Secrets in the Lowcountry--The River (28 page)

BOOK: Secrets in the Lowcountry--The River
6.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

As the driver opened her door, she stared at her beautiful home.
She loved the
w
hite-
w
ashed brick of the t
w
o-storied building.
Her great-grandfather had torn do
w
n the frame house and created a ‘Southern Mansion’ for his bride from up north.
They never filled the six-bedrooms, but the t
w
o children they had enjoyed the house, as had succeeding generations.

Sharon Smith
opened the screen door.
Her catering service
w
ould provide the food, just as they had for the
w
edding that never took place.
Taylor fought back the memory.

“Thanks for coming at such s
h
ort notice,” Martin said to Sharon
.


After all yo
u’ve done for me over the years,
helping me start my business, using my team
w
henever you had a party,
this is just a small
w
ay of saying thanks.

Martin flushed
w
ith embarrassment.
“The church
w
as full.
W
e
expect most
w
ill
come
to the house
.

“Ho
w
’s everything going?”
Taylor asked.

“I’ve set up a table
with food
and a help
yourself
bar in the library for you
, Dr. Harris
,
and Taylor and any
special
friends.
You can escape there, if you
w
ant,” the bro
w
n-haired, pleasant
w
oman, of indeterminate age, replied.
“The dining room, the living room, and the study have tables set up for
food
.
The Florida room and the front patio, each have bars and bartenders.
There are
enough provisions for a regiment or
for all Beaufort.
Is there anything else you need?”
Her face softened and she patted Taylor’s hand.

Taylor
w
ished she could say,
yes, I
w
ant to lock the door and prevent anyone from coming and if they do come I hope they leave my house quickly and let my dad and I grieve alone.
I
nstead, she said, “Thank you, no.
I’m sure you and your staff have taken care of everything.”

“You’ve done a
w
onderful job.
Thanks, again
.”
Martin took her hands and pressed them
w
ith his, before he turned a
w
ay to
w
ard the library. “Taylor, I need a strong drink.”

“I’ll get it.”
Sharon
headed to
w
ard the outside bar, calling over her shoulder,
“Maker’s Mark on the rocks, coming up.”
Then stopped and looked back, “Taylor, honey, ho
w
about you?”

“Nothing thanks.
I’m not sure my stomach can handle anything.”

Sharon
ackno
w
ledged the comment and continued.

“Okay,
w
hat room do you
w
ant?” Martin asked.


W
hat do you mean?
Can’t
w
e stick together?” Taylor asked dumbfounded.

“Maybe in the beginning, but later
w
e must mingle.”

Again, she
w
ished she could say
you mingle.
I’m hiding.
“Okay.
Let’s go outside to the bar.
That’s
w
here all our friends
w
ill
start.”

He laughed.
“And end.”

Chapter Eight

 

A fe
w
hours later, Taylor managed to escape to the pool area.
At the house, the liquor still flo
w
ed, desserts replaced sand
w
iches, and people started to drift a
w
ay.
Her f
ather
w
atched her leave
and nodded his understanding.
No
w
, she sat on a lounge chair and contemplated her life.
She and Rod had decided to make their home
w
ith her father until
the completion of
Rod’s ne
w
development.
His family, the Pinckneys,
had moved to
Beaufort
about the time Julia Ann left
Harmony Plantation to ‘discover herself’
.
Taylor refused to d
w
ell on her mother right no
w
, instead she returned to Rod.
Something had happened bet
w
een Rod and his family.
He never told her and he
w
ouldn’t
talk about them
or the situation
.
H
is mother and father
had
sold their fruit and vegetable sta
nds and moved
.
They’d
had a small
home
in to
w
n
w
hich
they’d left to Rod.
She’d often
w
ondered
w
hy they’d leave him the house sinc
e the family didn’t get along. For the foreseeable future, h
e’d told her
,
his parents
intended to make their new motor home their new house. When they tried of traveling they’d settle down in the place they’d i
nherited
in Louisiana
. He added they
didn’t need the money
from their cottage
.

“Taylor,” Jeff called, interrupting her.
“Your dad said I
’d
probably find you here.”
He slid a lounge chair closer and sat do
w
n. “
W
ant anything?”

“No.
But I
w
ant to thank you for pulling Ella Mae Lee off Dad and me.”
She focused on him for a minute
then she looked a
w
ay.


Glad to help.
W
ant me to leave?”

“No.”


W
ant me to keep quiet?”

She glanced at him, again.
“No.
Having someone sit
w
ith me and not commiserate is perfect.
I sa
w
your dad earlier.”

“Yes.
I took him home.
He tires easily.
He had a great talk
w
ith your dad yesterday
. Y
our dad thanked him today for coming yesterday.
They go back a long
w
ay
.

“Yes, they do.”

“Remember the tree house Dad built for me?”

“On my property?” she teased.

“No, on our property.
As a little kid, you thought all the land around here belonged to you.”


W
ell, didn’t it?” she smiled.

“You’re just as stubborn as ever,” he continued in a light tone.

“Me?”

“Yes, you!”

They joked back and forth for a
w
hile.
Finally, Taylor said, “You’re a good guy, Jeff.”

“Good?
I’m the best.
You just never noticed,” he said in an undertone.

Before she could question h
im, she heard her father
.
“Taylor, could you come to the library?
You, too, Jeff.”
Her dad stood at the side door facing the pool and gestured for them to come inside.

W
ith heavy legs, she dra
gged herself off the lounge
then glanced at her
w
atch.
“Five.
I’d hoped everyone
w
ould be gone by no
w
.”

“Most of them had left by
the time I came out to find you.
” Jeff r
ose
easily
and offered Taylor his hand
.

She stood next to him, squeezed his hand, and took
a deep breath
.
“Okay, let’s find out
w
hat Dad
w
ants.”

*
~*

W
hen they
w
alke
d into the library, Jeff
sa
w
Larry Murphy
from DNR and Sheriff Leroy Trotz
.
W
hy
w
as
he
here?
“Larry, Sheriff Trotz
.”

The t
w
o men
nodded their greeting.

Larry approached Taylor and took her hands.

A
s I’ve said before to you and your dad, I’m really sorry about Julia Ann’s death.
She and I go
w
ay-back, but then
all
our group
from high school
does.”

Everyone shook
their
heads in
agreement.


Before
I begin
you all
should sit do
w
n.”
He and the sheriff pulled out the upholstered, high-backed chair that normally
flanked the
w
all but didn’t sit
.
Instead, each stood behind one.

The to
ne of the DNR representative plus
the sober expression on his face,
as
w
ell as that of Sheriff Trotz
’s,
caused
Jeff
concern. He
w
atched as
Taylor
joined her father
and observed them as they found a seat on the small couch.

He
sensed her discomfort and could see the anxiety plainly etched on her face. She
edged
closer to her father
on the
bro
w
n, leather love-seat
and took
his hand in both of hers.
Neither sat back,
choosing to perch on the edge of the seat.

Jeff felt
the loneliness as soon as she’d slid a
w
ay from him.
Although h
e
accepted the fact she needed to be near her father that didn’t stop the gna
w
ing inside him.
He kne
w
the reason
. Y
et
,
his desire to comfort her raged
w
ithin.
Remember
,
you’re only a friend.
O
utside he’d been the one to help her forget, if only for a fe
w
minutes.
No
w
, someone
w
ith a strong connection took his spot.
W
anting to be near, just in case, h
e took the
w
ing-chair nearest
Taylor and
suspended himself
on the edge.

Once everyone found a spot, Larry stated, “
W
e found Rod’s boat overturned.

Taylor gasped. Both Jeff and Doc concentrated totally on her.

Other books

The Human Pool by Chris Petit
Extracurricular Activities by Maggie Barbieri
Everything She Forgot by Lisa Ballantyne
The Thief of Venice by Jane Langton
Forced Handfasting by Rebecca Lorino Pond
A Spy Among Friends by Ben Macintyre
The Steel Harvest by J.D. Miller
Liam by Madison Stevens