Her Mother's Shadow. Diane Chamberlain

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Her Mother's Shadow - Diane  Chamberlain


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knew what he was seeing—triangles of design formed by intensely colored glass beads and slivers of mirror.

      Lowering the kaleidoscope, he looked over at her. “Did you make this?”

      “Uh-huh.”

      He looked like one of those preppy sort of guys you might see modeling clothes in a catalogue. His brown hair was cut short and his eyes were dark, with lashes she could see from across the room. He was hardly dressed for the beach, in his khaki-colored chinos and plaid sport shirt. Although she supposed most women would find him drop-dead gorgeous, he was not her type and that relieved her, because he was obviously interested in her. She would not be tempted. She went for the earthier types—a little disheveled, imperfect features, knowing grins and the sort of eyes that cut right through to her soul. She was grateful that this guy did not come close to fitting that bill.

      “What’s your name?” he asked.

      “Lacey O’Neill.”

      “And is all this stained glass yours?” He motioned toward the windows.

      “Most of it. Some of it was made by Tom Nestor.” She nodded toward Tom’s empty worktable. “He’s at lunch. All the photographs are his.”

      The man glanced again at the huge black-and-white print of her mother.

      “Including that one,” she said.

      He walked across the room to her worktable. He was still holding the kaleidoscope, and he shifted it to his left hand as he held his right out toward her.

      “I’m Rick Tenley,” he said.

      She shook his hand. “You just here for the week?” she asked, making conversation. Most tourists visited the Outer Banks for a week.

      “Actually, no.” He lifted the kaleidoscope to his eye again and gently spun the wheel. “I’m staying in a buddy’s cottage while I’m working on a book. He’s in Europe, and I wanted the peace and quiet.”

      She had to laugh. “Not much peace and quiet around here during the summer.”

      He lowered the kaleidoscope with a smile. “Well, it’s away from my regular life,” he said. “None of the usual interruptions.”

      She spotted Tom walking up the front steps of the studio, and Rick followed her gaze to the door.

      “This is the other artist,” she said as Tom walked into the room. “Tom Nestor, this is Rick …”

      “Tenley.” Rick turned to shake Tom’s hand. “You do beautiful work,” he said.

      “Thanks.”

      There was an awkward moment of silence between the three of them. Rick turned to face Lacey again, a question in his eyes she couldn’t read, and in that instant, she knew he wanted something more from her than stained glass.

      “Rick is here for the summer, working on a novel,” she said, to break the silence.

      “Not a novel,” Rick said. “It’s nonfiction. Dry stuff.”

      “Ah.” Tom moved to the coffeepot at the side of the room. He poured himself a cup, then lifted it to his lips, looking at Rick over the rim. “Where are you from?” he asked.

      “Chapel Hill,” Rick said. “I teach at Duke.”

      She couldn’t help but be impressed. He looked too young to teach in a high school, much less a university. “What do you teach?” she asked.

      “Law.”

      “Wow,” she said. “That’s great.”

      Tom sat down at his table, slipped on his safety glasses and returned to his work, probably figuring that the stilted conversation was not worth his time.

      “How long have you lived here?” Rick asked her.

      “My whole life.”

      He held the kaleidoscope toward her. “I’d like to buy this,” he said.

      “Good choice.” She wondered if he truly liked it or if he was simply trying to ingratiate himself with her. Taking the kaleidoscope from him, she began wrapping it in tissue paper. She could feel him appraising her.

      Don’t look at me that way, she thought to herself. From the corner of her eye, she saw him glance at Tom, then back at her, and she guessed he was trying to figure out if they might be a couple. A very odd couple. A twentysomething-year-old woman and a fiftysomething-year-old ponytailed ex-hippie. Apparently, he came to the correct conclusion.

      “Any chance you’d have dinner with me tonight?” he asked her. “You probably know all the best places to eat.”

      “Oh, sorry, I can’t,” she answered quickly, prepared for the invitation. She thought of telling him she was going to the gym, which was the truth, but then he might ask if he could join her there. She slipped the wrapped kaleidoscope into a plastic bag and handed it to him. “I can recommend some places for you, though.”

      “Are you … attached?” He caught himself. “Sorry. That was blunt. None of my business.”

      She might have lied, but found she couldn’t with Tom listening in on the conversation.

      “Not really,” she hedged. “I’m just … I’m busy tonight.”

      “Okay.” He seemed to accept that. “Some other time, maybe.” He held the bag in the air like a salute. “Thanks for the kaleidoscope.”

      “You’re welcome.”

      She watched him leave the studio and walk across the small lot, where he got into a BMW the same color as his pants. She felt Tom’s gaze on her and knew he was smiling.

      “He’ll be back,” Tom said, standing up to pour himself another cup of coffee. “A guy like that isn’t used to rejection.”

       3

      THE COTTAGE WAS TUCKED DEEP IN THE WOODS on the sound side of the island, but when Rick sat on the small, rotting deck, he could see patches of sun-soaked water between the branches of the loblolly pines. He could hold the kaleidoscope to his eye, aim it toward those silvery patches of water, and watch the beads of glass form designs as he twirled the wheel.

      The cottage did not belong to a friend, as he had told Lacey O’Neill. He wasn’t even certain why he’d said that. Maybe he was simply practicing for the other lies he would have to tell. He was actually renting this place. It had two minuscule bedrooms, one more than he needed. No TV to distract him from his writing. No air-conditioning, but he could handle the heat. There was a phone line to connect him to e-mail and the Internet, and electricity for his computer. That was all he required. When he’d first entered the musty-smelling cottage four days earlier, he’d guessed it had not changed in the seventy years or so of its existence. He doubted a stick of furniture had been replaced. The tourists who usually came to the Outer Banks for the summer would disdain this sort of place. They wanted houses that slept ten, televisions in every room, hot tubs, pools, views. That’s why he’d been able to get the run-down cottage for a song. And it was perfect.

      There was a short, overgrown path that ran from the deck through the woods to a sliver of sand at the edge of the sound. Each day since his arrival, he’d taken a beach chair down to the water’s edge and read or worked or just watched the boats from his nearly hidden vantage point. Last night, when it had been too hot to sleep, he took his flashlight and walked through the trees to the water’s edge, then swam out into the bay, the quiet of the night surrounding him. He planned to make that nighttime swim a habit. There were grasses or something underwater that had given him the creeps as he swam away from the shore, but once he’d gotten past the grasping tendrils, the cool, dark water had buoyed him up and felt good against his skin. He’d floated on his back, and thought about Lacey O’Neill. That red hair. The warmth in her blue eyes. She was a kind person; you could tell that before she even opened her mouth.


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