Heart Echoes

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Heart Echoes Page 14

by Sally John


  He took a swig from the can. “I won’t give up on him.”

  “That doesn’t mean you communicate that what he did with our daughter was acceptable!”

  “I’m not doing that. He knows he’s on a short leash and has to earn back my trust.”

  “There is no earning it back.”

  “That’s where we disagree. This is how I operate. Been doing it for fifteen years.”

  “But now you have a family to think about.”

  It hit him, a punch to the solar plexus. He had had a family before—a wife, plans for children, the first on his way. They were not part of Teal’s reality. At times, she seemed to totally forget about them.

  She said, “What am I supposed to tell Maiya?”

  “That the shelves are up.”

  “I’m serious. If I tell her Jake is buddy-buddy with you, she’ll think the whole incident has blown over.”

  “She’s stuck up in Camp Poppycock. I doubt she’ll think that.”

  “I don’t want to talk about this anymore.”

  Her silly remark goaded. She wanted to talk as long as she heard what she wanted to hear.

  He threw out his idea to keep the details from her and said, with too much heat, “Tell Maiya I promised the judge that I’d spend time with Jake when he wasn’t working at the garage.”

  “That’s how he got out.” There was accusation in her flat tone. “Unbelievable.”

  She wasn’t talking about the judge’s decision, but that River would offer such a thing. He forced himself to explain in a neutral tone the rest of the story. “His boss posted bail and vouched for Jake’s excellent work record.”

  She did not reply.

  “Tell Maiya I wouldn’t hurt her for the world. Tell her this is not about her. It’s my job.”

  “I don’t like you.”

  “Feeling is mutual.”

  A long, silent moment passed. Her breathing sounded as if she’d run a mile. His own wasn’t all that steady.

  But she wasn’t one of his students. He broke the silence and stated quietly what needed to be said. “But I do love you and I want the best for you. Tell me about your day. Any Owen sightings?”

  “River, at the moment, I am sitting on a cushion on a linoleum floor, exactly fifteen inches from the front door that was white when I closed it, but now all I see is red. I think it’s best I say good-bye.”

  “Gotcha. Talk to you tomorrow.”

  “Good night.”

  River turned off the phone and smiled grimly. For all of her insistence that they agree to disagree, she hated not bagging a clear win.

  That was all right. He could live with her wrath. What he couldn’t live with was turning his back on a kid who needed another round of second chances.

  Chapter 29

  CEDAR POINTE

  “Mom?”

  Cell phone clenched in her fist, Teal blinked at the front door and tried to focus through the reddish haze. She had never been so angry at River. How dare he bring Jake back into their home!

  “Mom! You okay?”

  Teal spun around on the cushion and did not even attempt to smile. “I’m fine. Sorry, did I wake you?”

  “I was still reading.” She stood leaning at the hall opening, a dark-green fleece throw over her pajamas. “Kind of hard not to hear your hissy voice.”

  Shoot. She had kept her voice as low as she could. Stupid tiny cottage with paper-thin walls.

  “Were you and Riv fighting?”

  “Just having a little disagreement.”

  “About Jake and me?”

  Teal sighed. “What did you hear?”

  “‘Jake’ this, ‘Maiya’ that.”

  “It’s nothing you need to concern yourself with. River said Jake is doing fine, out on bail and back to work.”

  Maiya’s face lit up, all grin and sparkling eyes. “Sweet.”

  Teal’s heart sank. What did she see in this boy? She reminded her of Lacey as a teen, crazy about a guy who had nothing going for him.

  Maiya said, “So what’s with the arguing?”

  Teal stood and picked up the cushion and carried it to the couch. “Nothing.” River could explain his actions to her himself. “He wanted you to know and honestly—” she slid the cushion into place and headed across the room to the table—“I didn’t think you needed to know.”

  “How come?”

  Teal plugged her phone into its power cord, shut her laptop, and gathered papers. A little less use of the word honestly with Maiya would be a good thing. She did not need to clue her daughter in on every jot and tittle about her and River’s relationship. “Given the fact that you and Jake are no longer an item, it simply did not seem necessary to tell you.”

  “It’s not like he doesn’t exist. It’s not like I don’t think about him or don’t love—”

  “Spare me, Mai.” Good grief! Did she need to hear again how in love they were? “It’s late.” She sat at the table and began organizing the papers. “You should get to bed. I’m almost done here.”

  Maiya shuffled over to the table, pulled out a chair across from her, and sat.

  Teal glanced at her sad face and briefly considered apologizing for whatever put that expression there.

  “I miss Riv.”

  “He’d say the same thing.”

  “‘Spare me’?”

  She couldn’t help but smile. “No. That you should go to bed.”

  “Do you think he’ll come for my birthday?”

  “Hon, he said he’d try.”

  Maiya rested her head in her arms atop the table. “You could talk him into it.”

  Not tonight. Tonight she would not be able to talk him into a romantic candlelit dinner with herself for dessert.

  She noticed Maiya eyeing her.

  And suddenly she heard the tape of her own hissy voice in her head, fussing at her husband, the daddy to this child who stood on wobbly adolescent terrain.

  Teal said in a soft voice, “I will do my best to talk him into it. We know he wants to come. It depends on his schedule. If he gets the auction prep work under control, he’ll feel freed up to take time off.”

  “I’m going to marry a rich man who inherited all his billions and has nothing to do except give to charitable causes and show me the world.”

  Thank goodness. That left Jake Ford out of the picture.

  “It’s raining!” Maiya’s whine rang out from her bedroom as a morning greeting.

  Teal, working at the kitchen table since very early, called back, “A day late. It’s supposed to start on Labor Day.”

  Maiya emerged from the hallway, still in her pajamas. “Uncle Will said that’s an old wives’ tale. Labor Day falls on a different date every year.”

  Teal shrugged.

  “Mom, the real rain doesn’t start until October.”

  She shrugged again, eyes on her screen as her fingers tapped out legalese for the countersuit in the Hannah Walton case.

  “Mom.”

  “Yeah? One sec.” It took more like sixty to finish her paragraph. Then she looked up and forced herself to pull her hands from the keyboard. She clenched them on her lap. “Good morning.”

  Maiya was sitting across the table drinking orange juice, her eyes puffy, her long hair sticking every which way. “It’s not even seven o’clock.”

  “I know, and I am impressed to see you up and raring to go.”

  “I mean, you’re working already.”

  “This part has to be done first thing today.”

  “Is it related to yesterday’s emergency?”

  “Yes.” Her line of sight drifted toward the laptop.

  “Can you tell me about it?”

  “Can I ever?” She spotted a typo and mentally corrected it.

  “I just want to know what can be so important that you don’t talk to anybody.”

  Teal could take a hint. She shut the laptop and picked up her coffee mug. “Without going into details, the case is about parental rights.”
r />   “How old is the kid?”

  “Little.”

  “You’ll make sure he gets to be with the best parent?”

  “Always.” She smiled. “Uncle Will dropped off the bicycle he said you can use.” The shop was only six blocks away, but Maiya had told Will she preferred not to walk.

  “But it’s raining! Hard! Can’t I just drive myself to Happy Grounds? It’s not like there’s any traffic or cops between here and there.”

  “There are cops, and they don’t have much else to do except lie in wait for drivers who are breaking the law.”

  “Ha-ha.”

  “Aunt Lacey can pick you up later. Didn’t you decide to start with the tutoring this afternoon?”

  “But Baker’s working now before he goes to school. He said he’d take a look at where I am in my trig book. He wants to ask his teacher for some help.”

  “Wow. I’m really impressed now.”

  “What do you expect from a couple of geeks?” She yawned, propped an elbow on the table, and squished her cheek against her palm.

  Despite the previous night’s bout with regrets, Teal felt again the coziness of their situation. When Will stopped by on his way to work earlier, he helped her start a fire in the pellet stove. It sizzled now and warmed the small area. Lacey had thoughtfully stocked the kitchen for them with juice, bread, milk, cereal, eggs—the basics. Maiya really was a bit on the geeky side. She had books and her trumpet. They need not go anywhere.

  Maiya pushed her chair from the table. “I told Baker I’d be there by seven thirty.”

  Teal blinked away the cozy image. “I’ll take you.”

  “No, that’s okay.” She shuffled away toward the hall. “Aunt Lacey said to call her when I got up. She’ll come get me.”

  “I think she’s been skipping the early shift since her illness.”

  “It’s okay.” Maiya looked over her shoulder and grinned. “She told me it was going to rain today. She’d be ready.”

  Teal smiled.

  It was a tight smile.

  As Maiya disappeared into the bathroom, Teal called out, “Do you want breakfast?”

  “Are you kidding?” Maiya called back. “Aunt Lacey’s got quiche, croissants, muffins, scones, juice, fruit—not to mention coffee, which I may take up . . .”

  The door clicked shut.

  ‘Aunt Lacey’ this, ‘Aunt Lacey’ that.

  A mishmash of feelings struck so violently Teal could not ignore them.

  Resentment spoke, loud and clear. What was with this instant superglue bond between Maiya and Lacey? Teal’s plans to mommy her daughter were being derailed because Maiya would rather hang out with Lacey.

  Teal felt ashamed. She should blame her obsession with Hannah Walton’s case for taking her out of the picture. She should be happy that Maiya and Lacey liked each other. The truth was, with Maiya’s needs taken care of, Teal could get back to work without further interruption.

  She blew out a breath. “This does not make me the world’s worst mom.”

  Enough with the pep talk. She took a swig of coffee and opened her laptop.

  Teal was again seated on a cushion less than two feet inside the front door, talking on her phone, laptop open before her on the floor, legal pad on her lap.

  The bright white door was shut against the rain that lashed at the window on the upper half of the door. With the yellow café curtain pushed to the sides, the wet pane was visible if she craned her neck. Cold air seeped in around the door’s edges.

  She listened to her client’s rendition of the ex-boyfriend’s visit. Hannah Walton sounded less strung out than she had yesterday, which added cohesiveness but also red flags.

  Teal looked at her handwritten notes, unable to glean facts that warranted a restraining order. “Let me recap to make sure I have everything I need. First off, without advance warning, James Parkhurst rang your doorbell yesterday about 10 a.m., you opened the door, and he said he wanted to see his child.”

  “He demanded it.”

  “Did he threaten you?”

  “N-no, not exactly.”

  “Did you feel threatened?”

  “Definitely. He was belligerent.”

  “How so?”

  “Teal, the man is six-four and all muscle. He has a deep bass voice, bushy eyebrows, and beady eyes, and enough money to make anyone kowtow.”

  “So he always comes across as belligerent?”

  “I-I guess. Well, not when I was with him. You know, when we were seeing each other. He was, he was . . .”

  “A sweet-talker who made you feel safe.”

  “Exactly.”

  “Was it his tone of voice that frightened you?”

  “No. He was polite, I guess. He said, ‘I’d like to meet my daughter, please.’”

  “Did little Maddie see him?”

  “No. She was out in the backyard with my mother-in-law.”

  “All right. So you said to Parkhurst, ‘No way.’ He said, ‘If she’s mine, I have visitation rights.’ You said, ‘Over my dead body.’”

  “Yes.”

  “And then your husband, Ryan, joined you at the door and asked him to leave.”

  “Sort of. He told him to get the blankety-blank off our property.”

  Teal figured she was going to like this hero Ryan. “And Parkhurst replied what precisely?”

  “‘No problemo.’”

  “Then he left.”

  “Yes. Teal, I was so shaken up.”

  “Of course you were. Do you feel that he might harm Maddie or try to forcefully take her away?”

  “Yes!”

  “All right.” Teal paused. “I’m not sure that we have enough to go on for a judge to sign off on a restraining order—”

  “But he’s a threat to us!”

  “It feels like he is, but the facts don’t show it. And he has no past record of similar actions with you or others. I will talk to his attorney today and inform him that this behavior is unacceptable.”

  “Okay.” She didn’t sound happy.

  “Hannah, that’s just one aspect. We are moving forward to file the countersuit to terminate his parental rights. A no-show for five years after you told him you were pregnant is, without question, abandonment according to the California Family Code.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “It means his abandonment is on record and he doesn’t have a leg to stand on. Are you up for going through a few more questions?”

  “Sure. I’m sorry that you have to work on your vacation.”

  “I’m not on vacation. A family emergency took me out of town. I apologize that I’m not there in person, but you know I’m available, and everyone at my firm is at your disposal.” She heard a beep. “Hold on a sec, please.”

  She lowered her cell and saw that River was calling. Answer or not?

  He would have to wait. He would understand.

  Wouldn’t he?

  Of course he would. It was their life. They had each married not so much a workaholic as an advocate for the helpless. At times, for short periods, the helpless one was prioritized above the spouse. From the beginning they had realized this about their relationship and agreed not to take it personally.

  The fun part of such a crazy lifestyle was the catch-up time afterward. They would abandon themselves to each other. Special dinners were in order or daylong dates that included beach strolls, movies, and museums.

  River was fine.

  In spite of last night’s conversation. In spite of the fact there was no available catch-up time anywhere near on the horizon.

  She put the phone back to her ear. “Sorry, Hannah. I just have a few questions.” And a hope. If the original version of Hannah’s story was the complete truth, then they were most likely home free. If not, then Bio Dad—who perhaps did not fit the ogre profile—might get a chance to meet his daughter.

  A shiver went through Teal. She blamed it on the rain.

  Chapter 30

  Early afternoon Teal
’s back and head ached from hours on the cushion, talking and e-mailing on her phone. Besides needing a change of position, she needed wireless.

  As she walked inside Happy Grounds, the bell on the door tinkled its happy sound. Two people browsed the gift section and six others sat at tables in the dining area. Teal wondered how businesses like her sister’s ever made ends meet between September and June.

  Two of the six patrons were Maiya and Baker, the latte expert. Their heads nearly touched over an open textbook.

  Teal dropped her laptop and briefcase on the nearest table and met Lacey at the counter.

  Her sister handed her a mug of steaming coffee. “I saw you coming.”

  “Mm. Thank you.” She nodded in Maiya’s direction. “What’s with Mr. Latte here at this hour?”

  “He got off school early today for some reason or other. Maiya seemed glad to start math with him even after our full day.”

  “How did you two do?”

  “Great. She has syllabuses for most of her classes, so from those we figured out what to cover in the next few weeks. Health and US history will be fun, but Plato will be a stretch. It’s been a while.” She smiled. “From the looks of those two, I think we’ve got math covered too.”

  Teal noticed that Maiya and Baker were still huddled over the textbook and talking with animation, as if trig were the most fascinating topic in the world.

  “Hey, I saved a tuna salad for you. Maiya said you like it.”

  “You are the hostess with the mostest.”

  “That would be my mother-in-law. I just try to mimic her.” Lacey glanced down at her long-sleeved T-shirt and blue jeans and laughed. “However, the wardrobe would not pass muster.”

  Teal sipped her coffee and studied her sister. The green shirt with its pine tree and “Green is not just a color” message fit the tender expression on Lacey’s face. She would love trees and whales, customers and nieces. Maybe even wayward sisters.

  Lacey looked up. “I probably won’t wear this when Nora’s here next week.”

  “Nora’s coming? When?” The muscles in Teal’s neck stiffened again. She remembered Will’s parents as being friendly. The thought of relating to more people from her past, though, felt like overload.

 

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