Stealing Second: Sam's Story: Book 4 in the Clarksonville Series (24 page)

BOOK: Stealing Second: Sam's Story: Book 4 in the Clarksonville Series
2.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Sam lay on her side and let Evelyn, a woman she’d only met a few times, place a thin crocheted blanket over her. Sam closed her eyes against the pain exploding in her head with each beat of her heart. She tried to relax her tense neck and shoulders, with little success.

After forever, Evelyn came back. “I’m sorry, Samantha Rose. All I have is the aspirin. Should I call someone to come get you?”

“No,” Sam said quickly. “I’ll be okay.” The last thing she wanted was to see her parents.

“I’ll call William then. I’ll see if he can leave work and can get something for your migraine at Kinney’s. Okay?”

“Okay.”

“Can I get you some water?”

“No,” Sam blurted so fast it made her nauseous. “Bucket.” She took a couple of shallow breaths. “Hurry.”

“Oh, gosh,” Evelyn scurried around the room and finally came up with a plastic trash can. She held it near Sam’s head.

Sam raised her head slightly and grabbed the can with both hands. “Sorry.” She dry heaved into the trash can. Nothing more than spittle came out. Her head pounded. She heaved again and again, but had nothing to give despite her stomach’s best efforts. Sam closed her eyes and held her breath as another wave of nausea hit. That time she rode the wave but didn’t heave. She took that as a good sign and laid her head back down on the pillow. “Sorry.”

“It’s okay, dear. You’re obviously sick.” Evelyn yanked several tissues from the box on the bedside stand and wiped at Sam’s mouth. Sam sensed Evelyn’s rising panic. “The trash can’s right here on the floor if you need it. Let me call William.”

“Dark,” Sam muttered. “Please.” The bright cheery room was more than she could bear.

The sound of the blinds closing soon followed.

Sam relaxed a micron after the room got dark. Her entire existence consisted of riding each wave of pain in her head and breathing slowly to keep the nausea at bay.

“Sam,” a male voice asked gently, “are you awake?”

Sam groaned. Where was she? She must have fallen asleep. Miraculously, the migraine pounding in her head had downgraded from a category five to a category three. “Yes?”

“It’s William. Are you awake enough to hear me?”

“Yes.” She fluttered her eyes open, but pressed them shut again when her head pounded. “What time is it?”

“A little after two. Evelyn says you’ve been sleeping for over an hour.”

Sam opened her eyes again and took in William’s tall frame in the dark room. “Sorry.”

“I bought Excedrin Migraine. The pharmacist at Kinney’s said it was good. Do you want to take some now?”

“Yes, please.” Sam took a deep breath, grateful she didn’t seem to be as nauseous anymore.

He set a glass of water on the bedside stand and opened the bottle. She held out a shaky hand for the tablets. William put two in her hand.

“Get the bucket ready,” Evelyn said from where she was leaning against the doorjamb. Sam would have laughed if she’d had the strength.

Sam put the pills in her mouth and then took the water glass William handed her. He reached down and picked up the bucket, ready to launch it in her direction if necessary.

Sam sat up and swallowed the pills with minimal water and handed the glass back to him, not having the focus to be able to set the glass on the bedside stand by herself. She kept her head up for a moment to see if the pills were going to stay down. When they did, she lay back down and closed her eyes. “Thanks.” After a quiet moment, she added, “Sorry.”

The doorbell rang, and Evelyn said, “Who could that be?”

After a moment, Evelyn came back in the room. “Samantha Rose, there’s a man in a black suit at the door. He said his name is Rolando.”

Rolando? Sam groaned. How had he found her?

“There’s a black Town Car in the street,” Evelyn added.

“Did you call my father?” Sam heard the weakness in her own voice.

“No,” Evelyn said. “We don’t have your parents’ number. Should I let Rolando in?”

“Yes.”

After a moment, Rolando was in the room. “How are you Miss?”

“Been better. How’d you find me?”

Rolando hesitated for a moment, looking down at the floor. He looked up at her. “I shouldn’t tell you this, Miss, but I think it’s time you knew.” He reached into the pocket of his suit jacket, and showed her his cell phone. “Your father uses the GPS on your phone to track you. He knows when you’re at school, at softball, when you go to that pretty girl’s house in Clarksonville, and when you go to the yacht. He knows where you are at all times.”

Despite the pounding in her head, Sam’s eyes opened wide. Her father had been spying on her. Her father knew her every move.

“He even knows you’ve come here to these nice people’s house. He had them checked out, you know.”

Sam couldn’t believe what she was hearing. “Why are you telling me this, Rolando?”

“Like I said, I thought you should know. But, Miss?”

“Yes?”

“I will go to my grave denying I ever told you. I can’t lose this job.” He lowered his gaze.

“Don’t worry, Rolando. The Paytons are amazingly good at keeping secrets.”
All kinds of secrets.
She took a slow breath, amazed her migraine had downgraded further to a category two.

Rolando cleared his throat. “Your father is waiting for you in the car. He would like you to come home now.”

Sam’s head pulsed. “I can’t. Tell him I have a migraine.”
Which is true
. “I don’t care. Tell him anything.”

“Yes, Miss.” Rolando turned to leave, but then turned back. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a butterscotch candy. “Feel better,” he said as he handed the candy to her.

Sam smiled at him. “Thank you, Rolando.”

“You’re welcome, miss.” He turned and left the room.

Sam closed her eyes, hoping Rolando would drive her father back home, so she could be left in peace.

No such luck. Within minutes, Sam’s father walked into the back bedroom. She could feel him fuming. William and Evelyn hovered, obviously unsure how to handle the situation.

Her father turned to them. “May I have a moment alone with my daughter, please?”

“Of course,” William said. “We’ll be in the kitchen.” William ushered Evelyn out of the room and then closed the bedroom door behind him.

As soon as the door clicked shut, Sam’s father advanced. He placed both hands on his hips. “Samantha Rose, do you mind telling me what‘s going on?” His voice boomed. “Why are you lying in the back bedroom in a house owned by a used-car salesman and a dental hygienist? Why are you not in school? Did you know that Madeleine Baxter called me directly? I must say, young lady, I’m unaccustomed to the school principal calling to tell me my daughter is AWOL from school.”

Sam desperately wanted to close her eyes, but didn’t dare. Not when her father was on a rant. “I have a migraine,” she said weakly. Her migraine was escalating back up to a category three. She had no choice, she had to close her eyes for a moment or she would be sick again.

“You could have driven home. You could have gone to the school nurse. Hell, you were at the hospital, why didn’t you see a doctor there?”

Sam’s eyes flew open. “How did you know I was at the hospital?” She wanted to see if her father would admit to spying on her.

“That, young lady, is beside the point.”

Sam wanted to laugh, but couldn’t muster up the courage or the energy. God, it was all so tragic. If only her father realized she knew the whole sordid truth about the birth certificate, maybe then he would leave her alone. Maybe the whole world would leave her alone. Maybe she should open her mouth and tell everyone the deep dark Payton Family secret. Surely the postmaster already knew, because he had to examine her birth certificate. Her father had bought him off. Who else knew? Dr. Boyle. He had to know, didn’t he? Rolando? Mrs. Tardelli their cook? Her mother’s gardening committee? Did they all know? Sam groaned.

“Kitten, look.” Her father’s voice softened from
forte
to
mezzo-forte
, but was still commanding. “I know you’re upset, but you’re going to be fine. You can talk to Helene on the phone any time you want.” Sam didn’t understand what her father meant by calling Helene, but she didn’t have a chance to process it when he added, “I want you to get up right now and come home with me. I’ll send someone for your car later.”

Sam stayed silent, trying to gather her thoughts. Anger churned deep in her gut, displacing the numbness she’d lived with for the past twenty four hours. She wished she had the nerve to look her father dead in the eye and say,
Daddy, I read my birth certificate
, or
Daddy, I know Helene is my real mother,
but she didn’t do either of those things. With a sigh, she sat up in the bed, put her shoes on, and followed him out the door like the good little girl she’d been trained to be.

 

 

Chapter Twenty-Two

 

 

 

April Fools

 

 

SAM BOLTED OUT of the Town Car and ran into the house, refusing to let her father see her cry. Her mother looked stunned as Sam ran by and up the stairs to her suite. She slammed the door to her rooms, opened it, and slammed it again. Not that anyone cared. All they cared about was themselves and their secrets. That’s why she hadn’t bothered talking to her father as Rolando drove them the fifteen minutes home from William and Evelyn’s. That was plenty of time to say nothing to each other. Her father didn’t even seem to notice. It was as if she was something to be dealt with and, once handled, he could get back to more important things.

Sam grabbed the remote control lying on the arm of the couch and heaved it against the wall. The splintering plastic wasn’t as satisfying as she’d hoped. She headed to her bedroom and slammed that door, too. Tears of frustration poured out of her as she flung herself onto the bed, her head pounding.

“No,” she grunted to no one and pounded the bedspread once with her fist.
I will not cry.
She didn’t want to give in to her emotions. If she did, her father would win. Win what, she didn’t know. Who was he anyway? Was he really her father or was he just the man who provided the sperm? And who was Helene? Did she have an affair with her father and accidentally get pregnant? Did Helene become something that needed to be dealt with, too? Had she threatened to sue? Is that why she was being sent away?
Was I an inconvenience? An accident? Oh, God,
Sam thought.
Mother. Where does she fit into all of this? She must have resented me all these years. Raising Helene’s bastard child in her own house.

A wave of nausea spiked through her. She bolted off the bed to the bathroom, but luckily the feeling passed. Ignoring the stitches above her eye, she checked out her reflection in the mirror. Her skin was pale which made the dark circles under her eyes stand out more. She looked at her gray-blue eyes. Yup, she definitely had her father’s eyes. Everyone said so. She turned her head and examined her profile. She gasped when she saw it. It was so obvious. She had Helene’s profile, her nose, her chin. She even had Helene’s dirty blond hair. Why had she never noticed before?

The clues had been there her whole life. She felt like the butt of a bad joke, and at any moment someone would jump out and yell, “April fools,” even though it was mid-September. Yeah, she had been a fool. She had been a fool to hide her emotions and be Mother and Daddy’s perfect little princess. She wasn’t even their real daughter. She wasn’t anything. She had let them run her life for almost eighteen years and let them make her scared to be who she was. She had hidden her relationship with Lisa because of them.

“Ahhh!” she screamed and swept everything off the bathroom vanity onto the floor. The breaking glass made her head pound, but it was oh so satisfying. She gripped the edge of the vanity as angry tears rolled down her cheeks. She searched frantically for a happy place to go in her mind, but Helene’s image kept coming up. She took a deep breath and thought about Lisa. She remembered their first kiss in the Clarksonville College dugout. There wasn’t another soul around. She remembered how Lisa’s initial hesitation had turned into passion so quickly it made Sam woozy.

She smiled at the memory, but the ever-increasing pounding in her head told her she needed to lie down. She splashed a little water on her face hoping that would make her feel better, but it didn’t. Resigned, she lay back down on her bed. Before closing her eyes, she flipped open her phone and smiled when she saw that Ronnie had texted her. He said Mrs. Dickens hadn’t planned to rehearse any of Sam’s scenes that afternoon, anyway, so she was off the hook. Sam was about to text Lisa when there was a knock on the outside door to the suite.

At first Sam figured it was Helene, but then her heart sank when she remembered. Shit, what did he want now? Couldn’t her father leave her alone for two minutes?

He would let himself in anyway, so there was no reason to actually invite him in. Sam stashed her cell phone under the pillow and turned to face the wall.

“Samantha Rose, dear?”

The sound of her mother’s voice surprised her. She opened her eyes and rolled toward the door. “I’m in here, Mother.”

“I have some soup for you.” Her mother walked into the bedroom carrying a tray with a bowl of hot chicken and rice soup. It was Sam’s favorite soup from childhood.

“You made this?”

Sam’s mother nodded.

“All by yourself?”

Sam’s mother smiled gently. “I’m not that inept in the kitchen, you know. And, yes, I opened the can all by myself. I brought you those favorite crackers you like, too.” She set the tray on the bedside table, and Sam sat up. She moved over to make room for her mother to sit down on the edge of the bed.

“Oyster crackers. Thank you, Mother.” Sam wasn’t sure if she could handle food at the moment, afraid her stomach might recoil, but then it growled. “I guess I am kind of hungry.” She ignored the pounding in her head and pulled the tray onto her lap. She ate one test spoonful. When it stayed down, she ate more heartily. She couldn’t help thinking how ironic the whole scene was. Helene was the one who usually brought her a tray of food.

Other books

Dentelle by Heather Bowhay
Send Me A Lover by Carol Mason
Thorn Jack by Katherine Harbour
Benched by Rich Wallace
The Dreamer's Curse (Book 2) by Honor Raconteur
True Shot by Lamb, Joyce
Betrayed by Bertrice Small