Read Come Rain or Shine Online
Authors: Allison Jewell
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Family Saga, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Sagas, #Romance, #Historical
He pulled away, picking up speed as he headed down the road, leaving her barefoot and alone in Ava’s driveway.
A
ll four of the men were silent as they pulled away from the house. Trick turned and glanced behind them and then looked at his brother.
“That went well,” he sighed and turned to face the front. “When you return home I’m not sure
little ball of trouble
is going to be an accurate description of her. I’m thinking it’ll be something more along the lines of
little devil’s sphere of wrath and fury.
”
“Dry it up, Trick.” Silas worked hard to form the words and speak them aloud.
He couldn’t believe how he felt right now. He should have been able to drive away from that house feeling nothing but satisfaction because he had done the right thing. He had made the right choice to keep her safe. He had done exactly what needed to be done. There was no way she could go back to Kentucky right now. So, if he had done the right thing, why was his heart in his throat? He felt like he’d been sucker-punched as he watched her standing there in the driveway, begging him to take her. Damn it, he needed to get it together. He fought back the pain and swallowed hard, never taking his eyes off the road.
“Emmie’s a curious girl but you’re doing the right thing for her,” Al said from the back seat.
“Yeah, I’m leaving her alone and barefoot in your driveway, begging me for something I won’t give her. I’m a real stand-up guy.”
Trick looked over at his brother. “Do you think she will stay in Chicago?”
“I left her with no money to ensure she had no way to get home,” Silas said, keeping all trace of emotion from his voice.
“Do you think that will stop her?” Vincent asked.
“There’s not a person in that house crazy enough to buy her a ticket home when she would be in so much danger there,” Silas answered.
*
Emmie couldn’t say how long she stood in the driveway. She no longer felt the cold air, only the hollow feeling in her chest. She looked down at her ring and screamed in the direction of the car that was now completely out of sight.
“Damn you and your empty promises, Silas McDowell. I promise you nothing,” she shouted with her fists clenched at her sides. “I promise you nothing.”
With that she turned and walked into the house. As soon as she entered the smell of burning biscuits engulfed her. She ran to the kitchen to find a man bent over the oven, pulling them out.
“I am so sorry. I completely forgot I’d put them in . . .” she said, but her voice trailed off as the older man turned around to face her. He dropped the black biscuits on the counter and looked at her with a concerned expression.
Emmie pulled out a kitchen chair and turned her back to him, mumbling to herself, “Of course I see you here. As if this morning couldn’t get any better.”
She sat at the table and hated the tears escaping her eyes. These people didn’t deserve her tears, yet here she was crying buckets for them.
To her surprise the older man pulled out a chair next to hers and sat down. She peeked up and saw he sat stone-sober with his chin rested in his hands. He didn’t look at her as he began to speak.
“Your mother always made biscuits when she was upset. It could be the middle of the night and she’d be in the kitchen making biscuits,” Marco Del Grandé said softly.
Emmie gritted her teeth as she said, “Well you sure would know about upsetting her, wouldn’t you? You are a sorry excuse for a man, you know that?”
Marco only nodded for a moment before he said, “I suppose I am but you should know I loved Ruby.”
“Loved her? You call what you did to her love? You have no right to talk to me about my mother, Mr. Del Grandé,” she shouted, looking him right in the eye. She had no patience left today for lying men.
He turned and looked at her. “You can be mad at me. But you do need to know that we loved one another. When you were first born, before everything got all messed up, it was one of the happiest times of my life. I was as happy with your birth as I was with Gabe’s. You deserve to know that.”
“Oh yeah? How is knowing that supposed to help me? I know you lied to her. Your
wife
told me that you told my mother you were a widower. Well buddy, in case you didn’t know, a widower means your wife is dead. Your wife was very much alive in that hospital. Suffering from a horrible loss. You are talking about being happy when Gabe and I were born but what about that baby you lost? Did you not feel the proper emotions at that one, Mr. Del Grandé? It sounds like when things got tough you went and forced yourself on my mother.” She couldn’t believe the hateful words that had just come out of her mouth. Emmie could tell by the look on his face she had said too much.
He stood, towering over her and gritted his teeth. “I know I have hurt you with my absence in your life. But you speak of things you know nothing about, girl. We all feel pain differently. I assure you I mourned the loss of your
sister,
” he said, emphasizing the word sister. “We all process pain differently, Emma. Your mother grew to understand that. I suppose that is part of the reason she eventually forgave my lies.”
Emmie couldn’t believe her mother had ever forgiven him. She opened her mouth to tell him so but he continued talking.
“I know my wife told you a little about the truth of your past, but there is more,” he said, attempting to calm down.
“I think I’ve decided ignorance is bliss. I don’t want to know more about my past with you people,” she said, standing to grab her coffee cup from earlier. She was done with this conversation and this man.
As she reached the door he spoke again, “It wasn’t completely a lie you know.”
“What wasn’t a lie, Mr. Del Grandé?” she asked, her voice full of anger.
“When I said I was a widower, I partly meant it. I thought my wife was gone. She had been out of her mind for months. You’ve talked to her. She is better, but a part of her died with that baby. The day I met your mother I honestly thought she was gone forever. I swear that to you, Emma,” he said.
She didn’t know how to reply to that so she stood there for a moment with her back to him and said nothing. After a quiet moment, he spoke again.
“There is nothing I can do to make up for my past or my absence from your life when you needed me. But I can tell you that you do have other family. Not just the Del Grandés, but your mother’s family, the Sloan’s. You are not alone. They are still alive and live in Kentucky. I can help you find them when you are ready.”
Emmie jerked her head around, saying on impulse, “My mom has family members still living?”
He nodded. “Yes, near Louisville.”
Emmie chewed her lip. “Will you take me now?”
He stepped away from her and sighed. “Emma, I’ll take you but I’m not sure now is a good time.”
Emmie swallowed hard and found the courage to speak. “Please,” she pleaded in a softer voice, “take me to meet them. I need this Marco.”
Lord help her, she was being a user. She had no intention of meeting her mother’s family on this trip. If there was one thing she’d learned about the choices her mother had made in the past, it was if her mother kept her away from people, she must have had a good reason for doing so. Emmie was not ready to learn about any more skeletons in her mother’s closet. Marco Del Grandé rubbed his chin and thought for a moment before he spoke. Just when she was sure he was going to say no, he nodded in agreement.
E
mmie couldn’t remember the last time she had packed so quickly. She knew she was leaving things behind, but she didn’t care. As she walked out of the bedroom, she noticed an envelope on the floor in the middle of the doorway. Silas had mentioned leaving her a note. He must have slid it under the door thinking she was still asleep before he left the house. A small part of her wanted to leave the letter where it rested, but she couldn’t bring herself to do it. She dropped it into her purse and left the bedroom.
She made it downstairs before Marco. She found that waiting on a bench in the entry hall gave her too much time to doubt herself. She toyed with the idea of reading the letter but wasn’t ready to hear his excuses for leaving her yet. She stood and paced the length of the hall. Something inside her shouted she was a fool for leaving the safety of this house. Her heart beating faster, thinking of the last time Silas had been worried about her safety. She wasn’t eager to be shoved in the back of a car again but, with Mr. Thomas gone, she doubted she was at the top of anyone’s
folks to kidnap
list. As afraid as she felt to go, she was more scared not to go. Something in her gut told her she needed to get back home. These men had burned-down Silas’s businesses and she probably would have let him go down and handle that one alone. But these guys had messed with her friend’s property. What if Bo or his sister had been in that cabin? What if Spotty had been in there?
Marco met her after only a few minutes. Neither of them spoke on the drive to Chicago. She wished there weren’t so many miles between her and her friends. She figured it was just as well because she needed time to think of how she was going to get from Louisville to Bowling Green. She closed her eyes and rested her head on the back of the seat. Nothing came to her. She was going to have to tell Marco the truth at some point but she couldn’t do it yet. He might turn the car around and take her right back to Ava’s house.
When they arrived at the station it was busy and crowded. Fortunately she and Marco had missed the earlier train and wouldn’t be on the same one as Silas. She was sure if he caught sight of her in the station, he would have been furious. She didn’t plan to give that man a piece of her mind until they had reached Kentucky.
Somehow Marco Del Grandé had managed to secure a fairly nice private car on the train. The same awkward quiet they had experienced in the car continued on the train. They had spoken little more than an
excuse me
or
thank you
since leaving the house. Emmie bit her lip as she watched the world speed by her from the window of the moving car. Guilt was settling in her stomach. She was going to have to tell him the truth about why she’d run off with him. Emmie had always been this way. When she had done something bad as a child she’d never gotten away with it. She’d always told on herself. She looked over at Marco. Wrinkles creased his eyes and two deep lines formed in his brow as he picked at a loose thread on his pants. She didn’t have to ask him to know that taking some kid he barely claimed as his own to Kentucky to meet her family was not something he wanted to do today.
Emmie sighed and looked up at her father. “I’m just going to say this because I’m sitting here feeling bad about it.”
Marco’s eyebrow arched in question but he didn’t say a word.
“I don’t know for sure if I want to meet the Sloan family,” she said, skirting the truth.
“I would say that’s to be expected. It makes sense you’d be nervous about meeting them. They will be surprised to see you. I am not sure if they ever knew your mother had a child. They aren’t bad people exactly . . . your mother just . . .” She could tell he was searching for the right words.
“What do you mean they aren’t bad people
exactly
?” Emmie frowned.
“Your mother just didn’t want you around any kind of unpleasantness and they could be a rough sort. Ironically, in the end it was the same reason she gave for taking you away from us,” Marco said, lost in his thoughts.
Emmie rubbed her eyes. It was barely noon and she was exhausted. Whatever the Sloan story was, her mother was protecting her from something. She wasn’t saying she never wanted to meet these people but she didn’t want to meet them right now. Her plate was full. Looking down at her hands, she wondered how she was going to tell Marco that she had used him as a means to get back home. She twisted the promise ring on her finger, as she thought.
“Did Silas give you that ring?” Marco asked.
“Yeah,” she answered truthfully.
He didn’t say anything but she could see his brain working. He just nodded.