Authors: Mariah Stewart
Tags: #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Romance: Modern, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Suspense, #Romance - Contemporary, #Fiction, #Fiction - Romance
“I guess it’s easy if no one ever left town. There’d be records in the churches of births, marriages, deaths,” he pointed out. “And depending on how well the town kept records of the deeds changing hands, you could trace that, too.”
“I suppose. But for someone …” She stopped herself from saying
someone like me
. “… someone whose family records are scattered or missing or inaccurate, or just plain unknown, it’s a revelation to find out that some people even know who their first ancestors were who came to this country, and even what ship they came on.” She shook her head and added, “I’ve never even met my real father. I took Keaton from a step-father, but my real dad … I know his name but I don’t know anything about him.”
“Maggie never told you?”
“There’s a lot Maggie hasn’t told me,” Vanessa said drily.
“Have you asked her?” He stopped at the corner when she did. “About the things you don’t know?”
She shook her head from side to side. “I always figured if she felt like talking about him, she would.” She made a face. “Maybe that’s not really true. Maybe I was afraid to ask because—oh, I don’t know. Because she’d blow me off, or maybe not tell the truth, you know, maybe just tell me what she thinks I want to hear.”
“What do you want to hear?”
“Just the truth.” She was taller in the four-inch heels she wore, but still not eye to eye with him. “I would like to know about my father. I always told her it didn’t matter, that I didn’t want to know, but it does matter. I do want to know.”
“If you weren’t honest with her, why would she be honest with you?”
Vanessa frowned. “Whose side are you on?”
“Yours.” He took her arm when she wouldn’t give him her hand. “If you want the truth, ask for it. Don’t assume people can read your mind. That’s game playing. I didn’t figure that for your style.”
She crossed the street and started walking back toward town, and he kept in step with her.
“Ness?”
“I heard you.”
“I can see that I upset you,” Grady said. “I’m very sorry. But you brought up—”
“I know I did.” She exhaled a long breath. “I’m not upset with you. I’m upset with myself.”
“Why?”
“Why?” She snorted. “Why should I feel annoyed with myself for telling a man I slept with last night all my deepest secrets?”
“If you can’t share something of yourself with the man you sleep with, maybe you shouldn’t be sleeping with him.”
“We don’t ‘sleep with’ each other. We slept. Past tense,” she corrected him. “We just slept together last night.”
“So you’re telling me I was just a one-night stand?” He stopped in the middle of the sidewalk. “I feel so … cheap. So … used.”
“You’re not funny.” She kept walking.
“What do you expect me to say?” He caught up with her in one stride. “Ness, I don’t do one-night stands.”
“Of course you do.” She brushed him off. “All guys do.”
“That’s not fair.”
“You stayed with me last night. You’re leaving today,” she pointed out. “One night.”
“So if I leave town today, that means I can’t come back?”
“You mean, like once a year? Or whenever you felt like it?”
Grady whistled, long and low. “You really have a low opinion of men, don’t you?”
When she didn’t answer, he said, “Every guy isn’t out to love you and leave you, Ness, or to hurt you if he stays.”
They walked along in silence for a while.
“You are the oddest man I have ever known.” She shook her head, then fell silent again for the rest of the walk back to the center of town.
“Want to stop for coffee?” he asked as they approached Cuppachino.
She shook her head.
“How ’bout we stop in the art gallery across the street and just take a look around?”
“It won’t open for another few weeks. Rocky, the guy who owns it, usually doesn’t come back to St. Dennis until June first. He has a home in Arizona, and he stays there except for the summer. Anyway, don’t you have to get going?”
“Are you trying to get rid of me? Tired of me already?”
“You said you had to leave St. Dennis by three. It’s almost that now, and you still have to go back to the Inn to get your stuff and check out.”
“I’ll get to it.”
They crossed the street, and Vanessa stopped in front of Bling. She hadn’t noticed last night, but one of the side windows must have been cracked, because it was boarded up on the outside. Through the front window she could see the mess. There was yellow crime-scene tape wrapped around the entire building, and she noticed several passersby stop to speculate. She wrapped her arms around herself and willed herself not to cry.
“Maybe they’ll let you go in soon and clean up,” Grady said. “Maybe Hal can speed that up for you.”
“He said tomorrow I could go in. I asked him this morning. After the shock of seeing him walk in with Maggie wore off.”
“That bothers you, doesn’t it? That Hal and Maggie seem to have so much to talk about?”
“How is it that you just always seem to know exactly which scab to pick at?” He’d just played on her last nerve.
She walked ahead of him and turned up Cherry Street without looking at him. He walked alongside her, his hands in the pockets of his Dockers, his dark glasses hiding his eyes.
When they got to her house, he said, “I just seem to set you off, no matter what I say. I’m sorry. I don’t mean to pry or get into your business, but when you throw stuff out there, you shouldn’t be surprised if I pick up on it. That’s part of the whole conversation thing. You say something, I listen and say something back to you that pertains to whatever it is that you said. Then you say something else, and voilà. A conversation.”
“I’m not used to talking about … certain things … with anyone. I don’t know why my mouth has been so free this morning. I don’t talk about my father, and I rarely talk about my mother, and as for this …” She placed a hand on her scar and shook her head. “So I don’t know what’s gotten into me. You seem to bring out the blabbermouth in me.”
“Sometimes it’s healthier to talk about things, than to not.” He smiled. “You can blabber on to me anytime you want.”
And I probably would, if you were sticking around
, she thought.
“Now, here, all this time, I’d been led to believe that you were the strong, silent one. The loner. The recluse.” She snorted. “I swear I never met a man who asked as many questions or who talked about as much stuff as you do.”
“How else do you get to know someone?” Grady shrugged. “Besides, I like to talk to you. You’re not like most of the women I’ve known.”
“Yeah, well, back atcha there, pal.”
He laughed, and she found herself laughing, too.
She tugged on his hand.
“Come on in and get some cookies to take with you for your hike. I must have miscounted my batches, because I had some left over.”
“There were cookies here last night and you didn’t bother to mention it?”
“You were busy checking for intruders,” she reminded him as she unlocked the door.
His hand was on the small of her back while they walked toward the kitchen.
“Coffee or milk?” she asked.
“With cookies? Not even close.”
She opened the refrigerator and took out a carton of milk.
“Glasses are in the—” She stopped short, her attention drawn to a box wrapped in white paper and tied with red ribbon that sat in the middle of the kitchen table. “Did you put that there?”
His eyes followed her gaze to the table. “No. Maybe Hal dropped it off. Does he have a key?”
She nodded. “He does. Maybe it’s from Beck and Mia. You know, like a thank-you for being their unofficial wedding planner.”
She put her purse on the counter and unwrapped the present. When she opened the box and looked inside, she stood for a moment, staring at the contents.
“What is it?” Grady asked.
She reached into the box and held up crudely torn strips of white eyelet.
“It used to be a dress,” she told him. She dropped it back into the box. She looked up at Grady. “I think I know who broke into my shop. There was a woman in Bling the other day who came in and tried on this dress. She wasn’t sure if she wanted it or not, so I put it in the back to hold it in case she came back.”
“Get Hal on the phone,” Grady told her. “Tell him what you just told me.”
She did, and Hal arrived within minutes of her call.
She wasn’t as happy to see Maggie as she was to see Hal.
“Are you riding shotgun in the cruiser these days?” she asked her mother, who trailed into the house with Hal.
“Don’t be a smart-ass,” Maggie replied. “I have the right to worry about my daughter.”
“Don’t start with me.” Vanessa had led them into the kitchen.
Hal went straight to the box. “Ness, I’m assuming you opened this. Grady, did you touch it?”
“No. I doubt you’ll find any prints on there except Vanessa’s,” Grady told him.
“This was here when you came back from your walk?” Hal asked.
Vanessa nodded. “We came in through the front door—”
“Which I’m assuming was locked?”
“Yes.”
“Any idea how someone could have gotten in?” Hal asked her.
“Back door,” Grady said. “The lock was picked. Expertly done, I might add.”
Grady walked through the small back entry and pointed to the door. “An amateur would have taken out the lower glass pane and turned the latch. The door was unlocked as you see it when we came in, but it wasn’t obvious until we started looking after Ness found the box.”
“So tell me again about this woman you mentioned on the phone. When she was in the shop, what she looked like, any conversations you might have had with her.” Hal took out a pad and pen.
Vanessa ran through the woman’s visit to the store.
“She said her name was Candice,” she told him as she finished up, “but that’s probably not her real name. Oh, and Steffie saw her coming out of Sips yesterday when she—Stef—was on her way to the Inn for the wedding.”
“How did Steffie know who she was?” Hal asked.
“Stef was there the other day in the shop when ‘Candice’ came in.”
“I’m going to want to stop down and have a chat with Steffie, then, see if she can add anything to what you told me.” Hal folded the notepad and tucked it into the inside pocket of his jacket.
“She might. I went into the back of the shop for a moment while Stef was there, so they might have had some conversation,” Vanessa recalled. Then, thinking about how considerate she’d been to her would-be customer, she began to steam. “You know, I felt sorry for her. She just looked so … I don’t know, unhappy or downtrodden.”
“Like she was having a bad day?” Maggie asked.
“More like she was having a bad life. I offered to hold the dress for her—and I did, it was still on the hold rack in my office yesterday. And I even offered to give her a nice discount on the price because I felt sorry for her.”
“Why?” Grady stuck his hands in his pants pockets and leaned against the wall.
“Because the dress was a little on the pricey side, and I thought it might make it easier to make the sale.” Vanessa stared at Grady for a moment, then added, “Oh, all right, it was because she wasn’t dressed well and she looked like someone who didn’t have a lot of nice things and she said the dress had looked nice on her when she tried it on. She sort of lit up a little when she brought it back out of the dressing room. I wanted her to have it, okay?”
“Let’s assume for a minute that she was the person who broke into your shop last night,” Grady offered. “If she liked the dress all that much, why wouldn’t she have just taken it with her? Why destroy something she really wanted?”
“That’s the odd part, that she’d take the dress only to rip it to shreds. Why would someone break in, take the dress, destroy it, and then wrap it up and give it back to me? She’d have to know that I’d make the association to her right away.”
“No woman in her right mind would do that,” Maggie thought aloud. “That’d be like painting a big sign on her back: ‘I Did It.’”
“Well, she may have been involved, but I don’t think she was behind it,” Grady said. “I don’t think she was the person who broke into the shop and beat up on the car.”
“Those instincts of yours again, eh?” Vanessa asked, and Grady nodded.
Hal pulled on rubber gloves and replaced the lid on the box.
“Ness, do you have a paper bag?” he asked.
She nodded and got one from the pantry.
“Here you go.” She handed it to him.
He tucked the ribbon into the bag.
“Guess that’s it for now.” He picked up the box and the bag. “I’m going to take this down to the station and see if I can lift some prints. I’ll send someone down this afternoon to see what we can lift from that back door and the table.”
“I’ll bet you don’t find any.” Vanessa followed him from the room. “I’ll bet she wore gloves when she wrapped that box.”
“Was she wearing gloves when she tried on the dress?” Grady asked.
“Of course not … Oh.” Vanessa followed his thought. “Can you get prints off of fabric?”
“Depends.” Hal walked out onto the porch. “We’ll see what we can find.”
“I’ll bet there are prints on that price tag,” Maggie said when she reached the front door. “I never saw a woman yet who picked up something in a fancy store and didn’t sneak a peek at the price.”
“She did. She looked at the tag.” In spite of herself, Vanessa was impressed that Maggie had thought of it. “And she looked at some other things. A pair of shorts … madras plaid. They’re probably still in the shop. There’s only one pair like them. Red, blue, yellow, green, and white plaid, Hal.”
“I’ll stop and look for them. Sue down at the station is real good with lifting prints. If we’re lucky, we’ll find prints on the tag and dress that match prints from the box. And then if we’re really lucky, we’ll find them on record somewhere,” Hal said over his shoulder as he walked toward his car. “I’m going to send Sue over, see what she can get from the door and the table. We’ll get back to you, Ness.”
He stopped midway down the path and turned around. “In the meantime, I’d feel a lot better if you’d stay over at my place.”
“Why can’t you just park a police car in front of my house all night?” She frowned. “I hate that someone could drive me out of my house and I don’t even know why.”