by Nora Roberts
“But—”
“We don’t want to leave this space empty, do we?” She put her hands on her hips as she turned a circle. “We’ll need a counter there, for the cash register, for checkout. Small again, nothing fancy. You can build that, can’t you, Owen?”
“Ah … sure.”
“Coward,” Beckett muttered as their mother walked back to study the closet-sized powder room.
“Bet your ass, bro.”
“Pretty little wall-hung sink, a new toilet, nice little mirror and light—done. Paint and pretty lights out here and upstairs. Oh, new exterior paint. We’ll go with what complements what we’re doing on the inn.”
“Mom, even if we could split some of the crew, get this done, you have to get somebody to run it, stock it and—”
“Already there. Don’t you worry about any of that. I’ve talked to Madeline—from our book club. You know Madeline Cramer,” Justine continued in her cheerful steamroll over objections. “She used to manage an art gallery in Hagerstown.”
“Yeah, sure, but—”
“She knows all sorts of local artists and craftsmen. We’re going to do all local art and crafts, showcase what we have, who we are.” Sunglasses perched on her head, paint fan at the ready, Justine beamed at the space. “It’ll be wonderful.”
He couldn’t argue with that. He couldn’t argue at all, Beckett realized. He was outgunned. “We’re only going to be able to send somebody over to work when we can clear them from the inn job.”
“Well, of course, sweetie. Ry, do you have time to help me figure out the wall there?”
“Sure.”
“Won’t this be fun?” She turned that cheerful beam on all of them. “We’ll add a fresh, new business to town, give local artists a wonderful venue, and have a nice little lead-in to the inn before it’s done and open.”
She put her hands on her hips. “Any of you have dates tonight?”
“Who has time?” Owen muttered. “No, ma’am, not me.”
She got shakes of the head from the other two, sighed loud and long before bending to address Dumbass. “How am I going to get girls and grandchildren unless they start hunting them up? Well, why don’t you all come to dinner? I’ll pick up some fresh corn on the way home, make you a feast.”
And rope them into refining details on her latest brainstorm, Beckett thought. But what the hell.
“I’m in.” He glanced around as Clare poked her head in the door.
“Hi. Family meeting?”
“Just adjourned,” Justine told her.
“Oh, it looks so sad in here now. I’m sorry to see The Gallery go, but I know she’ll love having a bigger space over in Shepherdstown.”
“It won’t look sad for long. You’re just what I need.” Justine held the paint strip up again. “Tell me what you think of this color for the walls.”
“I love it. Sunny. Warm, but not overbright. Do you have a new tenant already?”
“We’re the new tenant. I guess you haven’t talked to Madeline recently.”
“Not since our last book club meeting.”
While his mother filled Clare in—surely satisfied with Clare’s enthusiastic delight—Beckett walked outside, then sat on the steps leading up to the bookstore porch.
They’d figure it out, he decided. The scheduling of crew and work, the materials. He could eke some time out if it needed a bit of redesigning. No need for permits if they didn’t change anything structurally, and since it would remain a retail space.
Owen would deal with the business license, the paperwork, and the rest.
But, Jesus, the timing. Crap timing at the end of a crap day.
At least he’d get a home-cooked meal out of it.
His mother came out with Clare, repeated the process, this time holding a new strip up to the exterior wall before she frowned over at Beckett.
“You look beat, baby.”
“Hard day at the ranch. Ironed out,” he added before she pecked at him. “We’ll fill you in later.”
“See that you do. For now, why don’t you go ahead and run Clare home.”
“Oh no, I’m fine. It’s a nice walk.”
“Why are you walking?” Beckett asked her. “It’s nearly a mile.”
“Hardly more than a half mile, and I like to walk. My sitter’s car was acting up, so I left her mine in case. I don’t want her to have to pile the boys in and come get me.”
“I’ll drive you.”
“Really, you don’t have to bother.”
“You can argue with me,” he said as he pushed up. “But there’s no point in arguing with her.” He stepped over, kissed his mother’s cheek. “Remind Ry and Owen they’ve got the tile installer coming.”
“Will do.”
“See you later, slave driver.”
Chapter Six
“I appreciate the lift,” Clare began as they walked to his truck. “Especially since you look tired.”
“Not tired. It’s just been a pisser of a day.”
“Problems with the hotel?”
“Irritations equaling a day I’d rather have been swinging a hammer than talking on the phone. It better be worth it in the long run,” he added with a glance toward the inn.
“It will be. And now the gift shop. That’s exciting.”
“It’ll be more exciting six months from now.” He opened the passenger door of the truck, took a clipboard, a fat notebook, and an old, dirty towel off the seat.
“It’s mostly just painting, isn’t it?”
He turned, gave her a long look.
“What?”
“First, it’s never just painting, not with Mom. Second, you smell really great.”
A horn tooted. Glancing over, Beckett spotted one of his carpenters driving by, waved. Clare boosted into the truck.
“Are we still on for Friday night?”
“Alva’s free to watch the kids.”
“Good.” He stood there a minute, just enjoying the fact that Clare sat in his truck, and they were making plans for Friday night. “Does seven work for you?”
“Yeah, seven’s fine.”
“Good,” Beckett repeated, then closed the door and walked around to the driver’s side. “So, are the kids up about school starting?”
“Liam’s all about it. Murphy’s thrilled—especially with his Power Rangers lunch box. And Harry’s still pretending not to be.”
Beckett pulled out of the lot, caught the light, made the left. “How about you?”
“We’ve got new shoes, backpacks, lunch boxes, crayons, pencils, notebooks. The Mad Mall Safari is now over, and that’s a relief. With Murphy in school full-time, a lot of the child-care issues go away, and that makes life easier.”
“I hear the but.”
“But … my baby’s going to kindergarten. Five minutes ago I had him in a backpack, now he’ll be carrying one to school. Harry’s moving halfway through elementary school. It doesn’t seem possible. So, I’ll drop them off Monday morning, go home, have a good cry. And that’ll be that.”
“I always figured my mom did a happy dance the minute we walked down the lane to the school bus.”
“The happy dance comes after the good cry.”
“Got it.” He pulled into her short gravel drive behind her minivan.
“I can’t ask you in to dinner. Avery and Hope are coming.”
“That’s okay. Mom’s bribing us with a meal.”
She hesitated, gave him a sidelong glance. “You could come in if you have a minute, for something cold to drink.”
“I’ve got a minute.” Testing them both, he leaned over to open her door, stayed where he was, looking into her eyes, into the glimmer of green over gray. “It’s nice. Being close to you without pretending I’m not trying to be close to you.”
“It’s strange knowing you want to be.”
“Good strange or bad strange?”
“Good and strange,” she said, and got out.
He didn’t really know her h
ouse. He’d been inside a few times. She’d hired Ryder to do some work shortly after she’d bought it, and he’d helped.
Any excuse.
She’d hosted a couple of backyard cookouts over the years, so he’d been in the backyard, the kitchen.
But he didn’t know how the place worked, day-to-day. It was something that interested him about buildings and the people who lived or worked in them. And particularly interested him about her.
She had flowers planted in the front, a nice, well-tended mix suffering a bit from what his mother called the late-summer shabbies. Her tiny patch of lawn needed mowing.
He ought to help her with that.
She’d painted her door a deep blue, had a brass Celtic knot knocker centered on it.
She opened it directly onto the living room with a small-scale sofa in blue and green stripes, a couple of chairs in the green. The remains of a multi–Matchbox car wreck scattered on the hardwood.
The bookshelves he’d helped build took up an entire wall. It pleased him to see she made good use of them by crowding them with books, family photos, a few trinkets.
“Come on back to the kitchen.”
He stopped in the doorway of a small room with the walls covered with maps and posters. Colorful cubbies held toys, the ones that weren’t littering the floor. He studied child-sized bean bag chairs, little tables, and the debris three young boys made.
“Nice.”
“It gives them a place to share, and get away from me.”
She continued back, passed the bolt-hole of a powder room under the stairs and into the combination kitchen/dining room.
White appliances and dark oak cabinets. Fresh summer fruit in a wooden bowl on the short run of white countertop between the stove and refrigerator, the refrigerator covered with kids’ drawings and a monthly planner calendar. Four chairs around the square wooden table.
“The kids’ll be in the back. Give me a second.”
She went to the door, called through the screen. “Hi, guys!”
There were whoops and shouts, and from his angle Beckett saw her face just light up.
“Clare! Why didn’t you call me to come get you?”
“I got a ride home. No problem.”
Beckett heard the scrape of a chair, then saw Alva Ridenour come to the door.
He’d had her for algebra, freshman year, and calculus his senior. As she had then, she wore silver glasses perched on her nose, and her hair—now brilliantly white—pulled back in a no-nonsense bun.
“Why, Beckett Montgomery. I didn’t know you were running a taxi service.”
“Anywhere you want to go, Miz Ridenour. The meter’s never running for you.”
She opened the screen as the boys rushed in to assault Clare with tales of the day’s adventures, questions, pleas, complaints.
Alva scooted around them, gave Beckett a poke in the shoulder. “When’s that inn going to be finished?”
“It’ll be a while yet, but when it is I’ll give you a personal tour.”
“You’d better.”
“Do you need any help with your car?”
“No. My husband managed to get it into the shop. How’s your mama?”
“Busy, and keeping us busier.”
“As she should. Nobody wants a pack of lazy boys. Clare, I’m going to get on.”
“I’ll drive you home, Miz Ridenour.”
“It’s two houses down, Beckett. Do I look infirm?”
“No, ma’am.”
“You boys.” She used her former teacher’s voice, and the three kids fell silent. “Give your mother a chance to take a breath. I want to hear all about the first day of school when I see you next. And Liam? You pick up those cars in the living room.”
“But Murphy—”
“You brought them down, you pick them up.” She winked at Clare. “I’ll be on my way.”
“Thanks, Alva.”
“Oh, I promised them cookies and milk if they didn’t fight for a half hour. They made it.”
“Cookies and milk it is.”
“Did you fight with your brothers today?” Alva asked Beckett.
“Not in the last half hour.”
She cackled out a laugh as she left.
Murphy tugged on Beckett’s hand. “Do you wanna see my Power Rangers?”
“You got Red Ranger from Mystic Force?”
Murphy’s eyes widened. He could only nod rapidly before running from the room.
“Wash your hands,” Clare called after him. “Now you’ve done it,” she murmured to Beckett. “Wash up,” she told the other boys, “if you want cookies.”
They obviously did, as they dashed off.
“Power Rangers are Murphy’s current obsession. He has action figures, DVDs, pajamas, Tshirts, costumes, transports. We had a Power Ranger theme for his birthday in April.”
“I used to watch them on TV. I was about twelve, I guess, so I said they were cheesy. But I ate it up.”
As he spoke he watched her take little plates out of a cupboard to set on the table. Power Rangers, Spider-Man, and Wolverine.
“Which one’s mine?”
“Sorry?”
“Don’t I rate cookies and milk and a superhero plate?”
“Oh. Sure.” Obviously surprised, she went back to the cupboard, chose another plate. “Han Solo.”
“Perfect. I dressed up as Han Solo for Halloween.”
“How old were you?”
“Twenty-seven.”
He loved the way she laughed, and when she brought the plate and four small, colorful plastic cups to the table, he caught her hand.
“Clare.”
“I got ALL of them.” Murphy muscled in a white plastic basket loaded with action figures. “See, we got Mighty Morphin and Jungle Fury and see, I got Pink Ranger even though she’s a girl.”
Beckett crouched down, took out one of the Green Rangers. “This, my man, is an amazing collection.”
Murphy, eyes wide and deadly earnest, nodded. “I know.”
He stayed nearly an hour. Clare would have kissed him again just for the fact he’d given her kids such a great time. He’d never seemed bored or annoyed with a conversation dominated by superheroes, their powers, their partners, their foes.
But he didn’t kiss her.
Of course, he didn’t kiss her, Clare thought as she slipped potatoes, quartered and coated with olive oil and herbs, in to roast. That would’ve proved awkward with three kids hanging all over him.
She set her cutting board over the sink—the better to watch the kids, who’d gone back to swarming all over the play set her parents had given them—and minced garlic for the chicken’s marinade.
They’d so enjoyed having a man to play with.
They had her father, of course, and Clint’s dad when he came to visit, and Joe, Alva’s husband. But they didn’t really have anyone, well, their dad’s age.
So, it had been a nice hour.
Now she was behind in dinner prep, but that was okay. They’d eat a bit later than planned. The evening would be nice enough to have dinner out on the deck, then the boys could spill back out into the yard after for a bit before bedtime.
She whisked ingredients together, poured the marinade over chicken breasts, covered the bowl, set it aside.
Clare enjoyed the kitchen time, listening to her boys’ voices carry on the warm air, the bark of the neighbor’s dog, the scents from the oven, from her little kitchen garden. Which reminded her she had to do some weeding and some harvesting over the weekend.
And the laundry, she remembered, she’d let go because they’d stayed so long at Vesta the night before.
When she’d kissed Beckett in the shadows of the inn.
Silly to obsess over that, she thought. She’d kissed other men since Clint died.
Well, two, so that qualified as men. Her mother’s neighbor’s son, a perfectly nice accountant who lived and worked in Brunswick. Three dates there, two pleasant enough kisses. And no genuine intere
st or chemistry on either side.
Then Laurie’s aunt’s friend, an estate attorney from Hagerstown. Great-looking guy, she recalled. Sort of interesting, but very bitter regarding his recently-ex-wife. One date, one fraught good-night kiss. He’d even sent her flowers, with an apology for spending the evening talking about his ex.
How long ago had that been? she wondered. Idly she counted back as she peeled carrots. Harry had fallen off his trike and chipped his front baby tooth the morning before she’d gone to dinner with the accountant, so he’d been five.
God, over three years ago, she realized. And she’d gone out with the lawyer the day after she’d moved Murphy into his big-boy bed, so he’d been three. About two years there.
Which was more telling, the fact she measured time by little events in her kids’ lives or that she hadn’t even thought of dating for two years?
She supposed one was the same as the other.
She had the chicken simmering in wine and herbs when she heard the front door open, and Avery’s hail. “We come bearing gifts.”
“Back here!” Clare took one last glance out the window before hurrying toward the front of the house. “Hope.” She grabbed the woman in a hug. “You look amazing.”
It was invariably true. She radiated chic in her casual summer skirt and flounced top the color of chili peppers.
“Oh, it’s good to see you.” Hope returned the hug with an extra squeeze. “It’s been too long. God, something smells amazing.”
“Dinner, which is a little behind. Oh, sunflowers.”
“Couldn’t resist them.”
“I love them. Come on back.”
“Where are my men?” Hope shook the trio of gift bags she carried.
“You know you don’t have to bring them presents.”
“It’s as much fun for me.”
“Hey, I brought the wine.” Avery tapped the bag in her arm. “Which will also be as much fun for me. Let’s go open it, get this party started.”
Hope headed straight out the back, laughing as the kids stampeded toward her, and the gift bags. Clare watched through the screen door while Avery opened the wine.