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Walk On By (Passing Through Series Book 3)

Page 34

by Sarah Hegger


  And that needed to stop. Right now.

  She intended to avoid Finn and stay well out of the way of his charm and even more devastating opinions. Snuggling deeper into her comforter, she waited. She needed coffee, but she couldn’t brave the family breakfast to get it.

  Only once the house fell silent, and stayed that way for ten minutes, did she risk going downstairs.

  She almost took a shower and got dressed before she went, but it was her house, dammit! If anyone had issues with her or the way she dressed, they could move out. Bravado aside though, she did concede to tossing a robe over her tank top and boy shorts.

  Sneaking into the kitchen she grabbed the full coffee pot before it could become a mirage and disappear on her. Breakfast dishes still littered the table, along with food debris that hadn’t made it into mouths.

  Surely Poppy could have cleaned up?

  She was being a bitch, and an intolerant one at that. Poppy got four kids and three adult males through breakfast every morning. From the condition of the rest of the house, Poppy did a good job keeping it clean.

  Sipping her black coffee, Claire cleared dishes and put them in the dishwasher. It wasn’t like she was doing anything else anyway.

  A knock at the door startled her. Tying her robe around her waist she went to answer it.

  “Bitch!” Tara Parsons nee Crowe stood on her doorstep. Dressed in skintight jeans and an off the shoulder sweater beneath an artfully open cashmere coat, she looked like she’d taken the wrong exit off the interstate. “Why didn’t you tell me you were in town?”

  “Hi.” At last someone who didn’t look at her as if she stank up the place. Claire raised one cheek and then another for a kiss. “I only got here yesterday. It was kind of a spur of the moment thing.”

  As in, losing her job and her boyfriend, and then getting the enormous bill for Mom’s care all in one week.

  “I, for one, am thrilled to see you.” Tara pushed her sunglasses into her honey blonde silk curtain of hair. Stilettos clacking on the wood, she brushed past Claire and into the kitchen. “We’ve wasted enough time already.”

  Feeling at a distinct disadvantage with her bare feet and pjs, Claire trailed Tara.

  “Thank you, Jesus.” Tara reached for the coffee pot in a crash of gold bracelets at her wrist.

  Claire handed her a cup.

  “Thank you, darling.” Tara gave her a grateful smile. “I haven’t had nearly enough caffeine to deal with today.”

  She took a sip and put the mug down on the counter with a shudder. “Ugh! Ben made that. God love the man, but he couldn’t make a decent roast to save his life. It all tasted like police drama sludge.”

  “Well, he is a cop.” Claire was enjoying Ben’s coffee to be honest. Not that she’d dare say that to Tara. Tara got a mite territorial where Ben was concerned. If, say, a mama grizzly could be considered a mite territorial.

  Tara shrugged out of her coat and stood with it in her hand as she surveyed the messy kitchen. “What happened in here?”

  “Breakfast.” Claire toyed with refilling her cup, but that would be tantamount to admitting she liked Ben’s coffee, and it was far too early in the day for that sort of furor.

  “Ugh!” Tara made a face. “God, I get that the woman dresses like a slob, but couldn’t she clean in here before she left?”

  Ignoring the conscience twinge that reminded her she’d had a similar thought, Claire said, “I’m sure she’ll get to it when she gets back.”

  “Where is she anyway?” Eyes glittering Tara peered about the kitchen, looking for her prey.

  “Taking her children to school.” Claire didn’t want to see what Tara would do if Poppy showed up now. “Why don’t I throw myself in a shower, and we can get coffee somewhere?”

  “Fabulous idea.” With evident relief, Tara shrugged back into her pale blush coat. “We can go to Kelly’s little dive.”

  “Great.” Claire liked Kelly’s coffee shop, despite the fact Kelly always served up a sneer and a dollop of disdain with her coffee. Kelly was a firm member of Team Horace and Poppy.

  Actually, other than Tara, the entire town was on Team Horace and Poppy.

  Claire put her cup in the dishwasher. “I won’t be long.”

  “Take your time.” Tara wiggled her fingers. She dug her phone out of her bag. “I have like a hundred messages I need to respond to anyway.”

  After a lightning-fast shower, Claire stood in front of her open suitcase. Time demanded she throw on a pair of jeans and a T-shirt and be done with it. But going out with Tara dressed like that invited unfavorable comparison. Then again, why should she care? Sighing, she conceded that she did care. Hanging out with gorgeous, glamorous Tara could be hell on the ego.

  God, being a girl came with drawbacks.

  She settled somewhere in the middle for a cashmere sweater paired with jeans and heeled boots. Yes to basic makeup and no to straightening her hair.

  Entering the kitchen about thirty minutes later she crashed headlong into an atmosphere tense enough to turn the air to jelly. The same atmosphere she’d hoped to avoid by getting Tara out of the house.

  Poppy looked up from where she was wiping the table. “Good morning.” Her tight smile spoke volumes about how she felt about Tara in the kitchen and Claire with her. “Did you sleep well?”

  “Yes, thank you.” She didn’t want to get into the truth in front of Tara. Tara had a way of cobbling random bits of information together and drawing her own picture, a picture that had a fast and loose relationship with the truth.

  Poppy nodded. “Good. Did you have breakfast?”

  “Always the concerned little mother.” Tara didn’t bother to look up from her screen.

  With a deep breath, Poppy dropped the cloth on the table and took handfuls of glasses to the dishwasher. “I am a mother,” she said in that quiet, dignified way of hers. “I was just being polite.”

  “You know she’s not a guest in this house.” Tara looked up from her phone. Loathing beamed across the kitchen at Poppy.

  “It’s really fine.” Claire jumped in. Tara spoke the truth, but Claire didn’t feel it was Tara’s argument to get into. “I’ll get something at Kelly’s.”

  “Oh.” Poppy looked relieved, and Claire didn’t blame her. Even though Tara was the only friend she had in Two Elks, the woman could be a total bitch. Claire wouldn’t want Tara and her axe grinding in her kitchen first thing in the morning any more than Poppy did.

  Wait a minute! It was her kitchen Tara was in, and it was first thing in the morning.

  “Try the carrot and walnut muffin,” Poppy said. “Kelly is trying out a new baker.”

  “Muffins!” Tara made it sound like pond slime. “Claire doesn’t eat carbs. How do you think she stays that size?”

  “Genetics.” Poppy shrugged Tara’s antipathy off. “Horace has stayed slim all these years.”

  Claire had spent her life trying to forget her genetic connection with Horace. “I am nothing like my father.”

  “So true.” Tara put her phone away. “Shall we?”

  Poppy gave Claire a long look.

  The sympathy in Poppy’s dark eyes made her uncomfortable, so Claire turned and strode for the door.

  Tara clippity-clopped behind her.

  Once they reached the front walk, Tara let out a groan of exasperation. “I can’t stand that woman.”

  “Poppy?” Poppy had committed the cardinal sin in Tara’s book of taking Ben’s attention away from her. Claire had her own axe to grind with Poppy, but she didn’t share Tara’s anger.

  Shouldn’t she though? The woman was here to steal her inheritance from her. Claire should dislike her even more than Tara did. But it was hard to dislike Poppy. So far, the reality of Poppy had refused to comply with the money-grubbing, gold-digging opportunist that existed in Claire’s imaginat
ion.

  Tara bleeped the locks on her car parked at the curb.

  Being divorced from a local police chief wouldn’t buy that set of wheels. Tara must have someone, or a group of someones, taking care of her finances for her.

  Curiosity got the better of her as Claire slid into the smooth leather seat. “So? You seeing anyone new?”

  “Bitch!” Tara gave her an exaggerated eyeroll. “This is me we’re talking about. I’m always seeing someone new.”

  For as long as Claire had known Tara, that had been true. Even when Tara was married to Ben, there had been new someones lurking in the shadows. It didn’t make any sense that Tara still clung to Ben like he belonged to her.

  Tara recycled one man for another without a pause in between. Claire didn’t know how Tara did it. Before Greg, there had been long dry spells, and it looked like Claire was entering another of those dry spells.

  The look of unadulterated approval Finn had given her yesterday popped into her mind. She kicked it right out again. She needed to get it into her head that there would be no breaking bread with the enemy, and no fraternizing either. Although the idea of fraternizing with Finn left her a bit breathless.

  Tara started the car, and something popular blared from the surround sound system. Claire had heard it on the radio, but she didn’t really listen to modern stuff. She liked to keep it old school.

  She envied Tara her ability to find men. For a girl who had been twenty-one before she’d had her first boyfriend, it didn’t seem possible. Claire never had one man lined up while she got rid of another.

  Exhibit: right now. If she’d had someone in her life, she wouldn’t be there dealing with things on her own.

  *

  Kelly’s Koffee Klatch had opened about three years ago and had quickly become the place to gather in Twin Elks. Along with great coffee, Kelly served fresh baked goods and a dose of cheerful sass. Except, not to her, or Tara.

  Silence descended as they stepped into the coffee shop. All gazes swung in their direction, and the natives did not look friendly. Claire caught her thumb worrying the edge of her other nails and shoved her hands in her pockets.

  “Tara.” Kelly’s wide, smiling mouth tightened. “Claire. How are you?”

  “Yo, Kelly!” A man called from the other side of the shop.

  Kelly glared in that direction. “Slow your roll, Vince, I’m getting there.”

  “But where exactly is it that you’re getting? Ecuador, so you can pick, roast and grind the beans yourself?”

  Claire giggled but quelled it under Tara’s furious look. What the hell? Vince was a funny guy.

  Spinning on her heel, Tara looked down her nose at Vince. “Ink dry on the divorce yet, Vince?”

  “You should know.” A tall, dark-haired guy with clean-cut good looks, Vince sunk his chin to his chest and crossed his arms. “You always did spend more time with my ex than me.”

  Chelsea had cut Vince loose? Claire found that hard to believe. More Tara’s friend than Claire’s, Chelsea had her hooks sunk deep into her husband and liked to drag him along behind her.

  Not anymore. Claire nodded to Vince. “I’m sorry to hear you’re divorced.”

  “Thanks.” Vince’s dark eyes softened, and he almost smiled at her. “But we’re both moving on.”

  “What will you have?” Kelly gave her a hard stare, clearly communicating she was not happy Claire was there and didn’t give a crap if she knew it.

  “Coffee. Black, please.” Nobody in the coffee shop looked glad to see her. Some looked openly hostile. Twin Elks was always like that. The weight of it pressed down on her. She should have suggested she and Tara go out of town.

  Except that felt like running away. Because it was running away. She didn’t owe Twin Elks anything. They had treated her mother like an outsider, barely tolerating her and making her miserable. It had been partly because of their hostility that life in Twin Elks had grown unbearable for Mom. Trapped in that house by Horace and with nobody to reach out to, was it any wonder she’d run away in the end?

  Now they were under the mistaken impression they could bully her. Claire straightened her shoulders.

  Her mother hadn’t known what they were like. She’d arrived in Twin Elks as a new bride with some hazy notion about the welcome of small towns. Boy had that bitten Mom in the ass.

  “Claire Winters.” Peg Hardwhistle stormed through the door. Permed hair tendrils twitching, her blue eyes fastened on Claire like manacles. “What brings you here?”

  “Mathews,” Claire said. “My name is Claire Mathews.”

  “Is that what it says on your birth certificate?” Peg folded her arms beneath her jutting breasts.

  It wasn’t any of Peg’s business. “I go by Claire Mathews.”

  “What brings you to town?” Peg had never cared about personal boundaries. If she wanted to know a thing, she asked. Subtlety would not deter her.

  Claire forced herself not to drop her gaze first. “I have business here.”

  “Business!” Peg snorted and shook her curls. “I bet that mother of yours heard all about Poppy Williams and sent you hotfooting it down here.”

  Claire’s mother wasn’t sending anyone anywhere anymore. In fact, she barely remembered her name on good days. But these people had treated her mother abominably and didn’t deserve the truth.

  “Is that what you would have done?” Tara sneered at Peg.

  Peg’s scrutiny transferred to Tara. “Don’t start on me, Tara. Everyone knows you’ve got a bug up your ass because Ben is getting remarried. Maybe if you spent less time being a bitch, you might have had a chance there.” Peg smiled a thing of evil incarnate. “Better luck with the next one, dear.”

  “Heya, Peg.” Kelly grinned from ear to ear. “What can I get you? And this one is on the house.”

  “Pfft!” Peg flapped a hand. “You’re never going to get anywhere if you keep giving everything away. I’ll have one of those mocha, frappy, creamy thingies.”

  Kelly laughed and twiddled knobs on her coffee machine. “One mocha, frappy, creamy thingy coming up.”

  “You know what I admire about you, Kelly?” Tara turned her spite toward another target.

  Claire really didn’t get why Tara had to make a bad situation worse and braced for it.

  So did Kelly. “I can’t wait to hear this.”

  “It’s how you just don’t care.” Tara showed her perfect teeth in a feral smile. “You walk around in the first thing you threw on this morning, and you don’t care what anyone thinks of how you look.”

  Wow! Claire almost choked on her coffee. Sometimes Tara soared way over the line and rubbed it out behind her with her claws.

  Kelly folded her arms and gave Tara a flat stare. “You want to drink your coffee or wear it, because either way you’ve outstayed your welcome here.”

  “Come on.” With a nonchalant shrug, Tara glanced at Claire. “We can find somewhere better to enjoy our coffee anyway.”

  Hastily Claire jammed a lid on her coffee. She dug a ten-dollar bill out of her purse and put it on the counter. “For the coffee.”

  “God, I hate this town.” Tara stood by her car, hands fisted as she breathed deep and fought for composure. “One day I’m going to walk right out of here and never look back.”

  “You could do that any time.” Claire didn’t want to rub salt in the wound, but Tara had been saying the same thing for years. “Pack your stuff and go. There’s nothing holding you here.”

  “Poppy would love that.” Tara yanked open her car door and slid into the seat.

  Claire climbed into her side.

  “But I’m not going to do it.” Tara started her car. “I’m not going to walk out of here and let her take what she wants. Somebody has to stop her.”

  Having come for almost an identical reason, Claire could only nod.r />
  Except, Ben didn’t belong to Tara. They’d been divorced for years before Poppy appeared in Twin Elks. Still, Tara was her friend, and Claire owed her loyalty. “If Ben is what you want then you should fight for him.”

  By the time Tara dropped her back at the house late in the afternoon, Claire’s mood had slid into lousy. There were reasons her mother had hated the place, and most of those reasons had taken every opportunity to tell her all about how unwelcome she was. Everywhere she and Tara had gone today, the judgy gazes had tracked them. Of course, some of that had been for Tara, but still it had stung.

  Finn was working on the front porch again. He stopped and watched her walk up the front walk and on to the porch. “You were out with Tara?”

  “Yes.” The way he said Tara’s name made her think he wasn’t a fan either.

  Finn looked disappointed. “You won’t win many friends with that one by your side.”

  The disappointment thing stung, which made no sense because it shouldn’t. She didn’t care what Finn of the sexy body and smoldering blue eyes thought of her. “Let me go upstairs right now and cry into my pillow about that.”

  Finn’s expression softened. “Rough day?”

  “Not especially.” Nobody saw past her mask if she didn’t want them to. Certainly not someone who had only met her yesterday. Except, the way Finn was looking at her with empathy worried her.

  The sooner she sold that dilapidated old piece of shit of a house and got the hell out of Twin Elks, the better for everyone.

  Books by Sarah Hegger

  Contemporary Romance

  Passing Through Series

  Drove All Night - Amazon

  Ticket To Ride - Amazon

  Walk On By

  Ghost Falls Series

  Positively Pippa - Amazon

  Becoming Bella - Amazon

  Blatantly Blythe - Amazon

  Willow Park Romances

  Nobody’s Angel - Amazon

  Nobody’s Fool - Amazon

  Nobody’s Princess - Amazon

  Medieval Romance

  Sir Arthur’s Legacy Series

 

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