Read Choices of the Heart Online

Authors: Julia Daniels

Choices of the Heart (5 page)

“I see,” she whispered.

The bed shifted as Chloe climbed off. He heard the ruffle of clothing as she likely redressed. He didn’t know what to say to her. He wanted her…more than anything he’d ever wanted. But he wanted her as his wife not just a lover. She was the best friend he’d ever had; no one had been closer to him, but he couldn’t take just part of her. He wanted all or nothing.

He didn’t breathe until she closed the door behind her. When the screen door banged below, he fell back against the sheets that still carried her scent. Damn his conscience! He stood and lit a cigarette before walking to the window and allowing the July breeze to soothe his taut body.

~*~

Chloe heard Bobby crying as she walked onto the Lloyd’s porch. The soft glow from a lamp illuminated the kitchen as she entered the back door.

Mrs. Lloyd was pacing with Bobby in her arms, trying to comfort him, a look of disgust on her face.

“Where you been, girl?” she demanded.

Bobby reached out for Chloe and immediately stopped fussing when she took him in her arms and gave him a kiss.

“I went for a walk,” she answered softly.

“Like hell,” the older woman spat. “You leave my boy alone, Chloe Brandt. He’s finally got you from his system, and I’ll not let you hurt him again.” She got up in Chloe’s face with her finger. “Mark my words. You hurt him again, I’ll make sure you’re hurt, too.”

She stormed from the room and up the stairs to her bedroom, leaving Chloe to consider her words. She didn’t think Mrs. Lloyd realized just how much it had hurt her to leave Reese. He was hurting, and so was she.

Chapter Five

 

“You have my sympathies, my dear.” Mrs. Rowen, an aged woman who once taught at the small schoolhouse Daisy and Chloe attended, patted Chloe on the hand as she passed through the receiving line at the funeral.

“Thank you.” Chloe smiled at her, remembering the kindness the woman had always showed her, even when mathematic facts didn’t always quite add up in Chloe’s mind.

“How long will you be staying in Broken Bow?”

“Just until the ends are squared away.” Chloe spoke quietly, careful not to draw ears their way.

“Your sister had a little boy. Bobby?” Mrs. Rowen looked around. “Is that his name?”

“Yes.” Chloe nodded. “He’s with one of Mrs. Lloyd’s friends today.”

Chloe glanced toward Reese. Isabelle Mathers was possessively clinging to his arm. How small-minded of Chloe to fail to consider he would move on without her! Reese was a handsome man, kind hearted and loving. Of course someone else would appreciate him. He deserved someone to care for him, to love him.

Chloe swallowed and looked back to Mrs. Rowen.

“What about you, child?” The older lady squeezed her hand again. “Are you happy down there in Lincoln? Will you come back here to help the new doctor?”

“Broken Bow has a new doctor?” Chloe hadn’t kept up with the news from her hometown. If anything, she’d made a concerted effort to avoid it.

“Not only that, my dear, but a whole new clinic,” Mrs. Rowen gushed. “Dr. William Babcock is his name. Fresh out of medical school in Omaha. He’s quite wonderful.”

That gave Chloe pause. It felt as if a window was opening to her, but she quickly shut out the possibility. She couldn’t come back. Reese had Isabelle. He’d made that choice last night. Bobby would have his loving grandparents to raise him, and she would go back to Lincoln. End of story.

“I finished up my program in May,” Chloe said. “I’ve been working at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, in the children’s wing.” She wasn’t sure where she would be working in the future but knew she had to move from the woman’s boarding house by August’s end. The new students beginning their training in the fall term would need her rental space.

“It’s a big world, isn’t it?” The older woman patted Chloe’s shoulder. “Sometimes, though, it’s the familiar, the mundane even, that will cause your heart to sing, to come alive.”

After another gentle smile and tap, Mrs. Rowen walked away, leaving Chloe wondering. Had she ever had her heart sing? There were times at the hospital, as she watched patients recover, that she knew joy. The sight of a new baby always brought happiness.

But had her heart ever sung?

She knew the answer. It was plain as day, standing not ten feet away.

Reese had made her heart sing every day.

~*~

What in the world was she looking at? He turned to his side, wondering who was standing nearby. Chloe’s face had gone from sad and tear-stained to pink and vibrant, all in about the blink of an eye. What had happened to make her mood change?

He was the only one around. Isabelle had just gone to find a seat inside the church. He knew Chloe was looking his direction. Someone walked up to her then, distracted her. What had Mrs. Rowen said to her to brighten her face so, and why had she shifted her focus squarely to him?

He continued greeting people as they entered for the funeral. Since Ronnie and Daisy had been dead almost two weeks, gone from Broken Bow for years, it seemed pointless to have a long wake. The earlier vigil had been small. The actual funeral attendance looked to be even smaller. When it was time for the doors to shut, none of Chloe’s family had arrived.

She didn’t comment on it, simply entered the church and found a seat in the front pew, right in front of the caskets. The wooden boxes Daisy and Ronnie had arrived in had been switched out for matching lacquered models. Not the most expensive but not the cheapest, either. They would be laid to rest next to each other on the top of the hill in the St. Francis Catholic Cemetery.

Chloe sat away from his family. By herself, she looked small, forlorn. She kept her black-veiled head bent over her rosary as they prayed prior to the actual funeral service. Once the funeral rites began, the priest moved right along, and before Reese realized it, the service was over, and he rose to help the other pallbearers carry the caskets down the aisle.

Chloe rode with his parents to the cemetery and stood in front of them as the final prayers were said and holy water was sprinkled over Daisy and Ronnie one final time. She looked so serene, calm and composed. Was she as broken up inside as he was?

After people started to disperse, Chloe still remained, stock-still, lost in silent contemplation.

He came up beside her. “Are you all right? You haven’t said much today.”

She looked over her shoulder at him, her body still square with the caskets. “Just a lot of memories floating on the air today, Reese. Daisy was a fine sister. We had a whole lot of happy times. She protected me from Pa, took the brunt of the abuse to save me from harm.”

He stood with her in the silence of the moment, his hands folded behind his back. Sounds of motor engines igniting in the distance and the crunch of gravel under the wheels of the vehicles rumbled in the background. But the only thing Reese took notice of was the rapid beating of his heart.

“Are you ready to leave?” he asked. “The folks are headed back to the church for dinner. The church ladies made a nice spread, Ma says.”

“Are you anxious to get back?” She turned to face him. “Hungry?”

“Not particularly.” He shook his head. “I’ve had a knot in my stomach since we received word of the murders.”

“Wanna sit for a bit?” She pointed to a nearby stone bench.

“Well, I brought Isabelle and her mom…” He looked back at the place he’d parked the Model T. He wasn’t quite ready to let his brother rest alone at the top of the hill yet. “I’ll tell the folks to go on ahead. I’ll meet up with Isabelle at the dinner.”

 

She watched him walk away, his legs bowed ever so slightly from all the horseback riding he’d done over the years. He seemed more refined than she remembered. The whole town seemed less backward, friendlier than when she left. How could that be? Maybe
she’d
changed.

Reese looked quite dapper today wearing a suit she’d never seen before. Of the latest style, it was a dark, rich camel color. He was broader at the shoulder, more muscular than he’d been when she’d left. Memories of their loving the night before caused her to flush. What had possessed her to go to him?

He makes my heart sing!

Isabelle Mathers had hovered nearby all day, hanging on Reese’s every word. Isabelle was two years older than Chloe and lived with her blind mother. Isabelle was an exceptionally nice woman, always pleasant when they were in school and afterward. She could have gone on to become a teacher, maybe. Like Chloe, she’d had aspirations. Instead, she stayed here in Broken Bow to care for her mother. Would Reese marry her? The thought made Chloe’s stomach clench. Not that it should. Reese deserved to be happy, even if it was with another woman.

Chloe watched the Lloyds help Mrs. Mathers slide into the backseat of their motorcar and pull out of the cemetery. Reese waited until they disappeared from sight before he came back up the hill to her, carrying his suit coat folded over his arm. He’d loosened his tie and opened the top button of his striped broadcloth shirt.

“Shall we?” He guided her toward the bench and waited for her to sit. He rested his coat on the bench in between them and took off his tie altogether. “Hate those things. Glad I only have to wear them on Sundays.”

“Well, there are worse things you could be forced to endure.” She chuckled, thinking of the corset binding her stomach.

“I’m sure.” He leaned forward and rested his elbows on his knees.

Will we discuss last night?

“He was different after the war. You know?” Reese turned toward her.

“I think most who went over came back different men,” she said. “He left here a boy and returned a man, having seen incredible things you and I can only imagine.”

She extended her legs and rested her hands on the bench on either side of her.

“If he hadn’t met those Chicago men—”

“Who’s to say?” Chloe interrupted him. “I never would have guessed my sister even had an interest in Ronnie. I never thought she would leave Broken Bow.”

“Remember that chicken she used to carry around with her? That small one?”

“Tootie?” Chloe laughed. “Yeah, I remember. Pa chopped its head off one night and chased Daisy around the yard with the bloody head.”

He grimaced. “Sorry to dredge that up.”

“No worries. I’m just thinking about Daisy.” Chloe crossed her legs and swiveled on the bench to face him. “She had that miniature poodle she loved, too. She was forever finding strays. She’d patch up a leg here, a tail there. I thought maybe she’d become an animal doctor.” Chloe smiled and looked back up at the mound of dirt the caretakers were already using to bury the caskets. “She was smart, you know? Really smart.”

“Mind if I smoke?”

“Since when do you smoke, Reese?” She clucked her tongue.

He shrugged. “Lots of things change with time.”

She watched him pull out a package of Camel cigarettes from his coat pocket. “
I’d Walk a Mile for a Camel
.”

He chuckled. “I don’t think I would. But that ad’s always been kind of catchy.”

He lit his match and took a long drag on the cigarette, blowing the smoke away from her. She didn’t like the look of him with a cigarette in his mouth. It just didn’t seem to fit him. The men in Lincoln who smoked did so to look sophisticated and worldly; she had a feeling Reese smoked to relieve tension.

“When I think of your brother, I remember his love of airplanes. All those models you and he used to construct. Those elaborate designs he would draw on wood and cut out. Especially that one big kit he ordered from the
Sears and Roebuck
.”

“I still have it.”

That didn’t surprise her, not after all the hours they spent doing building the thing, the arguments over the paint colors and how to decorate the sides.

“It will be a nice gift for Bobby when he gets older. Something to remember his father by.”

They pondered that in silence.

“Why were they killed, Chloe Anne?”

She swallowed. The way he said the pet name he’d always used for her still had an effect on her, made the lining of her stomach tingle. The odd thing was it also brought tears to her eyes. Or was that from the reminder of how her sister died…or maybe the thought of what they’d shared the night before?

“Bootlegging,” she blurted it out before thinking what his reaction might be. She’d been fearful to say it out loud to anyone else, worried it would reflect badly on Daisy and Ronnie. This was Reese, though, and over the years, she’d never held any thoughts back from him. He had always been her closest friend.

Her statement got Reese’s attention. He exhaled a breath of cigarette smoke and turned toward her, a look of astonishment on his face. He flicked his cigarette on the ground and turned full around to face her.

“You-do-not-know-what-you’re-talking-about.” Reese’s words were jerky, spoken through a clenched jaw. He popped off the bench as if it were on fire and stalked away, his back facing her.

“Why else would they not be in contact with us?” Chloe continued to prod. “You were close to your brother. Your family is tight-knit. Why would he break contact unless he was ashamed of what he was doing?”

Chloe watched Reese pull farther away, shake his head back and forth. She really should have eased into her theory. Ronnie was Reese’s hero. He’d looked up to his brother with stars in his eyes.

“Reese, if he was proud of his accomplishments, he would have told you,” she continued. “Just as he did when he was in the war.”

“Maybe he wasn’t making it.” His voice sounded like a whip. “He was there for almost five years. Maybe…” He paused and ran a hand through his dark hair. “Maybe he wasn’t at all successful, and he was too embarrassed to ask us for help. He’d never do anything illegal—not bootlegging. He wasn’t a drinker.”

“People, good people, don’t just get murdered,” Chloe said. “I’m not saying your brother was bad, but why did he stop contacting his family? Something doesn’t seem quite right here.”

“It wasn’t bootlegging.” He turned back toward her and lit another cigarette. “What did the child welfare lady tell you?”

“Nothing. She was just happy to be rid of Bobby and be on her way back to Chicago.” Chloe was still disgusted by the woman’s attitude.

“Well, the telegram and letter we got didn’t say much, either.” He turned away from her to blow out his smoke. “I’ve got the address of the police. Suppose I should contact them? Find out what the real story is?”

“Do you want to know?” she asked quietly. She stood and joined him, surprised he pulled away when she touched his arm.

“Yes, damn it, I want to know why Ronnie died. I want to know who is responsible and to see them brought to justice.”

“But—”

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