He’d even taken the task of gently telling Grady the company had lost faith in him.
Hell, he’d lost faith in himself. Grady had ruined everything.
The resources he had left were going to pay Dan’s salary and keep the health insurance current. Grady had sublet his apartment, liquidated what he could, and poured everything into Jackson Properties. That money would last another month, maybe two, if nothing changed. If he cashed in the rest of his retirement assets, Grady could buy a couple more months.
A far cry from nine months ago. Once upon a time, Grady Jackson had made the pages of Forbes magazine as an upstart who was heading straight to the top.
What did being at the top mean, anyway? That he got to stand on a towering pile of regrets and look down at the lives he’d ruined?
Grady pulled into Stone Gap a little after three in the afternoon, not in the Maserati he had given back to the bank two months ago, or in the Mercedes convertible he’d bought for fun and sold to keep the lights on at the office, but in a two-door economy rental that shuddered whenever he pushed the accelerator past fifty. The downtown area had barely changed in the past fifteen or so years, as if time had decided to stand still right there on Main Street. The same shops with the same cutesy names sat in the same spots, and the same neighbors strolled along the sidewalks, some now with grandkids in tow. Grady could still see shadows of memories of times with his brothers in the ice-cream shop they’d frequented, the Catholic church basketball court where they’d spent hundreds of afternoons, and the rolling green grass of the park that had been like a second home.
It was all so charming and quaint, a small town filled with families and hopes and dreams. The kind of world that would relax anyone other than Grady. The closer he got to his destination, the faster his heart hammered and the shorter his breaths became. His vision narrowed, and his chest began to ache.
It’s your fault... If you’d only thought before you leaped into that deal... They were counting on you...
He cursed and pulled at the neck of his shirt. There was not enough air in this damned car. Grady pulled under the wide branches of a shady oak tree and parked. He opened all four windows, and for a split second he couldn’t feel any air at all. There was nothing to breathe, nothing...
A whispering breeze tickled his face, then picked up steam and whooshed through the car. Grady closed his eyes and concentrated. Inhale. One long, deep breath in. Exhale. Let the air go gradually, a degree at a time. Inhale. Exhale. Repeat. Until the vise on his chest loosened.
This was a temporary setback. He needed just a couple weeks, maybe three at most. He was going to fix this.
He had to fix this.
Yet the doubts lingered in the thudding of his pulse. Was this decision, like so many others in the weeks since he’d lost that government contract, just another mistake waiting to happen?
Grady put the car in gear and kept going, until Main Street yielded to trees and space, and brought him to the T junction with Oak. He turned right, then took a left and another right, and finally pulled into a driveway as familiar as the back of his hand. For a second, he was five again, and bursting through the front door and into a world unlike any he had known.
The tar surface had rippled and cracked over the years, and weeds had seized the opportunity to sprout from the crevices. The yard was less overgrown than he’d expected, considering Grady had had to cancel the lawn service last month, which meant some neighbor was probably running his John Deere over the grass a few times a month, just to keep the neighborhood looking nice. That was the kind of place Stone Gap was—do unto others, regardless of whether they do unto you in return.
He got out of the cramped rental and inhaled again, drawing in the scents of fall. Grady stood there, inhaling, exhaling, focusing on the ground, until his heart slowed its frantic hammer.
The two-story house, flanked by a detached one-car garage on one side and a flower garden on the other, cast a long shadow over the driveway. He’d spent many a summer afternoon here, running in and out of the kitchen, hearing the screen door slam behind him and his grandmother’s voice reminding him to be careful. The smell of fresh-baked bread, or of warm chocolate chip cookies, would bring him back for a few minutes of stillness in the kitchen before he was off again, exploring the woods behind Grandma’s house and the creek that wound its way through the trees like a trail for Hansel and Gretel.
Finally, he was here. He’d come back. To what, he wasn’t sure. Amends, at the very least.
He was reaching for his bag when a movement caught his attention. A flash of beige fur, a rustle in the shrubs, then the flick of a tail. Grady dropped the bag on the driveway and crossed to the bushes—overgrown and thick and apparently not on the do-gooder neighbor’s list of things to do—and bent down. “Hey, you.”
Another flash of fur, a couple feet high, then two big brown eyes peered through the twined branches. A yip, then the eyes were gone, the shrubs trembling. Little guy was terrified. Grady could relate to that.
“Hey, buddy, don’t worry. I won’t hurt you.” He straightened, then slipped through a break in the bushes and into a small bare area too heavily shaded by trees for anything to grow. Just on the other side of a massive oak that must have been a hundred years old stood a yellow Lab puppy.
Grady approached slowly, his hand out, talking in soft tones. “What are you doing here? You lost?”
The puppy nudged forward, cautiously sniffing the space between him and this unfamiliar human. He didn’t have a collar, and his ribs rippled beneath his fur. If this dog was someone’s pet, they were doing a crappy job taking care of him.
“I have half a sandwich left in the car,” Grady said to the animal. “Ham and cheese, nothing fancy, but I bet you don’t care. Want some?”
The puppy kept on wagging and approaching. Grady bent down, keeping his hand extended, letting the dog sniff and make an assessment. Whatever he smelled, he approved of, because the next thing Grady knew, the puppy was pouncing on his knee and licking his face. Grady had never had a dog as a kid, and never had time for one as an adult, but this pup apparently didn’t care about a human’s pet-care résumé.
“I’ll take that as a yes.” Grady scooped the dog under his arm like a football—thing probably didn’t weigh more than fifteen pounds—then cut back through the shrubs and over to his car. The puppy squirmed and twisted, trying to lick Grady’s face every step of the way. Grady retrieved the sandwich, unfurled the paper wrapper, then stood back and watched the puppy gobble it in a few bites.
“That your dog?”
Grady turned. A hunched, elderly man with a Charlotte Hornets cap pulled low on his forehead waved at the puppy. The man had sharp blue eyes, and a scruff of white beard on his chin. He was carrying a copy of the Stone Gap Gazette in one hand, and a coffee mug in the other.
“No. I just found him in the yard,” Grady said.
“Thing’s been wandering around here for weeks. Every time I tried to catch him, he took off. Called the dogcatcher, but that guy’s about as useful as a rhinoceros in a swimming pool.”
Grady chuckled. He extended a hand toward the man. “Grady Jackson. I’m one of Ida Mae’s grandsons.”
The man had a firm grip, and his blue eyes brightened at the mention of Ida Mae. He leaned in closer, studied Grady for a moment. “You’re that little wild child who was here every summer, tearing up the woods.”
“That’d be me.” His two younger brothers had both been studious and quiet, the kind who preferred books to dirt bikes, almost as if they’d had different parents, except when they were at Ida Mae’s, and the tight hold they held on their lives loosened. Even today, Grady had little in common with Nick and Ryder, who’d settled into IT careers, until Nick moved down here last year. The brothers had been close at one time, but as they got older and the two-year-plus age difference had made more of an impact, the three of the
m drifted apart. Nick and Ryder had stayed close, while Grady had fallen into the new role of loner—and it had stuck.
Nick lived a couple miles away now with his new wife. Grady couldn’t even remember her name or when they got married. Showed what kind of brother he was. He hadn’t even told Nick he was coming to Stone Gap.
He wasn’t so sure Nick would care. All their communications for the last few years had been via text. Maybe Grady could remedy that. Maybe not.
“Pleased to see you again. I’m Cutler Shay.” The old man studied Grady some more. “You might not remember me, but I’m the one who fixed the flat tire on your bike that time.”
Grady had been seven, maybe eight, when he’d gotten that flat. He remembered standing there in the middle of the road, stumped. His father had never been the kind to show his boys how to do much of anything, and certainly not how to change a bike tire. He had exacting expectations for grades and decorum, which didn’t include skinned knees or broken bikes. Cutler—he’d been heavier, darker haired and taller then—had given Grady a mini tire-changing clinic on the sidewalk in front of his house.
“I remember that. You taught me more about that bike in one afternoon than I learned the rest of my life.”
“Well, that’s probably because I’ve got a head full of useless facts and I’m known for talking the ear off an elephant.” Cutler chuckled. “So...now that Ida Mae, God rest her soul, has passed on, are you here to stay or sell? Saw your brother living here for a month or so, with that pretty lady he married. Nice couple.”
At Christmas, Nick had asked if he could use the house for a few weeks. Grady had said yes, figuring it couldn’t hurt, and would keep the place from falling apart during the winter. He’d worried about damage and decay with each passing week of Atlantic winds and North Carolina sun. And yet, even though the pale yellow paint had faded and one of the dark green shutters was hanging askew, overall, the house didn’t seem to need a major facelift. Ida Mae had been fastidious about her home, and that attention to care and maintenance probably meant what was inside was in equally good shape.
“Sell,” Grady said. Ida Mae had left the house to him and divided her life insurance between his brothers. Leaving him the place had been some act of sentimentality, he was sure, but in all honesty, he’d rather have gotten full right to the insurance, which, as cash in hand, would have been a hell of a lot handier and wouldn’t have required a real estate sign, sale and deed signing. Still, the house was what he’d gotten, and now he hoped it held the key to a financial reboot and a second chance.
Cutler shook his head. “That’s a shame. That house has been in your family for three generations. Ida Mae sure would have wanted it to stay that way.”
Yeah, well, unlike him, Ida Mae wasn’t broke and out of options. Grady loved his grandmother dearly, and had loved the time he had spent here with her, but that didn’t mean he was sappy enough to hold on to the house out of sentiment. Not when he needed the money so desperately. “Well, nice talking to you, Cutler. If you find out who owns this dog, let me know.”
“You should take it to Beth Cooper. That girl knows about every dog in this town, and if someone lost that little guy, she’d be the one to hear about it.”
Beth Cooper. The name hit Grady like a brick. Last time he’d seen her, he’d been sitting behind her in math class on the last day of sophomore year, trying to work up the courage to ask her to the end-of-year dance. Young Grady had been a risk taker in every area of his life—except with girls. The teenage Grady had gotten tongue-tied around pretty girls, and around Beth Cooper in particular. He could still see the curve of her neck exposed by the lift of her blond ponytail, the bright blue of her eyes, and the grace of her smile.
“Beth has a little shop on First,” Cutler went on. “She’s a groomer, dog trainer and rescuer of pretty much anything lost or hungry.”
That fit the Beth he remembered, but it didn’t answer his real questions. He wondered if she was still single, if she still had that melodic laugh he’d loved, and if she remembered him half as well as he remembered her.
Grady scooped up the puppy, which had finished eating and was now sitting beside him, expectant and still looking hungry. “Thanks, Cutler. I’ll take this guy down to her now. I’m sure some family is missing him.”
Cutler nodded. “Nice to see you again. Don’t be a stranger.”
Considering Grady wasn’t planning on staying in town after the house sold, he didn’t know how to answer that. So he didn’t answer at all. He just opened the car door, deposited the puppy on the passenger’s side, then shooed him back when he scrambled onto the driver’s seat.
“Hey. Can I ask you one favor?” Cutler said.
Grady paused, his hand on the door. “Sure.”
“Don’t rush into selling right away. Stay in the house for a while. See how it feels on you. Sometimes a house grows on you when you spend some time with it. You know, like a new friend.”
Grady wasn’t about to agree and there was no diplomatic way to refuse, so he just said goodbye, got in the car and then pulled out of the driveway. Regardless of what one sentimental neighbor thought, the chances of him keeping this house—and taking away his only option for starting over and making it up to all his employees—was about one in the millions he used to have.
* * *
For a Pomeranian, Lucille was one strong dog that had firm opinions about baths. Beth Cooper grabbed a thick white towel and swiped the worst of the water and suds off her face. Unfortunately, the towel didn’t do much for her soaked jeans or shoes, past Beth’s waterproof apron. “Okay, so now we’ve both had a bath,” she said to Lucille.
The little white dog wagged her tail, sending another spray in Beth’s direction. Beth laughed, picked her up, then put her in the small pen in the back of the shop, to let Lucille run off some of her postbath joy before Beth attempted to brush her and give her nails a trim.
A couple other small dogs scampered around Lucille, in a circle of yips and tail sniffing. It was like a preschool, except with fur and wet noses. Beth loved the dogs, though, and loved the hours she spent in her shop. There was just something about a dog—the way it loved unconditionally, gave without needing in return—that made the worst days she’d ever had seem a little better.
The chime announcing a customer sounded in the back room, surprising her, given the odd hour. She didn’t have a ton of walk-in traffic—usually just clients coming in for drop-offs and pickups. Beth glanced in the mirror as she headed to the front, though it was pretty much a useless exercise. She spent her days giving baths to dogs, so dressing up was pointless. As per usual, her hair was wet, tendrils plastered to her cheeks and neck, and soapy water blotched the parts of her bright pink Happy Tails shirt that weren’t protected by the apron. She smoothed the errant hairs in the direction of her ponytail, then pushed on the closed bottom half of the split swinging door, making sure none of her doggy customers were underfoot.
A man stood just inside the front door, looking uncomfortable and out of his element. He was tall, broad shouldered, and wearing a pale blue button-down shirt with the cuffs rolled up, exposing strong hands, defined forearms. Jeans hugged his hips, outlined long, muscular legs and, she was sure, one hell of a nice looking butt. Aviator sunglasses hid his eyes. In his arms, a squirming yellow Lab puppy kept licking the man’s cheek.
Damn. She should have at least put on some lipstick or something before she came out to the front. It wasn’t every day that a hot man came into her shop. Not that she was on the market for dating or even anything close to it. Right now, she didn’t need another man in her life besides the one who already took up every second of her spare time, but it didn’t hurt to be admired once in a while and feel more like a girl and less like a wet dog.
“Hi! How can I help you?”
“Beth.” He shook his head. “Wow. You look...grown-up.”
How did
he know her name? Her gaze swept over him again. Nothing familiar registered. “Do we know each other?”
He took off the sunglasses, deftly avoiding the puppy’s attempt to nibble on the frames. Deep brown eyes met hers. And still no ring of recognition. “You don’t remember me?”
“I’m sorry, I don’t.” But something nagged at the recesses of her memory.
“Grady Jackson. I sat behind you in Advanced Geometry sophomore year. Also sat on the other side of the room in English III with Mrs. Delaney.” He grinned. “Hawkins Prep was a pretty small school, so we were in a lot of classes together, but never really talked.”
His name rang a bell, but she couldn’t place his face. Her life in high school had been...a mess, to say the least. It was a wonder she’d graduated. But that wasn’t something she talked about, then or now. For Pete’s sake, she was almost thirty-two. She was way past taking some stroll down that section of Memory Lane. “That was a long time ago.”
“It was.” He hoisted the puppy a little higher. “Anyway, I just got back to town, and I found this little guy in the woods behind my grandmother’s house. Cutler Shay thought you might know who he belongs to.”
She came out from behind the counter, once again wishing she’d taken a bit more time in front of the mirror. She might not remember Grady from high school, but was acutely aware that he had grown up into a mighty hot-looking man. She highly doubted he was equally impressed with her.
She reached out and gave the puppy a little head rub. In response, he licked her palm, the roughness of his tongue tickling her skin. “He looks like he might be one of the Wells family’s pups. Their Lab had puppies about three months ago. I thought they found homes for all of them before they moved to Seattle.”
“Apparently, they missed one.” Grady thrust the dog toward her. She had to admit the puppy was cute, but the guy holding him was even cuter. “Maybe you can ship him up there or something?”
The Best Intentions (Welcome To Starlight Book 1) Page 19