Lover's Lane (21 page)

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Authors: Jill Marie Landis

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General, #Erotica

BOOK: Lover's Lane
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29

CHRIS KNEW SOMETHING REALLY WEIRD WAS GOING ON.

Maybe Mom thought just because he was a little kid that he wouldn’t notice, but he did. She’d been acting grumpy since Jake came by. Grumpy and sad at the same time.

Another weird thing was that Jake had left without telling him good-bye, and then Mom made plain old sandwiches for him and Matt, tuna with mayonnaise, and he couldn’t even talk her into cutting them into stars.

After lunch, she said that he and Matt could watch cartoons until Matt’s dad came to pick him up, which was
really
strange, because she never let him watch longer than half an hour at a time. While they flopped on the living room floor in front of the television, Mom went into her studio and sat there staring out the window instead of painting.

By the time Matt’s dad picked Matt up, Chris was not just worried, he was getting scared.

“Hey, Mom, let’s take a walk down to the beach and look for shells.” Their beach wasn’t very big, but there were always birds to chase and shells and sand dollars that washed up. And there were lots of nature trails that wound up the face of the bluff, too.

“Not today, Chris.”

“Why?”

“Because I said no.”

“But why?”

Mom let out a big sigh. “I don’t feel like it, honey.”

“When I feel bad, you always tell me it would do me good to get out and get some fresh air. Maybe it will do you good.”

“I don’t think so. Not today.”

He watched Mom’s shoulders sag the way they did when she was sad. They’d been drooping since Jake left. Seeing her like this made his stomach hurt.

“I don’t feel so good, either,” he said softly.

Suddenly she looked over at him as if she were finally paying attention. “You just said you wanted to go for a walk.”

“My tummy hurts.”

“Where?”

He pointed to his belly button.

She left the kitchen and came over to where he was sitting on the couch, sat down next to him, and put her arm around his shoulders.

He wanted to ask her what was wrong, but things were all jumbled up inside him, and he didn’t really want to know if it was something really bad.

When Mom tightened her arm around him, he let her hug him. Even though he was afraid he’d start crying like a baby, he still wanted her to hold him. He buried his face against her and smelled her good Mom smell.

She pulled back and brushed his hair off his forehead.

“What’s really wrong, honey?”

“I heard you talking to Jake before. You both sounded mad, and now you’re acting sad. What’s wrong? Did somebody do something bad?”

“No. No one’s done anything.” She didn’t exactly sound real sure.

“Who’s Annasaunder?”

Mom got very still and didn’t answer for a minute. Then she cleared her throat. “Anna Saunders is . . . a lady who lives far away.”

“Is she trying to hurt you or Jake?”

She pulled him onto her lap and held him the way she liked to, as if he were still a baby. Lately he’d pretended he was too big for that, but this time he didn’t laugh and try to wriggle off. If she wanted to cuddle, that was okay with him.

Mom spoke with her lips close to his hair. “She’s not trying to hurt us. She . . . she wants to get to know you, that’s all.”

“Why?”

“She was your dad’s mom.”

“My dad’s mom? My
dead
dad’s
mom
?”

“Yes. She’s your grandmother.” Mom brushed his hair off his forehead again, and this time she kissed it.

“I have a
grandma
?” He tried not to get too excited. A grandmother was supposed to bake cookies and tell you how great you were, no matter what you did. At least that’s what Matt told him. And they gave you presents, too. He nestled against Mom, still wondering why he hadn’t known about Anna Saunders before.

“Why isn’t her name Anna Nolan like ours?”

“Well, because your dad’s name wasn’t Nolan.”

“Why?”

“That’s hard to explain. Sometimes people don’t have the same last names.”

“Where does she live?”

“She lives in Long Beach.”

“How come we never see her?”

“She . . . didn’t know where we lived.”

“Hey,” he said, suddenly remembering. “Jake lives in Long Beach, too.”

“Yes, he does.”

“You think he’ll come back soon?”

“I don’t know.”

“I wish he would. I miss him when he’s not here. Why don’t we call him and ask him over for dinner?”

“He’s very busy.” Mom got very quiet and held him tight.

“I like things just the way they are. With just the two of us. That’s enough, isn’t it? Just us?”

“Jake’s a nice guy. Why don’t you like him?”

Mom swallowed hard. He could feel it as he lay against her chest. Her heart was beating really fast.

“Jake is a busy man. He had to drive back to Long Beach this afternoon. You can’t expect him to be here all the time.”

“Why don’t we call up my grandma and tell her to come see us?”

“She’s very busy, too.”

“Like Jake?”

“Maybe we should put on some sweatshirts and go for that walk on the beach. How about that?”

“Do you think my grandma has any pictures of my dad?”

“I’m sure she does.”

“Maybe she’ll show them to me if I ever get to meet her.”

It was a few minutes before Mom whispered, “I’m sure she will.”

On the drive down the coast, Jake imagined himself sitting in the somber office of some funeral director with Jackson Montgomery’s ghost hovering beside him. The Ghost of Summers Past, laughing in his ear.

When he walked into his condo that evening, stressed from battling the tangle of rush hour on the 405 Freeway, preoccupied with the blowup with Carly, Kat was still there.

As he closed the door behind him, she walked out of the office with a stack of phone messages in her hand.

“Sorry about your grandfather.”

“Thanks.”

“Here.” She shoved the notes at him, reached for the purse and sweater hanging on an oak coatrack near the door. “Those are all from Anna Saunders.”

His hand tightened on the slips of paper. “Thanks.”

Anna Saunders had been calling him since the day after he’d returned to Twilight, but he’d put off calling her back and had told Kat to try to stall her.

“She had a tail put on me. One of Alexander and Perry’s guys, but I made him.”

“Then what?” Suddenly she no longer appeared interested in leaving. “Did you shake him?”

“No, I confronted him. He owed me one, so I got him to stall A and P.”

“And you took his word for it?”

“Yeah. And I made sure he was gone before I got on the road again. If he followed me, he somehow turned invisible.”

“Would you have done it? Let somebody off the hook like that?”

“In this case, yeah. I’d have done the same thing.”

“I know everything’s not all right, but is there anything I can do?”

“No. Thanks, but it’ll all work out.”

“What about The Obsession?”

He ran his hand over the stubble on his jaw. “She’s been better, too.”

“From the look on your face I gather you finally told her you are really Jake Montgomery, P.I.?”

“Actually, somebody else told her before I could, at the worst possible time.”

“Ouch. And she’s still pissed.”

He shrugged. “How’d you guess?”

“The look on your face says it all.”

He was more than ready for Kat to leave. He didn’t need to have her launch into a I-thought-you-knew-better-than-to-fall-in-love lecture. He wasn’t about to explain that Carly was more than pissed, that she was scared and upset and rightly so if the Saunders had really tried to take Chris from her. What he wanted right now was to be left alone to think and talk to Anna Saunders before it was too late.

“Hey, drive carefully.” He opened the front door for Kat.

“I can take a hint. I won’t be in until around noon tomorrow. I’ve got to go up to the courthouse in L.A. first thing in the morning.”

“Fine. I may or may not be here. I have an appointment with my grandfather’s lawyers.”

He watched Kat run down the steps, admiring her trim figure. She was graceful and athletic while feminine and sexy at the same time. Any man would be lucky to have her, but she had protectively encased her heart in bulletproof Kevlar.

He thought he had, too, but loneliness made for weak defenses, and thinking back, once he’d laid eyes on Carly, the fight against feeling had pretty much been over. He’d lowered his defenses, and now he was definitely feeling the pain.

Kicking off his shoes, he wandered toward the kitchen. On the way, he laid the stack of memos on the wicker table, picked up the portable phone and dialed his mother to let her know he was back in town and that he’d contacted Jackson’s lawyers. They were ready to go over the old man’s last wishes in the morning.

That done, he rummaged through the freezer until he found two bean-and-chicken burritos in a plastic sack on the back of a shelf. He pulled them out, opened one end of each wrapper, and set them on the microwave turntable.

An old jar of salsa was hiding in the fridge, but it was a science project with a layer of green fur floating on top. He tossed it and grabbed a package of hot sauce out of a collection of leftover fast-food packets of ketchup, mayo, relish, and mustard.

While he waited for the burritos to heat, he walked back to the table, picked up a pink phone memo, and stared at Anna’s number. He punched it into the phone.

One short ring later he heard Anna say hello. Her voice was laced with ice.

“This is Jake Montgomery.”

“Oh. Jake. Yes.”

“Sorry I couldn’t get back to you right away. I was out of the area.”

“You know, Jake, after we spoke last, I started wondering why you didn’t jump at the chance to take the case, and that got me thinking that you might already know where Caroline was, or at least you had a strong lead and didn’t want to get my hopes up. Have you continued searching for her pro bono all these years?”

“Rick was my friend. I wanted to make sure his son was being taken care of.”

“When did you plan to tell me? Or were you?”

“Why didn’t you call and ask me that instead of having someone from Alexander and Perry tail me?”

There was a slight pause.

“You know?”

“Yeah. I saw him. He was easy enough to spot.” Suddenly it hit Jake that Sam Godes had been very easy to make. Maybe too easy. As his thoughts churned, Anna went on to explain.

“It was Art Litton’s idea. I called to get his advice and tell him what I suspected. He suggested I contact Alexander and Perry and have you followed.”

Jake knew Litton. A high-dollar lawyer with the scruples of a python.

“You told me that all you ever wanted was to play a role in Christopher’s life. What’s going on, Anna?”

There was dead silence on the other end of the line. Lights from the shopping center across the footbridge from his condo building shimmered on the water.

He could hear her voice break when she finally answered. “I promised Charles I would find Christopher, Jake. If you had taken the case, I wouldn’t have had to have you followed. You were Rick’s friend, or claim to have been. Help me make certain his son has everything he needs.”

Jake thought of the tug-of-war on his own emotions that his grandfather had put him through. If just once Jackson Montgomery had said please. Please come for the summer. Please let me in. Accept my love. Instead, he’d made demands.

Outside of his immediate family, Jake wasn’t used to trusting in the goodness of man. He’d seen enough of the other side of life, and knew just how devious people could be. But this was his best friend’s mother. Fate had taken her son early on and then her husband when she needed him most. If he could convince her that she and Carly both wanted what was best for Christopher, if the two of them would just sit and talk things out, maybe they could make peace.

“Would you like to meet her, Anna? If I could take you to where they live . . .”

“Twilight Cove?”

He froze, stiffer than the freezer-burned burritos, certain he’d never mentioned exactly where he was going. There was only one way she’d know where Carly and Chris were. Sam Godes had gone back on his word.

Jake searched his memory. He had been sure Godes hadn’t trailed him. He’d have never gone on to Twilight if he’d thought any differently.

“How’d you find out?”

“Alexander and Perry had two investigators following you. I suppose it’s a compliment to you that they thought it necessary. One was a man, one a woman posing as a young mother. I have photos of you and my grandson in a park, playing catch. Another of you and Caroline, who we know now calls herself Carly, getting into your car.”

“If you already know where Christopher is, why call me at all?” He was so pissed at her, more so at himself, that all he wanted to do was hang up. Acid was etching out the lining of his stomach.

“I wanted to let you know that I’m suing for legal guardianship of Christopher. She’ll be served with papers right away.”

“Is that what you really want, Anna? To tear them apart? Do you think Chris will love you for it?”

She sounded less than certain when she said, “He needs a good mother.”

“He
has
a good mother.”

“A mother who misrepresented herself to my son. A mother who assumed an alias and used it for years. Why all the running and hiding if she’s so innocent?”

“Carly’s a wonderful mother.”

“She’s a gold digger. A slut.”

Charles Saunders had been one of the good old boys at the yacht club. Jake imagined the man couldn’t stand the idea of losing to someone like Carly. “You sound like your husband, Anna. Are you sure this is what
you
want?”

He was certain Anna didn’t stand a chance in hell of getting guardianship of Christopher—he’d bet money on it— but she could make Carly’s life miserable for a very, very long time. Social Services would interview friends and neighbors. They’d nose around at Christopher’s school. There would be psych evaluations.

Carly’s past would be dragged out in the open. She’d been a fifteen-year-old runaway, a discipline problem headed for juvenile hall when she assumed Caroline Graham’s identity. Rick wasn’t around to prove she had ever been completely honest with him about her real name and what she’d done.

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