by Nora Roberts
Grunt work, Seth thought and sighed. “And what are you going to be doing?”
“Basking in the glory of my little empire.”
The basking included detailing the bulkhead for the cockpit, the sort of carpentry Cam turned into an art.
Seth did the grunt work; it was hardly the first time. He knew how to plank, he thought, a bit resentfully as Aubrey’s drill continued its bump and grind over his head.
“Hey.” She bent down to talk to him. “Will’s got the night off. We’re going to get some pizza, catch a flick after. You want in?”
It was tempting. He wanted to connect with Will again, not only because they’d been friends, but because he wanted to check out any guy who was sniffing around Aubrey.
He weighed that against spending the evening as a fifth wheel.
“Village Pizza?”
“Still the best in Saint Chris.”
“Maybe I’ll swing in,” Seth decided. “Say hi to Will. I’ll pass on the flick. I’ve got to get started early tomorrow.”
“I thought you artistic types called your own hours.”
Seth worked oakum into a seam of beveled planking on the hull. “Subject’s calling these.”
“What subject?” She sat back on her heels, then suddenly understood when she noted the expression on his face. “Ooooh, fancy flower lady’s going to pose for the famous artist. I got more juice on her.”
“I’m not interested in gossip.” He managed to hold firm on that for nearly ten seconds. “What kind of juice?”
“Juicy juice, sweetheart. I got it from Jamie Styles, who got it from her cousin who was a Senate page a few years ago. Dru and a certain high-level White House aide were a very hot item back then.”
“How hot?”
“Hot enough to burn up the society columns in the Post for nearly a year. And to warrant what Jamie’s cousin describes as an engagement ring with a diamond the size of a doorknob. Then the diamond disappears, hot goes cold, and the high-level aide starts burning up the newsprint with a blonde.”
“She was engaged?”
“Yeah. Briefly, according to my source. It came out that the blonde was a factor before the broken engagement. If you get my drift.”
“He was cheating on Dru with the bimbo?”
“It so happens that this blonde was—is—a hotshot lawyer, assistant White House counsel or something.”
“Must’ve been tough on Dru, having all that personal business splashed around in the press.”
“She strikes me as someone who’d stand up to it pretty well. She’s nobody’s doormat. And I bet you a month’s pay she busted that cheating bastard’s balls before she stuffed the ring down his throat.”
“You would,” Seth said with approval and pride. “Right before you mopped the floor with his lying tongue. But Dru doesn’t come off as the violent type. More like she froze him to death with one chilly look and a few icy words.”
Aubrey snorted. “A lot you know about women. Still waters, pal of mine. They not only run deep, you bet your ass they can run hot, too.”
* * *
MAYBE, Seth thought as he dropped his filthy, aching body back behind the wheel of his car. But he’d lay money Dru had sliced the guy in two without spilling a single drop of blood.
He knew what it was to have little personal details of your life—embarrassing, intimate details—nibbled on by the press.
It could be she’d come here to get away from all that. He knew just how she felt.
He glanced at the time as he pulled out. He could use that pizza Aubrey had mentioned, and it seemed a waste of effort to drive all the way home to shower off the day’s work, then head right back into town.
So he’d just swing by and clean up at the studio. He’d brought over some towels and soap. He even remembered to toss a spare pair of jeans and a shirt into the closet.
He might just find Dru still at the shop and talk her into a friendly pizza. Which would, he thought, pleased with the idea, constitute date number three.
She’d get that cool, I-am-not-amused expression on her face when he called it that, he thought. And that quick light in her eyes that gave her humor away.
He was crazy about that contrast.
He could spend hours—days—contemplating the varieties of shadow and light in her.
But her car was gone from the little lot behind her building. He considered calling her, persuading her to come back into town, before he remembered he didn’t have a phone.
He’d have to take care of that, he mused. But since he couldn’t call from there, he’d clean up, buzz over to Village Pizza and call her from a pay phone.
Somebody was bound to have her number.
Better, he decided as he started up the steps, he’d get a pizza to go and stop by her house on the way home. With a bottle of Merlot.
What kind of woman would turn a guy away when he had pizza and wine?
Satisfied with the plan, he stepped inside, and felt something skid under his foot. Frowning, he reached down and picked up the folded note that had been slipped under his door.
His stomach pitched as the bottom fell out of his world.
Ten thousand should hold me. I’ll be in touch.
Seth simply sat on the floor just inside the studio door and crumpled the paper into a tiny, mean ball.
Gloria DeLauter was back. He hadn’t expected her to find or follow him so quickly. He hadn’t been prepared, he admitted, to find her nipping at his heels barely two weeks after he’d left Rome.
He’d wanted time to think, to decide. He flipped the little wad of paper across the room. Well, ten thousand would buy him time, if he wanted to piss the money away.
He’d done it before.
When it came to his mother, there was no price he wouldn’t pay to be free of her. And more, to keep his family free of her.
It was, of course, exactly what she counted on.
SIX
HE WAS SITTING on the dock, pole fishing with a smear of Anna’s Brie for bait. The sun was summer-hot on his back, with an August weight to it that drenched the skin and set the brain to dreaming.
He wore nothing but cut-off jeans and a pair of wire-rim sunglasses.
He liked looking through them at the way the light beat down from a hazy blue sky and smacked the water. And he thought, idly, that he might just set the pole aside in a bit and slide right in to cool off.
The water lapped lazily against the hull of the little pram with blue sails tied to the dock. A jay was bitching in the trees, and when a stingy little breeze passed by, it carried a hint of roses from a bush that had lived there longer than he.
The house was quiet. The lawn leading to it was lush and freshly mown. He could smell that, too. Newly cut grass, roses, lazy water. Summer smells.
It didn’t strike him as odd, though it was still spring.
Something had to be done, and he wished to God he knew what, to keep that house quiet, the air summer-peaceful. And his family safe.
He heard the yip of a dog, then the scrambling of canine feet on the dock. Seth didn’t look up, even when the cold nose nudged at his cheek. He simply lifted an arm so the dog could wriggle against his side.
It was always comforting, somehow, to have a dog at your side when your thoughts were heavy.
But that wasn’t enough for the dog, whose tail pounded a drumbeat on the dock as its tongue slathered over Seth’s cheek.
“Okay, okay, cool it. Thinking here,” he began, then felt his heart jump into his throat as he shifted to nudge the dog down.
Not Cam’s dog, but his own. Foolish, who’d died in Seth’s arms five years before. Speechless, Seth stared as those familiar doggie eyes seemed to laugh into his at the world’s best joke.
“Wait a minute, wait a minute.” Joy and shock tangled inside him as he
grabbed the dog’s muzzle. Warm fur, cold nose, wet tongue. “What the hell is this?”
Foolish gave another cheerful bark then flopped adoringly across Seth’s lap.
“There you are, you stupid idiot,” Seth murmured, as unspeakable love gushed inside him. “There you are, you idiot. Christ, oh Christ, I’ve missed you.” He bobbled the pole, let go of it as he grabbed for his dog.
A hand reached out, snagged the pole before it dropped into the water.
“Wouldn’t want to waste that fancy cheese.” The woman who sat beside him, legs dangling over the dock, took charge of the pole. “We figured Foolish would cheer you up. Nothing like a dog, is there? For companionship, love, comfort and pure entertainment. Nothing biting today?”
“No, not . . .”
The words slipped back down his throat as he looked at her. He knew that face; he’d seen it in pictures. Long and thin, scattershot freckles over the nose and cheeks. She had a shapeless khaki hat over messy red curls that were streaked with silver. And her dark green eyes were unmistakable.
“You’re Stella. Stella Quinn.” Stella Quinn, he thought as he tried to make sense of it, who’d been dead more than twenty years.
“You turned out handsome, didn’t you? Always thought you would.” She gave the stubby ponytail a friendly tug. “Need a haircut, boy.”
“I guess I’m dreaming.”
“I guess you are,” she said easily, but her hand moved from his hair to his cheek and gave it a rub before she tipped down his dark glasses. “You’ve got Ray’s eyes. I fell for his eyes first, you know.”
“I always wanted to meet you.” You got your wishes in dreams, Seth decided.
“Well, here we are.” With a chuckle, she tapped his sunglasses back in place. “Never too late, is it? Never cared much for fishing myself. Like the water—to look at, to swim in. Still, fishing’s good for thinking, or not thinking at all. If you’re going to brood, might as well have a line in the water. You never know what you’ll pull up.”
“I never dreamed about you before. Not like this.”
The fact was, he’d never dreamed with this kind of clarity. He could feel the warm fur under his hand, and the steady beat of heart as Foolish panted in the heat.
He felt the strength of the sun on his bare back, and could hear, in the distance, the putt and purr of a workboat. The jay never stopped its piercing song.
“We figured it was time I got to play Grandma.” She gave Seth an affectionate pat on the knee. “I missed that while I was here. Getting to fuss and coo over the babies when they came, spoiling you and the others. Dying’s damn inconvenient, let me tell you.”
When he simply stared at her, she let out a long, clear laugh. “It’s natural enough to be a little spooked. It’s not every day you sit around talking to a ghost.”
“I don’t believe in ghosts.”
“Hard to blame you.” She looked out over the water, and something in her face spoke of absolute contentment. “I’d’ve baked cookies for you, though I was never much of a cook. But you can’t have everything, so you take what you can get. You’re Ray’s grandson, so that makes you mine.”
His head was reeling, but he didn’t feel dizzy. His pulse was galloping, but he didn’t feel fear. “He was good to me. I only had him for a little while, but he was . . .”
“Decent.” She nodded as she said it. “That’s what you told Cam when he asked you. Ray was decent, you said, and you sure as hell hadn’t had much decent up till then, poor little guy.”
“He changed everything for me.”
“He gave you a chance to change everything. You’ve done a pretty good job of it, so far. Can’t choose where you come from, Seth. My boys and you know that better than anyone. But you can choose where you end up, and how you get there.”
“Ray took me in, and it killed him.”
“You say something like that and mean it, you’re not as smart as everyone thinks. Ray’d be disappointed to hear you say it.”
“He wouldn’t have been on that road if it hadn’t been for me.”
“How do you know that?” She poked him again. “If not that road that day, another road another day. Damn fool always drove too fast. Things happen, and that’s that. They happen a different way, we’d sit around complaining about it just the same. Waste a lot of living on the ifs and ors, if you ask me.”
“But—”
“But hell. George Bailey learned his lesson, didn’t he?”
Baffled, fascinated, Seth shifted. “Who?”
Stella rolled her eyes toward heaven. “It’s a Wonderful Life. Jimmy Stewart as George Bailey. Decides it would be better for everyone if he’d never been born, so an angel shows him the way things would’ve worked out if he hadn’t.”
“And you’re going to show me?”
“Do I look like an angel to you?” she asked, amused.
“No. But I’m not thinking it’d be better if I’d never been born either.”
“Change one thing, change everything. That’s the lesson. What if Ray hadn’t brought you here, if he hadn’t run into that damn telephone pole? Maybe Cam and Anna wouldn’t have met. Then Kevin and Jake wouldn’t have been born. You wishing them away?”
“No, Jesus, of course not. But if Gloria—”
“Ah.” With a satisfied nod, Stella lifted a finger. “There’s the nub, isn’t it? No point in saying ‘if Gloria,’ or ‘but Gloria.’ Gloria DeLauter is reality.”
“She’s back.”
Her face softened, her voice gentled. “Yes, honey, I know. And it weighs on you.”
“I won’t let her touch their lives again. I won’t let her fuck up my family. She only wants money. It’s all she’s ever wanted.”
“You think?” Stella sighed. “Well, if you do, I suppose you’ll give it to her. Again.”
“What else can I do?”
“You’ll figure it out.” She handed him the pole.
He woke sitting on the side of the bed, his hand loosely fisted as if it held a fishing pole.
And when he opened those fingers, they shook a little. When he drew one careful breath, he’d have sworn he smelled the faint drift of summer grass.
Weird, he thought and raked his fingers through his hair. Very weird dream. And he could swear he felt the lingering warmth from his dog stretched across his lap.
* * *
THE first ten years of his life had been a prison of fear, abuse and neglect. It had made him stronger than most ten-year-old boys. And a great deal more wary.
Ray Quinn’s pre-Stella affair with a woman named Barbara Harrow had been brief. He’d put it so completely behind him that his three adopted sons had been totally unaware of it. Just as Ray had been unaware of the product of that affair.
Gloria DeLauter.
But Gloria had known about Ray, and had tracked him down. In her usual style she’d used extortion and blackmail to bleed Ray for money. And had, in essence, sold her son to her father. But Ray had died suddenly, before he found the way to tell his sons, and his grandchild, of the connection.
To the Quinn brothers, Seth had simply been another of Ray Quinn’s strays. They’d been bound to him by no more than a promise to a dying man. But that had been enough.
They’d changed their lives for him. They’d given him a home, stood up for him, shown him what it was to be part of a family. And they’d fought to keep him.
Anna had been his caseworker. Grace his first surrogate mother. And Sybill, Gloria’s half sister, had brought back the only soft memories of his childhood.
He knew how much they’d sacrificed to give him a life. A life as decent as Ray Quinn. By the time Gloria had stepped back into the picture, hoping to bleed them for more money, he’d been one of them.
One of the brothers Quinn.
This wasn’t the first time Gloria had approac
hed him for money. He’d had three years to forget her, to feel safe after his new family had circled around him. Then she’d slithered back to St. Chris and had extorted money from a fourteen-year-old boy.
He’d never told them of it.
A few hundred that first time, he remembered. It was all he could manage without his family finding out—and had satisfied her. For a little while.
He’d paid her off each time she’d come back, until he’d fled to Europe. His time there hadn’t been only to work and to study, but to escape.
She couldn’t hurt his family if he wasn’t with them, and she couldn’t follow him across the Atlantic.
Or so he’d thought.
His success as an artist, the resulting publicity, had given Gloria big ideas. And bigger demands.
He wondered now if it had been a mistake to come home, as much as he’d needed to. He knew it was a mistake to continue to pay her. But the money meant nothing. His family meant everything.
He imagined Ray had felt the same.
In the clear light of day, he knew the sensible thing, the sane thing would be to tell her to get lost, to ignore her. To call her bluff.
But then he’d get one of her notes, or come face-to-face with her, and he’d clutch. He found himself strangled between his helpless childhood and the desperate need to shield the people he loved.
So he paid, with a great deal more than money.
He knew how she worked. She wouldn’t pop up on his doorstep right away. She’d let him stew and worry and wonder, until ten thousand seemed like a bargain for a little peace of mind. She wouldn’t be staying in St. Chris, wouldn’t risk being seen and recognized by his brothers or sisters. But she’d be close.
However dramatic, however paranoid it was, he’d swear he could all but feel her—the hate and the greed—breathing down his neck.
He wasn’t running again. She wouldn’t make him deprive himself of home and family a second time. He would, as he had before, lose himself in his work and live his life. Until she came.
He’d wheedled a second morning session out of Dru. From the sitting the previous week he knew she expected him to be prepared when she arrived, precisely at seven-thirty, and for him to be ready to start. And to stop exactly sixty minutes later.