Carolina Mist (20 page)

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Authors: Mariah Stewart

Tags: #Romance, #Blast From The Past, #General, #Fiction

BOOK: Carolina Mist
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“And through there?” Drew seemed anxious now to continue the tour.

“Thomas’s study.” Abby slid open the pocket doors.

Drew followed her into the room, his eyes darting around as if searching for something before coming to rest on the massive desk.

“Doesn’t much fit the image of the adventurer, does it?” Drew noted. “Looks more like the room of a college professor. Or a lawyer.”

“By the time he settled down and married Aunt Leila, Thomas had apparently lost his wanderlust. So the story goes.” Abby smiled. “Though I’ve often wondered if that was completely true.”

“What do you mean?” he asked.

“Well, I don’t know that anyone but a consummate adventurer could have written these.”

Abby opened one of the glass-doored cabinets and removed a stack of paperback books.

"The Treasure Seekers.

Abby handed him the books and gestured for him to sit at the desk. “Are you familiar with the series?”

“Of course.” He took them from her hands. “My grandfather wrote these books.”

“He surely did.” She smiled.

“Abby, could I have a few minutes to look at these?”

“Certainly. I’ll get you a refill,” she told him as she took his cup and headed off toward the back of the house.

What a perfectly odd turn of events, she thought. And what a tragically romantic story. As she poured coffee into his cup, she tried to imagine the mysterious woman who had mourned the loss of her beloved Thomas while bravely raising their love child alone.

“These are wonderful stories,” Drew told her when she placed the mug on the desk blotter. “Is this the entire set?”

“There may be a few others. I’m not certain.”

“Where were they?”

“Excuse me?”

“Where were they? In the room.”

“On the third shelf, second cabinet. Why?”

“I just thought, if there were others, they’d be in the same place.”

“Those were the only ones on the shelf.”

“Where do you suppose he got his ideas?” Drew fanned through the stack, reading the titles aloud.
"The Silver Saddle. The Golden Griffin. The Tears of the Maiden
.”

“Well, there is a school of thought that holds that each book was written around an element of truth. That is, that Thomas wove his real-life adventures into his stories. And that he even wrote about treasures he found but did not take.”

“How could you find a treasure but not take it?”

“Well, a few years ago, someone claimed to have found a sunken ship off the coast of Georgia by following the clues in one of Thomas’s books. The story was that Thomas had located the ship back in the thirties but did not have the resources to raise it. How true that is, only Thomas would know.”

“If these books had been written about treasures Thomas had found, where do you suppose they would be? The treasures, I mean.” He sifted back through the books and held one up.
“The Tears of the Maiden.
Look at the size of the pearls on the cover, Abby. They look like hens’ eggs. Do you know what one pearl that big would be worth?”

“A small fortune, I’m sure.” she laughed. “Unfortunately, if in fact he ever found them, he kept it strictly to himself. Or, at the very least, he didn’t leave any clues for me to follow. Are you ready for the rest of the tour?”

“Have you looked for any?”

“Any what?”

“Clues.”

“Of course not.”

“Then how do you know there aren’t any?”

“I guess if there was such a thing, Aunt Leila would have told me years ago. Are you ready to move on?”

Drew hesitated for a moment, then stacked the books neatly on the edge of the desk, picked up his cup, and followed her out of the room. As she slid the pocket doors back across the doorway, he asked, “You always keep the study closed up like that?”

“Keeping the room closed up keeps the dust down.” She smiled as she crossed the foyer. “This was Aunt Leila’s parlor, where she entertained her lady friends at tea.”

“Is that her? Your great-aunt?” Drew gestured to the portrait over the mantel.

“No, that was her mother, my great-great-grandmother. Serena Dunham.”

“Abigail, who on earth are you talking to?” Belle called out from the morning room.

“Oh, she’s awake. Come meet Belle, Drew.” Abby motioned for him to follow her. “Belle, you’ll never believe this. Guess who this is.”

Belle’s eyes narrowed as they settled on Drew’s face and lingered for a long minute.

“I am sure I do not know,” she said pointedly.

“Belle.” Abby walked all the way into the room. “This is Drew Cassidy.”

"Cassidy,
you say?” Belle arched an eyebrow.

“Yes. As in Thomas Cassidy.” Abby’s eyes twinkled, the scandalous story bubbling within her. “Belle, wait till you hear. Drew is Thomas’s grandson.”

“Oh, is he now?” Belle’s eyes narrowed a notch further. “Is he indeed?”

“His grandmother was a stage actress who was from

where, Drew? Chicago, you said? Which is really a coincidence, when you think that Aunt Leila’s mother was a stage actress in Chicago at one time. Sometime before the turn of the century, I believe. Which would have be
en long before your grandmother…

“What year was your father bo
rn
?” Belle’s eyes were now the width of a strand of thread.

“I think it was maybe 1919 or so.”

“Really,” Belle said flatly.

Her blatant unfriendliness—her not-so-subtle skepticism—was making Drew uncomfortable and Abby annoyed.

“Belle and her husband, Granger, lived across the street for many years. They were very close to Aunt Leila and
Thomas.” Abby sought to offer an explanation for Belle’s animosity.

“Then you knew my grandfather very well.”

“Oh, very well indeed,” Belle told him steadily, then turned her attention from him as if he were no longer there. “Abigail, do you think I might have my tea now?”

“Of course, Belle. Drew, would you like to join us?”

“No, no thank you. I’ve already taken far too much of your time.” He looked at his watch. “It was nice meeting you, Mrs. Matthews.”

Belle appeared not to have heard.

“I’m going to walk Drew out,” Abby told Belle, “and when I come back, I’ll make your tea.”

Belle dismissed them with a click of the remote control. “I’m really sorry, Drew,” Abby told him as they went through the front door. “I cannot imagine what got into Belle. She’s usually much more gracious.”

“Well, maybe she’s having a grumpy day,” he said pleasantly. “At her age, she’s entitled.”

“Well, I would have expected her to have at least been polite to the grandchild of an old friend.”

They walked to his car, which was parked at the end of Cove Road.

“Well, you know, it may have come as a greater shock to her than it did to you, finding out that Thomas had a grandson,” Drew told her. “After all, you never knew him, and he was her friend. And your aunt was her best friend, right?”

Abby nodded.

“Well, then, there you go.” He held his hands out in front of him as if holding the explanation before her. “I’m sure she felt disloyal to your aunt’s memory just by having me in the house.”

“You think so?”

“I’m sure that’s it.”

“Well, I hope she gets over it,” Abby told him, “because I’d like you to stop back. It must be like finding a missing piece of yourself, coming to this house, sitting at your grandfather’s desk.”

“Yes. That’s it exactly. Thank you for understanding,” He had brightened. “And for letting me see my grandfather’s books.” He shook his head slowly, as if awed by the experience.

“Look, there must be a complete set of Thomas’s books around someplace. If you give me your address, I’d be happy to send them to you if I find them.”

“Abby, that’s very nice of you. But I’ll be traveling the next few months with this new job. But, say, I will be back in Durham at some point over the next few weeks to check on an order. Would it be okay if I stopped back?”

“It would be fine,” she assured him. “I’ll see what I can find for you between now and then.”

“Abby, this has been one of the happiest days


He shook his head as if overcome by emotion.

“I understand. Believe me, I do,” Abby assured him, and she stepped back onto the curb so that he could pull away. “You take care,” she said as he pulled away.

“You, too,” he called through the open window. “And thanks again.”

Her smile faded into a grim line as she started back toward the house with a deliberate stride.

Belle had some explaining to do.

 

 

 

 

 

24

 

 


W
ell, Miz Annabelle Lee Matthews of Primrose, North Carolina.” Abby stood in the doorway to the morning room, hands planted firmly on her hips. “I’d surely like to know what that was all about.”

“Whatever do you mean, Abigail?” Without glancing from the television screen and the afternoon soap of choice, Belle raised her chin, a movement of the slightest defiance against the interrogation she knew was about to commence.

“You know perfectly well what I mean.”

Belle continued to stare at the screen, calmly scratching the back of Meri Puppin’s head, but she did not offer a response.

“Belle, why were you so rude to Thomas’s grandson?”

“That boy is not Thomas’s grandson,” Belle pronounced matter-of-factly.

“Belle, why would he come here and say that he is if he isn’t?”

“Perhaps there’s something of value to be gained by the charade.”

“What? Belle, I am working my fanny off just to

to
…”
She
paused, the words
to get this house in shape to sell it
catching in her throat. It was not time to have
that
discussion with Belle, and no amount of annoyance on her part was going to force a premature disclosure
.
“…
to keep
things going. There’s no money at stake here.” At least, Abby thought, not yet.

“Abigail, what he wants or what he is after is another matter entirely,” Belle explained with exaggerated patience. “The point is, that boy is no kin to Thomas Cassidy.” Belle crossed her thin arms over her chest and resumed her viewing of the daytime drama unfolding on the screen.

“I don’t understand your attitude at all. If it’s because you feel a certain loyalty to Aunt Leila’s memory, I can appreciate the sentiment. But on the other hand, I think we owe it to Thomas to welcome Drew, who has come here seeking his

his roots. It’s not his fault that his father was bo
rn
on the wrong side of the sheets, Belle.” Perhaps, Abby thought, logic and reason could overcome Belle’s obvious emotional rejection of Drew. “Could you please try to put your own theories aside and be a little kinder next time?”

“Next time?”

“Yes. I invited him to come back.”

“Why?”

“Because he has every right to be here, Belle. His father’s family built this house. When you think about it, he has more of a right to this house than
I…

“Don’t ever say such a thing!” Belle cut her off sharply.
“Leila preserved this house and everything in it for you, Abigail.”

“Leila’s family did not build this house, Belle.”

“And neither did Drew’s.”

Abby sighed. “We’re getting nowhere with this. Whether you like Drew or not, whether you accept that he’s Thomas’s grandson or not, he will be back, and I will welcome him. So let’s see a little of that gracious Southern hospitality that I know you are capable of, okay?”

With her jaw set solidly, Belle’s nose drifted a tad higher in the air. Damn, what a stubborn soul she was! Acknowledging that Belle was not going to agree to offer a personal welcome mat to Drew, Abby shrugged, throwing her hands up in resignation.

“Okay. Enough said. It’s time for tea. Would you like strawberry or elderberry jam with your scones today?”

“Elderberry, please.” Belle’s pert little nose was still in the air, as if sniffing at something unpleasant.

Shaking her head in frustration, Abby headed for the kitchen, Belle’s whispered insistence, “That boy is no kin to Thomas Cassidy,” hanging in the air between them.

 

 

I
n preparation of her assault upon the room—third bedroom to the right of the stairs, next to Abby’s own room but larger in size—Abby had removed the heavy drapes from the three tall arched windows that formed the deep bay overlooking the driveway side of the house. With the windows now bared to the late-afte
rn
oon sky, light flooded in, giving a whole new perspective to the room and its furnishings. Abby sat on the dressing-table stool and crossed her arms, one foot tapping unconsciously as she debated her color options for the decor. The two three- quarter-sized beds stood along one wall, an oval marble-topped washstand between them, its mirror caked with years of dust. A tall bonnet chest rose along the short wall near the door, a massive armoire along the wall near the closet. All of the furniture was of darkest mahogany, the bedspreads were white chenille yellowed with age, and the
walls were papered with a sallow peach print on a grayed background. Overall, the room was inhospitable and depressing. Abby rubbed her wrists, anticipating yet another week of scraping. Her arms almost ached at the very thought of it.

“So, there you are.” Naomi’s head peeked around the door frame. “Wow, I hadn’t seen this room before. What great light.” Naomi drifted into the room and gravitated toward the windows.

“I took those down this morning.” Abby nodded to the heap of dark green velvet piled on the floor next to one of the beds. “Just letting in some light makes a big difference in the way the room feels.”

“It’s wonderful.” Naomi nodded. “And those beds with the high carved posts are beautiful.”

“Aren’t they? I was just trying to decide what to do in here. The peach and dark green really don’t do much for the room.”

“Ummm.” Naomi’s eyes darted around the large room. “I’d do this room in a really soft ivory—the walls and ceiling—with ivory lace curtains at the windows. White would be too stark with all this light, and too much color on the walls would detract from the dark natural woodwork and the dark furniture. But ivory would soften the afternoon sun. And then you could use quilts on the beds for color.”

“Naomi, I’ve used quilts on the beds in every room so
far.”

“Well, you can’t have too much of a good thing, especially since you’re trying to create the kind of homey warmth that will attract a good buyer. In a house this size, you need all those little touches that make a house seem more welcoming and less formidable.” Naomi leaned back against the deep sill of the center bay window. “And, besides, you’re lucky to have so many of them. I’d kill to have antique quilts on every bed in my house.”

“Well, there are two large trunks filled with them in the attic,” Abby told her. “You are welcome to help yourself.”

“You have to be out of your mind.” Naomi laughed. “Old quilts like these are worth a lot of money. You should actually be thinking about selling them, not giving them away.”

“Selling them seems so

final. Giving them to you is more like passing them on,” Abby said thoughtfully. “Belle said that Aunt Leila doted on Meredy and Sam. I think she would have liked for them to have something of hers.”

“Well, I’d think you’d want to keep some for your own children.”

“Don’t know that I’ll ever have any.” Abby shrugged. “And I can’t see hoarding things for children who may never be bo
rn
.”

“Don’t you want a husband, some young ones, someday?” Naomi seemed to choose her words with care.

“Naomi, every woman doesn’t have to marry and have a family to live a successful life.” Abby seemed to bristle slightly. “The right career can be very fulfilling. Very rewarding.”

“I’ve no doubt of that. I was asking about what you wanted.”

“Why, I want what I have always wanted.” Abby’s answer was too quick, Naomi thought. Too clipped. “I want to be successful

though maybe in my own business this time.”

“Owning a business does not preclude having a family, Abby. Millions of women do it. And many do it very successfully, I might add. Surely you know that.”

“I don’t know that I could do both. I tend to put too much energy into my job. I don’t know what I’d have left to offer anyone else.”

“The right man, the right job


Naomi began.

“There’s not necessarily a ‘right man’ for everyone, Naomi. Some of us are just better off going it alone.”

“You really believe that?”

“It’s worked for me for the past ten years.”

“Guess that carves it in stone.”

Pointedly ignoring Naomi’s last remark, Abby began to
remove the spread from the bed closest to her. Naomi crossed the room to help fold the wide chenille square. “Well, then, what about Alex?” Naomi asked bluntly.

“What about him?”

“Abigail, are you going to stand there and try to tell me that you do not break into a sweat every time that man looks at you?”

“Is it that obvious?” Abby grimaced.

“Well, you
do get the most becoming glow…”

“Ouch! Stop!” Abby cringed. “Do you think he’s noticed?”

“I think he notices every little thing you do.” Naomi grinned.

“Not likely.” Abby sat down on the side of the bed. “I’m just his old best buddy, Naomi. His old best buddy who so conveniently is around to take care of his grandmother while he plays big-time lawyer and romances the boss’s daughter.”

“You sure about that?”

“I’m certain.” Abby nodded firmly.

“Then where’s she been?”

“What do you mean?”

“The last few weekends he’s been here, he’s been here alone. Where has Melissa been, if they’re so cozy?”

“Her sister is getting married soon, so they’ve had a few bridal showers, that sort of thing.”

“I’m not convinced.” Naomi shook her head. “He didn’t impress me as a man in love when I saw him at Christmas. He didn’t have
that look
when he looked at her.”

“Naomi, you are the most hopeless romantic I ever met Maybe he’s not head over heels in love with her, but maybe the thought of marrying the senior partner’s daughter is enough to make his heart go pitty-pat. I can’t see any man who wants to get ahead turning his back on the kind of doors someone like Melissa could open for him.”

“Then what was he doing here this afternoon?”

“Alex wasn’t here this afternoon.”

“I thought I saw him walking up the drive.”

“Oh, that wasn’t Alex. That was Drew. I almost forgot.” Abby drew her legs up under her and twisted slightly to face Naomi, who was perched on the other bed, one arm wrapped around the high post of the footboard. “Wait till I tell you. Thomas Cassidy’s grandson was here!”

“What? I had no idea that he and Miz Cassidy had a child!”

“They didn’t. Thomas and another woman—to whom he was not legally wed—had a son. Can you believe it?”

“What a very proper little scandal for Primrose.” Naomi chuckled.

“More of a scandal than Belle can cope with, I’m afraid. She refuses to entertain the thought that there could have been such an indiscretion in Thomas’s past. Belle was absolutely rude to poor Drew, who had come here with the intention of just looking at the house. He was as surprised to find family still living here as I was to have him show up. But he was charming and so grateful for the opportunity
to actually tour the house…

“You gave him a tour of the house?”

“Just the downstairs. The upstairs is, for the most part, off limits to visitors, since it’s so to
rn
apart. Why?”

“Do you think that was a good idea? Opening your house to a stranger?”

“He didn’t
feel
like a stranger, Naomi. There was s
omething that almost seemed…
familiar
about him. And, besides, he’s almost like family. You would have done the same thing. I know you, and I know you would have felt the same way.”

“Probably.” She shrugged. “Why did he come here?”

“To see his grandfather’s house.”

“Why do you suppose he waited till now? Why not years ago? Why not when Leila was still alive?”

“Drew works for a sporting goods manufacturer. He’s been assigned to this area.” Abby toyed with the fringe on the bottom of the bedspread, unconsciously braiding several strands together. “Well, I, for one, thought it was an interesting twist. And being pretty much alone myself for so
long, I was happy to be able to offer a little bit of family connection—however tenuous—to Drew. Next time, you’ll meet him, and you’ll see for yourself. I invited him to come back. I hope Belle will be a bit more gracious.”

“It’s so unlike Belle to be less than charming to a stranger.”

“The best I can figure, she’s just being protective of both Thomas and Leila. After all, back in their day, illegitimate children were the object of scandal. I’m certain she would do anything to protect the memories of her dearest friends from any such taint.”

“Maybe so.” Naomi glanced at her watch and rose to leave. “I need to get back across the street. I’m sure the young ones have Colin in a frenzy by now. Sam was really wound up—the storyteller at the library had selected
Where the Wild Things Are
as today’s book. Every time Sam hears that story, he becomes a wild thing himself.” Naomi chuckled. “Funny, though, you know, when I glanced over, I thought it was Alex standing there,” Naomi said over her shoulder as she started down the steps.

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