Newport Dreams: A Breakwater Bay Novella (2 page)

BOOK: Newport Dreams: A Breakwater Bay Novella
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Just looking at it made her head spin.

She snapped her head down and concentrated on studying the walls. The whole house looked as if it had been painted during the “Early Psychedelic” period—neon oranges, yellows, blues.

The room at least was interesting, octagon shaped with wainscoting that reached halfway up the wall. The door that had been boarded over from the outside was dark oak with a transept window still intact and made up of hundreds of pieces of stained glass.

“Oh yeah,” Meri said. She sounded like she had just struck the mother lode. “How soon can we get scaffolding set up?”

Scaffolding?
Geordie’s breath caught. No one had said anything about scaffolding.

Doug laughed. “Next week, hopefully. There’s a lot more to do before we start work.”

“I know but . . .”

You’d think it was Christmas they way they were talking. Geordie forced herself to take a quick look up at the ceiling. “Should I take a photo?”

“Yes, and a few of the transom for now,” Bruce said. “And any other place that is fragile enough that it might be damaged in the cleanup.”

She could do that. She moved away from the others and soon became lost in taking pictures of all sorts of things. Woodwork that had been chewed by some rodent or hungry hippie, water damage on a patterned wallpaper that had curled at the edges and revealed the promise of a more intriguing paper underneath.

She pulled back one of the edges.

“Please, do not touch anything. We have experts for that.”

Geordie spun around, not that she hadn’t already learned to recognize that voice. Bruce Stafford looked annoyed.

“Sorry. I just wanted to see what was underneath.”

“You and the rest of the world. You can’t rush into these things. It must be done slowly, carefully, and methodically. By experts.”

And he clearly thought she wasn’t one of them.

He gave her a long penetrating look and she took a photo of him just to be annoying.

He raised one eyebrow. “Don’t get separated from the others.”

Geordie was tempted to take another shot, but he turned and walked away. And all she could do was watch and fume and try to control the blush that had traveled up her neck and spread across her face.

 

Chapter 2

“I
THOUGHT YOU
said you were hiring a photographer.” Bruce paced along the narrow space between the kitchen sink and table. “Instead we get an intern who can’t stay focused or follow orders, and takes pictures like she was a tourist. If she’s even studied architecture I’ll be amazed. I hope to hell we’re not paying her.”

Doug was one of the best project managers in Newport. Bruce always tried to work with him. Before he’d crashed through a supposedly inspected floor to the marble of the floor below, he’d been one of the best restorers in town. He knew the business and the people in it and he didn’t usually make these kinds of mistakes. What the hell had he been thinking to hire Geordie Holt?

Meri glanced from Doug to Bruce. “She seemed okay to me. She got lots of shots.”

“Yeah, but of what? I caught her doing multiple close-ups of curling wallpaper. And not in a way that could possibly be useful. What the hell is that about? Didn’t the grant request go through?”

“Yeah, it did,” Doug said. “And she isn’t an intern.”

Bruce stopped pacing and turned to face the project manager. “A volunteer?”

Doug shook his head.

Bruce got a terrible sinking feeling. “She’s a professional?”

Doug nodded.

“You saw her credentials?”

“I saw her portfolio. The woman takes a good photo.”

“This doesn’t sound like you.”

“Look, Bruce. No one I like working with was available, which was just as well, since she was part of the bargain.”

Bruce pulled out a chair and sat down. A really terrible feeling. “Let me guess, somebody’s niece, granddaughter, or spoiled daughter and who contributes to the board. I knew it.”

“Maybe. She applied, we hired her. There wasn’t a lot of choice out there. And I had to cut some corners.”

“Which you’d know if you didn’t have your head in the restoration clouds.” Carlyn said. She was slightly flushed. “Geordie Holt isn’t the only one who isn’t focused on the here and now.”

Doug grinned at her. “That’s what we have you for. To keep us on the straight and narrow.” Carlyn was the financial whiz kid, accountant, development coordinator, publicist, marketer, lunchtime gopher and whatever else came her way. She was devoted to Doug. And best friends with Meri.

“So they held you hostage until you hired her?”

“We’re not paying her, the board is.”

“What? Never heard of such a thing.”

“Well, I think we should wait until she uploads her photos before we judge,” Meri said.

“So we’re stuck with her?”

Doug shrugged. “Pretty much.”

“What a couple of jaded old grumps. Maybe it’s her first project. She’s probably nervous and you didn’t exactly make her feel welcome. She was practically quaking when she left.”

Bruce glowered at her. “I was nice.”

“As ice,” Carlyn said under breath. “You just don’t like her because she drives a fancy sports car.”

“It’s not about cars, it’s about expertise.”

Meri rolled her eyes and stood. “I’m going to check out my ceiling. Give her time to settle down. Don’t worry. We got the grant and if we have to do a little extra until she gets up to speed . . . Doug and I know our way around a camera. We do most of our own documentation anyway. Cheaper that way.” Meri headed to the door.

“Be careful out there,” Doug said.

“Aye, Aye, Captain,” Meri saluted and disappeared.

“Guess I’ll go chose small or smaller for an office so I can start moving my equipment in.”

“Carlyn,” Doug began.

“I know, be careful. Have I ever not been?” She headed to the door.

“So what do you really think?” Bruce asked as he sat down across from Doug.

“I think you’re too stressed out over this photographer and this project. We haven’t even started yet.”

Bruce sighed. He knew he was. He was taking on way more work than he had time for just so he could make enough real money to moonlight on independent projects like Gilbert House.

It was a diamond in the rough. He had a feeling about it. So did Doug. And Doug didn’t miss much. When he’d called Bruce to tell him he’d found a hidden wonder, Bruce didn’t hesitate to say yes. And once he’d seen the building for himself, he was hooked. Even before he’d run the inspections to make sure it was recoverable, he was totally committed.

That’s what he liked about Doug and his team of restorers. They were a practiced crew with a master at the helm. That’s what was so infuriating about this photographer.

Everybody had to carry their weight and more. Had to wear several hats at once, and be willing to work for little remuneration. Geordie Holt with her designer jeans and manicured nails was fluff. And none of them had time for fluff.

B
RUCE WALKED HOME,
hands in his pockets and his head in a quandary. He should be happy. Gilbert House had good bones. But he wasn’t.

He stopped at the deli, looked at his reflection in the glass door before going inside. It was that girl, woman, the photographer, Geordie Holt.

He opened the door and went inside.

His reaction to her had been over the top. She had an attitude, but creative people sometimes did. And she was creative, if the way she crawled around taking shots of stuff they would never need was any indication. But they didn’t need creative, they just needed meticulous documentation.

At least she seemed to be into details. Too much so, he thought, as he remembered her taking several close-ups of a windowsill from various angles. Not to mention candid shots of the crew. What was with that? He’d asked her what she was doing.

She’d ignored him. Or maybe she hadn’t even heard him. Maybe she had some kind of Asperger’s.

She obviously knew her photography but it was equally obvious that she was inexperienced in the field of restoration photography. Of course they dealt with inexperience all the time; when you worked on a shoestring budget you took on a lot of interns and volunteers.

She was also obviously rich and spoiled, by the looks of her clothes and all that equipment. And that attitude. That wasn’t what bothered him. Actually it wasn’t her at all. She just happened to be the most recent annoyance in a string of annoyances.

Geordie Holt wasn’t really the problem. It wasn’t her fault that she had the things he wanted, was the kind of woman that interested him. And as far from his reach as possible. The truth was he was barely making it.

He ordered his usual evening meal, sandwich and salad, grabbed a newspaper and continued on his way.

He’d been so sure of himself when he’d picked up and left the architectural firm to strike out on his own. He thought that being his own boss would give him more time to do more restoration work. Gradually build a reputation so he would be able to segue into full-time restoration.

Just as soon as he paid off all those student loans.

It had taken him a good six years to work and borrow his way through college. Maybe he should have stuck it out in a larger firm for a few more years, but he’d been impatient.

So far he’d been pretty successful on his own. He had more work than he could handle. Plenty of clients. Unfortunately quite a few never paid him on time.

He climbed the steps to his house, grabbed a beer from the fridge and sat down at his computer to eat his dinner and catch up on the paying work he’d let slide while spending the day on a recce at Gilbert House.

When Doug called a few weeks before, waxing enthusiastic over a house he’d found and looking for a consultant he could trust and who worked cheap, Bruce couldn’t say no. It hadn’t even occurred to him to say no.

How could he? Doug had a genius for finding teardowns and turning them into showplaces. One look at Gilbert House, and Bruce knew Doug had done it again.

It was a mess. Would take loads of work, a knowledgeable crew. More money. Daunting, but Bruce had confidence in Doug. And he could see Gilbert House’s future in his mind, as clearly as if he was looking at a color photo of the finished product.

The idea of which pissed him off all over again. They could have brought in an unpaid intern and used Geordie Holt’s salary for more pressing needs.

Sandwich forgotten, he tugged on his beer and looked down at the plans on his drafting table. Not plans for Gilbert House, but a renovation of a townhouse bathroom, marble tub and vanity. Tumbled tile floor. There was nothing wrong with the bathroom they had now, but they had to have the very best and newest fad. The damn place was only ten years old. But at least they paid on time.

He looked around his own house. It had plenty of period detail and was in need of some major TLC. But it would have to wait. It always had to wait. He’d managed to gut the kitchen and bathroom, thinking that once those two were finished he could tackle everything else piecemeal. But the plumbing sucked, had to be completely changed out.

Now the plumbing was fixed but he’d spent way too much money—and time. He’d had to keep the old appliances and leave the linoleum floor instead of reclaiming the old flooring. So now he worked late every night and on weekends, subsisting on deli food and frozen dinners heated in the microwave.

Hell, his house wasn’t in much better shape than Gilbert house. And the heat? Nonexistent. That would be another money suck. But it would have to be remedied. Winter was just a couple of months away.

G
EORDIE SAT AT
her desk spotlighted by the glow from four computer screens that filled the dining niche of her apartment. She had state-of-the-art equipment and she thanked her lucky stars that she’d bought it while her family was still supplying her every whim. It gave her a cutting edge in the business, whatever that business turned out to be.

But she was beginning to see that having things made easy by her family had made her ill equipped to take care of herself. Hell, this apartment wasn’t even hers, just a pied-à-terre her family kept for visiting clients.

And now their wayward daughter.

Well, what was she supposed to do until she saved some money and could make it on her own? Maybe that was the problem. She didn’t have to make it on her own.

Her family was rich. Had indulged her every whim. They’d indulged her sisters, too, but they had lived up to the family expectations, had respectable careers, married well.

But not Geordie. Even as a child she could never settle for one thing. Always felt different. She was different. Had never quite measured up. Now she had to show them that all their indulgence had been worthwhile. That she was worthwhile.

And that same feeling of panic set in, the need to get out, go somewhere, anywhere that captured her imagination, kept her busy. Find a place that said
Stay here, this is where you belong.

It wasn’t like she hadn’t been looking. She’d been desperate to find something that would show that she was a mature adult and didn’t have to be scolded every time something didn’t turn out the way she’d expected.

Like being a fashion photographer. She loved photography. Some of her best shots were of people. But models posed, did what they were told to do. Some of them transcended the genre. But for the most part, Geordie had found that their facades and their “looks” were already finely honed, strong. And trying to cut through all that sleekness to reach something essential was too exhausting.

She had taken some good shots. But her best shots were caught when the models had finished, were tired. Leaning over to take off a shoe or sitting before a makeup table with no makeup. Of course those were unusable. But for Geordie, that’s where photography belonged. When the subject was unsuspecting. Caught when all the external stuff was forgotten, in a moment of indecision, anger, introspection, fatigue. Moments like that gave you a window to a person’s soul.

Without them even knowing it.

People face-to-face made her nervous. That was obvious this morning when she’d blundered into her latest fiasco with enthusiasm and intensity only to flounder and embarrass herself.

The architect hated her, thought she was a flake and clueless. And what made it worse, was he was probably right. She’d taken hundreds of photos on-site, but most of them would be totally unusable for what the team needed.

She swiveled her chair from her large graphics monitor to a smaller one. Several rows of thumbnail-size photos stared back at her. More than could fit on the screen. She’d taken more than a hundred shots today and as she looked them over, she realized she might not have taken enough.

Okay, not enough of what she was supposed to look at. But she’d just followed her eye. At a certain level the house was fascinating. All that light and dark play through shuttered windows.
Like this one
. She clicked on it and an enlarged photo appeared.

A perfect triangular dash of sunlight, its point pricking the dark oak windowsill like a shard of glass, unleashing the life of the wood and sending the grain racing away from the point. And the one she’d caught immediately after, as Carlyn stepped into the same light and a halo appeared around her curly hair. And the two together . . .

She opened the photo in her graphics program and spent the next few minutes enhancing and clarifying and playing with the contrasts, overlaying and editing, fragmenting and enhancing—until she remembered that she was supposed to be organizing her documentation of the day’s work.

She pulled her eye from the computer screen, checked the time, and realized that it had been more then a few minutes; she’d been playing with that same photograph for more than an hour.

She saved the work and clicked out of it. Returned her attention to her rows of photos and began to organize them according to subject matter and time of day.

After two hours her eyes were burning, her back was aching, and her stomach was growling, but she had twenty different files of architectural details.

She looked over the files, wondering if there were too many. That was one thing she hadn’t been able to learn: how to organize the files in a useful way rather than a creative way. To recognize what was wanted and what was superfluous. Well, she could learn.

She stood up. Stretched, touched her toes and hung there until her back stopped hurting, then walked across the wooden floor to the balcony doors. She opened one and stood just inside the threshold and let the cool air energize her.

BOOK: Newport Dreams: A Breakwater Bay Novella
6.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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