Baldwin, Barbara - Indigo Bay.txt

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by Indigo Bay (lit)


  branded on her heart.

  Seven

  On previous occasions when Mica had visited Logan, no

  one knew she was gone because it had only been for a few

  hours at night. However, this morning when Mrs. Harris had

  casually asked her whereabouts over the past several days, Mica

  realized that Sea Crest and Indigo Bay ran on exactly the same

  timetable. To avoid having to explain her disappearances, she

  had mentioned vaguely that she was working on a case and not

  to worry if she was gone days at a time.

  Now, she sped towards Charleston, knowing she had to

  put some distance between herself and Sea Crest because the

  temptation to stay near Logan had been so strong it had made

  her physically ill. She stopped at a convenience store for

  antacids, but they did little to dispel her anxiety. Just as the

  gloomy rain battering the windows did little to improve her

  mood. It was ridiculous to feel that way, especially after getting

  so angry when she first read his note.

  Because of the time in which Logan lived, she could

  understand his overbearing attitude toward marrying her, even

  if he had told her instead of asking. What made her so upset

  was that, for a very brief time, she had actually thought about

  doing it.

  As soon as she got in her apartment, she called Katie and

  asked her to come for lunch. She hoped a visit with her friend

  would get Logan off her mind.

  “Katie, you’ve known me all your life, right?” Mica turned

  to her friend, who now sat in an overstuffed chair, legs curled

  under her.

  “Yeah, why?”

  “Have you ever known me to do anything not sensible?

  Have I ever strayed from the straight and narrow plan for my

  life?” Mica couldn’t quell the foreboding that something terribly

  wrong might occur because she had traversed time and ventured

  into the past.

  From the misgivings she had, she wondered if she had

  somehow upset history. Perhaps her longing for adventure had

  disrupted time waves, or ripples, or whatever science fiction

  writers called them.

  Katie looked up from the magazine on her lap. “What is

  this, a cross examination?” She gasped. “Oh, Mica, have you

  been picked up for speeding and need a character witness?”

  Mica had to smile at her friend’s theatrics, but it was true.

  She had never broken a law or done anything irresponsible.

  “Come on, help me out here, will you?”

  Katie scrunched up her face in thought. “Well, what about

  that time we smoked cigarettes out in the pool house after your

  parents went to bed?”

  “Katie, be serious! We were fourteen.”

  “I’m thinking...I’m thinking.”

  Mica went on as though Katie hadn’t spoken. “I mean, I

  always did what I was told. I had good grades and studied

  hard. Why would this happen to me?” She looked at her friend.

  “I’m a lawyer, for God’s sake. I believe in fact, not nonsense.

  Proof, not some long-dead apparitions or a machine that signals

  when ghosts appear.”

  She had explained just a little about the strange people in

  residence at Sea Crest, but she had not mentioned Logan. Yet

  somehow, she sensed his life was connected to Professor Bigley

  and the Barkers as much as Indigo Bay was connected with

  Sea Crest.

  Katie moved to the window, taking her hand. “Who are

  you trying to convince—me or yourself? Like you said, the

  man’s a quack. Did you do a background check on him?”

  Mica realized Katie thought she was upset because of the

  Professor. She decided not to alter that belief, because Katie

  would never comprehend the enormity of what Mica had

  done—even if she believed it, which was doubtful.

  “I asked around town, since he said he has been there

  several years before. He is what he says—a professor on

  sabbatical from Columbia, investigating paranormal

  phenomena.”

  “And he thinks there are ghosts at Sea Crest?”

  “Apparently. Look, I might go back. Come with me and

  see for yourself.” Perhaps if Katie went with her, she wouldn’t

  be tempted to cross that invisible line into Logan’s world.

  Logan’s image flashed in her mind, and her stomach

  plummeted. His kisses had fired her passion, and when they

  had made love—Mica silently moaned, her feminine core

  heating in remembrance of the exquisite torture he had put her

  through. She tried to focus on her friend’s voice.

  “I don’t know if I can get away. Matthew might not like

  it.”

  “Katie, show some independence! You slave away for Matt

  and the kids every day. You deserve some time to yourself.”

  Katie truly believed in her calling as a mother and wife, and

  chair of the Country Club Charity. She never did anything

  without Matt’s permission. Mica liked Matt, and Katie was a

  dear, but sometimes...

  “I’ll ask Matt.” Katie spun around and headed for the door.

  “Gotta run—school PTA is this afternoon. You will come for

  dinner tomorrow, won’t you?”

  “Do you promise not to serve up another Mr. Right?”

  “Honestly, Mica, just because Richard didn’t work out,

  don’t give up on men. We’ll find you one yet.” She waved and

  dashed out the door before Mica could tell her she had probably

  found the right man, but from the wrong century.

  Thomas Logan Rutledge—she must have been out of her

  mind to stay with him. Now, what could she do about the

  untenable situation she had created? Several easy solutions

  came to mind—seal the door at Sea Crest, never go up there

  again in this lifetime, or sell the place.

  Since Logan had no idea where she actually lived or the

  peculiarities regarding her arrival at Indigo Bay, she would

  never have to answer his questions. But Mica realized it

  wouldn’t be that easy. The fact was, she didn’t know if she

  could let him go.

  She grabbed a basket of dirty clothes and headed for the

  laundry room as she thought about the man whose life she had

  interrupted and who now wanted her to become a permanent

  part of it. Scared would be an understatement for the sensations

  gnawing at her middle and muddling her brain. She was terrified

  by the fact that she was even contemplating going back in

  time again, and her mind refused to dwell on the idea of actually

  staying back there.

  If Logan were a twenty-first century man living across town

  from her, she still would have hesitated before marrying him.

  She wasn’t sure she could give up her newfound independence

  for a man again, even for a man like Logan, who epitomized

  all the best qualities she could dream for in a life partner.

  His gentleness towards her, his sense of fairness and justice

  towards his freed slaves, and his humor and love of life were

  ideals Mica held close to her heart. That didn’t even take into

  account the way her heart catapulted whenever he was near, or

  the s
ensuous heights they had traveled that last night together.

  He symbolized everything she wanted and couldn’t have, all

  due to a breach in time.

  “Damn it all, anyway.” She let the lid to the washer bang

  down, the sound satisfying to her frustrated frame of mind.

  Her cell phone rang and she grabbed it off the counter.

  “Hello.” She didn’t care if she sounded bitchy. That was

  exactly how she felt at the moment.

  “Michaela, dear, you are home. I tried to call you at Sea

  Crest, but a nice woman named Anna said she hadn’t seen you

  in days. When did you get back?”

  “Hello, Mother. I’m not staying. I just came down to do a

  few things.” Mica knew she should have packed everything

  and come back to the city and to work, but she had time left—

  time to figure out what she wanted to do.

  “Well, as long as you’re in town, be here for dinner at

  seven. You know how your father detests late meals.”

  “Mother, I really don’t think I can make it.”

  “Michaela, I refuse to let my only daughter ruin her life.”

  “If you invited Richard to dinner, you won’t see me step

  foot inside the door.” Mica couldn’t understand why her mother

  wouldn’t let it go.

  “Now, dear, I don’t see why...” Mica heard a sigh on the

  other end of the line. “Please, come for dinner. I’ve found some

  old letters of your Aunt Theo’s.”

  Mica couldn’t resist, even knowing her mother would no

  doubt manage to bring Richard into the conversation at some

  point. “I’ll be there.”

  ***

  Dinner proved more pleasant than she expected, most likely

  because Richard hadn’t been invited. Since her mother refused

  to allow her father to discuss business at the table, Mica visited

  with him in the study after the meal. Trials had been scheduled

  and were being handled efficiently by junior executives, though

  her father reiterated his desire for her to return early.

  “Thirty days, Dad. That’s what you gave me, and that’s

  what I need.” The whole idea of taking time off had been to

  come to terms with her life and make the necessary adjustments

  to being a divorcée and career woman. So why did she now

  have doubts as to whether she really wanted that life any more?

  She seemed no closer to a resolution than when she had started

  her vacation.

  Even though her sensible, responsible side nagged her to

  return to work tomorrow, deep inside her woman’s heart she

  wasn’t ready to let go of Logan. She gave her father a kiss on

  the forehead and left him to his work.

  “In here, Michaela.” Her mother’s voice reached her from

  the parlor, and Mica shook off her own misgivings about

  delving into her aunt’s past.

  “As I told you the last time you popped in, most of our

  family’s historical documents have been given to the Society.

  When we sorted through things, Aunt Theo must have set aside

  these personal letters.” Her mother handed Mica a small bundle

  of letters, the yellowed envelopes addressed in a flowing script.

  “I tried to read them, but they don’t make much sense.”

  Mica carefully removed the ribbon tying the bundle

  together, lifting the first to examine the words. As she glanced

  down at the stack, she noted the envelopes were addressed to

  Theodora Josephine Ashley, but there were no street addresses

  or stamps on any of them. “Who are they from?”

  “Someone named Maggie. She must have been a friend.”

  Mica’s gaze snapped to her mother then back to the first

  letter that she now held in shaking hands. Maggie—Margaret.

  Could there be a connection?

  The first letter made reference to Theo’s ride in an airplane.

  It seemed Maggie found that incredible, since she had been

  frightened to death when George (her husband?) raced his

  trotters with her in the curricle.

  Those words didn’t seem at all odd to Mica considering

  her aunt’s age and the fact that many older families in the area

  still maintained a stable, even if they also had automobiles and

  traveled in jets.

  Mica read through more letters, but none mentioned

  anything she could connect with Sea Crest and Indigo Bay.

  She also noted none of them contained the year in which they

  were written. The writer began with the month and day, giving

  no indication when, in her aunt’s eighty-nine years of life, these

  letters were written.

  She silently read on. Thomas continues to study very hard,

  but, oh dear, how that boy misses his father. He doesn’t return

  home as often now that Elizabeth has remarried, for he doesn’t

  deal well with his stepfather, Charles.

  The parchment fluttered from Mica’s nerveless hands onto

  her lap. Her vision blurred until the script ran together, and she

  couldn’t see any of the words except the first—Thomas. Could

  it be?

  Had her aunt somehow discovered Sea Crest’s secret and

  gone back in time to make the acquaintance of Logan’s aunt?

  How did they manage a correspondence through time? Why

  had her aunt never told her anything about this? And how could

  she jump to such incredible conclusions based on the

  appearance of a name that had, no doubt, been very popular

  throughout history?

  Luckily, her mother had begun her embroidery and paid

  little attention to Mica. She placed a hand to her chest in hopes

  of stilling the heart palpitations that thundered clear up to her

  ears. She swallowed several times and blinked her eyes against

  the pictures her mind conjured up.

  Instead of blocking out the images, Logan’s face came to

  view, his dark hair gleaming and a frown bringing his brows

  together. She could almost hear him say something like—Leave

  things be, Michaela Marie. Don’t question fate. Just enjoy

  each day to the fullest.

  “Easy for you to say. You don’t have to figure out which

  century—”

  “What did you say, dear?” Mica’s mother looked up from

  her sewing.

  “What? Oh, nothing. Just something I read.” Mica hadn’t

  realized she had spoken aloud. She took a breath and willed

  her hands to quit shaking as she pulled the last letter from the

  envelope. The writing was the same, but the message proved

  incriminating.

  Dearest Theo,

  Poor Thomas. I fear there will be nothing left of his legacy,

  for Neil and his father are bent on destroying Indigo Bay. If

  only my poor brother-in-law were still alive. While I love dear

  Elizabeth, she just is not strong enough...

  The script faded to nothing, water stains blurring the rest

  of the message, but it had been enough to make Mica’s hand

  tremble once again. She very gently folded the letter and

  returned it to its envelope, half afraid it would disintegrate

  before her eyes.

  So there was a connection between her aunt and Indigo

  Bay. Did she dare return to Logan and tell him that his aunt

  had
written to her aunt, and the letters indicated Neil spelled

  trouble? What if he questioned her about her aunt? How could

  she ever begin to explain that the two ladies had somehow

  carried on a correspondence even though far more than one

  hundred years separated their lives?

  Mica hung her head, rubbing her forehead with her fingers.

  Logan’s aunt could have written the letters, but in actuality,

  they didn’t prove a thing. They didn’t point to any facts that

  weren’t already clear. The only supposition Mica could make

  was that her aunt might have known about the door at Sea

  Crest and had tried to tell her about Logan, whom her aunt had

  called Thomas, so that she could help him in some way.

  At the moment, she couldn’t begin to imagine how she

  could be of help in an era where women were not acknowledged

  as having the ability to do much of anything. The most she

  could accomplish by going back would be to warn Logan of

  Neil’s plans to destroy Indigo Bay. And that wasn’t even very

  clear since everything alluded to in Maggie’s letters had already

  happened in Logan’s life.

  By returning, she would open herself, and Logan, to more

  hurt. It had been hard enough to leave when she had. Given the

  circumstances and progression of their relationship, she could

  only imagine it would be twice as hard the next time.

  Was it fair to Logan to return when she knew she couldn’t

  stay? Oh, God, she thought her life had been complicated

  before. The whole idea of going to Sea Crest had been to resolve

  her conflicts, not create more.

  “Michaela, dear, it’s getting late. You’ll stay in your old

  room, won’t you?” Her mother’s question gave Mica something

  else to focus on.

  “I really should return to the apartment. I left clothes in

  the washer. Besides, I’ll probably return to Indigo—Sea Crest—

  early tomorrow.” She let out a sigh. “Mother, was there anything

  else, any other correspondence?” Mica didn’t know what she

  wanted to find, but her mind refused to relinquish its quest.

  “What are you looking for, dear? Didn’t those letters

  contain any useful information about whatever it is you’re trying

  to learn?”

  “No.” Mica refused to disclose even the slightest tidbit of

  the strange coincidences. Her mother would have her committed

 

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