Ever Present Danger (2 page)

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Authors: Kathy Herman

Tags: #Murder, #Christian, #Single mothers, #General, #Witnesses, #Suspense, #Religious fiction, #Fiction, #Religious

BOOK: Ever Present Danger
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“Oh, come on, Kel. He never said that.”
“No, but Jake never thought I would adjust to the idiosyncrasies of a small town. I don’t deny that moving here was a culture shock after Raleigh, but now I
love
living in Jacob’s Ear…What are you grinning about?”
“Jacob’s Ear sounds more like an ailment than a town.” Brandon rested his elbows on the railing and looked out beyond
the camp at the mining town-turned-tourist attraction that still bore the distinctive character of the gold rush days. “Too bad they didn’t give it a name like Gold Town or Jacob’s Mine.”
“Oh, I think Jacob’s Ear is much more intriguing. Besides, the tourists get a kick out of the legend.”
“Which the chamber of commerce is more than happy to capitalize on.”
“And why not? Maybe the widow Thompson really did find Jacob Tanner’s ear on the back porch—not that I believe some nineteenth-century Bigfoot came out of the woods and devoured him. But a little folklore is more intriguing than saying a bear got him.”
Brandon nudged her with his elbow. “And you don’t think naming a town after a body part is weird?”
“They didn’t exactly
name
it that. It just sort of…stuck.” Kelsey smiled and then burst into laughter. “Okay, it’s weird. Unique, but definitely weird.”
“And hard to say with a straight face.”
“At least we’ll be smiling a lot.”
Brandon put his arm around her and pulled her close. “I’ve already got plenty to smile about, Mrs. Jones. The four months since we got married have been the happiest of my life. And living here in Colorado…well, it’s just a blessing on top of a blessing.”
“It’s wonderful seeing you excited about your job, and I’m hooked on the mountains. I could spend all day up here.”
“Me, too, but not if I’m going to get started on those changes to the Three Peaks website. Since you’re not scheduled to work today, why don’t you meet me for lunch at the dining hall?”
“I’d love to, but I doubt I’ll be back from town in time.”
Brandon put his hand on his heart. “I’m crushed. What could be more important than a romantic buffet lunch with your husband and seventy-five conference attendees?”
Kelsey laughed. “How about if I make us a romantic dinner for two? I need to run errands and get the grocery shopping done before we get all that spring snow they’re predicting tonight. And if I’m going to be snowbound, I want to have everything I need to do some baking.”
“I have a feeling I’m not going to get all these homemade goodies when summer rolls around.”
Kelsey poked his chest with her finger. “According to Jake, you’re going to be too busy to care. I’d better spoil you now while I have the chance.”
Carolyn Griffith put the last of the breakfast dishes in the dish-washer and turned it on just as the phone rang.
“Hello.”
“Mom, don’t faint…it’s me.”
Carolyn gripped the phone with one hand and groped behind her for the kitchen chair and eased into it.
“Is this is a bad time?” Ivy Griffith said.
“No, I—I just wasn’t expecting it to be you.”
I don’t even recognize your voice. You sound so grown-up
. “How are you?”
“Okay. How’s Rusty? Did he ever marry Jacqueline?”
“Yes, they’re living in Albuquerque and have two little girls. Tia’s three and Josie’s two. Rusty just started his own veterinary practice.”
“That’s really great. How are you and Dad?”
Feeling much older than we are
. “We miss you, Ivy.”
There was a long, agonizing stretch of dead air. Carolyn wondered why, after all the years of longing to talk to her daughter, she couldn’t think of anything to say.
“I miss you, too…” Ivy’s voice cracked, and she paused for several seconds. “Do you think maybe I could…come home?”
“You mean to
stay?

“If you don’t want to see me, just say so. I’ll understand.”
“No, it’s okay! We definitely want to see you. Just give me a minute to let my heart catch up. This is so unexpected.”
“I know, and I’m sorry for calling out of the blue like this, but I just lost another roommate. Denver’s too expensive. I need to live someplace where I don’t have to rely on another person for half the rent.”
Carolyn wondered if the roommate Ivy had lost was her boyfriend but decided not to ask.
“Actually, Mom, it’s more than that. I just need to be with family. I can’t make up for all the years I stayed away, but I want to make things right.”
“When do you want to come?”
“I have friends who’re going skiing at Purgatory day after tomorrow. We can hitch a ride with them.”
We?
Carolyn felt the muscles tighten in her shoulders. “Someone’s coming with you?”
“Would it be okay? Just till I find a job and get my own place?”
“Ivy, your father and I would welcome your coming home. But we need you to be up-front with us about what’s going on. No more secrets. No more game playing.”
“I’ll be bringing a very nice lady named Lucia. And a little boy named Montana.”
“Are they hiding from someone?”
“No. They’re the only family I’ve had for a long time.”
“I see. Is Lucia your partner? Are you…?”
“Mom, she’s seventy years old. It’s not like that. I just want you to meet her.”
“Is the little boy her grandson?”
“Not exactly.”
Carolyn sighed. “Ivy, please. For once in your life, just say what you mean.”
“Montana’s mine…he’s my son.”
Brandon Jones brushed the snow off his down jacket and stomped his feet on the mat, then went inside the dining hall of Three Peaks Christian Camp and Conference Center and spotted Jake Compton at a table by the windows.
“Thanks for meeting me for lunch,” Jake said. “How’re the website changes coming?”
“Great. I should be done before the weekend.” Brandon laid his coat across the back of a chair and sat at the table. “So what’s up?”
“Ivy Griffith is coming home Saturday.”
Brandon stared at Jake for a few moments and let the words sink in. “How do you know?”
“Carolyn stopped by the administrative office this morning and told me. She asked me to fill everyone in.”
Brandon threw back his head and felt a smile stretch his cheeks. “Praise God! We shouldn’t be surprised. That’s what the staff’s been praying for.”
“Well, there’s another huge surprise: Ivy’s got a seven-year-old son.”
“Whoa. Carolyn and Elam never mentioned him.”
Jake’s eyes grew wide. “Because they didn’t know. They’re not sure what to expect either. Ivy’s been in and out of drug rehab, but swears she was clean during the pregnancy. She says a lady named Lucia has helped her with the boy all these years. Apparently Lucia’s coming, too.”
Brandon looked out the window and spotted the Griffiths’ log house at the base of the mountain covered in a blanket of new snow. “So Ivy, her son, and this woman are all going to stay at Carolyn and Elam’s?”
“I got that impression. They’ve got a ton of room.”
“Is Ivy moving here?”
“Carolyn says Ivy rarely gives her a straight answer but mentioned she wants to find her own place.”
“So is Ivy supporting her son and this woman?”
“I guess so. Carolyn won’t say it, but she has to be afraid that she and Elam will end up supporting all three of them. Most jobs in Jacob’s Ear are seasonal.”
“I doubt money’s an issue, Jake. Elam’s made more dollars on his real estate investments than there are people in the state.”
“That’s true. I suppose if Ivy started to infringe on their space, he and Carolyn could buy her a house of her own.”
Brandon glanced out the window again at the Griffiths’ house and noticed smoke snaking out of the chimney. “Maybe all she really wants is to come home to the familiar—you know, find her roots again.”
“Then she’s going to be sorely disappointed.”
“Why do you say that?”
“For one thing, Three Peaks is sitting on the open range where she and her brother used to ride horses. This land was the Griffiths’ homestead, and ten years ago their house was the only thing out here.”
“I didn’t know that. So the camp property belonged to them?”
Jake nodded. “Still does. This and half of Tanner County. After their son Rusty was out on his own, they decided to invest money in a camp and conference center and had it built just a couple hundred yards from their house. The Griffiths wanted a sense of community and liked the ministry aspect. But they never had the desire to be involved in the day-to-day operation, which is why they hired me to be the administrator. Ivy doesn’t know any of this.”
“Maybe it won’t matter that much to her. At least the house is still there. Do you know if Elam and Carolyn ever heard from her during the years she was gone?”
“A few times. I know that when she dropped out of college they arranged for her to go through drug rehab—and then again several years ago. But she’s never been back to Jacob’s Ear since she left for college.”
Brandon turned his eyes on the embers in the huge rock fireplace that made up one wall of the dining hall. “Can you imagine dropping out of your family at eighteen and showing up again at twenty-eight?”
“Not really. But I’ve seen firsthand how deeply Ivy’s absence has affected Elam and Carolyn. I’m sure they’re glad she’s coming home. But they’ve also stuffed a lot of hurt and anger over the years. At some point, all that’s going to have to be dealt with.”
“Well, I know one thing: They can count on the support of the staff here.”
“Definitely.” Jake pushed back his chair. “Okay, you’re up to speed. Let’s go get in that buffet line while the food’s still hot.”
2
CAROLYN GRIFFITH WALKED into the family room and set a mug of hot tea on the coffee table, aware that her husband had been staring out the picture window for over an hour.
“We’re supposed to get another four inches of snow before midnight,” she said. “But it’s supposed to be sunny tomorrow and there’s no more snow in the forecast, so the roads should be clear on Saturday when Ivy arrives.”
“Ah, yes, with her
family
.” Elam Griffith picked up the mug and took a sip of tea.
Carolyn sat on the sofa, her arm linked in his, her gaze set on the row of icicles along the eaves.
“Why don’t I feel excited to see my own daughter?” Elam said.
“You’re probably as terrified as I am. We don’t really know Ivy anymore. I’m not even sure what to talk about.”
“I wonder if she’s even told Montana he’s coming here to see his grandparents.”
“I’m sure she has. Ivy knows we’d never go along with keeping it from him. It’s hard to believe the child’s lived in Denver all his life and has never been up in the mountains. Coming here should be quite an adventure.”
“I’ll ask Brandon to take him snowmobiling and sledding and maybe cross-country skiing. It’s been a long time since I’ve entertained a kid.”
Carolyn squeezed his arm. “Or we could just take him ice skating in the park and let him meet some of the local kids. I don’t think Ivy’s expecting us to entertain him.”
“Good, I’ve got a lot going on. We’re ready to bulldoze the south end of Collier Ranch and get it ready for the condominium project.”
“With a foot of snow on the ground?”
“The snow won’t last long. The sun’s supposed to shine every day next week. We need to push hard if we want phase one completed before summer.”
Carolyn glanced over at Elam and then out the window at the whirling mass of white. “You know Ivy isn’t going to find a job in Jacob’s Ear that will pay her enough to support herself, let alone Montana and Lucia. We need to decide before they get here what we’re willing to do and not do.”
Elam set the mug on the coffee table. “One thing I’m not willing to do is be manipulated. The only reason she’s coming back is she can’t make ends meet. If she’d finished college instead of shooting up, maybe she’d have some options.”
“It’s not just about Ivy anymore. We have a grandson to consider.”
“She’ll just use him to get what she wants.”
“But why now? Why not seven years ago?” Carolyn spotted Ivy’s Student Bible in the bookshelf next to the fireplace. “We prayed she’d come home, Elam. We need to trust the Lord’s timing.”
“I always thought she’d change first.”
“Maybe she has. We haven’t even eyeballed the poor girl and already you’ve decided what’s in her heart.”
Elam sighed and looked over at Carolyn. “Ivy’s been consistently disappointing for ten years. I don’t trust her to be straightforward about anything.”
“This has nothing to do with her being straightforward. We know the job situation here, and she can’t make enough to live on.”
“There’s nothing I can do about that.”
“Yes, there is.” Carolyn lifted her eyebrows. “You could
create
a
job for Ivy and make sure she draws enough to cover her expenses. That way she could make it on her own and preserve her dignity.”
“You think she’s worried about dignity? This is the same girl who sold herself to support a drug habit.”
“I’m well aware of what she did!” Carolyn jumped up off the sofa and stood facing the fire. Finally she spun around, her hands moving faster than her mouth. “Elam Griffith, you listen to me! We have to treat this situation with Ivy like a whole new day and leave the past behind us. The worst thing we can do is guilt that girl over mistakes she can’t do a thing about now! She wants to come home. She’s taken the first step. The least we can do is meet her halfway without dooming her to failure.”
Ivy Griffith walked out of Elmer’s Market holding a sack containing a can of tuna, three potatoes, and a can of cream of celery soup.
“I’ll carry that, Mom.” Montana Griffith took the sack from her hands and tucked it under his arm.

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