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Chesapeake Blue

Page 17

   


She leaned back, smiled up at him. "Thank you for the tulips. They're beautiful. I'm sorry I wasn't home."
"So was I. I figured I'd trade them for some of your homemade fries. You still make the best."
"Come to dinner tomorrow. I'll fix some for you."
"With sloppy joes?"
She laughed again, reached back with one hand to take Ethan's. "Well, that hasn't changed, has it? With sloppy joes. Deke will be thrilled."
"And chocolate cake?"
"Guy expects a lot for a bunch of flowers," Ethan commented. "At least I didn't swipe them from Anna's garden, then try to blame it on innocent deer and bunny rabbits."
Ethan winced, sent a wary look toward the house to make certain Anna wasn't within hearing distance.
"Let's not bring that up again. Damn near twenty years ago, and she'd still scalp me for it."
"I heard you got them from the very pretty florist on Market Street." Grace tucked her arm around Seth's waist as they walked toward the house. "And that you've rented the place above the shop for a studio."
"Word travels."
"Fast and wide," Grace agreed. "Why don't you tell me all about it?"
"Nothing to tell, yet. But I'm working on it."
SHE WAS running behind now, and it was her own fault. There was no reason, no sane reason she'd felt compelled to shower, to change out of her grubby gardening clothes. Certainly no reason, she thought, irritated with herself, to have spent time on her precious Sunday fussing with makeup. Now it was past noon.
Didn't matter, she told herself. It was a lovely day for a drive. She'd spend two minutes on Seth Quinn and the key, then indulge herself at the nursery.
Of course now she'd have to change back into her gardening clothes, but that was neither here nor there. She'd plant, then make fresh lemonade and sit and bask in the glow of a job well done. Feel the air! Brisk with spring, moist from the water. The fields on either side of the road were tilled and planted, and already running green in the rows. She could smell the sharp edge of fertilizer, the richer tones of earth that meant spring in the country.
She made the turn, caught the glint of the sun off the mudflats before the trees took over with their deep shadows.
The old white house was perfect for its setting. Edged by woods, with water hemming its back, and the tidy, flower-decked lawn skirting its front. She'd admired it before, the way it sat there, so cozy and comfortable with its front porch rockers and faded blue shutters.
While she felt the whimsy and the privacy of her own home suited her perfectly, she could admire the character of the Quinn place. It gave a sense of order without regimentation. The kind of home, she reflected, where feet were allowed to prop on coffee tables.
No one would have dreamed to rest a heel on her mother's
Louis XIV. Not even her father.
The number of cars in the drive made her frown. A white Corvette—vintage, she assumed—a sturdy SUV of some sort that appeared to have some hard miles on it. A snappy little convertible, a dented, disreputable-looking hatchback that had to be twenty years old, a manly pickup truck and a sleek and muscular Jaguar.
She hesitated, then mentally assigned the vehicles. The SUV was the family car. The 'Vette was undoubtedly former race-car driver Cameron Quinn's—as would be the truck as work vehicle, giving Anna the convertible and the old hand-me-down to the oldest boy, who must be old enough to drive. The Jag was Seth's. She'd noticed it, with some admiration, the night before. And if she hadn't, she'd heard all about his recent acquisition from chatting customers in her shop. She nosed up behind it. Two minutes, she reminded herself, and grabbed her purse as she turned off the engine. Instantly, she heard the blast of music. The teenagers, she figured as she started toward the front door, her steps unconsciously timed to the beat of Matchbox 20.
She admired the pots and tubs of flowers on the porch. Anna, she knew, had a clever hand for mixing flowers. She knocked briskly, then bumped it up to a pound before she sighed. No one was going to hear her over the music, even if she used a battering ram. Resigned, she stepped off the porch and started toward the side of the house. She heard more than music now. There were shouts, squeals and what she could only describe as maniacal laughter. The kids must be having a party. She'd just go back, pass off the key to one of Anna's boys and be on her way.
The dog came first, a cannonball of black fur with a lolling tongue. He had a bark like a machine gun, and though she was very fond of dogs, Dru stopped on a dime.
"Hi there. Ah, nice dog."
He seemed to take that as an invitation to race two wild circles around her, then press his nose to her crotch.
"Okay." She put a firm hand under his jaw, lifted it. "That's just a little too friendly." She gave him a quick rub, then a nudge, and managed one more step before the boy streaked screaming around the side of the house. Though he held a large plastic weapon in his hand, he was in full retreat. He managed to veer around her. "Better run," he puffed out, an instant before she saw a flash of movement out of the corner of her eye.
An instant before she was shot dead in the heart, by a stream of cold water. The shock was so great that her mouth dropped open but she couldn't manage a sound. Just behind her the boy murmured, "Uh-oh."
And deserted the field.
Seth, the water rifle in his hand, his hair dripping from the previous attack, took one look at Dru. "Oh, shit."
Helpless, Dru looked down. Her crisp red shirt and navy pants were soaked. The splatter had managed to reach her face, making the time she'd spent fiddling with it a complete waste. She lifted her gaze, one that turned from stunned to searing when she noted that Seth looked very much like a man struggling not to laugh.
"Are you crazy ?"
"Sorry. Really." He swallowed hard, knowing the laugh fighting to burst out of his throat would damn him. "Sorry," he managed as he walked to her. "I was after Jake—little bastard nailed me. You got caught in the cross fire." He tried a charming smile, dug a bandanna out of the back pocket of his jeans.
"Which proves there are no innocent bystanders in war."
"Which proves," she said between her teeth, "that some men are idiots who can't be trusted with a child's toy."
"Hey, hey, this is a Super Soaker 5000." He lifted the water gun but, catching the gleam in her eyes, hastily lowered it again. "Anyway, I'm really sorry. How about a beer?"