Read Unmasked (Godmother Security Book 1) Online
Authors: June Stevens,DJ Westerfield
Both Sebastian’s house and the White’s house had state of the art security systems with motion activated cameras at the gate and other points along the drive. Greer hadn’t found any evidence anyone had been on the mountain in weeks, other than the Whites.
Cindy thanked her for the information and Greer and her team left. They were staying at a nearby lodge posing as hikers. The area was popular with hikers, so they would blend right in. They would be keeping an eye out in town for anyone fitting the Bauers’ descriptions.
After they left, Cindy stood on the pier staring out over the lake girding her loins for the next several days. Living in the same house with Sebastian Prince was going to be a new level of hell.
She had expected a mansion, what rose up from the hill before her was a log cabin. It was a large split level with floor to ceiling windows and two wide decks across the back, but it was still, essentially, a log cabin.
Gus and Jack stood on the lower deck and Cindy climbed the steps up to meet them. She went over what Greer had told her, then set up a schedule so that at least one of them would be on duty at all times, then the three of them went into the house via a set of glass paned French doors.
The inside of the house was as beautiful as the out, and just as bafflingly un-millionaire like. While the expensive rugs and leather furniture denoted wealth, it wasn’t lavish like what she’d seen in other clients’ homes. Almost the entire first floor was one giant room with floor to ceiling paned French windows around two sides of the room. Another wall was two-thirds floor to ceiling bookshelves, and one-third kitchen cabinets. The fourth wall held four doors and a staircase to the upper floor.
The room was divided into two sitting areas, an eating area with a rectangular dining table, and an open kitchen that was separated from the rest of the room by a long L-shaped island with shelves built into the side facing the sitting areas.
“You have a beautiful home,” she told Sebastian, who was standing in the kitchen.
“Thank you, I designed most of it myself,” he said, pride in his voice. “I hope you three are hungry. Mrs. White left enough lunch to feed a small army.”
To Cindy’s delight, he wasn’t kidding. There were sandwiches of homemade bread and thick slices of roast beef that had clearly not come from a deli, potato salad, baked beans, and sliced cucumbers and tomato. They all sat and ate. The men chatted about sports while Cindy ignored them, too intent on the delicious food to talk. Once the meal was done Gus went down to the boathouse to get some rest before he went on the all night shift later, and Jack went out to walk the perimeter of the house.
Cindy helped Sebastian clear the table, and put the dishes in the dishwasher. It was strange how well they moved around each other in the kitchen. Yet as they worked, neither of them spoke.
When the dishwasher was running and the counters had been wiped down, Sebastian said, “Come on, I’ll show you up to your room so you can settle in. You’ll probably want to change.”
Cindy looked down at the straight skirt suit she still wore. Yes, now that she could, she wanted to get into something more comfortable that she’d be able to run in if the need arose. “That would be nice.”
She followed him upstairs to a narrow hall with two doors. He opened the one on the right and stepped in. She followed him into a huge bedroom decorated in chocolate brown and sky blue. To one side was a king size four poster bed, and across from it were French doors that led out onto the upper balcony. An open door opposite the one she’d just came in revealed a massive marble tiled bathroom with a tub the size of a small pool. This was more like the mansion she’d been expecting. “This looks like the master suite. Isn’t it your room?”
He laughed. “No, I’m across the hall. But you are right about it being a master suite. I designed it so that both of the bedrooms were masters. My parents visit upon occasion and I like for them to be comfortable.”
“That’s very sweet,” she said, but she wasn’t sure if he heard her.
“Gus brought up your bags,” he said, pointing to where they sat on the cedar chest at the end of the bed. “There should be fresh towels and soap in the bathroom. Let me know if you need anything, I’ll be across the hall.”
“Thank you,” she said, but he was already shutting the door behind him.
Glad to have a moment herself, she took her time changing, while still keeping an ear out for suspicious sounds. She was just tucking her plain, black t-shirt into a pair of black cargo pants when she heard the door across the hall open and shut, then footsteps on the stairs.
She grabbed her gun and holster and buckled it on as she went down the stairs. She found Sebastian sitting on a leather sofa putting on a pair of sneakers.
“Hi,” he said, looking up. “I thought I’d go for a walk. I need to work off that lunch.”
“I’ll have to go with you,” she said.
He shrugged. “Suit yourself. What’s with the fanny pack? You look like a gangster tourist.” He pointed to her waist.
She flashed a grin at him and slid the zipper around and pulled the flap down to reveal her gun. “It’s open on this side,” she said as she zipped it back up and slid her hand into the opening. “So I can draw quickly.”
He laughed. “Yep, gangster tourist. Okay, let’s go then.”
Instead of going out the way they came in, he led her through one of the four doors she’d seen earlier. It opened into a large room, but this room was different than the rest of the house. It was darker, cozier, somehow. She noticed a fireplace on one wall, and didn’t see any electric lights. Instead glass oil lamps sat on small tables around the room. The room was furnished in rustic and antique furniture.
Sebastian must have noticed the curiosity on her face because he said, “This is the original cabin. The rest of the house was built around it, but I left this room as natural as I could. It doesn’t even have electricity.”
Cindy didn’t say anything, just looked around as they walked through, and went out the front door. They walked along the dirt drive in silence for a few minutes.
“Does Faye have a rule against talking to clients?”
Cindy, who had been looking around at the countryside, was caught off guard by Sebastian’s question. “I beg your pardon?”
“I was wondering if there was a rule that you couldn’t be friendly with clients. If so Gus and Jack are some serious rule breakers. They’ve had dinner with me, talked with me, even watched movies with me while guarding me this week. You, however, have barely exchanged five words with me that didn’t directly pertain to safety protocols. Why is that?”
Cindy gaped at him, her mind flitting around to justify her behavior. She couldn’t very well say
I didn’t want to be too friendly in case you remembered we made out on your balcony
. Finally she told an abbreviated version of the truth. “I’m sorry. Sometimes in my effort to be alert and professional I can come off as rude.”
He seemed to mull it over for a moment, then said, “I guess I can understand that. I can tell you though, this is a weird enough situation for someone to be in—needing twenty-four hour guards—without having that guard be rigid and taciturn.”
She nearly shouted at him that she wasn’t rigid, but she caught the quirk of his mouth and realized that was just the reaction he was looking for. Instead, she decided to give him what he asked for. Conversation.
“You know, this is not the sort of place I would have expected you to live. I’d love to hear all about it.”
He shot her a sideways glance. “Now you’re just making fun of me.”
“No, I’m not. I’d really love to hear more about the cabin, and this whole place,” she said, truthfully.
“Okay, then. The original cabin was built in 1797 by my several times great grandfather. He and his and his six sons farmed the land and built a sawmill about a mile in that direction, down the river,” he said, pointing off past the lake.
“Six sons. You must have a huge family.”
“Maybe, but I don’t know any of them. By the time my great-grandmother was born in 1896 the family had dwindled down to just her father, who was an only child. The valley around here may be littered with my distant relatives, but connections have long since been lost.”
“That doesn’t bother you?” Cindy asked. Faye was the only family she had, and it was a bit lonely sometimes. As a child she’d always wondered what it would be like to have siblings or even cousins.
“Not really, my Dad has four sisters, and I have a half a dozen or so cousins and they all have kids. I’m not lacking for family. Besides, apparently family ties aren’t all they are cracked up to be,” his voice lost some of its zest.
Cindy cringed. Perhaps that hadn’t been the best question to ask, considering his only cousin on his mother’s side was trying to have him killed. She quickly got them back on topic. “You were telling me about your great grandmother.”
“Ahh, yes. She was an amazing woman, according to my Dad. She grew up in the farmhouse that the Whites now live in, but we aren’t sure exactly which generation of the family built it. When she was young it was rare in this area for a girl to do anything but marry young and have a brood of kids. But, when she was 19 she went to Norfolk to one of the first nursing schools in the state, then when she was 21 she joined the army as a nurse and went off to war. She never came back here. She married after the war and settled in New York. Her brother and father both died in an accident at the mill. The mill and farm were shut down, and her mother went to New York to live with her. Neither of them could bear to sell it, so when she passed it went to my grandmother.”
“And then eventually to you,” Cindy put in, fascinated with his story.
“Yes. When I was born she put this property in a trust for me. Though my father never owned it, he deserves credit for the fact that any of the buildings are still standing.”
“He renovated the farm?”
They were walking past the large white farmhouse now, with its wrap around porch. Their pace had slowed, as if they both were enjoying this talk and wanted to stretch it out.
“He had always been fascinated by the stories his grandmother told of growing up on top of a mountain in Virginia, and when he was in his early twenties he came out here for the first time. He fell in love with it, even though the farm was overrun with weeds and the cabin and farmhouse both were dilapidated and falling down,” Sebastian said, kicking a large rock that could damage a tire off the dirt road.
Cindy looked out at the breathtaking view of the mountains as she waited for him to resume walking. She felt a little in love with the place herself. “It’s the view, and the history, I think.”
They resumed their slow, leisurely pace. “I agree. He brought my mother camping out here just before he proposed. She has always teased him that if she hadn’t loved it he wouldn’t have married her. He doesn’t deny it. They fixed the cabin up enough to camp in and we came out every summer until I was fourteen. But then Andy’s parents died, and he came to live with us. After that Mom felt it was important to keep up some of their traditions for him. So, it was good-bye camping and hiking in the Virginia Mountains and hello beach house in The Hamptons.”
“Oh, you poor baby.” Cindy scoffed.
He grinned, “I know, right? It was really a tough childhood.”
Cindy rolled her eyes. “So, what about this place? You definitely aren’t roughing it here anymore. And neither are the Whites.” She turned to motion back to the house with all of the flowers but realized they were long past it, and now the tiny road was surrounded by trees. “Wow, I didn’t realize we’d walked so far.”
“We can turn back, or we can take a path just ahead that cuts through to a blackberry patch, then back up around the pasture and behind the Whites’ house. It’s a bit longer, are you game?”
Cindy didn’t think she’d ever taken a leisurely walk through the countryside like this. She’d always lived in a city, and though her job often took her to the country, there wasn’t usually time for easy strolls through the jungle or across the desert. Of course she was working now, too. As much as she wanted to take him up on it, taking a stroll through the woods and pasture with Gus and Jack back up at the house just wasn’t a smart thing to do. “As much as I’d love to see a blackberry patch, we really shouldn’t stray off the path. It’s just too dangerous right now. We should just go back the way we came.”
He looked for a moment like he would argue, but just turned and started back up the road, his gait a bit faster than earlier. He was clearly annoyed.
Instead of being annoyed herself, Cindy was a bit sad. He’d been talking so freely, and from the way he talked about the history of the farm, she could tell he really loved it. She hated that his good mood was gone. “We don’t have to hurry though. I’d like to hear more about how the farm was renovated,” she called after him.
He stopped and turned back to her. He flashed that amazing, melt your heart grin. “Well, come on then.” When she caught up with him, he continued. “When we vacationed here, we always used the cabin because the farm house was just too dilapidated. Dad had a few improvements done. The only major one was having the boathouse built. We needed somewhere to store our boats and he had the room put in for me. The cabin was only one big room, and as I got older he and mom wanted more privacy, of course. And I, as the precocious eight-year-old that I was, thought it was cool to sleep in the boathouse all by myself.”
Cindy slid a sideways glance at him. “You weren’t scared?”