204 Rosewood Lane (8 page)

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Authors: Debbie Macomber

BOOK: 204 Rosewood Lane
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“Warren wants you back, doesn't he?” her mother said when she didn't immediately respond.

“Did I mention that Maryellen Sherman and I met for lunch earlier this week?” Justine said, pointedly changing the subject. Warren was off-limits as far as she was concerned. “She wanted to congratulate Seth and me.”

Her mother set the bowl of tea bags in the center of the table. “So you'd prefer not to discuss Warren.”

“That's right.”

Olivia squared her shoulders and nodded firmly. “Then we won't. Tell me about Seth. When will he be back?”

Justine filled in the details. The longer she spoke, the more relaxed her mother became—and Justine understood why. Her mother finally had complete confidence in her love for Seth. Olivia now knew that nothing Warren said or did was going to change the way Justine felt about her husband.

“How is Maryellen?” Olivia asked as she poured them each a second cup of tea. “I see Grace every week at our aerobics class, but we seldom have a chance to talk.” She laughed. “Actually we need all our energy just to breathe. Did Maryellen tell you Grace filed for divorce?”

Justine nodded. “By the way, what happened with Maryellen's marriage?” It'd never occurred to her to ask before. Justine had only been fourteen at the time. All she remembered was her mother and Grace, her best friend, talking on the phone a great deal. Maryellen had moved home for a while, and she'd taken back her maiden name as if she'd never been married at all.

Her mother stirred a teaspoon of sugar into her tea. “I don't think anyone really knows, not even Grace. When Maryellen got married, I remember Grace telling me she didn't feel Clint Jorstad was a good match for her daughter.”

“Apparently she was right,” Justine said. Then a frightening thought occurred to her. “What do you feel about Seth and me?” she asked, raising hopeful eyes to her mother, trusting her judgment and wisdom.

“Oh, Justine, I think the world of Seth. I couldn't be more pleased for you both. Seth's perfect for you.”

Justine smiled. “I think so, too, Mom, I really do.” For the first time in a while, she thought about her brother. Seth and Jordan were best friends, and then Jordan had drowned the summer they were all thirteen. Seth was in Alaska with his father and hadn't learned of the accident until he'd returned home. Justine had been with Jordan that dreadful August day. She'd held his lifeless body until the paramedics arrived. He was her twin, her best friend and her brother. Her entire world had changed that summer. Only a few months afterward, her parents had divorced and within a shockingly short time her father had remarried. Her younger brother, James, seemed oblivious to the uprooting of their security, but Justine had felt it all, lived it all.

“What are you thinking?” her mother asked, a slight frown on her face.

Justine shook her head. “Nothing important,” she said, which wasn't true. But she didn't want to bring up the one memory that would never stop hurting. The one death her mother could never recover from. Drinking the last of her tea, she carried the cup and saucer to the sink and said, “I'd better get home.”

“Thank you for coming by.” Olivia touched Justine's cheek. “I'm thrilled about you and Seth. Honestly.”

“I
am
happy, Mom,” Justine said and impulsively hugged her mother. “Next time I won't wait so long to visit.”

“Good.” Olivia walked her to the porch and waved as Justine drove off.

When Justine got back to the apartment complex, she found a note from the manager taped to her door; it said she'd accepted a delivery on Justine's behalf.

After dropping off her mail, she hurried down to the manager's office and learned that a huge flower arrangement had arrived. The large crystal vase was filled with an array of carnations, pink lilies, irises and a handful of others she couldn't name, as well as artful sprigs of greenery. It could only be from Seth.

Justine could hardly wait to read the card. Seth loved her, missed her, and her sweet, wonderful husband must have realized she'd need an emotional boost to get her through the next few weeks.

Justine discovered almost immediately how wrong she was. Only one word was written on the card.

Warren.

She groaned with disappointment and tossed the small card onto the kitchen counter. She set the vase carelessly on the table, cringing every time she looked at it.

An hour later, while she was scrounging around her refrigerator, seeking out something easy and edible for dinner, the doorbell rang.

She answered it to find Warren Saget standing there, wearing a flashy thousand-dollar business suit and an even flashier smile. “Hello, Justine.”

“Hello, Warren,” she said without enthusiasm.

“Did you get my flowers?”

She didn't invite him inside. “I did, but I wish you hadn't.”

“I wanted to thank you for having lunch with me.”

She'd guessed as much. “It was very thoughtful.”

He met her eyes, then stared at the handle on the door. “Can I come in?”

She shook her head. “I don't think that's a good idea.” If her mother had heard about their lunch date, Justine wondered how many other people in town already knew. She had no intention of adding to the gossip by having Warren's visit to her apartment reported next.

“All right,” Warren said, looking hurt and a little confused. “I didn't mean to intrude.”

“You didn't, it's just that…” She stopped herself from saying more. Warren was far too clever when it came to getting his own way and she wasn't going to make it any easier.

He waited for her to continue and when she didn't, he asked, “Do you have any plans tonight?”

She certainly wasn't telling him that the most exciting plan she had was a rerun of
Nash Bridges.
“Why?”

“I was hoping you'd have dinner with me. No pressure. It's just that I figured you might be lonely with Seth gone for so many weeks. I thought you might enjoy a night on the town.”

“No thanks, Warren.”

He shrugged. “No harm in asking,” he said with a forced smile.

“Actually I think there might be.”

He arched his eyebrows as if she'd surprised him.

“The two of us shouldn't be seeing each other. It's…inappropriate. In fact, I'd appreciate it if you didn't visit me again—either at work or at my apartment.”

The hurt-little-boy look was back. “Justine, you don't think I'd purposely do anything to jeopardize your relationship with Seth, do you?”

“It doesn't matter what I think. I mean it, Warren, stay away from me.”

“You told him, didn't you?” Warren's eyes narrowed. “That big Swedish oaf is jealous.” He laughed, although the sound was humorless.

She refused to defend Seth or make excuses for him. Her husband was uncomfortable with her seeing Warren and that was the end of it. Her relationship with Warren was over; it had been for a long time, regardless of their recent lunch date. Nothing he said or did was going to change her mind.

“The next thing I know,” he said bitterly, “you'll be telling me that big oaf got you pregnant.”

“Warren, please.” She dragged out his name, implying that this conversation was boring her. “Just go.” She wasn't willing to stand in the doorway and argue with him. She started to close the door, but Warren's words stopped her.

“You
are
pregnant, aren't you?” he demanded. “Don't you see what he's doing to you?”

“Warren…”

“Don't let it happen, Justine. I'd hoped you'd come to your senses before—”

She was through listening and shut the door with a resounding bang.

Leaning against it, Justine felt weak with relief. He was gone. She'd been an idiot to go out for lunch with him that day. She saw now that it was disloyal to Seth; furthermore, Warren was too competitive to ever be a friend, as she'd naively thought. Not only that, Cedar Cove was a small town, and perceptions mattered. She couldn't risk humiliating her husband by allowing people to think she was seeing Warren—her supposed former lover—behind his back.

Warren had brought up an interesting point, though. Preg
nancy. Shortly after Jordan's death and her parents' divorce, Justine had decided she didn't want children. But now that she was married, she realized her views had changed. She could only hope Seth felt the same way.

 

Jack Griffin slapped cologne on his freshly shaved cheeks and blinked at the sting. He caught his reflection in the spotted and foggy mirror and wiggled his eyebrows a couple of times.

“Tonight,” he said aloud, reminding himself that this could very well be the evening he lured Olivia Lockhart into his bed. Their relationship had been progressing nicely—
very
nicely. But they were both mature adults, and with those years had come a certain…patience. A kind of caution. They weren't twenty-year-olds at the mercy of their hormones. Still, he was a man in every sense of the word, and he'd like nothing better than to take their relationship to a physical level. Beyond kissing and cuddling… He was ready to make the leap and hoped she agreed.

The divorced family court judge wasn't like other women he'd known. Olivia had class and culture, and he was a no-account drunk who remained sober one day at a time.

Grace Sherman had told him about Olivia's upcoming birthday and he was grateful. This was exactly the occasion he'd been looking for, a chance to show her exactly how much he cared. Jack had searched long and hard for the perfect birthday gift. His quest had been to find something that would let her know the message of his heart. Something that suited a woman who was both sophisticated and unpretentious. The diamond tennis bracelet was it.

Choosing a clean shirt, he reached for the gray velvet box and examined the bracelet. It was stunning, if he said so
himself. He'd never bought anything as beautiful as this, not even for his ex-wife. The jeweler had sold him on the quality, and had then shaved off an extra ten percent when Jack showed more than idle interest. Nothing wrong with being practical, he figured. The extra cash would go toward a fancy dinner at The Captain's Galley. He enjoyed imagining Olivia's reaction when she opened the box. Twice now he'd wrapped it, and then because he wanted to be assured it was as lovely as he remembered, he'd unwrapped it just to take another peek.

Whistling, Jack finished dressing.
Tonight,
he said again, his blood already heating at the thought of Olivia lying in his arms.

A sound came from the direction of his living room and he stuck his head outside the bedroom door. “Anyone here?”

No response.

Jack frowned, then checked his reflection one last time.

“Dad?”

Jack froze. Eric was here?
Now?

“Eric?” Jack stepped out of the bedroom to find his twenty-six-year-old son standing in the middle of his living room, a suitcase in his hand.

“You were on your way out?” Eric asked.

“I'm not expected for a while,” Jack assured him. The boy looked dreadful, his complexion pale with pain. His shoulders were hunched and his misery was evident in every line of his body. “What's wrong?”

Eric shrugged.

Experience had taught him that only a woman was capable of bringing a man to this point. “Did you and Shelly have a fight?”

Eric's returning snort was devoid of humor. “You could say that.”

Glancing at the suitcase in his son's hand, he assumed this was more than the usual disagreement. “She kicked you out?”

Eric nodded.

His son slumped onto the sofa and gazed pleadingly up at Jack. “Do you have time to talk, Dad?”

Jack's relationship with his son was tenuous at best. For almost his entire life, Eric had lived with his mother. Even after Jack became sober, Eric had rejected every effort he'd made to establish a relationship. This year, this past spring, was the first time Eric had agreed to see Jack. Afraid he might inadvertently say or do something to distress his son, Jack had invited Olivia along for the initial meeting. They'd all had dinner on the Seattle waterfront. Buoyed by the success of that outing, Jack and Eric had gotten together every month or so since.

Jack was thrilled with the prospect of having a good relationship with his only child. He had a lot to prove, both to Eric and himself. He didn't want anything to injure this fragile beginning.

“Of course I have time. Tell me what's on your mind.” Jack sat down across from his son, leaning forward so Eric would know he was interested and that he cared.

“It's Shelly and her pregnancy,” Eric murmured.

That much Jack had guessed, but he didn't say anything.

“The baby
can't
be mine. I told her that and she blew up at me. She said if I seriously think she's pregnant by someone else, then I should get out of her life.”

“I'm sure she didn't mean it,” Jack murmured. “Women say things like that when they're upset.”

“She meant it enough to throw me out of the apartment.”

So much for
that
pearl of wisdom, Jack mused. He cursed himself for not being better at this.

Eric looked as if he was about to weep. “She said she never wanted to see me again.”

“I'm sure she didn't mean that, either.”

“I think she did.”

“Perhaps she did when she said it, but she'll have a change of heart later.” Jack winced at his own glibness. “Soon,” he added. “She'll ask you to come home soon.”

“I hope she does,” Eric said emphatically. “The apartment's leased in my name,” he added, “but I don't want her to move. She can have the apartment if she wants.”

“What about you? Where will you go?”

Eric hesitated, then glanced up. “Would you mind very much if I stayed here with you? Just for the time being.”

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