, her gaze would be sheltered, downcast. How are you doing?

    I’m fine, Will, as always. You know I am.

    They both took a bag of groceries, but still held an arm around each other as they walked to the cabin, Lucy sedate at Elyse’s side. The answer was always the same and always a partial truth. She was healthy and strong and happy in her limited way. But she wouldn’t leave her mountain and rarely spoke with another human being.

    Elyse had been gravely wounded, body, heart, and soul. A week of her life was missing—a week of unspeakable terror and torture. A week where her mind had shut the door then locked it tight. She didn’t recall what had happened during that time and had given up trying. It was enough that she’d survived it.

    Yet, her survival had been a retreat, nearly a defeat. Just married, quickly widowed, she’d been taken in the loving arms of her parents to the sanctuary of their farm, their mountain. Where the small family—expanded nine months later by the birth of her son—secured their safety by maintaining total isolation. No more strangers were allowed on Fergus Mountain.

    Elyse had dug for the strength to help her young son’s life be as normal as she could make it. When it came time for school, she bravely walked Will down to the bus stop and even made it to parent-teacher conferences the first couple years. The last time she’d left the mountain had been for his high school graduation. She’d watched the procession as he and his classmates filed into the auditorium. She hadn’t been able to enter the building.

    Will went to college locally so he could live at home. Elyse’s mother died his freshman year, and her father, Thomas, two years later. Will helped her bury them on the mountain.

    He moved out when he trained at the state police academy. When he was hired into a deputy position in Sussex, he rented the top floor of an old Victorian in the village. But he sent graders up to rebuild the road that had become little more than a footpath to his mother’s cabin. And he drove up the mountain three or four times a week, bringing her, like today, supplies and connections to the world.

    In the kitchen, Elyse put groceries away while he toted her mail from the bed of his truck. She hummed as she worked—a testament to her acceptance, her

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