The Good Girl's Second Chance (The Bravos Of Justice Creek 2) (9 page)

BOOK: The Good Girl's Second Chance (The Bravos Of Justice Creek 2)
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Chloe explained about the fairy princess dress.

Manny said, “She’s gonna love that.”

“So it’s okay with you? You don’t think I’m a complete pushover?”

“I think we got a little girl who loves her princesses. And you want to help her with that. Sounds about right to me.”

She thanked him and then glanced around, admiring the soaring stone fireplace and the thick log walls. “Give me a tour?”

“Getting ideas for this one already?”

She nodded. “I’m happy that I’ll have a chance to get to know this house ahead of time, get familiar with it, you know? I’ll have an opportunity to mull over what changes will work best for it. Redoing a log home presents a special set of challenges.”

Manny seemed to be studying her. “You’re all right, Chloe.”

“I’m glad you think so, Manny. I’m growing quite fond of you, as well.”

“Quinn pop the question yet?”

Chloe fell back a step. “He told you he was going to?”

“Hell, no. He told me zip. But we been together more than a decade. I got a good idea what’s going on with him, whether he lays it out for me or not.” The two burly moving guys came in with the dining-room table. Manny said, “Through there, boys.” And on they went. Manny lowered his voice for Chloe alone and said, “You haven’t said yes yet, have you?”

Chloe pretended to ponder. “Hmm. Let me see. Would Quinn really want me to answer that?”

Manny chortled out a rough laugh. “Come on. Let me show you the house...”

* * *

The landline was ringing when Chloe got back to her place. It clicked over to her old-school answering machine before she could pick up.

It was her mother. “Sweetheart, we’re home. Walked in the door five minutes ago. Maui was heaven, as always. But it’s nice to be back and I can’t want to see you, find out how you’ve been doing and tell you all about our trip. Call me the minute you get this. Love you...”

Chloe stood by the phone and considered getting it over with, calling her mother back right away. Years of conditioning had her feeling she really
ought
to call now, that a good daughter could be counted on to keep in contact with the ones she loved.

But as soon as her mother asked her what she’d been up to in the past two weeks, Chloe would be confronted with the question of how much to say.

Ha. As if there was a choice. Monique Hightower was spreading the news about her and Quinn far and wide. One way or another, it wouldn’t be long before her mother got an earful. And it would probably be better if her mother heard it from Chloe.

Better
being a relative term, knowing her mother.

Chloe picked up the phone.

And then set it back down again.

Her hand was shaking slightly, and that made her mad.

Why should she live in fear of her own mother? She’d faced Nell Bravo right down and told her that Linda Winchester did not run her life. She’d told Quinn the same thing. She needed to live by her own words.

Chloe turned the ringer off on the kitchen and bedroom phones and turned the volume on the message machine all the way down. Then she switched the sound off on her cell, as well. She’d check to see who’d called her at
her
convenience, thank you very much.

And she would get in touch with her mother later, after she’d had a little time to decide exactly what she wanted to say to her.

* * *

The evening went by—a goodly portion of it spent joyfully in Quinn’s strong arms. After he left, she had trouble falling asleep. She couldn’t stop stewing over what to tell her mom.

Somehow, in the morning, she slept through her alarm. That left her rushing to get ready and out the door in time to get the showroom opened by nine.

Her mother called the showroom number at ten. “Sweetheart, there you are!”

Chloe still wasn’t ready to deal with her. “Mom. Glad you’re home safe. Can’t talk now. You know that. I’m at work.”

“But how am I supposed to get hold of you if you won’t answer your—?”

“Mom, I have another call,” she outright lied. “I’ll call you this evening, I promise.”

“But—”

“Gotta go. I’ll call. Promise.”

Her mother was still protesting as Chloe hung up the phone. She knew time was running out. She was going to have to stop being such a coward. All day long, in the back of her mind, she rehearsed the things she would say when she called back that night.

I’ve been seeing Quinn Bravo. I care for him, Mom. Deeply. He’s asked me to marry him and I am seriously considering telling him yes
.

It all sounded so simple. It was...what people did. They found each other and they fell for each other and realized they didn’t want to be apart. So they got married and raised a family.

Why shouldn’t she have that—and with the right man this time? With a good man, a strong man. A man who cared about more than money and power and
things
. A man who considered her a whole person, with a heart and mind of her own, not just his most prized possession who looked good on his arm and had great taste and could work a room with the best of them.

Short answer: she absolutely
should
have that. And she
would
have it. With Quinn.

By the time she locked up the showroom and went home, she was all fired up to get it over with. To call her mother and tell her simply and proudly that she and Quinn were together.

But as it turned out, no call was necessary. When she pulled into her driveway, her mother’s Mercedes SUV was parked in the side space next to the garage.

Chloe’s stomach lurched at the sight, which was so pitiful it made her want to throw her head back and scream. But she didn’t scream. She drew in a slow breath and told herself to man up. It was her life and she was going to live it for herself, not her mother. She would tell her mom the simple truth about her and Quinn and that would be that.

But then, as she left the garage by the breezeway door and caught sight of her mother waiting on the front step, it became crystal clear from the tight, furious expression on Linda Winchester’s face that she already knew about Quinn.

Chloe’s steps faltered. Only for a second, though. She quickly caught herself, straightened her shoulders and kept right on walking. “Mom. I don’t remember you mentioning that you would be dropping by.”

“Oh, please.” Her mother gave her a truly withering glance. “Let me in. I have a few things to say to you and I’m not going to say them on your front step.”

Chloe froze with her key raised to unlock the door. “Look, Mother. I don’t want to—”

“Open the door. Now, please.”

The temptation was so powerful to tell her mother right then and there that this was
her
house and
she
would decide who did or didn’t enter it.

But then again, well, Linda Winchester wasn’t the only one who had a few things to say. And she wasn’t the only one who preferred to have this out in private.

So she unlocked the door. Her mother brushed past her as she disarmed the alarm.

Carefully, quietly, Chloe shut the door. Her mother stood beside the formal dining table, her blond head high, bright spots of color flaming on her cheeks, her lips bloodless with tension.

Chloe almost felt sorry for her. “Look, Mom. Why don’t you sit down?”

Linda whipped out the chair at the end of the table and sat in it. She put her hand to her mouth and shut her eyes.

Chloe took the nearest chair. She waited until her mother dropped her hand away from her mouth and opened her eyes again before she said gently, “You’re obviously very upset. Please tell me why.”

Her mother sucked in a gasp and snapped, “Don’t you play coy with me, Chloe.”

“I’m not playing coy,” Chloe said with a calm that surprised her. “What I’m doing is trying my best not to jump to conclusions.”

“All right.” With two sharp tugs, Linda straightened the sides of the linen jacket she wore. “Agnes Oldfield dropped by to see me an hour ago. She says it’s all over town that you’ve been seeing Quinn Bravo. She says you went to the Sylvan Inn with him last Friday night, where you told Monique Hightower right to her face that you were...
attracted
to that man ever since high school. Agnes also says that you’ve been seen having ice cream with him and that child of his. She says that everyone says how...intimate you seem together, that it’s obvious something serious is going on between you.” Linda pressed her hand flat to her chest, and shook her head fiercely. “I do not believe this. Tell me that none of it is true.”

Chloe just stared. God. She’d known this would be bad. But somehow, now that it was actually happening, all she could think was
What are we doing here? How could I have let it get his far? Why didn’t I back her down years ago
?

The questions were all too familiar to her. They were the same ones she’d asked herself over and over about her ex-husband.

“Well?” her mother demanded. “What do you have to say for yourself?”

“You know, Mom. I don’t think I have to say anything. But I would like to know what happened to
you
? I just don’t understand how you got so messed up.”

Another indignant gasp. “Excuse me?”

“It’s not going to work on me, Mother. Not anymore. All your trumped-up outrage, your sad, small-minded ideas about who’s okay and who’s not. Your judgments about the right kind of people and the ones who just don’t measure up.”

“Wait just a minute, now—”

“No. No, I’m not going to wait for you to try and fill my head with more of your small-minded garbage and your snobbish, silly lies.”

“Well, I have never—”

“Stop. I mean it. I don’t want to hear it, never again. Quinn Bravo is a fine man and I’m not listening to one more word of this ridiculous crap you’re dishing out against him. Yes, I am seeing him. And I am
proud
to be seeing him. Also, you should know that I am redoing his house and I’m gratified that he and Manny Aldovino have confidence in my ability to do the job well. In fact, Quinn has asked me to marry him and I am seriously considering saying yes.”

“Dear, sweet Lord. Have you lost your mind?”

“No, I have not. I am perfectly sane, saner than I’ve ever been in my life before. And all that old stuff about Quinn’s mother and his father and his father’s first wife, all those ancient, ridiculous distinctions between the
real
Bravos and the
bastard
Bravos... Nobody cares about that anymore. Nobody but you—and maybe Monique Hightower and Agnes Oldfield, who both ought to get a life and stay out of mine.”

“But you surely can’t—”

“Wake up, Mother. Smell the Starbucks. I mean, look at it this way. Haven’t you heard? Quinn Bravo’s rich now. He’s made a big success of his life. You know how much you love a big success.”

Linda Winchester paled. “How dare you imply that I care how much money a man makes?”

Chloe knew she had lost it completely when she shouted, “I’m not implying it, I’m saying it straight out!”

Her mother cringed and jerked back in her chair, as though terrified—which Chloe knew very well she was not. “There’s no need to shout,” Linda said with a wounded sniff. “And I would hardly consider beating other men to a pulp a ‘successful’ way to make a living. And what about that motherless child of his being raised by that strange old man?”

“Manny is a wonderful person and he’s doing a terrific job with Annabelle.”

“Oh, please. It doesn’t matter how much money he has. Quinn Bravo will never measure up and I raised you to know that.”

“Enough.” Chloe stood. “What I know, Mother, is that I’m done. I’m finished. I’ve had enough of your narrow-minded, holier-than-thou, manipulative behavior to last me a lifetime.”

Another hot gasp from her mother. “What’s happened to you? What’s the
matter
with you? You’re acting like a crazy person. I brought you up to be better than this.”

“Stop. Quit. There’s just no point. I want you to leave now. I want you to leave my house and not come back until you’ve had a serious change in your attitude.”

Something happened then. Linda’s gaze shifted away. When she looked back at Chloe, she actually seemed worried. Was it possible she’d finally realized she’d gone too far? She said, more softly than before, with a hint of appeasement, “It’s only that I don’t want you to throw your life away. It’s only that you’re special. You deserve the best life has to offer. I want that for you. I want
everything
for you.”

“I really do want you to go now.” Chloe gentled her tone, but didn’t waver. “Please.”

Linda didn’t get up. She only talked faster. “Oh, sweetheart. I know. I understand. You had it all. And you threw it away. But the good news is, if you’ll only make a little effort, you and Ted can work through this rough patch and—”

Chloe put up a hand. “Get back with Ted? You can’t be serious. I don’t believe you, Mother. How many times have I told you I never want to hear his name? How many times have I told you that he hit me and he cheated on me and there is no going back from that? I don’t
want
to go back. All I want is never to have to look in his evil, lying face again.”

“You’re overwrought.”

“Oh, you bet I am.” She stepped back and pointed at the door. “Please leave my house. Now.”

Finally, her mother stood—and kept on talking. “Can’t you see? That new wife of his? She’s a pale imitation. She can’t hold a candle to you. Ted realizes that now. And you know that you’re exaggerating about his behavior, making a big drama out of a little marital spat or two.”

“Wait.” Chloe really, truly could not believe her ears. “What did you say?”

“I said, you’re making a big drama of—”

“‘He
realizes
that now’? How could you know what Ted Davies realizes?”

“Well, sweetheart, now listen. You really need to settle down, so that we can speak of this reasonably.”

“Reasonably?” Chloe echoed in a near whisper. The awful truth had hit her like a boot to the head. Her ears were ringing. “You’ve been in touch with him, haven’t you? You’ve been
encouraging
him.”

Linda got right to work blowing her off. “Well, I... You know I only want what’s best for you and I—”

BOOK: The Good Girl's Second Chance (The Bravos Of Justice Creek 2)
3.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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