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Authors: Jessica Keller

Small-Town Girl (16 page)

BOOK: Small-Town Girl
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“Sesser Atwood? What does he have to do with this?”

Oh, right, Kendall was friends with Sesser's daughter. Brice tried to infuse gentleness into his voice. “Sesser owns both docks. I pay him for every boat I have to have there. Well, that was him on the phone. He's going to cut into our profit deeply if he really is allowed to enforce the tax.”

Kendall dropped into the chair on the other side of his desk. She opened her mouth and then closed it, then opened it again. “Wait. Sesser owns the docks?”

Why was that so hard to comprehend? He nodded.

She rocked to the edge of the seat. “No problem, then. I'll speak to him. I'm sure he'll waive it for you. He must not realize we're in business together.”

Why was Kendall speaking as though she was friends with Sesser? Brice's head pounded. “What are you talking about?”

She licked her lips and lowered her voice. “Will you promise not to tell anyone if I tell you something?”

“Okay.” He drew out the word, not sure he wanted to make the promise she was asking of him, but agreeing anyway.

“Sesser is my secret business partner. He financially backed Love on a Dime. I know if I go speak with him he'll be more than happy to—”

“Your
what
?” Brice's voice rose. He couldn't help it. His mind had taken a moment to catch up to her words, but now they sank in. Sourness crept up the back of his throat. Kendall had a partnership with Sesser Atwood...the man he disliked most in the entire world.

“Partner.” She looked down.

“No.” The word came out hoarse, as if it had been ripped from his lungs. “That man...” He shook his head. “You can't be partners with him.”

Kendall tipped her head back, her deep, soulful eyes meeting his. They reminded him of a sad animal, begging to be let in from the rain.
Look away.
He couldn't afford to go soft. Not when it had to do with Atwood. Not after all that man had done to the Danielses.

“He's been good to me,” Kendall pleaded. “He—”

“I don't want to hear it.” Brice held up his hand. Blood rushed through his veins like a freight train. “Is there a way to get out of the partnership?”

“There's not.” She lifted her chin. “And I don't want out. I wouldn't have a business without him. I wouldn't know
you
without him.”

“I owe that man nothing. Not. One. Thing.” Brice shoved away from his desk and stalked to the window. “You have to break the partnership, Kendall.”

“I can't.”

“For me. Please? Can you do this for me?”

“I can't.” Her bottom lip quivered.

Brice shoved his hand against the back of his head. “It's him or me. Don't you understand that? I can't be with you—not in a business deal or in a personal way—if you have a connection to that man.”

“Where is this coming from? Talk to me, Brice. You're scaring me.”

Brice pivoted and stalked toward her. “That man has ruined the lives of everyone I've ever cared about. He's held back my business for years. He uses, crushes and discards people. How can you even consider staying with him?”

“It's just business. Brice...look at me.”

One clipped laugh burst from his lips. “You told Shelby that she shouldn't keep secrets from Joel, and here you were keeping this whopper of a secret from me. I trusted you, Kendall.” His voice broke. Brice swallowed hard, regrouping. “I thought... It doesn't matter what I thought. You're not going to break your partnership with him, are you?”

A few tears slipped down her cheeks as she shook her head. “My business is gone if I do.”

Kendall's confirmation hit with the pain of a crowbar against knees. He wanted to sink to the ground and crawl into a closet. Hide the way he had done when he was a child.

Worthless. No one wants you. No one would ever choose you.
He wasn't good enough for her. He would never be good enough. Never be the one chosen. Women always picked the man with money. Just like Audra. How had he allowed himself to be blindsided again? Sure, there was nothing romantic between Sesser and Kendall, but that hardly mattered. She was still choosing to align herself with the man.

Brice crossed his arms over his chest, pressing against the hurt boiling inside. “He's my enemy, Kendall. How do you not get that?”

“Enemy? Really? Listen to yourself.” She dashed tears away. “You sound like you're still in high school!”

“Out.” Brice pointed toward the door. For her own good, he had to get her to leave. He didn't want to say something he'd regret later. He had to think first. Had to piece his life together alone. Like always.

“Brice, you don't—”

“I don't want to talk to you right now. I can't. Please go.” He sank back into his chair and rested his head in his hands. She hadn't moved yet. “Go.”

“I will.” She sounded as if she was choking back a sob. His heart squeezed. The logical part of his brain told him to go comfort her, to end the argument by taking her in his arms. But he quashed that thought by shoving his arms into his chest harder.

Her feet shuffled against the concrete floor. “But this conversation isn't done. Call me whenever you're ready. I'll wait. I'll always wait for you.”

Emotions churned in his chest.
Chase after her!
But he kept his head down until he was sure she was gone.

Brice dug his cell phone out of his pocket and tore off the back. He yanked out the battery and tossed it into a nearby drawer. No one would be able to reach him.
Good.
He should have stayed an island. Should have kept to his cabin. Well, he'd learned his lesson good and hard now.

He'd never venture outside himself again.

Chapter Fourteen

T
wo days.

Kendall paced the length of her condo.

No one had seen or heard from Brice in two days. The men at the shipping warehouse hadn't sounded concerned when she dropped by looking for him the day following their argument. They said Brice was taking a few days off. No return date, at least not one they were sharing.

She dropped down into her eggplant-colored chair, scooping up her phone. Kendall swiped the screen, bringing it to life. But...she couldn't call him. Not without making herself look completely pathetic. She set the phone back on the coffee table. The first day she'd left him four messages.
Four.
And he hadn't returned her calls. The second day she'd called his phone three different times throughout the day and it still went straight to voice mail.

He obviously didn't want to be reached. And he obviously didn't want her.

She'd slipped up. Fallen for him. That hadn't been part of her plan. When it came to men, she'd always jetted before they had the chance, and this was why. Falling with no one waiting to catch her hurt. The pain now was different than when she was the little girl who had ached to know her father. Kendall felt a searing tear in her heart from loving a man who didn't want her.

She rubbed her thumb over the corduroy-like fabric on the armrest.

Men abandoned. Hadn't her mother drilled that into her head? Dad left, none of her mother's boyfriends had stuck around long and none of the men Kendall had dated had ever fought to keep her. She had thought Brice was different. Kendall pressed her palm into the place near her heart that throbbed. But Brice wasn't any different than the rest of them. When things got hard, she wasn't worth staying for.

Enough tears. She sucked in a shuddering breath. As long as Brice kept her partnership with Sesser a secret, she still had her business. And wasn't that the whole reason why she'd moved to Goose Harbor to begin with? Kendall wasn't made to be loved and cherished. She was gifted at helping others feel that way. Seeing the joy her planning brought to other people's lives, that would have to be enough for her from now on.

A knock sounded on her front door. Kendall had closed her office for the day, deciding to take a day or two to regroup, so she wasn't expecting anyone. She rose to her feet, padded over to the mirror on the wall and tried to swipe away her smudged makeup. The bags under her eyes made her grimace, but it would have to do.

She grabbed the door handle but then froze for a moment. What if it was Brice? No...she couldn't get her hopes up. She had to move forward without thinking about him. He'd given her an ultimatum—cut ties with Sesser or cut ties with him—that wasn't okay. Even if Brice returned, would she ever be able to trust him again? Believe that he wouldn't just up and leave the next time they argued?

She eased open the door. Not Brice. A middle-aged man with a graying widow's peak, tan skin and a kind smile stood there. “Kenny?” His voice held a trace of awe.

Weird. No one besides her mother called her Kenny. Was this a new boyfriend? A way for her mother to deliver a message without causing problems with the police? Kendall bristled and inched the door so it was open by only a foot.

“I'm sorry—do I know you?” She started to close the door farther.

He cocked his head, kind smile still in place. “You don't remember me at all, do you?”

“I have no idea who you are.”

“You were so young.” He shook his head in a sad manner. “I'm your father, Kendall. It's me.”

She yanked the door open all the way. “My...what?”

“I read about you in the paper. About your business.” He pulled a sheet of newspaper from his back pocket and unfolded it carefully. “I've been searching for you for so many years. I'd started to give up hope of ever finding you.” He passed her the news article.

She took the page but didn't look down at it. Her father? She didn't know whether she should hug him or slam the door in his face. This was the man who had left her first. The man who had started the pattern of abandonment.

“If you're my father, I don't know why you're here.” With so much swirling in her mind, she didn't have the ability to rein in her words. “You left us. You walked out on me.”

“I wouldn't have done that.” His gaze raked over her face as if he was trying to memorize all her features. “I was filing for full custody. I wanted you—wanted to raise you.”

But it didn't measure up. She narrowed her eyes. Her mother said he left. And he'd never returned—never come home or sought Kendall out before—so her mother had to be telling the truth, right? Then again, Mom wasn't known for
the whole truth and nothing but
. Kendall wasn't certain what to think.

“That's not true,” Kendall mumbled.

“The day she took you...” His voice caught. He cleared his throat. “When I came home and found you, her and all your belongings gone...it felt like I was going to die.” He shuffled his feet. “I didn't know where she took you, but I promise, I tried to find you. Even after the police closed the case and stopped searching. Even when my friends told me to move on. I've never stopped searching.”

Kendall pressed her hand over her forehead. “Do you want to come in?” She motioned toward her small couch.

They spent the next two hours catching up. He explained how he and her mom hadn't even been dating when they found out they were expecting a baby. They tried to make a relationship work for her sake, but soon after Kendall was born, he caught her mother cheating on him. Since they were unmarried and hadn't sorted custody out in court yet, when her mother took off with Kendall the authorities didn't consider it kidnapping. It wasn't a crime for a mother to move with her child. Not unless there were court documents stating the father's visitation rights or granting full custody.

He'd hired investigators, but he had assumed they'd stayed in the state. But her mother had moved them out of Utah—Kendall's birth state—and they'd lived in ten different states in less than four years until they finally settled in the foothills of Kentucky when Kendall was five. Even then, they rarely stayed at the same address for long.

No wonder her father hadn't been able to track them.

“I married a few years after you went missing,” her father said. “We moved to Ohio not long after that. It's hard knowing you were only a state away that whole time.” He rocked forward, his elbows resting on his knees. “You have three siblings. They would really love to meet you.”

Kendall had a family—people who had searched for her and longed to know her. “I have siblings?”

“Two brothers and a sister. They all live a few hours' drive from here, at most.”

“You searched for me?” Kendall repeated for the seventh time. It was hard to rewire her thinking. Hard to realize the foundation of her beliefs concerning herself and what she thought about men was a complete lie.

“I've never stopped.” His wife had shown him an article about Love on a Dime, originally suggesting that Goose Harbor looked like a nice place to go for a long weekend. But Kendall's name was mentioned in the article, and while her father knew there could be other women in the world named Kendall Mayes, he wasn't going to rest until he knew one way or the other.

“Kendall, I've loved you since the moment I knew you existed. So many years have been stolen from us, but if you're willing, I'd like to be a part of your life now.”

Kendall had never been abandoned. She'd always been wanted. And now a family waited to meet her and be a part of her life. She leaned back in her chair. It was almost too much to believe. But it was true.

“I'd like that, Dad.” She tried out the word to see how it felt. A peace Kendall had never known before settled over her soul.

* * *

Usually being in the woods brought Brice peace, but not tonight. Not the night before either.

He stirred the campfire until the flames crackled and the fingers of fire reached higher into the sky. Every time something had gone wrong in his life, he'd been able to escape into nature. Live alone for a couple days while his head cleared. The habit dated back to when he was nine years old and his father had come after him with the buckle side of a belt. Brice traced the scar on his cheek. He'd figured living in the wild was better than ever staying under his father's roof again. But after a few days of getting rained on, and once he picked clean a berry bush and hunger attacked him, he'd slunk back home. Thankfully his father had already left for a gambling trip when he returned, but he'd been forced to endure comments from his mother for a week.

Older now, Brice had brought provisions, so hunger pains wouldn't be a problem for a few more days. Besides, it wasn't the same as when he was a child because he wasn't running away anymore. Just clearing his head. That was all. Wasn't it? Brice ran his hand over his face as if he could brush away his tension. A grown man didn't run and hide from his problems. Right?

Bats circled around a nearby pine tree. Night was coming. He would bunk down for one more day. That was all he needed. One more day to get Kendall off his head. To remind himself that his life had progressed just fine before she was a part of it. Although it would take longer to clear her from his heart.

He tucked his hands behind his head and lay back against the hard earth. Tents and sleeping bags weren't his style. Through the pine tree canopy that lined the ravines near the dunes between his property and the land that made up the abandoned summer camp, Brice stared toward the last rays of light. Sunset.
Their time.

His gut clenched.

One more day alone wouldn't solve his problem. It never did, not really. The escapes bought him time or gave him opportunities to distance himself from people. Building walls to protect himself. He'd always considered that a good thing, but was it?

Brice worked his jaw back and forth. He let out a loud huff.

He and Kendall could never work. Not long term.
Why not?
He had to recite the same reasons he'd been repeating the past two days. Maybe if he said them enough, he'd convince himself. Not likely. But worth another try.

Neither of them came from God-fearing families. That mattered, didn't it? Brice pinched the bridge of his nose. If he had no example to follow, it would be beneficial if the woman he ended up with had been raised in a loving home and had a model she could copy.

A thought niggled at the back of his mind. Wasn't that the role of the church body—to mentor and shepherd each other? He could start a small group based out of the church and invite men like Caleb Beck, Kellen Ashby and Joel Palermo to join him. Guys his age in committed relationships who could learn together what it looked like to be husbands and leaders in their homes. An example didn't have to come from a blood relation. He had plenty of Christian friends who would come alongside him and offer advice and support if he ever did marry.

Brice groaned. He was
supposed
to be convincing himself that breaking things off with Kendall was the right course of action. He shook his head.

She liked to be around people—came alive around large groups—and he would rather spend every weekend either on the lake or back at his cabin tucked away from the crowds. Sure, that hadn't been a problem for them yet, but it would. At some point she'd decide he was a stick-in-the-mud or he'd get sick of going to town festivals. He never wanted to be responsible for holding her back. Not when he'd been accused of doing that in his mother's life.

Besides, Kendall had warned him from their first interaction that she was a serial dater. Told him she always left the guy she was dating. Why would he be any different? Sooner or later, she'd find a reason to cast him aside. She'd see they weren't a good fit or find some reason to leave him. Might as well cut things off before they got to that point.

Then again, they were already past that point, weren't they? They were already to love. At some point between the walks on the beach and watching the sunset side by side, Brice had lost his heart to a woman who had placed herself in the care of the man he disliked the most. That alone meant he couldn't be with her. No matter how much he cared about her.

Brice squeezed his eyes shut.
Sleep.
He just needed sleep. Everything would sort itself out. He would listen to the crickets and frogs and he'd go to sleep and then go back to the life he'd had before he ever met Kendall. Run his shipping business, read his books and spend time with his siblings as if she didn't even live in Goose Harbor.

But the thought of returning to life before Kendall brought him no comfort.

BOOK: Small-Town Girl
9.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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