Read Stranger in the Moonlight Online

Authors: Jude Deveraux

Tags: #Contemporary, #Romance

Stranger in the Moonlight (28 page)

“Think I should what?”

“Nothing. Here’s Russ. Shall we go?”

Travis wanted to drive, but Russell wouldn’t let him. “My car, my hands on the wheel,” he said.

Kim rode in front with Russ. Travis was in back with the handwritten directions.

“Looks like you failed penmanship,” Travis said. “I can’t read this.”

“Maybe you should have gone to better schools to improve your comprehension,” Russ shot back. “Oh wait. I went to the same ones you did.”

“Did you pass any of the classes?” Travis mumbled.

Kim looked out the window to hide her smile. They sounded like her and Reede.

The Old Mill was beautiful. It was wide and low, U-shaped, with the middle part one story, flanked by two-story sections. The building had a low stone wall along the front, which made a courtyard in the center of the U.

For a few moments the three of them stood, looking at the wonderful old building. Part of it had no roof and doves flew out when they walked up. But the two-story section on the left had new tiles on the roof. The little stone wall looked to be falling down, but in places the rocks had been replaced.

“Someone’s been working on it,” Travis said.


That
is perfect,” Kim said. She was pointing inside the courtyard to the right. There, behind another low stone wall was a perfect little garden—except that it looked like something out of an eighteenth-century book about gardening. It had gravel paths laid out in the shape of a double circle with an X through it. Inside the eight quarters were wild, weedy-looking plants of different colors, heights, and textures. They had all been carefully, meticulously tended.

“Unless I miss my guess, those are medicinal herbs,” Kim said, grinning, “and that means there’s still a Tristan here.”

Travis and Russ looked at each other, then back at Kim.

“What does that mean?” Russ asked.

“The Tristans are doctors so . . .” Kim said.

“Medicinal herbs,” Travis finished for her.

“All the Tristans have the greenest thumbs imaginable. When we were kids we made Tris plant things for us. If he planted them they grew for sure. When the rest of us put anything in the ground, half the time it didn’t grow.”

“So maybe a descendant owns this place,” Russ said.

A tile came rattling down from the roof, hit the ground, and broke.

“One who can’t afford to restore it,” Travis said, looking at Kim. “I think you are going to find some relatives here.”

She looked at Russ. “Finding new relatives—ones you didn’t know you had—can be very rewarding, don’t you think?”

“It can also be terrifying,” he said softly. “Traumatic.”

“Possibly. But then I always find truth to be better than deep secrets.”

“Depends on the truth,” Russ said. His eyes were laughing, as though he were greatly enjoying the exchange.

Travis had walked away to the center of the building and pushed open a door. “Are you two going to spend the day in some cryptic, philosophical exchange or are we going to look around?”

“I vote that you scale this wall and walk along the ridgepole. Show us what you learned in Hollywood,” Russ said.

“Only if you show us that you know how to do anything at all,” Travis shot back as he went through the doorway.

Russ went to the door, and turned back to Kim. “Are you coming?”

“I . . .” There was something about the herb garden that she liked. Maybe it was the shape of it, or the light on the yellow-green leaves of one of the plants, but she was glad she had her sketch pad with her.

Travis came back to the door, and went to Kim. “Why don’t you stay here and draw? The kid and I will find the cemetery and record everything.” He kissed the top of her head.

She was grateful to him for understanding. When a spurt of creativity hit, it needed all her attention. To put it off might allow it to disappear. And too, unlike her history-loving cousins, Kim couldn’t abide cemeteries. “Thank you,” she said.

“Don’t leave here, don’t talk to strangers, and—”

“And don’t eat any of those plants,” Russ said.

“I’ll try to behave myself,” Kim said as she shooed them away. She really did want to put those shapes down on paper.

Travis kissed her again, this time on the cheek, then went to the door.

“I thought you were a ladies’ man,” Kim heard Russell say, “but you don’t even know where to kiss the girl.”

“I could show you a lot about . . .” She heard Travis say as their voices faded into the distance.

Kim sat down on a flat stone near the plants she most admired. They were tall, with seed-filled heads that looked as delicate as rays of sunshine. She pulled out her phone, snapped a photo of one of them, and sent it to her cousin Tristan.
WHAT IS THIS
? she wrote.

Kim started sketching, translating the shapes into jewelry. The chain would be made of long, thin tendrils, like the leaves of the plant. She drew a curved shape with tiny spirals inside it that would clasp one edge of the chain. She’d put a pearl at the center of each one. The earrings had a thin leaf that would curve up a woman’s ear.

Her phone buzzed; it was Tristan.
ANGELICA
, he wrote.
WHERE DID YOU SEE THAT
?

Standing, she stepped back to get a full view of the garden. When she couldn’t get a good photo that showed the design of it, she climbed on the surrounding wall, snapped, and sent it to Tris.

When she started to get down, the loose rocks slid under her feet, which flew out from under her. She would have fallen but a strong arm caught her.

It was Red from the B&B.

“Are you all right?” he asked as he helped her down.

“Fine, but thanks.”

“I told you this place was dangerous,” he said, his tone sounding severe. “Last year a woman nearly broke her leg here.”

Kim sat down in the shade on an old doorsill.

“Don’t lean back,” he said. “That door doesn’t look to be securely on its hinges.”

She wiped dirt off her trousers and flicked sand out of her hair. “Are you the town watchdog?”

“More or less,” he said. “I was on the way to the garage but made a detour by here. Looks like my worry paid off. You didn’t come here alone, did you?”

“No. I have two big strong men with me.”

He laughed. “Your young man and . . . ?”

“His—” She hesitated. “His friend.”

“But not yours?” Bending, Red picked up her sketchbook. “May I?”

She gestured that it was all right for him to look at what she’d drawn.

“These are pretty,” he said as he brushed off some dirt. “Do you make these into jewelry?”

“Yes. I have a shop in Edilean. That’s in—”

“Virginia!” he said. “I used to go fishing there. Nice little town. I like the old houses. I don’t remember a jewelry store, but I do remember a place that sold baby clothes.” Red sat down on the low wall. “Why would I remember that?”

“Because they are extraordinary,” Kim said. “The shop is called Yesterday and it’s owned by a lovely woman, Mrs. Olivia Wingate.”

“Does she make the clothes?”

“No. Lucy makes most of them.”

“Lucy Wingate?”

“No. She’s . . .” Kim trailed off. Everything about Lucy was too much of a secret to talk about. “Do you know who owns this place?” She gestured at the Old Mill.

“I’m not sure,” he said. “I’ve seen a young woman here, but I don’t know who she is.”

“She’s under forty?”

He smiled at her good memory. “Yes, she is. I’m sure you could find the property records in the county courthouse.”

“Today? Saturday?”

“Oh. Right,” he said. “But then, you don’t want to waste your time with your young man in a dusty old courthouse, do you?”

“No,” Kim said, “I don’t, especially since we don’t have much time together before he—” She waved her hand.

Red looked concerned. “You sound like he’s ill. Oh, my dear, please say that isn’t so.”

“No, no,” Kim said. “He just . . .”

“He’s in the military? Facing combat?”

“No,” Kim said. “He has some personal business he has to take care of, so he has to leave.”

Red sighed in relief. “That doesn’t sound so bad.”

Kim snorted. “It has to do with his father and from what I’ve heard . . .” Again, she waved her hand. “That’s . . .”

“I understand. It’s private, but there’s a reason that I’m known around town as everyone’s grandfather. I’m a good listener.”

Kim smiled. “That’s what Travis says he is.”

“And is he?”

“Yes, very good.”

“Does he have other good qualities?”

“Of course. Lots of them.”

“Then perhaps . . .” He trailed off.

“Perhaps what?”

“Sometimes children can’t see their parents clearly. They remember that their mother wouldn’t let them eat what they liked. What they don’t remember is that they wanted to eat paint flaking off an old wall.”

From what she’d heard, Travis’s father hadn’t been around enough to know what his son was eating. Was he having an affair with Mrs. Pendergast all those years? But she couldn’t say any of that to anyone, especially not to a stranger.

Red stood up. “I believe I hear your young men returning, so I better go.”

Kim got up. “Stay and meet them.”

“Maybe this evening,” he said as he began to walk quickly. “I just remembered that I have a hundred pounds of ice in the back of the truck.”

“It’s probably melted by now,” she called after him as she watched him hurry out of sight.

“Were you talking to someone?” Travis asked as he came back into the courtyard, Russ behind him.

“The caretaker from the B&B stopped by. He—” She broke off as her phone buzzed. It was from Tristan.

GORGEOUS GARDEN. I WANT TO MEET WHOEVER MADE IT. I SEE COMFREY. IS IT POSSIBLY BOCKING 14
?
I NEED SOME TO MAKE COMPOST TEA
.

She gave the phone to Travis, he read it, and handed it to Russ. All three of them looked at the herb garden. To a person who knew nothing about herbs, the plants looked very much alike. How could he pick out one from a cell phone photo?

“Told you,” Kim said. “There’s a Tristan here. So what did you guys find out?”

Travis spoke first. “Dr. Tristan Janes, born 1861, died 1893, aged thirty-two years.” He turned to Russell. “What did it say on the stone about him?”

“‘A Well-Loved Man,’” Russ answered. “Not a bad thing to have people say about you. Sorry, but there was no evidence of a wife or kids.”

“His father was named—”

“Gustav,” Kim supplied.

“Right,” Travis said. “No doubt that was told to you by the mysterious man named Red.”

“What’s mysterious about him?”

“Just that he disappears whenever we show up,” Travis said.

“He’s probably heard you’re a Maxwell and he runs away,” Russ said. “Smart man.”

Kim squinted her eyes at Russell. He was as much a Maxwell as Travis was.

Russ gave a one-sided grin. He understood Kim’s meaning perfectly. “So what do we do now?”


We
don’t do anything,” Travis said. “
You
are going to walk around town and ask questions until you find the owner of this old place. Kim and I are going to look at jewelry.”

“Oh?” Russ asked, an eyebrow raised.

“For designs,” Kim said quickly.

Travis pulled her arm through his. “Keys,” he said to Russell, his hand extended.

“I need to—”

“Keys!” Travis said in a voice meant to be obeyed.

Russ laughed. “Big—Maxwell commands.” He tossed Travis the car keys.

Kim was sure Russ had been about to say that “big brother commands.”

With a grin, Russ winked at Kim.

He’s enjoying this, she thought. And he’s going to delight in dropping this brotherly bombshell on Travis.

When they were in the car, Kim asked Travis what he and Russ had talked about when they were alone.

“Nothing much, why?”

“Did you two keep arguing the whole time you were there?”

“Naw,” he said, smiling. “That’s all done for your benefit. He was actually good help. There are only six headstones in the little cemetery, and I took photos while Russ wrote down names and dates. I guess your friends will want all the data.”

“I’m sure they will,” Kim said.

“So what did you do, other than meet a man in secret?”

She ignored his comment as she opened her sketchbook. They had reached the center of the little town and Travis expertly parallel parked the car, turned off the engine, and took the book to look at Kim’s designs.

“So this slides around a woman’s neck?” he asked.

“Yes, and the earrings go up.”

“Not down? Not grazing her shoulders?”

“I’m not much on chandelier earrings.”

“Me neither. They get in a man’s way.” He leaned across the seat and kissed her earlobe. She had on small gold earrings with stones of citrine just off center.

She smiled at him, glad he’d really looked at her drawings. Most people just glanced at them and said how pretty they were, but they couldn’t actually visualize her designs.

“Want to wander through every store or go directly to the one and only jewelry shop in town?”

She looked at him in disbelief. “Don’t tell me you’re a man who likes going shopping with women? Going in and out of stores and looking at every little thing in the shop?”

“Well, I . . .” He looked out the windshield.

“Oh, I see. You’re just being polite. You added the jewelry bit on the end to entice me there.”

“I’m glad you’re not a judge in a courtroom or I’d never be able to put anything over on you. I tell you what, today is yours. I’ll go in and out of every one of these insufferably cute little stores, but in the future . . .”

“I’m on my own? You’ll get a beer while I wander?”

“Pretty much,” he said, and they smiled at each other. That they were speaking as though their future together was set in place, a given, a done deal, was pleasing to both of them.

They got out of the car and stood on the sidewalk, holding hands. So normal, Kim thought. So . . . so satisfyingly, deeply
normal
.

“Where to first?” Travis asked.

“There.” Kim pointed to a used bookstore across the street. Its windows were covered in years of dirt and the few books she could see had curled, faded covers.

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