Authors: RaeAnne Thayne
“What about a day of service? Neighbors helping neighbors,” Mary Ella suggested. For the first time
since she came in, her lovely green eyes looked clear and unclouded by sorrow.
“Yes. Yes!” Claire thought of the possibilities. Fences that needed to be painted, windows to be washed, blankets to be knitted. “We could involve every one. Children, families, youth groups.”
“We should have something special planned for the teenagers. They've lost so much,” Evie said.
Claire thought of Taryn, a cheerleader and popular girl at Hope's Crossing High School, lying in a hospital bed in Denver, of Charlie Beaumont, facing serious charges in the accident, of the other teens involved.
And, of course, of Layla.
She leaned forward suddenly, an abrupt movement that sent a pain rippling up her leg that she ignored. “What if we end the day with a dinner dance and benefit auction. The proceeds can go to a charity that benefits the entire community. Maybe something with particular impact on the young people.”
“A scholarship in Layla's name,” Ruth said abruptly.
“Oh.” Mary Ella's features softened.
Claire beamed at her mother. “Oh, perfect, Mom. Just perfect.”
“Maura would be touched, don't you think?” Evie asked.
“How soon could we throw it together?” Claire asked. “Would a month give us enough time?”
“Layla would have turned sixteen on June forth,” Mary Ella offered.
Claire calculated. Three and a half weeks. Could they make it happen in that short amount of time? “A little less than a month, then.”
“It's too much work,” Ruth said.
“No, we can do this. I can't imagine a better day for it.”
She pulled the rolling table with her laptop toward her, excitement flooding through her. This is what the town needed, something to hold on to. The bright beam of hope piercing the dark clouds that had lingered since the tragedy.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
E
VENINGS LIKE THIS SEEMED
surreal to him. A little spooky even.
Riley drove toward his rented house past the close-set Victorian houses of Old Hope, down streets where he saw neighbors out front talking to neighbors, lawns being mowed, kids riding skateboards on homemade ramps in their driveways.
Through the open window of his patrol vehicle, he could smell fresh-cut grass mingled with the sharp sweetness of blooming sagebrush and the delectable aroma of steaks on the grill somewhere close.
It was about as far from the gritty, dark world of an undercover narcotics cop in the inner city of Oakland as anything he could imagine without leaving the planet.
With all the changes the town had seen in the twenty years since he'd been a kid, the particular sweetness of a warm spring evening seemed timeless.
Oh, he wasn't naive enough to think all was Mayberry-perfect in Hope's Crossing. After a month as police chief, he knew the usual elements of human ugliness simmered under the surface. Domestic violence, assault, embezzlement. Even illegal substances.
On his desk right now were reports about ongoing investigations featuring all of the above.
He supposed the difference was that in Hope's Crossing, those things were the exception, not the norm.
It was a nice town. The influx of tourists made life a little more interesting and had certainly changed the dynamics, but Hope's Crossing was still a good place to live.
For most people anyway. The jury was still out for him. Maybe he wouldn't even have a job in a month's time when his sixty-day probationary period expired. J. D. Nyman was certainly doing his best to stir up trouble and raise doubt in people's mind as to his competence.
As he turned onto Blackberry Lane, he lifted a hand to wave at Mrs. Redmond on the corner, pruning back a leggy forsythia of bright blooming yellow. She gave him a sour look and deliberately turned her back.
Lisa's grandmother was one of those old-timers who had genuine reason not to want him there, he admitted, reasons not based on prejudice or malice. He had genuinely wronged her family in his wild youth, something he couldn't repair no matter how many hours of service he gave to the town.
Still, others in town somehow had come to blame him for everything that was wrong with the community, regardless of any rational reason. Somehow they seemed to think he was responsible for a group of teens who had suddenly gone off track, although how the hell they thought he had anything to do with Charlie
Beaumont and his band of troublemakers other than being uncle to one of them, Riley had no idea.
He sighed as he drove past Claire's house, the brick a warm, weathered rust in the evening light. A basketball suddenly rolled out of her driveway and he hit the brakes just seconds before he would have rolled over it.
“Hey, Chief,” Owen called from the edge of the driveway, where he had safely waited instead of chasing into the road after his ball.
“Hey, kid.”
He glanced up at the house and saw her there, sitting on a wicker chair on her front porch. She shaded her eyes against the light filtering through the trees and although her smile was guarded, it was still about a hundred degrees warmer than the look he'd just gotten next door.
He lifted a hand in greeting and she waved back with her broken arm.
“Should I wait for you to go past before I get the ball?” Owen asked him.
“No, go ahead.”
The boy hurried to the side of the car and scooped it from where it had come to rest against the front tire. “Hey, you want to play?” he asked. “Macy's not home and my mom can't. I'm tired of just shooting by myself.”
He should give some excuseâjust let the boy grab his ball, wait for him to return to the safety of his driveway, then drive on by. That was the smart thing to do. The safe thing. But he was feeling reckless suddenly and a quick game of hoops wouldn't hurt anything,
right? And besides, he
had
more or less promised Owen he would play sometime.
“Sure,” he answered and was rewarded with a gleeful shout.
He parked his patrol vehicle and saw Claire's wary surprise when he stepped out.
Chester greeted him with as much enthusiasm as the hound could muster, then plopped back in the cool green grass.
“Watch this!” Owen said, going for the freestanding basketball standard next to the driveway.
“Wow, Kobe Bryant. Your left-handed jump is wicked.”
Owen grinned and tossed him the ball. Riley fired it off and was gratified when it swooshed through the net.
“Nice.” Owen grabbed the ball and took a ten-foot jumper. It bounced on the rim for a minute with a boing sort of sound, then fell through.
At his suggestion, the two of them played an informal game of PIGâthe younger brother of HORSEâfor a while and it was close to a perfect moment for Riley. The warm evening, the setting sun turning every thing golden, the sweet Rocky Mountain air that smelled of home and peace and summer just around the corner.
Claire had put down whatever she'd been working on, though she said nothing, only watched them.
He was showing off for her, he realized after one particularly hotdog shot, a one-handed, behind-the-back throw that landed in the sweet spot. It was a rather embarrassing realization, a reminder of all those times
when he was a kid trying desperately to make her notice him.
What would she say if she knew he still probably had the road rash scars on his back from a spectacular bike crash when he was twelve, trying to pop a wheelie in front of her house and failing spectacularly?
Hunger curled through him, slow and insistent. Stupid. She'd warned him away the last time he was here, told him plainly she wasn't interested in any kind of one-on-one with him. He would do well to keep that in mind.
“Okay, what's a hard one you can't hit?” Owen said, considering his options. While he set up the shot, Riley risked another glance at Claire and found her watching him. Their gazes locked for a moment, then she quickly looked away, a blush staining her cheeks.
A tensile thread of awareness stretched between them, taut and shimmery, and he was so busy trying to figure out what the hell to do with it that he completely missed Owen's shot except for the swish of the net.
“That's G for you. I win!” Owen exclaimed after Riley took a wild shot and completely missed the hoop.
“Good game, kid.”
“How about two out of three?” the boy said.
Riley looked at Claire. “How about another day? I should go say hello to your mom.”
“Okay. I have to pee anyway.”
Riley set the ball down on the standard's base, paused to pet Chester's brown droopy face, then headed up the three porch stairs, the memory of the kiss they had shared the last time he'd seen her playing over and
over in his head. He relentlessly tried to shut it down by reminding himself of all the reasons why kissing her was a lousy idea.
Still, he couldn't resist brushing her cheek with a light, friendly sort of kiss when he reached her. If he inhaled the scent of her, fresh and lovely as the spring evening, that was nobody's damn business but his own.
“Thanks for playing with him for a few minutes,” she said and he wondered if he was imagining that slightly husky note to her voice. “It's a little tough for me to go in for a layup right now.”
“And I would guess the cast on your arm probably plays havoc with your shooting percentage.”
She smiled. “I guess I'm a wuss in that respect. A cast doesn't seem to bother Owen, obviously.”
“I hear you went back to work today,” he said after an awkward pause, perching on the white gingerbread railing that encircled the house.
“Wow. Really? I wasn't aware it made the
Hope Gazette.
”
“I sometimes think the
Gazette
is a waste of paper around here. I mean, who really needs it because everyone knows everything anyway? Donna Mazell apparently stopped in on her lunch break. She told me about how you've got a nice comfortable chair set up by the register like the Bead Queen of Hope's Crossing.”
“Queen Claire. That's me. I forgot Donna came in. She was looking for polymer beads for a project she's doing with her grandkids.”
He didn't know polymer beads from pinto beans, any more than he'd been able to figure out just how
exactly Donna had guessed with such accuracy that he might have a particular interest in the comings and goings of a particular bead-store owner of their mutual acquaintance.
“She said she walked out of the store with about seventy-five bucks in beads she hadn't planned to buy and had no idea what she was going to do with.”
Claire smiled. “It's the beaders' curse. Knitters, too. They call it SABLEâStash Acquisition Beyond Life Expectancy. I've got more beads in my personal collection than I'll ever be able to use. You tell Donna she may as well give in. Resistance is futile.”
Now there was something he could relate to. He had no power to resist the inexorable pull tugging him to her.
His bodily functions apparently taken care of, Owen burst through the front door and started to head back to his basketball, but Claire's voice stopped him.
“You need to go make sure you've got everything you want to take to your dad's tonight.”
“Oh, yeah. I forgot. Okay.”
He turned around and raced back inside at that full-throttle speed Owen seemed to use for everything.
“I didn't realize they sometimes went with Jeff and Holly on weeknights.”
“Tonight's a special night. Jeff's birthday.”
“Ah.”
“We're pretty flexible with the custody arrangements. Right after the separation, we tried fifty-fifty joint physical custody for a while, but it was tough on the kids. One week here, one week there. They never felt like they really lived in either of our places. After
Holly and Jeff got married, we decided weekends with their dad worked better all the way around except for special occasions because that's when he had the most time to spend with them anyway.”
“Macy doing homework?”
“She actually went shopping with Holly for birthday stuff after school. Owen would have gone with them, but he had Cub Scouts this afternoon, until a little while ago.”
This was nice, he thought. Sitting here on her porch in the evening while birds flitted through the trees and a light, mountain-scented breeze ruffled his hair. A curious feeling stole through him, so unaccustomed that it took him a moment to identify it.
Contentment.
Even with his unfulfilled attraction for her, the ache in his gut he knew would never be satisfied, he enjoyed her company so much he didn't mind.
“I interrupted you. What were you working on when I pulled up? Something for your shop?”
Her eyes lit up with excitement. “We had this idea down at the store today.”
“I'm guessing by that you mean
you
had an idea.”
She tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear so the breeze couldn't play with it anymore. “It really was one of those group-think situations, everyone throwing out ideas.”
“Everyone being?”
“Well, Evie Blanchard. You met her that day in my store, I think. Your mother and mine were part of the discussion, too.”
“This sounds like trouble, then. As chief of police, I'd better hear what you're up to so I can be prepared.”
She rolled her eyes. “We want to organize a day of service where hopefully everyone in town works together to help someone else.”
“Sounds ambitious.”
“Maybe, but can't you just see the possibilities? When we're done, not only will the town be better tangibly, but I hope people will also feel a little happier. We're thinking the whole thing should culminate in a charity benefit. A real town celebration. What do you think?”
He pictured it, some Pollyanna-ish utopia of neighbors helping neighbors. Despite a quick cynical vision of fistfights erupting over trees overpruned or fences varnished incorrectly, he couldn't resist Claire's excitement. Her whole face glowed with it and she was so lovely there in the evening light that he couldn't seem to look away.