In the Garden Trilogy (41 page)

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Authors: Nora Roberts

BOOK: In the Garden Trilogy
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His face, with its smooth tan and clear features, hardened. “I’d hoped, after all this time, we could be friends.”
“We’re not friends, and never will be.” Quite deliberately, she took a tissue out of her purse and wiped the hand he’d touched. “I don’t count lying, cheating sons of bitches among my friends.”
“A man just can’t make a mistake or find forgiveness with a woman like you.”
“That’s exactly right. I believe that’s the first time you’ve been exactly right in your whole miserable life.”
She started across the street, more resigned than surprised when he fell into step beside her. He wore a pale gray suit, Italian in cut. Canali, if she wasn’t mistaken. At least that had been his designer of the moment when she’d been footing the bills.
“I don’t see why you’re still upset, Roz, honey. Unless there are still feelings inside you for me.”
“Oh, there are, Bryce, there are. Disgust being paramount. Go away before I call a cop and have you arrested for being a personal annoyance.”
“I’d just like another chance to—”
She stopped then. “That will never happen in this lifetime, or a thousand others. Be grateful you’re able to walk the streets in your expensive shoes, Bryce, and that you’re wearing a tailored suit instead of a prison jumpsuit.”
“There’s no cause to talk to me that way. You got what you wanted, Roz. You cut me off without a dime.”
“Would that include the fifteen thousand, six hundred and fifty-eight dollars and twenty-two cents you transferred out of my account the week before I kicked your sorry ass out of my house? Oh, I knew about that one, too,” she said when his face went carefully blank. “But I let that one go, because I decided I deserved to pay something for my own stupidity. Now you go on, and you stay out of my way, you stay out of my sight, and you stay out of my hearing, or I promise you, you’ll regret it.”
She clipped down the sidewalk, and even the “Frigid bitch” he hurled at her back didn’t break her stride.
But she was shaking. By the time she’d reached the right address her knees and hands were trembling. She hated that she’d allowed him to upset her. Hated that the sight of him brought any reaction at all, even if it was rage.
Because there was shame along with it.
She’d taken him into her heart and her home. She’d let herself be charmed and seduced—and lied to and deceived. He’d stolen more than her money, she knew. He’d stolen her pride. And it was a shock to the system to realize, after all this time, that she didn’t quite have it back. Not all of it.
She blessed the cool inside the building and rode the elevator to the third floor.
She was too frazzled and annoyed to fuss with her hair or check her makeup before she knocked. Instead she stood impatiently tapping her foot until the door opened.
He was as good-looking as the picture on the back of his books—several of which she’d read or skimmed through before arranging this meeting. He was, perhaps, a bit more rumpled in rolled-up shirtsleeves and jeans. But what she saw was a very long, very lanky individual with a pair of horn-rims sliding down a straight and narrow nose. Behind the lenses, bottle-green eyes seemed distracted. His hair was plentiful, in a tangle of peat-moss brown around a strong, sharp-boned face that showed a black bruise along the jaw.
The fact that he wasn’t wearing any shoes made her feel hot and overdressed.
“Dr. Carnegie?”
“That’s right. Ms.... Harper. I’m sorry. I lost track of time. Come in, please. And don’t look at anything.” There was a quick, disarming smile. “Part of losing track means I didn’t remember to pick up out here. So we’ll go straight back to my office, where I can excuse any disorder in the name of the creative process. Can I get you anything?”
His voice was coastal southern, she noted. That easy drawl that turned vowels into warm liquid. “I’ll take something cold, whatever you’ve got.”
Of course, she looked as he scooted her through the living room. There were newspapers and books littering an enormous brown sofa, another pile of them along with a stubby white candle on a coffee table that looked as if it might have been Georgian. There was a basketball and a pair of high-tops so disreputable she doubted even her sons would lay claim to them in the middle of a gorgeous Turkish rug, and the biggest television screen she’d ever seen eating up an entire wall.
Though he was moving her quickly along, she caught sight of the kitchen. From the number of dishes on the counter, she assumed he’d recently had a party.
“I’m in the middle of a book,” he explained. “And when I come up for air, domestic chores aren’t a priority. My last cleaning team quit. Just like their predecessors.”
“I can’t imagine why,” she said with schooled civility as she stared at his office space.
There wasn’t a clean surface to be seen, and the air reeked of cigar smoke. A dieffenbachia sat in a chipped pot on the windowsill, withering. Rising above the chaos of his desk was a flat-screen monitor and an ergonomic keyboard.
He cleaned off the chair, dumping everything unceremoniously on the floor. “Hang on one minute.”
As he dashed out, she lifted her brows at the half-eaten sandwich and glass of—maybe it was tea—among the debris on his desk. She was somewhat disappointed when with a crane of her neck she peered around to his monitor. His screen saver was up. But that, she supposed, was interesting enough, as it showed several cartoon figures playing basketball.
“I hope tea’s all right,” he said as he came back.
“That’s fine, thank you.” She took the glass and hoped it had been washed sometime in the last decade. “Dr. Carnegie, you’re killing that plant.”
“What plant?”
“The dieffenbachia in the window.”
“Oh? Oh. I didn’t know I had a plant.” He gave it a baffled look. “Wonder where that came from? It doesn’t look very healthy, does it?”
He picked it up, and she saw, with horror, that he intended to dump it in the overflowing wastebasket beside his desk.
“For God’s sake, don’t just throw it out. Would you bury your cat alive?”
“I don’t have a cat.”
“Just give it to me.” She rose, grabbed the pot out of his hand. “It’s dying of thirst and heat, and it’s rootbound. This soil’s hard as a brick.”
She set it beside her chair and sat again. “I’ll take care of it,” she said, and her legs were an angry slash as she crossed them. “Dr. Carnegie—”
“Mitch. If you’re going to take my plant, you ought to call me Mitch.”
“As I explained when I contacted you, I’m interested in contracting for a thorough genealogy of my family, with an interest in gathering information on a specific person.”
“Yes.” All business, he decided, and sat at his desk. “And I told you I only do personal genealogies if something about the family history interests me. I’m—obviously—caught up in a book right now and wouldn’t have much time to devote to a genealogical search and report.”
“You didn’t name your fee.”
“Fifty dollars an hour, plus expenses.”
She felt a quick clutch in the belly. “That’s lawyer steep.”
“An average genealogy doesn’t take that long, if you know what you’re doing and where to look. In most cases, it can be done in about forty hours, depending on how far back you want to go. If it’s more complicated, we could arrange a flat fee—reevaluating after that time is used. But as I said—”
“I don’t believe you’ll have to go back more than a century.”
“Chump change in this field. And if you’re only dealing with a hundred years, you could probably do this yourself. I’d be happy to direct you down the avenues. No charge.”
“I need an expert, which I’m assured you are. And I’m willing to negotiate terms. Since you took the time out of your busy schedule to speak to me, I’d think you’d hear me out before you nudge me out the door.”
All business, he thought again, and prickly with it. “That wasn’t my intention—the nudging. Of course I’ll hear you out. If you’re not in any great rush for the search and report, I may be able to help you out in a few weeks.”
When she inclined her head, he began to rummage on, through, under the desk. “Just let me ... how the hell did that get there?”
He unearthed a yellow legal pad, then mined out a pen. “That’s Rosalind, right?
As You Like It
?”
A smile whisked over her mouth. “As in Russell. My daddy was a fan.”
He wrote her name on the top of the pad. “You said a hundred years back. I’d think a family like yours would have records, journals, documents—and considerable oral family history to cover a century.”
“You would, wouldn’t you? Actually, I have quite a bit, but certain things have led me to believe some of the oral history is either incorrect or is missing details. I will, however, be glad to have you go through what I do have. We’ve already been through a lot of it.”
“We?”
“Myself, and other members of my household.”
“So, you’re looking for information on a specific ancestor.”
“I don’t know as she was an ancestor, but I am certain she was a member of the household. I’m certain she died there.”
“You have her death record?”
“No.”
He shoved at his glasses as he scribbled. “Her grave?”
“No. Her ghost.”
She smiled serenely when he blinked up at her. “Doesn’t a man who digs into family histories believe in ghosts?”
“I’ve never come across one.”
“If you take on this job, you will. What might your fee be, Dr. Carnegie, to dig up the history and identity of a family ghost?”
He leaned back in his chair, tapping the pen on his chin. “You’re not kidding around.”
“I certainly wouldn’t kid around to the tune of fifty dollars an hour, plus expenses. I bet you could write a very interesting book on the Harper family ghost, if I were to sign a release and cooperate.”
“I just bet I could,” he replied.
“And it seems to me that you might consider finding out what I’m after as a kind of research. Maybe I should charge you.”
His grin flashed again. “I have to finish this book before I actively take on another project. Despite evidence to the contrary, I finish what I start.”
“Then you ought to start washing your dishes.”
“Told you not to look. First, let me say that in my opinion the odds of you having an actual ghost in residence are about, oh, one in twenty million.”
“I’d be happy to put a dollar down at those odds, if you’re willing to risk the twenty million.”
“Second, if I take this on, I’d require access to all family papers—personal family papers, and your written consent for me to dig into public records regarding your family.”
“Of course.”
“I’d be willing to waive my fee for, let’s say, the first twenty hours. Until we see what we’ve got.”
“Forty hours.”
“Thirty.”
“Done.”
“And I’d want to see your house.”
“Perhaps you’d like to come to dinner. Is there any day next week that would suit you?”
“I don’t know. Hold on.” He swiveled to his computer, danced his fingers over keys. “Tuesday?”
“Seven o’clock, then. We’re not formal, but you will need shoes.” She picked up the plant, then rose. “Thank you for your time,” she said, extended a hand.
“Are you really going to take that thing?”
“I certainly am. And I have no intention of giving it back and letting you take it to death’s door again. Do you need directions to Harper House?”
“I’ll find it. Seems to me I drove by it once.” He walked her to the door. “You know, sensible women don’t usually believe in ghosts. Practical women don’t generally agree to pay someone to trace the history of said ghost. And you strike me as a sensible, practical woman.”
“Sensible men don’t usually live in pigsties and conduct business meetings barefoot. We’ll both have to take our chances. You ought to put some ice on that bruise. It looks painful.”
“It is. Vicious little ...” He broke off. “Got clipped going up for a rebound. Basketball.”
“So I see. I’ll expect you Tuesday, then, at seven.”
“I’ll be there. Good-bye, Ms. Harper.”
“Dr. Carnegie.”
He kept the door open long enough to satisfy his curiosity. He was right, he noted. The rear view was just as elegant and sexy as the front side, and both went with that steel-spined southern belle voice.
A class act, top to toe, he decided as he shut the door.
Ghosts. He shook his head and chuckled as he wound his way through the mess back to his office. Wasn’t that a kick in the ass.
twenty
LOGAN STUDIED THE TINY FORM BLINKING IN A patch of dappled sunlight. He’d seen babies before, even had his share of personal contact with them. To him, newborns bore a strange resemblance to fish. Something about the eyes, he thought. And this one had all that black hair going for her, so she looked like a human sea creature. Sort of exotic and otherworldly.

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