A Small-Town Reunion. Terry McLaughlin

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A Small-Town Reunion - Terry  McLaughlin


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as he entered the room.

      Geneva silenced the dogs with a wave of her hand. “Good morning, Devlin.”

      He bent to press a kiss against her soft gray hair. “Good morning, Grandmother.”

      She lifted one elegant eyebrow and the pot by her side. “Coffee?”

      “Yes. Please.” He reached for the cup she handed him and then settled back against downy chair cushions. Julia’s coffee was worth the trip from his rooms at this relatively early hour. “What’s up?”

      Geneva shuddered delicately. “Nothing is up. I have a few things to discuss with you before I leave next week.”

      Dev froze with the cup raised near his chin. “You’re going somewhere?”

      “I’ve decided to accept an old friend’s invitation for a cruise in the Caribbean. I’ll be flying to San Francisco the morning after my annual Fourth of July picnic to do some shopping and to make a call on your Aunt Jacqueline before I leave for the gulf.”

      Aunt Jacqueline. Dev had lived in the same city, and yet he hadn’t seen Tess’s mother for years. “Why didn’t you mention this before I decided to come up here for a visit?”

      “You needn’t bother sounding so wounded, Devlin. You’ll embarrass us both.” Geneva sipped her coffee.

      “I assume you didn’t make the trip north just to visit me.”

      “Why else would I be here?”

      “That’s one of the things I’d like to discuss this morning.”

      His grandmother may have been nearing eighty, but she remained as observant and shrewd as ever. He quickly drained his coffee and then leaned forward, his elbows on his knees. “I want another look at Dad’s papers.”

      Geneva set her cup aside and folded her hands in her lap. “I can’t possibly imagine what purpose that would serve after all these years.”

      “I’m working on a story angle. I think they might help.”

      “With a plot element containing striking similarities to the family business? Or some sordid account bearing an uncanny resemblance to the circumstances surrounding your father’s death?”

      “I would never do that.” He settled back against his seat. “I resent the implication that you’d think—even for a second—that I might consider it.”

      “I’m relieved to hear that. And there was no implication,” she said with steel in her voice. “My questions are always clear and direct, as you well know.”

      He opened his mouth to disagree and to ask a few questions of his own, questions that roiled and bubbled up inside him, but he paused until the hottest spike of temper had subsided. Old patterns, old anger.

      Calmer, he chose just one question and cleared his throat to smooth the words. “What do I have to do to prove myself?”

      “What is it you’re trying to prove, exactly?”

      His grandmother waited a beat for his answer, but when she saw there was none coming, she freshened the coffee in her cup and offered him the same. He refused.

      “I’d like to know what it is you feel you need to prove to me,” she continued, “because I have a favor to ask. And I don’t want you to think that granting this favor will somehow count toward proving your worth.”

      He crossed an ankle over his knee. “You need something from me.”

      “As it so happens, yes, I do.”

      “Is this a first?”

      “Have you been keeping score?”

      The glance she gave him over the rim of her cup sparkled with amusement. Interfering old woman. No one else in his life could fill him with so much frustration, resentment and admiration, all at once. And make his chest constrict so tightly with love. “One of us has to keep score,” he said. “For old times’ sake.”

      “Then it should be you, I suppose.” She lowered her cup to her lap and turned her face toward the window, her gaze trailing over the bunches of opalescent wisteria dangling through the arbor outside. “I don’t have that kind of time to spare.”

      Her admission troubled him. He’d rarely heard her refer to her age. It was difficult to imagine his life without Geneva Chandler in it. She was like the rocky cliffs beyond the edge of her neatly trimmed lawn, standing tall and rough and defiant, year after year, against the pounding ocean waves.

      “You don’t have to prove yourself, you know,” she said. “I’m quite satisfied with the man you’ve become. I hope you are, too.”

      He shifted in his seat and lowered his foot to the floor, more disturbed by her praise than by her disappointment in him. He’d had more practice dealing with the latter. Much more. “I guess I’m doing okay. So far.”

      She spared him an enigmatic smile and lifted her cup to her lips for another sip. “The favor I’m about to ask stems in part from what I wanted to discuss with you today. I’ve decided to leave Chandler House to you.”

      His stomach seemed to rise and lodge in his throat. “I don’t want it.”

      “Then you can do with it as you see fit after I’m gone. It will be your decision.”

      “Damn.” He shoved out of his chair and stalked to the window, staring at that jade-green sweep of lawn, at the ribbony drive leading to the iron gates, and he felt it all weigh on him until he could barely draw breath for his next words. “Is there something you’re not telling me?”

      “I’m in excellent health, if that’s what you’re wondering.”

      “Then why did you choose to discuss this with me now? And why are you giving me Chandler House?” He turned to face her, his fingers gripping the sill. “Why not leave it to Tess? She loves this place.”

      “Yes, she does. But I’ll see to it that she has the means to build a house of her own design. A new house, a unique one. A home that reflects her talents as an architect. She’ll prefer that, I’m sure.”

      “Have you asked her? No, of course not,” he said. “She’d have told me.”

      “The only person I’ve discussed this with is Ben.”

      Ben Chandler, Geneva’s favorite cousin. Ben would soon marry her friend, Maudie Keene. Charlie Keene’s mother, his new friend Jack’s soon-to-be in-law. Incestuous place, Carnelian Cove.

      Geneva calmly sipped her coffee. “I notice you haven’t asked why the estate won’t be inherited by anyone else.”

      Dev snorted. His grandmother had never disguised her displeasure in her children or their choices. “I don’t blame you for skipping a generation,” he said.

      “No.” Geneva’s faint sigh hinted of weariness. “There’s slightly less … satisfaction there. Besides, I doubt Tess’s mother would care to abandon the city’s social whirl for the quiet of the Cove. She’d sell this place in a flash.”

      “And break Tess’s heart.” He shoved his hands into his pockets. “I could sell it to her.”

      “To Tess? She wouldn’t take it, not like that.” Geneva set her cup aside. “Quinn wouldn’t let her.”

      “What makes you think I won’t sell it to someone else? Someone outside the family?”

      Geneva’s mouth curled, catlike, at the edges. “Would you sell it, Devlin?”

      He couldn’t say it; he couldn’t disappoint her. Not again.

      Overwhelmed by the challenges of this place—and dreading this favor his grandmother wanted to ask of him—he turned and stared again at the seemingly endless horizon stretching over the countless ocean swells.

      “Damn,”


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