There were some things money couldn't buy. For everything else, there was her father.
Since Brett Delmar couldn't—or wouldn't—provide Amanda Delmar with love, affection, or respect, at the very least she figured he should foot the bill for a few of life's necessities. And luxuries.
"Daddy, just two hundred. That's all I need." Amanda checked out her manicure and grimaced. If he could only see how godawful her nails looked, he would understand that this was an emergency.
"Why not make it two thousand? Why not make it ten thousand?" Her father's sarcasm came crackling through her cell phone.
She decided to ignore it. "That's so sweet of you! And it's not even my birthday."
That wheezing was probably the sound of his blood pressure going up. She felt a momentary twinge of guilt. She didn't want to give him a heart attack. She just wanted a manicure.
"Amanda Margaret."
Ouch. Trotting out the middle name was never a good thing. Amanda set her front porch swing swaying. She ran her fingers idly through the lilac bush that hugged the porch as she rocked back and forth.
She was enjoying her summer in East Bum Fuck, or if you went by what the map said, Cuttersville,
Which was ironic, considering he had created those spending habits, nurtured them in her. He had praised her beauty and her style as a child and scoffed at her attempts to use her brain. Now he found those very traits he had fostered in her annoying.
All her attempts to please him had failed, and around about her eighteenth birthday she had stopped trying.
"Yes, Daddy?" If he could use sarcasm, surely he would recognize it.
"Have you heard of tough love?"
Amanda stopped playing with the tips of her hair extensions and frowned. Maybe she had been in the country too long, ogling brawny farmers and getting back to nature. "Is that a new designer? Did P. Diddy start a line of street wear? Why haven't I heard of it?"
He snorted. "No, it's not a goddamn clothing line. It's what I'm about to do for your own good, because I love you and you need to get serious, Amanda. You're almost twenty-six goddamn years old. When I was your age, I was making half a million a year already."
Amanda moved her mouth in a silent "blah, blah, blah." She had heard this speech before. Could recite it backward and forward and in French.
"You need to work for your money."
She was. Listening to him blather was hard, painful work, and she had to endure it every time she needed cash. It was as bad as flipping burgers at McDonald's would be, she'd bet.
Maybe it was time to get a job. Not that she was qualified to do anything, given her degree in art appreciation. But it was getting a little old to beg for money all the time, and the childish satisfaction of spending her father's fortune no longer had quite the same charm.
My God, maybe she was actually maturing. There was a scary thought.
Amanda reached down and scooped up Baby, her teacup poodle, and stroked her downy head. She was getting stressed out, and Baby was soothing, her fluffy fur poufing around Amanda's fingers. Baby's devotion was simple and uncomplicated, and Amanda appreciated that.
"So, this time, I'm serious, Amanda, I've had it. I'm instituting tough love. In the end we'll both be happier this way."
Amanda heard herself sigh. She really was getting too old for these circular arguments. There was no fight left in her. That's why she was nesting in the country, to relax. "What are you talking about? What does tough love actually mean?"
"It means I'm cutting you off. No more money."
"What?" The words didn't make sense. They were unintelligi-ble to her. Daddy was money, money was Daddy, and he couldn't possibly mean…
"No. More. Money. Ever. That's what I mean. You'll have to fend for yourself from here on out. I know your rent is paid for the duration of the summer, so you'll have plenty of time to look for work. There's the two thousand I gave you last week. That should hold you over until your first paycheck."
"It's gone already! Baby needed dog food." And she had needed a new handbag, one better equipped to handle the dust of the country.
"What the hell is the dog eating? Beluga? Christ, Amanda, give me a break. That dog is the size of an egg. It probably eats a can of dog food a month."
Amanda felt the beginnings of panic, followed by pure anger. How absolutely like him. He gave, and he taketh away. Her father had a serious power trip going on. He just loved being the one in control, holding the cards, manipulating her life.
Well, she wasn't going to beg. Not this time.
She'd just run to the money machine instead and make a large cash withdrawal on her credit cards. All six of them.
"Well, if you're really serious about this…" She paused, giving him time to regain his sanity.
"I am."
"Then I have to go. I have to find a job before I die of starvation and exposure."
Or worse, her cell phone ran out of minutes.
Danny Tucker wiped his forehead on the sleeve of his T-shirt and watched the car pulling in his driveway. Didn't look like anyone he recognized, at least not from first glance at the black Ford pickup.
The truck passed the turn-off to Danny's parent's house, the big Victorian farmhouse in the center of their property, and headed back toward the squat brick ranch that belonged to him.
In no big hurry to see who it was, and only mildly interested, Danny stepped over a row of soybeans and started toward the house, slow and steady. That's what he was, slow and steady. That's what his father called him. That's what his first wife, Shelby, had claimed to admire in him. And Danny was who he was, and there wasn't any sense in trying to change that.
But slow and steady somehow hadn't served him quite the way he'd wanted them to. There were only two things in life Danny had ever wanted—to work this farm and to raise a family.
He had the farm. Pinching a leaf off as he went down the row of lusty green plants, he surveyed his crop and was satisfied. It was a good year, so far. Farmers never counted their crops before the harvest, but so far, so good.
What Danny didn't have was the family. No wife, no kids. An empty house and an even lonelier bed. It was a problem. One he had been aiming to fix when he'd been side-swiped by a strange lust for the new woman in town, Amanda Delmar.
He shook his head, even as his body reacted just to the thought of her tall, thin, sun-kissed body. "You're a damn fool, Tucker," he muttered.
A woman like that wouldn't look twice at a lug like him—and if she did, she'd toddle herself right back out of town on her toothpick heels after she'd tired of him. Wasn't a future with a woman like that.
Rubbing his hands down the front of his jeans, Danny stopped in his drive and watched the pickup crawl to a stop in a cloud of dust. He could see a man and what looked like a little boy in the passenger seat. He was starting to think maybe they were lost.
"Can I help you folks?" he asked, as the man stepped out of a truck that looked like it had just slid off the assembly line, shiny and dent-free under the layer of farm dust that had just coated it. The tires were three sizes too small for the height of the truck, which must have jarred the guy's teeth coming up Danny's dirt driveway.
The man himself was tall and lanky, wearing low-slung nylon cargo pants and a basketball jersey, his thick, gold chain necklace flashing in the sun. Danny wasn't overly impressed with his done-up car or his abundant jewelry. There was something about a man who primped like a girl that sat wrong with Danny. But he would be friendly, a nice guy, until given a reason not to be.
"You Danny Tucker?"
"Yeah." Danny's shoulders went up at the man's belligerent tone. "Do I know you?"
The guy snorted. "No. But you knew Nina Schwartz, didn't you?" He turned and called over his shoulder, "Get out of the truck!"
Nina Schwartz? Danny didn't know a Nina. It was a small town, and he didn't leave Cuttersville too often.
Slowly, the passenger door creaked open and two small gym shoes hit the dirt. A solemn set of eyes, set in a thin face half covered by a baseball hat, peered around the door at him. It was a kid. Just a little kid, no more than eight or nine years old.
"I don't know any Nina Schwartz."
"Maybe she never told you her name, but you knew her alright. About nine years ago, I imagine. When was you born, Piper? I can't remember exactly."
"April 23," the child said with a soft, frightened voice.
Big brown eyes locked with his before skittering away and Danny had a suddenly horrible feeling that this man was trying to tell him something he didn't think he wanted to hear.
"So what was you doing in July nine summers ago, Danny Tucker? You meet a girl from Xenia and get it on?"
Nine years ago. That had been the summer between his junior and senior year in high school. The summer he and his longtime sweetheart, Shelby, had broken up over a misunderstanding about sex. He had wanted it; she hadn't. So when he'd been footloose, fancy-free, and more than a bit heartbroken, he'd gone to the county fair.
And met a girl named Nina from Xenia, who had been a friendly sort. Friendly enough that she had suggested they go for a drive, which had resulted in them both naked and him losing his virginity.
Oh, shit.
"I can see from the look on your face that your memory's coming back." The guy reached into his pocket. "She put you on the birth certificate."
Danny cleared his throat and tried not to panic. He glanced at the kid, who was making circles in the dirt with his toe. This could not be his child. It just couldn't be, because this kid was half grown and, and…
He took the piece of paper. The words blurred together, but he managed to make out the vitals. Mother: Nina Schwartz, age 16.
Christ almighty, she had told him she was eighteen. He'd knocked up a kid, nothing more than a kid.
Of course, that kid had shown him a whole range of sexual tricks he'd never even dreamed of, but that was beside the damn point.
Father: Daniel Tucker, age 17.
A sticky note was attached to the front of the birth certificate. Danny Tucker,
Oh, boy.
"Why didn't she ever tell me if she thought I was the father?"
"She told her boyfriend it was his, and they got married. But
Nina wasn't all that bright, and she put your name on the birth certificate. He found it a couple of years later and walked out."
"Who are you then?"
"I'm Nina's third husband, Mark Johnson. She's dead now. Nina got a bit too attached to her happy pills and took one too many. We had some good times, and I was torn up when she died, but that doesn't mean I'm willing to keep her brat."