Debbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series

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Debbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series Page 28

by Debbie Macomber


  “I like you in dark glasses. They make you look mysterious.”

  She laughed; there wasn’t a thing mysterious about her—certainly not her growing attraction to him.

  “Next, consider the background music.”

  “Dire Straits? Guns n’ Roses? Red Hot Chili Peppers?”

  “No,” she said with a beleaguered sigh. “I was thinking more along the lines of Neil Diamond, Barry Manilow, Henry Mancini.”

  “Barry Manilow? Please, not Barry Manilow.”

  “I happen to like Barry Manilow,” she chided.

  Now it was his turn to sigh. “I don’t know if there’s hope for this relationship.”

  “All right, we’ll compromise on the music.”

  “If you like Manilow, there’s nothing I can do.”

  “Okay, Eric Clapton,” she suggested.

  “Bob Dylan’s better. Agreed?”

  “All right. May I continue?”

  “Go ahead,” he urged, as if she’d been the one holding up the proceedings.

  “We’re together on the Cove watching the sun set, music is playing softly in the background and we’re sipping glasses of wine.” She hesitated, certain he was about to launch into a discussion regarding the wine. “Do we need to argue about the wine, too?”

  “No,” he assured her, “you choose.”

  “All right. A nice fruity Gewürztraminer.”

  “Hmm. Isn’t that a little sweet? Are you sure you wouldn’t be interested in something—”

  “I thought we weren’t going to argue about the wine. You can drink what you want and I’ll drink what I want.”

  “Fine with me.” He was certainly amicable all of a sudden.

  “A waiter appears with a menu,” she went on.

  “If the menu’s got tassels, I can’t afford to eat there.”

  “No tassels.”

  “Good.” Jack said immediately. “Now, did the waiter bring the bread basket yet? I’m getting hungry.”

  “Don’t rush him, we’re still enjoying our wine.”

  “While you’re drinking the wine, I want the warm bread and butter.”

  “You’re making this difficult, Jack.”

  “Okay, okay, continue, but I should tell you I worked through lunch today, so if you’re going to start listing the specials of the day, I’ll have to make a run to the candy machine.”

  Olivia heard drawers opening and closing. “What are you doing?”

  “What do you think? I’m looking for something to eat.” A grumbling sound followed his explanation. “The best I could come up with was a roll of Tums.”

  “Poor baby. I guess that means you don’t want to hear about the seafood fettuccini, dripping with spicy shrimp, seared scallops and bits of lobster, stirred together in a creamy Alfredo sauce.”

  “You are a cruel woman, Olivia Lockhart.”

  Olivia laughed delightedly. “You just wait until I show you how cruel I can be.”

  Jack sucked in his breath. “I love it when you talk dirty.”

  Olivia growled.

  “When, where and how long will it take me to get there?”

  “Tonight at seven.”

  He hesitated. “I…can’t.”

  “Six?”

  “That won’t work, either.”

  “All right, eight, but that’s really kind of late for me.”

  “What about tomorrow night?” Jack asked.

  “Can’t. I’ve got a judicial committee meeting. Why can’t you go to dinner tonight?”

  “I just can’t.”

  He was certainly being cryptic about it. “Jack, have you got another date?” she asked, half laughing as though it was a joke. Neither of them had made any promises. He was free to date someone else, just as she was. But she hadn’t.

  He paused before answering. “Not exactly,” he said.

  “Not exactly,” she echoed. What the hell did that mean? “Are you doing something illegal?” she asked.

  “No.”

  “Just secretive,” she muttered under her breath.

  Again the pause. “If you want to put it that way.”

  Olivia hated secrets. “I see,” she said, not bothering to hide her disappointment.

  “Olivia, I’m sorry. I’d love to have dinner with you, but you’ll have to choose some other night.”

  Olivia was a woman whose life was open to scrutiny; she disliked the way he chose to keep parts of his life hidden. If he had some dark secret, she’d rather know now.

  “Come on, honey, it’s not that big a deal, is it?”

  Honey. Now she was his honey.

  “Another evening, all right?”

  “No,” she said softly but with conviction. “It isn’t all right.”

  “Let me make sure I’m getting this,” Jack said after a long pulsing silence. “You’re angry because I can’t go to dinner with you at the drop of a hat.”

  “No, Jack, that’s not it at all.” She straightened in her chair. “Listen, I’m sorry. It seems I’ve been reading more into our relationship than warranted—”

  “Olivia…”

  “No, please, I understand.”

  “You don’t.”

  “I do,” she countered. He wanted everything on his terms, which meant that any relationship could only be a surface one. He had his secrets, and she was just supposed to overlook that.

  “Olivia…”

  “I’m sorry you can’t make it for dinner,” she said, interrupting him a second time. “We’ll do it another night.” Maybe ten years from now.

  “Don’t hang up that phone!” Jack shouted.

  She was too stunned to react.

  “I know what you’re going to do. The next time I call and suggest we get together, you’ll have a reason you can’t. The time after that, it’ll be the same, until I’ve got the message. Dammit, Olivia, I won’t let that happen.”

  “Then I’ll be up front with it. Jack, I don’t think it’s a good idea to continue seeing each other.”

  “Why? Because I can’t go to dinner with you tonight?”

  “No,” she said swiftly. “Because I was married to a man who chose to keep secrets from me. I’m not willing to get involved with anyone who can’t be open and honest.”

  Silence.

  “I’m right, aren’t I?” she pressed. “You’re a man with secrets.”

  It took him forever to answer. “If it gives you any pleasure, then I’ll say it. You’re right—I have my secrets.”

  He replaced the receiver, and Olivia listened to the buzz droning in her ear. Jack should’ve known her better than that. She derived no pleasure from being right.

  The instant Grace pulled into the driveway, Buttercup bounded out the doggie door at the back of the house and raced to her side.

  “Hello, girl,” Grace said as she stepped out of the car. She leaned down and scratched the dog’s ears, then the two of them walked to the mailbox to collect the day’s offerings.

  Along with a couple of magazines and a few odd bills, Grace got the Bremerton Sun.

  “Are you ready for your dinner?” she asked Buttercup, unlocking the door that led to the kitchen.

  The golden retriever dutifully walked to her water bowl and lapped up a drink, then waited patiently while Grace opened the closet door and brought out the large bag of dog food. She filled the dog’s dish, then settled down to glance at the mail.

  Nothing important.

  She set the magazines on the table and as she did so, noticed that the message light was flashing.

  “Grace, it’s Roy McAfee. Give me a call when you get home.”

  Dan.

  Roy must have learned something about Dan. Her hand trembled as she looked up Roy’s number and immediately returned the call.

  Corrie, Roy’s wife and assistant, connected her right away.

  “Roy, this is Grace Sherman. Have you located Dan?”

  “No, but I got the report from the Assets Check and thought you might be interested
in what I found out.”

  After running into nothing but dead ends, Roy had suggested they request a computer check for assets, but Grace had balked at forking over the extra two hundred-dollar fee required for the search. Learning that Dan held title to a piece of land wasn’t going to help her locate him. In a community property state, any bank records would be open to her without cost.

  “So—anything interesting?”

  “Yup. The report listed a license application Dan made last June.”

  “A year ago.”

  “That’s right. You didn’t tell me you two owned a travel trailer.”

  “We don’t.”

  “According to state records, Daniel Clayton Sherman residing at 204 Rosewood Lane, Cedar Cove, Washington, applied for a license for a travel trailer.”

  “When?” Grace asked. “Exactly when?”

  “June sixteenth of last year.”

  The date was meaningless, and Grace felt numb. “I…I don’t know about any travel trailer.”

  “I called the private party who sold it to him and discovered he paid cash. It’s a twenty-four footer. The other person wasn’t likely to forget, since Dan arrived with the money in fresh one-hundred-dollar bills.”

  “How much?”

  “According to the seller, thirteen-thousand dollars.”

  “Cash?” They didn’t have thirteen-thousand dollars in cash. Any extra money had been invested. Nearly everything they’d managed to save over the years was in stocks and bonds.

  “The man made quite a point of telling me it was all one-hundred-dollar bills. Actually, he was quite shaken when he was handed that much cash.”

  “Where would Dan get that kind of money?”

  “I can’t answer that,” Roy told her.

  Neither could she. “Dan couldn’t have taken out an equity loan without my knowing, could he?”

  “He didn’t,” Roy said. “Not according to the bank records I have.”

  And surely she would’ve received some sort of statement for any other kind of loan.

  “This doesn’t make sense.” But then, very little of what Dan had done in the last year was logical.

  “So you don’t know anything about this travel trailer?”

  “Not a thing. Do you think Dan’s traveling around the country?” she asked, searching desperately for answers.

  “I really don’t know. Haven’t come across any evidence of that—no credit card charges, for instance. None in his name, anyway.”

  “Then what’s he using for money?”

  “If he had thirteen-thousand dollars in cash you knew nothing about, there’s no way of knowing how much money he had squirreled away.”

  “Where could he have kept this money?”

  “Do you have a safety-deposit box?” Roy answered her question with his own.

  “Yes…no. I don’t know anymore.” They did have a box at some point, but she hadn’t seen the renewal application in years.

  “Tell me this,” Roy said. “Who brought in the mail every day?”

  “Dan.”

  “That’s what I thought. Another possibility is that Dan has a post office box you know nothing about.”

  All the secrets Dan had kept from her. Grace didn’t know how she could have lived with him for more than thirty years and not known the man who was her husband.

  “The report didn’t show a safety-deposit box?” she asked.

  “No, but if Dan has one strictly in his name, the bank isn’t legally obligated to report it. Some banks will as a matter of course, and others only if a court order is issued.”

  “Will we need a court order?”

  “We’ll face that when we come to it.”

  “All right.”

  As if she understood that her new mistress was feeling anxious, Buttercup walked over to the phone and stood next to Grace. She leaned down and stroked the dog’s head, which calmed both of them.

  She spoke with Roy for a few more minutes. When she hung up, Grace experienced a new sensation. Considering the range of emotions she’d already become familiar with, she wouldn’t have thought that was possible. Since Dan’s disappearance, she’d felt disbelief, shock, grief and outrage. Lately she’d discovered a certain peace that came with resignation and acceptance. Roy’s latest news didn’t infuriate her. Instead, she was left feeling stupid.

  Sitting at the table, she leafed through the latest issue of Sunset Magazine. Something must be wrong with her, she mused. Her life was falling apart and she was reading a chicken enchilada recipe.

  The phone rang and for an instant Grace hesitated, uncertain she wanted to talk to anyone. But it was bound to be one of her daughters, and if she ignored the call they’d both worry.

  “Hi, Mom.”

  Grace was right. “Hello, sweetheart. How are you feeling?”

  “Pregnant,” Kelly complained. “Six weeks to go.”

  The time had passed quickly for Grace, but she doubted her daughter would feel that way.

  “Any news on Dad?”

  Grace was always astonished by the way her daughters seemed to sense any new developments regarding Dan.

  “Mom?” Kelly pressed.

  “Can you get your sister on three-way calling?” Kelly had the option on her phone, whereas Grace didn’t.

  “You learned something?”

  “Get Maryellen on the line and I’ll tell you both at the same time.”

  “Okay.” Grace was accustomed to the procedure. She was put on hold while Kelly dialed her sister’s phone number, and then once Maryellen was connected, Grace would be able to speak to both her daughters at once. She closed her eyes, her mind spinning as she waited.

  In the beginning, Grace had wanted to protect her children from what Dan had done. Her reaction had been instinctive, but it’d also been wrong. Maryellen and Kelly were entitled to know. Furthermore, they might be able to provide an answer. For all Grace knew, Dan might have said something to one of the girls that would give her—or Roy McAfee—some kind of clue.

  “We’re both here,” Kelly said anxiously.

  “Are you all right, Mom?” Maryellen asked.

  “No.” It was time for honesty. “Roy discovered that your father purchased a twenty-four-foot travel trailer last year.”

  “Dad bought a trailer?” The question came from Kelly.

  “Where did he keep it?”

  That was a question Grace hadn’t thought to ask. “I don’t know, but I’m discovering that I knew very little about your father.”

  “There’s more, isn’t there?” Again it was Kelly who asked. Kelly who was so close to her father and so confident he’d return before her baby was born.

  “Yes,” she said reluctantly. “He paid cash for the trailer.”

  “How much?” Maryellen asked.

  “Thirteen thousand,” Grace said. “In fresh one-hundred-dollar bills.”

  Kelly gasped.

  Maryellen said nothing.

  “I don’t have a clue where he got that much money,” Grace told her daughters. It was as much a mystery as his disappearance.

  “Mom, do you think the other woman might have bought the trailer for him?” Maryellen asked softly.

  “Then why not register it in her name?”

  “Maybe she wanted you to find out about it,” Maryellen suggested.

  “Stop it!” Kelly shouted. “There is no other woman. Dad wouldn’t do that.”

  “Grow up,” Maryellen said sharply. “When are you going to quit looking at Dad like he’s some kind of saint? He didn’t just leave Mom, you know. He walked out on you and me, too.”

  “Don’t say that,” Kelly cried, breaking into huge sobs. “I don’t believe it. I’ll never believe it.”

  “Girls, please…” Grace felt close to tears herself.

  “Do you still think Dad’s going to magically reappear before your baby’s born?” Maryellen asked. “Get a grip! He doesn’t care about either one of us.”

  “Maryellen, stop.
” Grace refused to allow her older daughter to continue. This was hard enough without the two of them turning against each other.

  An awkward moment passed, then Maryellen whispered, “I’m sorry, Kelly. I was upset and I took it out on you.”

  “I’m sorry, too,” Kelly said. “For you and Mom. One day we’re all going to discover the truth about Dad. I don’t know why he’s doing this or where he is, but there’s a perfectly logical explanation for his disappearance.”

  Her daughter had said this many times before, and Grace let her say it again. Neither she nor Maryellen challenged what they both saw as a fantasy. They understood that Kelly needed to believe it.

  Justine had been downright miserable since the reunion. She’d announced to Seth that she intended to marry Warren, but she hadn’t gotten around to mentioning it to Warren himself.

  Friday night, Warren planned to take her to dinner at D.D.’s on the Cove, and she thought she’d tell him then, as long as he understood she wanted a long engagement. Eventually they’d ease their way into marriage.

  “You look fabulous,” Warren said, kissing her cheek when he picked her up after work. The bank was open until six on Friday nights and after a ten-hour day, Justine was tired. Warren might think she looked good, but that wasn’t how she felt.

  Because they were close to D.D.’s, Justine suggested they walk over to the waterfront restaurant.

  “Let’s drive.”

  It seemed ridiculous to drive to a restaurant less than two blocks from the bank, but Justine didn’t want to start the evening with an argument.

  Warren held open the car door for her and she discovered a small wrapped package on the passenger seat. “What’s this?” she asked.

  “Open it and see.”

  “Not another gift. Warren, please, this isn’t necessary.”

  “Says who?” he joked. “It’s the only way I can prove to you that I’ll be a generous husband.”

  “Warren.”

  “All right, all right, no pressure.” Chuckling, he hurried around to the driver’s side.

  Justine waited until he was seated before she opened the jeweler’s box. Inside was an oblong-shaped black pearl in a gold oyster clasp; it was suspended from a fine gold chain. The pearl was exquisite.

 

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