Mary Margret Daughtridge SEALed Bundle

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Mary Margret Daughtridge SEALed Bundle Page 65

by Mary Margret Daughtridge


  Harris tossed aside the bank statement he’d been studying. “Did you know Riley’s school was that expensive?”

  “I feel so guilty,” his older-by-fifteen-minutes twin said. “You and I should have gotten jobs when we graduated instead of going straight to med school. David’s the only one who wasn’t dependent on her.”

  That didn’t let him off the hook. He was also the only one who had been an adult when Eleanor, Harris, and Riley’s father had died. He’d accepted his mother’s reassurances that his stepfather had left them well-provided for—it was what he wanted to hear.

  He’d been totally engrossed by medical corpsman and SEAL training. When he’d made it home for Christmas or the occasional birthday, everything had seemed fine. Pretty much like always. He’d fixed a leaky faucet or cleaned the gutters and told himself what a good son he was.

  Eleanor stiffened her shoulders. “Maybe if I get a job, Harris can stay in med school, and Riley can live with us.”

  It was typical that Eleanor had gone into problem-solving mode and was planning how to care for her twin. While unquestionably brilliant, Harris had always been willing to turn practicalities over to his more assertive sister.

  Well, not on his watch was she going to sacrifice her dreams for Harris’s. It was time for Davy to man up. He was the oldest, and he was already established. If they’d had his life insurance, there would have been enough money to get them past the shock, and to buy enough time to get their feet under them. Instead, he was alive. He’d just have to make sure the twins finished their education and Riley was taken care of.

  “You’re going to stay in medical school. Both of you.”

  “How?

  “We’ll sell the house. This semester is paid for. You might as well finish it. In the meantime, we’ll find scholarships, loans, something.”

  “But what about Riley?”

  “Lower your voice.” Their fourteen-year-old brother, Riley, had bionic ears—when he chose to listen. He’d wandered off to the family room to play video games as soon as they got home from the funeral.

  “But what about him? He doesn’t adapt well to change. Our hours are crazy, but yours are crazier. I still think I should get a job. I can provide the stability he needs.”

  “Mom’s will names me guardian,” Davy reminded her, more sharply than he intended. The pain in his head was making him nauseated now. He needed to end this discussion.

  “Sorry.” Elle stiffened at his tone but didn’t back down. “I didn’t mean to step on your toes. But you haven’t been around much. I don’t think you know what you’re letting yourself in for.”

  Davy lurched to his feet. The pain was affecting his balance. He had to get out of there before he threw up. “I’ll figure something out.”

  Davy woke up in his old room, now Elle’s, with his sister standing over him holding a white Nike shoe box.

  “Feeling better?” She sat down on the edge of the bed, shoe box in her lap.

  He was. The headache had retreated.

  “We’ve finished packing up personal items—things we need to remove if the house is to be unoccupied.”

  “Sorry I didn’t help you.”

  “Lon kept us organized. You needed to rest. You’re not recovered yet. Listen, I packed a box of the things Mother kept for you. I’m kind of embarrassed it’s so small.”

  “I’m surprised there’s anything. I didn’t live here.” For all practical purposes, he hadn’t lived in this house since he left for military school when he was twelve. It had been ridiculous for his room to be unoccupied while the younger kids had to double up and ridiculous to hang on to mementoes that only cluttered up space needed by someone else.

  Davy sat up. “Let’s see what you’ve got.”

  “Here’s the watch Daddy gave you for graduation. Some old coins. Dad’s arrowheads. Ten or twelve. Not enough to be called a collection.”

  “His arrowheads? Why are they mine?”

  “Mom put them away for you after he died. She said you loved them when you were a little boy.” She turned over a photograph. “I found this in the bottom of her jewelry box. I thought you’d like to have it. That’s Carl, isn’t it?”

  Carl was what the family had always called Davy’s biological father. Dad was his stepfather. Frozen forever in time, Carl appeared younger than Davy was now. He was smiling just like—Davy glanced in the long dressing-table mirror—just like Davy used to. Before shrapnel had opened his cheek from the corner of his mouth almost to his ear.

  Davy sifted among the items to uncover a tiny, square jeweler’s box. He opened it. Against satin, yellowed and slightly grubby with age, nestled a woman’s diamond ring, a solitaire set in platinum. He snapped it closed and offered it to Elle. “You should have this, shouldn’t you?”

  “I have the diamond Daddy gave her. This is the engagement ring from her first marriage. Mom said it should be yours.” Elle’s smile was a crumpled mix of sadness and affection. “To give to your bride—you know how sentimental she was.”

  “I know. But,” he held it out again, “seriously, you take it.”

  “Seriously, no.”

  Davy tossed it back in the shoe box with the other forgotten pieces of his past.

  Chapter 10

  Wilmington, NC

  JJ CARUTHERS’ CELL PHONE CHIMED. CHECKING THE CALLER ID, she saw it was Blount Satterfield, her soon-to-be fiancé. She hand-motioned to her executive assistant, Katherine, that she needed to take the call. “Hello, Blount.”

  “Hey. I wanted to make sure we’re on for tonight.”

  “Of course.” JJ didn’t understand why Blount so frequently had to call to find out if she was going to keep a date with him. She didn’t say what she didn’t mean, and when she made an agreement, she kept it.

  “Well, you said you didn’t like to go to weddings and I wasn’t sure.”

  “Into every life, the occasional wedding must fall,” JJ quipped. “Including mine. You took what I said about not liking them too seriously.”

  Attending weddings had never been a favorite part of her social duties, and, after last year’s disaster, she liked them less. But since she had to attend one, there was no point in dwelling on the negative. She wished she’d never told Blount how she felt. She changed the subject. “Tell me again, whose wedding are we going to?”

  “Emmie Caddington. A friend—well, more a former colleague. She was an instructor last year in the biology department. She’s come back here to get married.”

  JJ wondered why Blount, a tenured professor at UNCWilmington, would want to attend the wedding of a lowly instructor—a lowly former instructor. “A good friend?”

  “Just someone I used to know. But a lot of the faculty will be attending. Since I’m invited, and people like Senator Teague Calhoun will be there, it’s an opportunity to network.”

  Having achieved the holy grail of tenure, Blount had ambitions on the administrative side of the university system. In these days of grant money drying up, an administrator with an inside track to the people who had money, or who could steer funds in a university’s direction, was very valuable indeed.

  JJ respected his ambition and his ability to stay focused on his goals. They had that in common. It would benefit them both to be seen in public together, while in private, their interests were separate enough to keep them out of each other’s way.

  He was fine with the prenup they had discussed. Married to her, he would be invited into a world of power and influence—something he valued more than money. She was ninety percent sure he would officially propose tonight, and she would officially say yes.

  JJ checked the oversized stainless-steel clock on the wall of her office. “Listen, if I’m going to be ready for you to pick me up at the beach cottage by five-thirty, I’m going to have to leave soon, and I have a few more things to see to.”

  “I’ll be so glad when you give up that place.”

  JJ was a little surprised by his vehemence. “I won’t. I’v
e loved living there. I didn’t realize it bothered you.”

  “It’s just that Topsail Island is so far from Wilmington. I have to factor in another thirty minutes.”

  “On a good day,” JJ acknowledged. “But you know, I’ve almost enjoyed the commute. It gives me time to decompress a little. I don’t take work home with me quite as much. You have a point though. It’s a long way for you to go, only to turn around and go back to Wrightsville Beach. I can drive myself and meet you at the hotel, if you’d rather.”

  “No,” Blount answered as she knew he would. “That’s fine. I don’t really mind picking you up.”

  Katherine stuck her head around the office door, waving the floor-plan inventory reconciliation report for her signature.

  These days, the car business had more to do with massaging the numbers than with the glamour of cars, even the sexiest high-end foreign cars. Businesses selling high-ticket items like cars and boats survived on something called a floor plan.

  A floor plan was a line of credit extended by a lender using the inventory as collateral. The lender kept a list of every car in the floor plan, and every month the car went unsold, interest had to be paid on that car. When a car was sold, the loan on it had to be paid in full immediately—not at the end of the month.

  Every business that sold big-ticket items and depended on volume walked a tightrope between the amount of inventory they were required to carry and the interest they had to pay on that inventory. During economic downturns, businesses might be forced to carry more inventory than they could possibly sell. It took fancy footwork to maintain the cash flow and creative financing to stay in the black.

  Sometime in the next week, the bank’s floor-plan auditor would come around to check the vehicle identification number, or VIN, of every car on the lot against what was listed in the floor plan. Mistakes could be costly. If the auditor found cars unaccounted for and for which the bank hadn’t been paid, the dealership was considered “out of trust.” Being “out of trust” could spell doom. Car dealers everywhere had been forced out of business when they lost their line of credit.

  JJ had invested in new software to keep more accurate, real-time data on exactly where Caruthers was with the floor plan. “Gotta go, Blount,” JJ told him, already studying the numbers. “I’ll see you later.”

  Report signed and dispatched, JJ glanced at the wall clock again. She liked the clock for its polished face and cuneiform-like numerals. She especially liked the large distance that the sleek hands moved to measure the minutes. Unlike the relentlessly changing numbers on the digital clock on her desk, those on the wall clock gave time a sort of spaciousness. There was very little time left before her grandfather’s deadline, but she had made it. By midnight, JJ would be engaged.

  She had had a year in which to grow resigned to the inevitable.

  A year in which to search for a legal way to stop her grandfather’s machinations—and to learn there was none. The car business had been passed down in the family for three generations. Her great-great grandfather had insisted it not be divided among his heirs, and the tradition had continued. JJ’s grandfather was the sole owner. He could do anything he wished with it, including dismantle it and sell the parts if she didn’t get married.

  A year to consult doctors about her grandfather’s health—and learn that his heart condition might eventually kill him, but so slowly he could very well die of something else first. His mind was as sharp as ever and likely to remain so. Trying to wrest control of the business on the grounds of incompetence would be expensive and probably fail.

  She’d learned a long time ago not to fight what couldn’t be changed. Far better to adapt and make circumstances work for you.

  By the time her parents’ marriage had had its final eruption, she had already found more security than she’d ever had before in the dealership’s active orderliness and purpose. She had somewhere to be other than on the battleground of her parents’ marriage.

  At the car place, there was always noise in the repair bays—whines of power screwdrivers and percussive bangs from compressed-air power wrenches tightening lug nuts—but never discord. People came and went (hired, fired, and retired) and car models changed with the years, but the purpose, the need, and the work of the business stayed exactly the same.

  She couldn’t remember the first time she’d come here. From her babyhood, the dealership had always been the background of her life. She starred in her first commercial at two. When she was thirteen, she had realized that Caruthers was hers—or would be one day. She had drawn the first unrestricted breath she’d known in years. And the business had moved into the foreground.

  She’d had a year to get to know each of the four men her grandfather had selected.

  The cardiac surgeon—that one had never gotten out of the parking lot. It was harder for him to find time to date than it was for her, and that was saying something.

  She and the scion of the agribusiness family had become friends almost instantly and still were. But he had known exactly what he wanted in a wife—and it wasn’t someone dedicated to a business of her own.

  The lawyer was a decent man, one who shared her commitment to service in the community. But he was captivated by her beauty and looking for true love. He would have married her in a heartbeat, and she would have broken his heart in no time. Even with the future of Caruthers at stake, she couldn’t use him without regard for his welfare.

  That left Blount. She had always intended to marry some day. The last thing she needed was to get sentimental about marriage at this point. Blount would do very well. JJ scooped up a contract she wanted to study before Monday and tucked her purse under her arm. There was just time to check on the progress of the adoption fair. Several times a year, JJ invited animal rescue groups to use the parking lot to show off pets available for adoption and to raise money.

  The phone clipped to the Italian leather belt of her black silk-crepe slacks sang “We Are the World” as she descended the white metal stairs from her office on the mezzanine to the polished black granite floor of the car showroom. A soaring, semicircular bank of windows filled the building with sunlight all day. She’d only been sixteen when the old headquarters was razed and SEALed with a Ring 73 the new building put in its place, but her grandfather had included her in every decision.

  She loved the black, silver, and white color scheme; the clean serenity of the façade’s classical proportions; and the efficiency and functionality of the back sections. It was she who had insisted on a spotless lounge for customers waiting for their cars to be serviced and a quiet room equipped with child-sized furniture and toys where tots could be entertained. Tires and motor oil, plastics and lubricants smelled like security to her.

  She put the phone to her ear. She blessed the technology that had created cell phones. Their advent had eliminated the unending noise of a public address system that had to be audible over a fourteen-acre lot and kept her in touch no matter where she was—since she wasn’t likely to be found in her office. And while her employees knew they could come to her at any time, she preferred for them not to have to. She preferred to be so visible and present in the workings of the business that she already knew of any problems before someone had to come to her.

  While answering a salesman’s question, JJ waved to Kelly at the concierge desk and held up her car keys to show she was leaving. From a rack near the door, she snagged stylish sunglasses, intertwined J’s decorating the stems, and headed out to the sun-drenched lot.

  The sunglasses were an innovation of JJ’s that had evolved into a Caruthers tradition—a piece of its cachet.

  Her eyes were sensitive to light. Without protection, she found spending time on the lot to be painful. In a seeming paradox, the problem was even worse in the fall and winter than in the summer. Even in winter, the sun was still plenty hot and bright, capable of burning. Being lower in the sky, the sun sent the millions of hot, sharp shards of reflection straight into the eyes.

  Su
nglasses were vital. And yet JJ couldn’t seem to keep up with them. She replaced them so often that she finally resorted to buying them wholesale. They became a sort of personal trademark, and since whether she meant to or not, she left them wherever she went, she turned them into a calling card. Gold intertwined J’s were added. All around Wilmington, people sported “Shades of JJ.”

  She didn’t pass the glasses out wholesale. Customers had to ask for a pair, which meant salesmen had a chance to meet them even before they “looked.” Customers were asked to return the glasses when they left the lot, giving salesmen another chance to establish a relationship when customers left. A lot of people didn’t return the glasses, of course, but that was okay. Every time they looked at the glasses, they subconsciously remembered they had been given something and asked to return.

  When a customer bought a car, a pair of the glasses in a special case was tucked into the glove compartment. The salesman would open the glove compartment and say, “Here is the manual, and here’s your registration, and these are the sunglasses JJ wants you to have as a present and a thank you.”

  Other dealers had tried similar promotions, but none attained the cachet of Shades of JJ.

  “Have my people looked after you?” JJ asked a few minutes later when she reached the rescue group’s leader, a serious-looking young woman with short, straight hair, who was dressed in jeans and a plaid flannel shirt. Even though it was a beautiful fall day, JJ had resisted going to see the animals until now, knowing how hard it would be not to want one of the dogs.

  “They’ve been wonderful, JJ. They always are. We really appreciate them setting up this tent.”

  JJ nodded with satisfaction at the temporary pens where a couple of older dogs snoozed at the back of the tent. “I thought the last time you came, it would be better if we could provide the dogs some shade. Today feels more like real summer than Indian summer. But it can get hot out here on the pavement, even on a cool day. Glad it’s working. Is there anything else we can do for you?”

 

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