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Authors: Carla Neggers

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BOOK: The Spring at Moss Hill
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He'd never, not once in his thirty-three years on the planet, imagined working investigations for a Beverly Hills law firm.

Julius had refused to take rent money from him, saying he liked having someone there while he was in transition between Hollywood Hills and La Jolla.

Russ got out his worn duffel bag.

How the hell had he ended up here?

But he knew the answer. He didn't like it, but he knew.

* * *

Russ eased onto a cushioned stool at Marty's Bar off Hollywood Boulevard. Opened in 1972, it had survived the changes in the area because of its best and its worst qualities. Best, it served good drinks and good tacos, chili and burgers. Worst, it was a notch above seedy with its dark wood paneling, chipped tile floor and cracked vinyl cushions. Cheaply framed Hollywood photos hung crookedly here and there, featuring everything from black-and-whites of the Three Stooges to color shots of Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. It wasn't a spot to see and be seen, but since neither interested Russ, he didn't mind.

His older brother greeted him with a big grin. Marty had chosen to put in an application there when he came to Hollywood eighteen months ago because they had the same name. To him, it was amusing, as good a place to tend bar as any before he got rich and famous. “What're you having, little brother?” he asked.

“Heineken, thanks.”

It was one of a dozen beers the place offered on tap. Marty grabbed a pint glass—scratched but clean—and drew the beer. He was dressed head-to-toe in black. With his chiseled features, clear blue eyes and straight, medium-brown hair, Marty was classically good-looking. He had no visible scars, although plenty were hidden under his black attire. Russ had never been as good-looking. He was beefier, and more of his scars were visible, if from minor injuries. His eyes were a darker blue. A scary blue, a former girlfriend had told him. He didn't know what that meant, but she'd insisted it wasn't bad.

Marty slid the beer across the worn bar. “All set to head east?”

“As ready as I'm going to get. You still okay with driving me to the airport?”

“Yep. No worries.”

Russ didn't see any sign of worry in his brother's face, but Marty had been taking acting lessons. He didn't like airports and anything that flew except birds and bugs, and not all of them. But it wasn't something the two of them talked about. Ever.

“Daphne offered to drive me,” Russ said. “I declined.”

“She told me. Smart move on your part. She'd throw her back out driving your Rover. We'd never hear the end of it. I suppose she could take her car and leave the Rover with me, but I don't see how that would get you to LAX alive. She tootles around here in that sporty little thing she drives, but I doubt she's driven on a big highway in years.”

“It's hard to tell with her.”

“I bet she'd have her own driver all the time if she could afford it. She must do all right, but no way does she have that kind of money.” Marty paused to take an order from another customer, then grabbed a pint glass and poured another beer. “It's cool she likes this place.”

And because she did, Russ thought, he was working with Sawyer & Sawyer as an investigator, living in Julius's guest room and on his way to Knights Bridge, Massachusetts. Russ had met Daphne when he'd come up from San Diego in February to check on Marty, make sure he wasn't living under a bridge. She'd been sitting two stools down from where he was now, drinking a French martini and bitching about some nonexistent problem. She'd found out Russ was just out of the navy, doing security and investigative work on his own in San Diego, and put him in touch with Julius.

“This place suits Daphne's contrary nature,” Russ said.

“She likes to surprise people. Also I make a damn fine French martini, if I do say so myself.”

Three young women came in and ordered margaritas, laughing and chatting about their plans for the evening as they sat on stools down from Russ. He left his brother to his work and took his beer to a small booth. He ordered fish tacos and settled in for the next hour, until Marty was free to take him to LAX. In exchange, he could use Russ's Rover while he was back East.

After Russ finished his tacos, Marty delivered a fresh beer and set a squishy, tissue-wrapped package on the table. “A present for you. Don't get taco grease on it.”

Russ unwrapped the tissue to reveal a well-made Hawaiian shirt. “It has palm trees on it, Marty.”

“Damn right. I figured now that you're a real PI, you need your own
Magnum, PI
shirt, just like Tom Selleck in the '80s—except you're not as tall as he is and you don't have his sense of humor.”

“I don't live in Hawaii, either.”

Marty grinned. “A little devil-may-care attitude wouldn't hurt you, Russ. Selleck was about your age when he was playing Magnum.”

“Thanks, Marty. A Hawaiian shirt with palm trees on it won't stick out at all in Knights Bridge, Massachusetts.”

“Go ahead, little brother. Put it on while I finish up.”

Russ held up the shirt after Marty disappeared behind the bar. The palm trees were relatively muted. What the hell. It would make Marty happy for him to wear it, and it would be comfortable on the long overnight flight across the continent.

He changed in the men's room. When he got back to his booth, Marty was ready. “Looks great. You want to finish your beer or head out now?”

“Now's fine. Thanks for the shirt, Marty. I feel cool.”

His brother laughed. “You are the definition of cool. Come on. Let's get you to the airport.”

* * *

Marty drove. He hadn't had any alcohol, and he wasn't distracted by the prospect of spending the next few days in a little New England town to make sure Daphne Stewart could do her master class without incident. Not that anyone—Daphne included—was concerned or had any reason to believe there would be an incident.

Russ grimaced at the prospect of wasting the next few days of his life, but he said nothing.

“I'm buying a car,” Marty said. “A friend is giving me a good deal on a clunker. All I need.”

“You've managed to get where you need to go without a car.”

“Friends, Uber and public transportation. It'll be good to have wheels for a few days. I won't take off up the Pacific Coast Highway, though. Promise.”

“I recorded the mileage.”

“Of course you did.”

Russ hadn't, which Marty knew, but it was the game they played with each other. Marty, the irresponsible dreamer. Russ, the feet-flat-on-the-ground military type.

Wasn't that far off from the truth.

“Have you decided to take a permanent position with Sawyer & Sawyer?” Marty asked.

“I'm there now. That's all I know.”

“You can't camp out at Julius Hartley's place forever. Unless the daughter who's buying it is available?”

Russ wasn't going there. He had no interest in either of Julius's daughters. “Right now I'm focused on this trip.”

“I thought you'd worm your way out of this one. Daphne's got you by the short hairs, doesn't she?”

“She's a valued client and a good friend.”

Marty sputtered into laughter. “You just did the civilian version of saluting smartly. Daphne's great, but she knows how to get what she wants. Think she'll go through with this class in this little town? We have a pool going at the bar. Most of us think she'll twist an ankle or get a sinus infection to find some way out of it.”

“I resist any urge to predict her behavior. She's talking about helping to start a children's theater in Knights Bridge.”

“With the theater-major twins? Seriously? Where's the start-up money coming from? Don't let Daphne fool you. I've seen her calculate a tip. She's careful with a buck.”

“I'm not getting mixed up in what happens with this theater.”

“You always were the smart brother.”

When Marty pulled up to the appropriate terminal, he had a death grip on the wheel but otherwise seemed okay being this close to aircraft. He cleared his throat and turned to Russ. “I'm doing fine, Russ. I mean it. Don't insult me by worrying about me.”

“What makes you think I'm worrying about you?”

“Because you're here, working in Beverly Hills. It's not what you want. You're here because of me.”

“Tell you what, Marty. You don't worry about me and I won't worry about you.”

“Never. You're my baby brother. I always worry. The reverse doesn't work.” Marty pointed at him. “Shirt really does look great.”

“I figure I can change when I get to Boston.”

“Ha-ha.”

“I'll see you soon.” Russ climbed out and grabbed his bag from the back. “Thanks for the ride, Marty.”

“No problem. Safe travels. I promise not to wreck your Rover while you're gone.” Marty still held tight to the wheel as he leaned across the seat. “You have directions to this town?”

“Head west. Look for the goat signs.”

Three

D
aphne Stewart arrived at Marty's Bar as Marty Colton returned from dropping Russ off at the airport. “This is an awful little place,” she said, hopping onto a bar stool. “But that's part of its charm.”

“That's what we all think. French martini?”

“As only you can make one, my dear Marty. Did Russ bitch and moan about heading east?”

“You know us Coltons. We're stoic.” Marty reached for a glass. “His flight hasn't taken off yet. You still have time to call him and cancel this trip to this little town.”

“Then you'd lose your chance to drive his Rover.”

“The sacrifices we make for our siblings.”

“I don't have any siblings. I'm an only child. Thank heavens. I'd hate for anyone else to have had to endure my SOB of a father. What was your father like, Marty?”

“Solid.”

She frowned at him. She'd heard something in his voice. A certain raggedness, or unease. Maybe it was just driving to and from LAX. Her idea of hell. She was relieved Russ hadn't taken her up on her offer to drive him, not that she'd ever doubted he would. “Is he still with us? Your father, I mean?”

“Nah. Died ten years ago. You didn't drive over here, did you?” Marty held up the martini glass. “I don't have to worry about you getting behind a wheel after having one or two of these babies?”

“I did not drive, no, and you never have to worry about me. I'm a responsible drinker.”

“Does that mean you want me to go heavy on the pineapple juice?”

“It does not.”

Daphne noted how he'd changed the subject from talk of his father, deliberately. Fathers could be a tricky topic. It had occurred to her, more than once, that the Colton brothers knew far more about her than she did them. Russ, because he worked with Sawyer & Sawyer and she was a client. Marty, because he made a hell of a French martini and she was a customer. She considered them friends, and she thought they considered her a friend, if along the lines of an eccentric aunt.

An aunt would know more about her nephews than Daphne did about Marty and Russ Colton.

She leaned forward. “Marty, darling, are you dawdling?”

“No, ma'am. I have your drink right here.”

“You're such a brat. You know I hate being called ma'am.”

He set her drink in front of her. “That will take the sting off the insult.”

Chambord liqueur, vodka and pineapple juice, with a twist of lemon. It was Daphne's favorite drink these days. She took a sip. “Ah. Perfect, as always. Have you ever sampled one, Marty?”

“No. Never will, either.”

“Russ tried mine a few weeks ago. I think you were busy and missed it. I could tell he wanted to spit it out, but he's a tough guy. He resisted. He said it tastes like spiked punch.”

“To each his own.”

“That's what I told him.”

Marty grabbed a white cloth and mopped up where he'd prepared her drink. “Are you seriously worried you'll run into problems next week in this little town?”

“They're expecting fifty people at my master class.”

“You can handle it. That's nothing in your world.”

“What if one of them is fixated on me in an unhealthy way?”

“You'd have forty-nine people there to help you.”

Daphne didn't want to explain her mix of emotions about returning to Knights Bridge. Paranoia, excitement, dread, dedication. Affection. She'd come to adore Ruby and Ava O'Dunn. She'd known their father when she'd lived in Knights Bridge, briefly, as a young woman. He'd died tragically ten years ago in a tree-trimming accident. Ruby, in particular, reminded Daphne of handsome, poetic Patrick O'Dunn.

“You okay?” Marty asked as he poured a beer for another customer.

She made herself smile and adopt her practiced air of not having a care in the world. “Did Russ tell you he caught a stalker targeting a young actor? He didn't tell me. The actor did. No charges were filed. Our stalker volunteered to return home to Portland and go back into therapy. All it took was seeing Russ on his doorstep. Russ didn't have to say a word.” Daphne drank more of her martini. “He says it was his sunglasses.”

“He does look like a badass in those sunglasses.”

“But it wasn't just the sunglasses,” Daphne said.

Marty shrugged. “Russ is very good at what he does. He's a natural at his job, but he's also worked hard at it. He had a lot of experience in the navy.”

Marty delivered the beer down the bar. He had the ability to carry on multiple conversations. He was a dabbler, bartending, acting, screenwriting, grabbing whatever work he could to live his Hollywood dreams. Daphne understood and tried to help, to get him to focus on the work and not just the dream. But he was focused, Daphne thought. It was easy to underestimate Marty Colton.

She nursed her martini. She didn't want to have two drinks, but she also didn't want to gulp down this one and end up going home too early. She supposed she could switch to sparkling water, but she knew she wouldn't. When Marty returned, he tilted his head back, studying her. She wasn't fooled by his good looks and easygoing ways. He could be as incisive and critical as Russ. Worse, even, since he didn't have a client relationship with her. She was just a customer who liked the occasional French martini at the hole-in-the-wall bar where he worked.

“Do you wish you felt guilty for sending Russ to your hometown?” Marty asked.

“Knights Bridge isn't my hometown. I moved there when I was eighteen to get away from my father. I found solace and hope there, and I honed my sewing and design skills. I left at twenty to come out here.”

“That took guts.”

“I think we say that when things work out. When they don't, we say it was reckless, stupid, irresponsible.”

“This class isn't a prison sentence, Daphne. You can bow out at the last minute.”

“Imagine how that would look.”

“Imagine how it would look to drive yourself crazy or drink yourself into oblivion because you keep trying to talk yourself into believing you want to do this thing.”

“I do want to do it.”

He raised his palms in front of him. “I rest my case.”

Daphne finished her martini. She was being ridiculous, second-guessing herself. She'd made her decision. She'd made a commitment to Ruby and Ava. Of course she had to go to Knights Bridge next week. With the day drawing closer, jitters were normal.

She thanked Marty and let him put her drink on her tab. It was a late night for her. Usually she was in bed by ten o'clock.

* * *

When she arrived at her bungalow in Hollywood Hills, Daphne was glad she'd opted to take a cab. Her one martini had gone to her head. She was careful not to stagger, because who knew if the cab driver was taking a video, texting his friends—anything was possible these days. Once she was inside, with the door locked, she felt tears on her cheeks. Oh, good heavens, she thought, was she crying? It had to be the martini.

“You need food.”

She went into her kitchen, hoping she could find something to eat. Her house was only fifteen-hundred square feet, but she loved it. She'd bought it after her last divorce and had it painted a warm sunshine yellow in celebration of her new freedom. She'd decorated the interior in creamy neutrals, with the idea that a man would never live here again. So far, so good on that one.

Hard to believe it had been twenty years.

She discovered hummus and cut-up vegetables in the fridge. She arranged them on a plate, poured herself a glass of water and headed out to the patio, turning on the lights since it was darker than the pits of hell. She checked her chair cushion for spiders before she sat down. She hadn't become a fan of western spiders in the forty years she'd lived in Southern California.

As she ate her dinner, she watched the turquoise pool water ripple in the light and smelled the roses off to the side of the patio. They were pink and peach, and she could see them from her studio window while she worked. Everything was on one floor—she could grow old here.

Her house wasn't anything special by Hollywood standards, but it was what she'd imagined when she'd boarded her first bus west all those years ago. Her life wasn't perfect, and she'd made plenty of mistakes, but she'd done all right. She had nothing to prove to anyone, including herself. That wasn't what this master class next Saturday was all about.

“Yes, my dear,” she said as she dipped a carrot stick into the hummus. “If only you believed it.”

Did she want Russ to come upon something that would force him to recommend she cancel her Knights Bridge appearance?

She remembered the first time she met him at Marty's Bar. Rugged, focused, task-oriented and so obviously very worried about his big brother. She had no one to worry about her. Some of that was by her own design. Even now, she could hear her father telling her he was smacking her because he was worried about her.

Damn.
She wished she had another French martini instead of carrots, celery, broccoli and hummus.

Her great-great-grandfather's old mill as a theater...a place for children to come and learn about acting, costume design, lighting...ultimately about themselves.

Can I do this, tie myself to Knights Bridge?

Do I want to?

She inhaled deeply. The ghosts of the past were grabbing her from behind. She tried to shake them off, but they clawed at her, refusing to let go, forcing her back to those early days when she'd first arrived in Knights Bridge as a teenager. She hadn't lived there long, but her life there—working in the library, living in a cottage on Thistle Lane—had transformed her.

She remembered walking to the mill at Moss Hill one fine spring morning with the full intention of flinging herself off the dam. It was early on after her arrival in Knights Bridge. She figured people would think she'd slipped amid the tall grass, broken glass and debris.

An unfortunate accident befalling the last descendant of the mill's original owner.

A fitting end to the Sandersons.

She hadn't jumped. She'd decided the dam wasn't high enough, and it was too damn risky. What if she just got banged up and lay there alone, no one to find her?

She really hadn't wanted to die a slow death.

She'd walked back to town. She vividly remembered her annoyance at getting blisters.

It wasn't long after that little brush with oblivion that she'd started sewing, copying dresses she saw in movies and magazines and dreaming of a different life.

She didn't want to go back to who she'd been forty years ago. She was Daphne Stewart now, not Debbie Sanderson, the abused, insecure teenager with no money and no prospects.

BOOK: The Spring at Moss Hill
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