Moondance Beach (27 page)

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Authors: Susan Donovan

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“I’ve got her. She’s right here.”

The dog toddled up to Lena and began licking her hand. Duncan looked down at the poor thing to see her fur was singed and black, but otherwise she didn’t seem injured. He scratched her behind the ears.

“Bravo Zulu, Ondine,” he said.

Lena began to cry. He felt her shake and tremble. He held her close, covering her body with his.

“I love you, Lena. So much.” Duncan’s tears fell on her face, rinsing the soot away in narrow streaks. “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I will never doubt you again. I get it now—sometimes you just
know
. Like just now I knew something had happened to you. I can’t explain it . . .”

“Shhh,” she said, cutting off his rambling. “I love you, Duncan. Thank you for not giving up on me.”

Epilogue
 

One year later . . .

 

L
ena lay on a blanket in the sand and watched the high evening clouds float along, pastel wisps of red and orange making their way across the horizon line. Though beautiful, she knew the passing clouds were an illusion. The sky was still—
they
were the ones in motion down here on earth, spinning through time, the tides and seasons always in a state of change.

A warm breeze ruffled their hair and clothing. Ondine continued to chase seagulls up and down the surf. And Lena reveled in her husband’s touch. One of his hands gently stroked her hair while the other protected her enormous belly.

Sometimes Lena cried when she recalled last year’s fire and the chaos and pain it had caused. But mostly she looked back on herself a year ago with bittersweet amusement. Right here on this beach, she’d dug her heels into the sand and informed Duncan that she could take care of herself. She didn’t need his protection. Thank you very much.

As it turned out, she’d missed the mark on both counts. In the moment when all was lost, she had needed Duncan. She hadn’t been able to do it by herself. And he had been there—to take care of her and protect her. He still was.

“I love you, Adelena Silva-Flynn.” Duncan’s voice was low and gentle as he leaned down to kiss her forehead. “Are you getting tired? We can go in if you’d like.”

“Naw, I’m great. I’ve got at least ten good minutes left in me.”

They laughed. Lena was due with their daughter any day now, and she had become grumpy, uncomfortable, and exhausted from not being able to sleep. Duncan had cleared his schedule for the next month so that he could be with her for the birth and then stay at home with his girls.

It was not something Lena had asked him to do, but after the fire Duncan had resigned from the Navy. He’d accepted a job as director of a national nonprofit that brought together his two passions, wounded warriors and competitive water sports. Duncan had resigned while Lena was still in the hospital recovering from her injuries, which had allowed him to stay in Boston to be at her side.

Sanders took care of everything else—all the insurance hassles and all of Lena’s finances. “Just get better,” he’d told her.

The first time she’d asked Duncan about his decision not to return to active duty, he’d explained his thinking this way: “I listened to others. I listened to my heart. And I realized I could still serve in honor of my friends. It’s just a different kind of service to my country and to those I love. I think my friends would approve.”

So, in this last year, not only had Duncan started a new career, but he had acted as general contractor in the rebuilding of their home. He’d also provided expert personal coaching for Lena as she got back on her feet—literally.

Her right leg had been broken in two places, and she now sported a screw in her ankle and knee, with a metal rod at her tibia. Though it wasn’t planned, Lena had become pregnant just three months after the fire, while still in the thick of physical therapy with the always-energetic and competent Brandy. Lena and Duncan now affectionately referred to her as “the Perky-nator.” Just not to her face.

Duncan and Lena had moved into the Safe Haven while the house was being rebuilt. He’d created a studio space for her and had encouraged her to get back to work, even gifting her with a stool and a beret. Lena had decided not to use oils and solvents during her pregnancy, sticking with acrylics, egg tempura, and watercolor, a change that had brought out new dimensions in her paintings.

“Are you up for a swim?” Duncan asked.

“Always.”

For some men it could prove challenging to maneuver a very pregnant woman from a prone to standing position in the sand. Not for Duncan Flynn. He simply reached down, scooped his arms under Lena’s knees and back, and stood up. Slowly and carefully, he carried Lena to the rolling surf, walking with her until the salt water lifted her away from Duncan’s arms. Lena drifted, floating on her back, feeling the familiar rocking motion provided by the mother of all life and the forceful kicks coming from inside her own body.

“Looks like we’ve got company again.”

She raised her head from the water and turned to where Duncan pointed. A group of fantails playfully splashed in the waves not ten yards away, their sleek shapes slipping through the water in unison. They seemed particularly joyous, Lena thought. It was almost like a celebration.

“They’re unusually active this evening.”

She nodded, swimming toward Duncan. Lena eased into his embrace and kissed his warm lips. “The ocean is full of surprises, you know.” She smiled up at his handsome face.

“You don’t say?”

“It’s true.” Lena brushed her fingertip down his scruffy cheek and sighed with contentment. “All kinds of unusual things happen here at Moondance Beach. Who knows what you’ll experience in the years to come?”

“Hmm.” Duncan dipped his lips to hers once more, cupping the back of her head in his hand as he kissed her lovingly. When he pulled away, Lena saw that his eyes were full of mischief.

“Lena?”

“Yes?”

“What are the chances that our daughter will be a . . . you know . . . a natural swimmer?”

Lena laughed. “That goes without saying! Her daddy is a SEAL!”

Lena and Duncan laughed, holding each other as they watched the graceful creatures swim out to deep water.

Read on for a look at the first book in Susan Donovan’s Bayberry Island series,

SEA OF LOVE

 

Available from Signet
Select.

 
 

“I
s it true what they say about the mermaid statue?”

“Yeah, like, can she really hook us up with some hot guys while we’re here?”

Rowan Flynn’s eyelid began to twitch. She gently closed the cash drawer and smiled at her latest arrivals, grateful they couldn’t read her thoughts. But holy hell—this had to be the hundredth mermaid question of the day! At this rate she’d never make it through festival week without completely losing her mind.

“And, like, where’s the nearest liquor store?”

But wait . . . what if this were the opportunity she’d been waiting for, the perfect time to knock some sense into the tourists? Maybe these girls—two typical, clueless, party-hungry twentysomethings checking into her family’s godforsaken, falling-down bed-and-breakfast—would be better off knowing the awful, horrible truth about the Bayberry Island mermaid legend. And love in general.

The thought made her giddy.

Rowan was prepared for this opportunity. She’d rehearsed her mermaid smackdown a thousand times. The
words were locked, loaded, and ready to
zing!
from her mouth and slap these chicks right on their empty, tanned foreheads, perhaps saving them from years of heartache and delusion.

Yo! Wake up!
she could say.
Of course there’s no truth to the legend. Trust me—the mermaid can’t bring you true love. It’s a frickin’ fountain carved from a lifeless, soulless hunk of bronze, sitting in a town square in the middle of a useless island stuck between Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard, where . . .

“Uh, like, hell-
oh
-oh?”

The girls stared at Rowan. They waited for her answer with optimistic, wide eyes. She just couldn’t do it. What right did she have to stomp all over their fantasies? How could she crush the romantic tendencies nature had hardwired into their feminine souls? How could she jack up their weeklong vacation?

Besides, her mother would kill her if she flipped out in front of paying guests. The Flynns relied on the B and B to keep them afloat—a predicament that was 100 percent Rowan’s fault.

So she handed her guests the keys to the Tea Rose Room, put on her happy-hotelier face, and offered up the standard line of crap. “Well, as we locals like to say, there’s no limit to the mermaid’s magical powers—but only if you
believe.

“Awesome.” The dark-haired woman snatched the keys from Rowan and glanced at her friend. “Because I
believe
we need to get laid this week!”

The girls laughed so hard they practically tripped over themselves getting to the grand staircase. Rowan cocked her head and watched them guffaw their way to the landing, banging their rolling suitcases against the already banged-up
oak steps. For about the tenth time that day, she imagined how horrified her loony great-great-grandfather would be at the state of this place. Rutherford Flynn’s mansion was once considered an architectural wonder, a symbol of the family patriarch’s huge ego, legendary business acumen, enormous wallet, and enduring passion for his wife—a woman he swore was a mermaid.

“Oh! Like, ma’am, we forgot to ask. Where’s our room?”

Ma’am?
Rowan was only thirty, just a few years older than these girls! Since when was she a damn
ma’am
?

Oh. That’s right. She’d become a
ma’am
the day she’d left the real world to become the spinster innkeeper of Bayberry Island.

“Turn right at the top of the stairs.” Rowan heard the forced cheerfulness disappear from her voice. “It’s the second room on the left. Enjoy your stay, ladies.”

“We are so going to try!”

As the giggling and suitcase dragging continued directly overhead, Rowan propped her elbows on the old wood of the front desk and let her face fall into her hands. So she was a ma’am now, a ma’am with three check-ins arriving on the evening ferry. She was a ma’am with one clogged toilet on the third floor, twenty-two guests for breakfast tomorrow, four temporary maids who spoke as many languages, and eight hellish days until the island’s annual Mermaid Festival had run its course. Oh, and one more detail: the business was twenty-seven thousand dollars in the hole for the year, losses that absolutely
had
to be made up in the coming week or bankruptcy was a distinct possibility. Which also was this ma’am’s fault, thank you very much.

And every second Rowan stayed on the island
playing pimp to the mermaid legend was a reminder of the lethal error she’d made while visiting her family exactly three years before. She’d dropped her guard with that fish bitch just long enough to leave her vulnerable to heartbreak, betrayal, and the theft of what little remained of the Flynn family fortune. It was hard to believe, but Rowan had been happy before then. She’d studied organizational psychology and had a career she loved, working as an executive recruiter in the higher-education field. She had a great apartment in Boston and a busy social life. So what if she hadn’t found her true love? She’d been in no rush.

But she’d returned for the Mermaid Festival that year and met a B and B guest named Frederick Theissen. He was so charming, handsome, and witty that before she could say, “Hold on a jiff while I check your references,” Rowan had fallen insanely in love with a complete stranger determined to whisk her away to New York. Her mother and her cronies insisted it was the legend at work and that Frederick was her destiny.

As it turned out, her charming, handsome, and witty stranger might have loved her, but he also happened to be a Wall Street con man who used her to steal what remained of her family’s money. Destiny sucked.

Of course, her mother wasn’t entirely to blame for her downfall. Rowan should have known better. But she still had the right to despise anything and everything related to the frickin’ mermaid until the day she died.

The familiar
putt-putt
of a car engine caught her attention, and Rowan raised her head to look out the beveled glass of the heavily carved front doors. She watched the VW Bug plastered with iridescent fish scales come to a stop in the semicircle driveway. Since it was festival
week, the car was decked out for maximum gawking effect, with its headlights covered in huge plastic seashells and a giant-assed mermaid tail sticking out from the trunk. Her mother got out of the car and strolled through the door.

“Hi, honey! Everything going smoothly? How many more are due on the last ferry?”

Rowan gave Mona the once-over and smiled. Like the car, her mother was in her festival finery, in her case the formal costume of the president of the Bayberry Island Mermaid Society. Mona’s flowing blond wig was parted in the center and fell down her back. She wore shells on her boobs, sea glass drop earrings, and a spandex skirt of mother-of-pearl scales that hugged her hips, thighs, and legs. The skirt’s hem fanned out into a mermaid flipper that provided just enough ankle room for her to walk around like Morticia Addams. Unlike Morticia, however, Rowan’s mother wore a pair of coral-embellished flip-flops.

“Hi, Ma.” Rowan checked the B and B reservation list. “Two doubles and a quad—parents and two kids.”

“Will you put the family in the Seahorse Suite?”

“No. I’ve already got a family in there. I’m putting the new arrivals in the Dolphin Suite.”

Her mother approached the front desk, leaned in close, and whispered, “What’s the status of the commode?”

“I’m hoping it’ll get fixed before they check in.”

One of Mona’s eyebrows arched high, and she tapped a finger on the front desk. “You’d better do more than hope, my dear. The Safe Haven Bed-and-Breakfast has a reputation to uphold.”

Rowan held her tongue. Some might argue the establishment’s only reputation was that it had seen better
days and was owned by the island’s first family of cray-cray.

“But why worry?” Mona waved an arm around dramatically, a move that caused one of her shells to shift slightly north of decent. “The evening ferry might not even make it here. Did you hear the forecast?”

This was a rhetorical question, Rowan suspected, but she could tell by the tone of her mother’s voice that the news wasn’t good. “Last I heard, it was just some rain.”

Mona shook her head, her blond tresses swinging. “Ten-foot swells. Wind gusts up to forty-five knots. Lightning. The coast guard’s already issued a small-craft advisory. And the island council is meeting with Clancy right now to decide if they should take down the outdoor festival decorations—a public safety concern, you know. We wouldn’t want that giant starfish flying around the boardwalk like back in 1995. Nearly killed that poor man from Arkansas.”

“Absolutely.” Rowan pretended to tidy some papers on the desk as she forced her chuckle into submission. They both knew the real public safety risk was that council members could come to blows deciding whether to undecorate for what might be just a quick-moving summer squall. She didn’t pity her older brother Clancy. Tempers were known to flare up during festival week, a make-or-break seven days for anyone trying to eke out a living on this island, which was nearly everyone. And that didn’t count the latest twist. A Boston developer’s plans to build a swanky marina, golf course, and casino hotel had split the locals into two warring factions. About half of the island’s residents preferred to keep Bayberry’s quaint New England vibe. The other half wanted increased tourism revenue, even if it meant crowds, traffic, noise,
and pollution. And the Flynns were at the center of the dispute, since their land sat smack dab in the middle of the mile-long cove and was essential to the development plans. Much to the dismay of every other property owner on the cove, both Mona and Frasier were listed as owners, and Mona forbade Rowan’s father to sell the land. This meant that one little, middle-aged, spandex-clad mermaid was holding a major real estate developer, every other cove landowner, and half the population of the island hostage.

Rowan had come to view the conflict as a kind of civil war, and like the more historically significant one, the conflict had pitted family member against family member, neighbor against neighbor. The weapon of choice around here wasn’t cannon or musket, though. It was endless squabbling, ruthless name-calling, and an occasional episode of hair pulling or tire slashing.

Rowan might not be thrilled about running from Manhattan with her life in shambles, but one thing could be said for her place of birth. It wasn’t dull.

“Well, Ma, I’m sure Clancy will handle the situation with tact and diplomacy. He always does.”

“That is so true.” As Mona’s gaze wandered off past the French doors and into the parlor, a faint smile settled on her lips. Rowan was well aware that her mother was enamored with her two grown sons—Clancy, a former Boston patrol officer who was now the island’s chief of police, and Duncan, a Navy SEAL deployed somewhere in the Middle East. As the baby of the family, Rowan had grown up accepting that her mother was unabashedly proud of her two smart, handsome, and capable boys. Of course Mona had always loved Rowan, too—but
enamored
? Not so much. Exasperated was more like it,
especially starting in about fifth grade, when Rowan began talking about how she couldn’t wait to escape the island and start her real life.

“This
is
your real life,” her mother would say. “Every day you’re alive is real. And if you can’t be really alive here on Bayberry Island, you’ll never be really alive, no matter where you go.”

God, how that used to piss Rowan off. It still did.

Mona adjusted her shell bra and returned her attention to her daughter. “I told Clancy to come over here after the meeting and help you with the storm shutters. God knows your father is useless when it comes to that sort of thing, if he cared enough to check on the house in the first place.”

Rowan ignored the jab. She’d adopted a hands-off policy when it came to her parents’ ongoing power struggles, including their opposing positions on the development plans. “Only a few shutters are in good enough condition to make a difference, and besides, Clancy’s got more important things to do right now.”

Mona didn’t like that response, apparently. Her brow crinkled up. “Who’s going to help you, then? Has a handsome and single handyman managed to check in without me noticing?”

“Not possible, Ma.”

“It’s not possible that such a man would want to visit Bayberry Island?”

“No—it’s not possible you wouldn’t have noticed.”

“True enough.” Mona giggled. “It
is
my job, you know.”

Rowan’s eyes got big, and all she could think was,
Dear God, not this again
. Her mother was the retired principal of the island’s only school, but she’d just alluded to her other “job”—that of Mermaid Society president and keeper of all things legend related. It was a
wide net that Mona and her posse used to fish around in other people’s love lives.

Her mother glanced down at Rowan and put her hands on her scale-covered hips. “You look like you have something facetious to say.”

“Nope. Not me, Ma. I’m totally cool with the legend. Love is a many-splendored thing . . . all you need is love . . . back that ass up and all that shit.”

Mona gasped. “
Rowan Moira Flynn
!”

Just then, the
tap-tap
of quick footsteps moved through the huge formal dining room and headed toward the foyer, which was enough to divert Mona’s attention.

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