the state.
âLook what Ivy buyed me, Dr. Ryan!â Noah beamed at him, apparently momentarily forgetting his apprehension. âIt gots like a hunnerd pockets anâ everything!â Seated at his desk, Ryan removed his glasses to peer at the kid, who was gleefully slurping down what was left of a chocolate ice-cream cone. Dots of color stained his pale cheeks over an ice-cream stuccoed chin, while bits of yellow leaves clung to his dark curls. Then Ryanâs gaze shifted to Katie, who, clinging to Ivyâs hand, gave him a shy, chocolate-coated smile in return. She looked down at her coat, then back up at him, her smile broadening.
âI look pretty,â she said, her voice weightless as goose down.
âYou sure do, sweetheart,â he said, ignoring the dull ache curled up inside his chest like a dog settling in for the night. Then he waved Noah over, grabbing a tissue to wipe off the sticky little face. When he gently took the child by the arm, however, the boy flinched, the fire going right out of his eyes.
âItâs okay, grasshopperâ¦I just want to clean you up a bit. I wonât hurt you.â
After a moment, Noah nodded, although he still made a helluva face when Ryan tried to undo some of the damage. âWhere on earth you take these kids, Ivy?â
She hadnât bothered unfurling herself from that poncho thing she wore, so he guessed she wasnât planning on staying. âVerna Madisonâs youngest galâs about to have her third baby, theyâve got four-week-old lab pups. You seen them yet? Five of âem, gold as sunshine. And full of the devil.â
âCân I go show Mama my coat?â Noah asked between licks, completely undoing Ryanâs cleanup job.
âYour mama and sister are taking a nap,â he said, wondering how Maddie was going to react to Ivyâs purchases. âWhich they both need.â At the childâs crestfallen expression, he added, âYou know, Iâve got about a million blocks out in the waiting room. Why donât you go build something to show your mama later?â
When the children had gone, Ryan stretched back in the desk chair, making it squawk. Hard to believe those were the same frightened children whoâd shown up on his doorstep barely twelve hours ago. A knot formed in his chest at the thought of any childâs having to feel that kind of anxiety.
He could only imagine how Maddie must feel.
He glanced up at the midwife, whose face indicated shewas thinking much the same thing. She caught his stare, blushed. âI didnât figure it would hurt them to have a treat. And the coats were half off. Last yearâs stock or something.â
Shaking his head, Ryan leaned forward again to gather up the charts strewn across the blotter. âLooks to me as though somebody wants to be a grandma real bad.â
Ivy let out a sigh. Her daughter Dawn, whom Ivy had raised on her own, had left Haven before the ink was dry on her high school diploma, going off to college, then law school. Now an attorney at some high-falutinâ firm in New York City, Ivyâs only child seemed determined not only to never set foot in Haven again, but to never give her mother any grandbabies, either. âGuess Iâve just about given up on that score. Not that Iâm not proud of my daughter, but I swear Iâm gonna wring her skinny little neck if she tells me one more blessed time her careerâs far more challenging, reliable and stimulating than raising a kid could be.â
Yeah, that sounded like Dawn, who was the same age as his brother Cal. In fact, there was a time there when Ryan had thought Cal might have been a little sweet on Ivyâs daughter, but that was a long time agoâ¦.
âNow, where on earth did you drift off to?â he heard Ivy ask, and he lifted his gaze to catch the amused curiosity in hers.
âOh, nothing,â he said, standing to pull a chart out of
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