Read Turnagain Love (Sisters of Spirit #1) Online
Authors: Nancy Radke
“That, too,” he agreed. “Here are her plans for your home. Take a look at them while I let her know you’re here.”
Excusing himself, he walked quickly back to the house. Five men were clearing the area for the helicopter-- three piling branches and stacking the split wood while the other two cleared away the low brush. All worked with a skilled economy of movement.
He stopped on the porch and motioned Jeff over. “Someone’s going to fall through this. Maybe break a leg.”
“Right. I’ll put Hank on it. Anything else need fixed or protected?”
“No.” Just Jennel. His heart needed fixing, and she needed protecting. Unless he figured out some way to keep her close, he wasn’t going to be able to do much about either.
He entered the house and found her picking up the cans, just starting to clean up the raccoon mess. She was dressed in jeans, a light pink blouse and a rose-pink sweatshirt, all making her look like an efficient worker. To this, she had added a pair of stylish boots. She didn’t portray the image of a Boston socialite right now. Her hair was down, billowing around her shoulders.
He had to steel his heart against casting caution aside and begging her to marry him. Instead, he gestured at the can she was reaching for. “Leave that.”
“Bu...” She threw out her hand, questioningly, and Zack grabbed it, pulling her towards the door. John was his last hope to keep Jennel on this side of the continent.
“The Van Chattans are here.” Picking up her bag, he hurried her outside. “They came with Clyde. They’re looking at your designs.”
She stumbled, thrown off-stride. “They are?”
Zack slowed his pace. “Yes.” He could feel her hesitate. The moment of truth had arrived and the fear of failure was apparently shaking Jennel’s normal confidence.
“Right now?”
“I just handed them over and left. They speak for themselves.” He nudged her, eager to hear what the Van Chattans thought. “Go on! They sounded pleased enough when I walked away.”
John beamed approvingly at Jennel as Zack introduced her. “Young lady, you’ve performed a miracle,” he declared. “Elenora and I think these are great. It’s the first time we’ve ever agreed on an interior.”
Elenora’s face was lit in pure delight, her happiness overwhelming the contriteness of her words. “My dear, I’m so sorry. I realize I put you into a very bad situation here.”
“That’s okay.”
“We like all your designs, Miss Foster,” John Van Chattan added. “We’d like you to do the whole house, top to bottom.”
“But what about Zack’s plans?” Jennel protested. “He put in hours of wor...”
With a sideways glance at his wife, John waved off her worry. “I’ll pay for both sets of designs. And I’ll pay whatever else it takes to implement yours. I’ll put thirty thousand into your account. Let me know when you need more.”
Relieved at John’s handling of the situation, Zack turned to him and said with a broad smile, “I’m glad that’s taken care of. Can you spare a few hours, or do you need to leave right away?”
“We’ve got some time. We’re taking the last ferry to Vancouver.”
“Good. I need to guide in the helicopter. I’ll show you around briefly, then Clyde can take me to Roche Harbor while you look on your own.” Zack looked at Jennel, feeling her happiness. “Why don’t you finish your elevations...after you do your hair?”
“Okay.”
“You can leave with John and Elenora this afternoon.”
The smile fled from Jennel’s face. “What do
you
think?” she asked John. “Wouldn’t you prefer I stay here, at the site?”
John Van Chattan answered with a shake of his head. “No. That won’t work. Stay in Seattle. Include your rent in your fee.”
Chapter Thirteen
Alone on the boat, Jennel half-heartedly examined the stack of mail Clyde had brought over with him. Hers was all bills. At least she could start paying them. The total was not impossible. She’d be able to save her company.
To stay independent.
How empty that thought seemed now!
It was time to go back to Boston. Time to leave the West Coast before she fell more deeply in love with Zack. As if that were possible! They would make a grand team: he designing the houses and she fashioning the interiors.
Love didn’t happen just because you wished for it, and apparently Zack didn’t love her. Not when he sent her off the island as fast as he could.
Whatever happened, she would always remember this island and this man...and some day, somewhere, she might meet someone who would be able to capture her heart again. But for now, she would leave it behind with Zack.
He would never know.
Would she ever again meet a man as challenging as Zack? So wonderful? The pain of leaving was already unbearable. What would the days and nights be like once they parted? How could she stand them?
A brief tap on the door announced Clyde, who came briskly in, his square figure clad in the same wool navy checked coat and baseball cap.
“Hello, Clyde...er, Mr. Brekley.”
“Clyde’s fine, to my friends.”
Jennel folded the bill she was holding and shoved it back into its envelope. “Friend? Even after I asked you to sabotage your reputation for being dependable?”
Unconcerned, he shrugged his broad shoulders and commented, “It didn’t hurt with Zack. We’re good friends. And it was for a good cause.”
“I lied to you. There was no surprise.”
“I knew that.”
“You did?”
“Yes. But you can’t catch a fish using a straight hook.”
“I never....” Jennel paused, completely baffled.
What on earth was he talking about?
Head cocked to one side, she frowned quizzically at his weathered features.
This had nothing to do with fishing.
“Looks to me like you did pretty well,” he praised her, rubbing his hands together in evident satisfaction, making Jennel even more perplexed.
“Well? I haven’t done anything right since you left me here.”
“Then what did I see when I arrived? I’d say you played him just right, girl. All you have to do is reel him in.”
“Clyde!” The full meaning of his fishing hints finally landed. “I’m not talking about Zack.”
“You aren’t?”
“No!”
“Why not?”
“I wasn’t trying to catch him. Was he the friendly little shark you talked about?”
“‘Course. What other game is there? When a single lady goes fishing, she’s not after fish. Wasn’t he friendly enough?” He looked bewildered, as if his plan had gone awry. “Zack’s been due to get caught for quite a spell now. We were just waiting for the right gal to come along.”
“And you thought I was it?”
“Made to order, aren’t you?”
“No.” Although she wished she was,and her spirits dropped accordingly. A sudden suspicious insight made her ask, “Is that why you left me on the island the first day, without warning me about the conditions here, because you knew Zack was coming? And you knew I’d probably end up staying on his boat?”
His grin would have put a jack-o’-lantern to shame. “Uh-huh. We pulled out just ahead of him. I could have sent you with him...except he wouldn’t have taken you. This way he had no choice.” He chuckled mischievously. He had been way ahead of her. “Of course I agreed to your staying here longer. Worked, didn’t it?”
Jennel took a deep breath, letting it out in a forlorn sigh. “No. Your plan didn’t work. My plan didn’t work. Zack trumped both of us.”
“Your plan...?”
“I was trying to save my business, not catch a man.” ...
at first,
she added to herself.
“Is that all?” He made her business sound of small importance as compared to catching Zack. He was right. Without Zack, Jennel felt little interest in her work.
“That’s enough.” Her voice dropped in resignation as she motioned to the stack of opened envelopes. “Bills! Companies I owe after remodeling a house and getting paid with a bad check.”
“What happened?”
Jennel explained, giving him the estimated total. “This job saved me. I’m sorry I asked you to stay away. It was foolish of me, and dangerous. If Zack had cut himself badly...”
“I’d have come. I only made excuses when he wanted you picked up.”
“But you didn’t come the night he needed stitches!”
“That time my radar really was down. I can repair my own engine, but not the radar.”
“Then what made you come today?”
“The Van Chattans flew in last night and were determined to see what was going on. We couldn’t wait much longer, Zack’s crew was chomping at the bit. What’s been happening”
She spent the next few minutes telling him, her voice reflecting the hopelessness she felt. Clyde merely sat and nodded, saying little. She finished her account by saying, “The raccoons destroyed everything. Didn’t you see the mess?”
“No. John stepped through the rotten boards on the porch, so we didn’t go inside.”
“Oh, no! Was he hurt?”
“No. Startled him, that’s all. He didn’t go into the house, after that.”
Zack entered the cabin just then, heard Clyde’s comments and added “It was my fault. I should have covered that spot sooner.”
At last,
thought Jennel,
something that Zack didn’t blame on me!
“Are you ready to leave?” he asked Clyde.
“Yes.”
Zack’s glance swept over her. “How do your shoulders feel? Are they limber enough you can braid your hair or will you need help?”
“I think I can manage.”
“Mrs. Van Chattan is resting in my boat, but she assured me you wouldn’t disturb her with your packing.”
Packing again! He couldn’t get rid of her fast enough. “I won’t have much to do. Most of my supplies were groceries and the raccoons effectively took care of them.”
She left without another word and watched as Clyde’s boat pulled off. Sighing for the unattainable, she joined Elenora Van Chattan.
The older woman’s perceptive brown eyes discovered Jennel’s secret immediately. “Clyde told us you and Zack collided right away. What happened? Did you fall in love with him?” She sounded happy, eager for her guess to be fact.
Jennel sighed ruefully as she picked up her hairbrush. “Is it so plain?”
“You’re like a bee in a jar.”
“That’s the way I feel.” She told Elenora about her brief stay, adding, “It was almost funny at times. Zack thought I’d jinxed him.”
“I’m sure he didn’t,” Elenora answered sweetly. “Not you, especially.”
Jennel knew better, but couldn’t think of any way to defend herself. It did little good to either protest or feign indifference since her mind was full of Zack.
Elenora fiddled with her wedding ring. “Zack would do for you nicely. Your jobs would hold you together instead of apart. A marriage must be tended like everything else in this world. Neglect it and lose it.”
Jennel grabbed a pin to finish fastening her hair. “You’re wrong, you know. Our jobs were the source of friction all the time.”
“Are you sure that caused the friction?” Elenora teased, with a gleam of mischief in her eyes.
Jennel finished with a vigorous jab as if to do away with her frustration over the whole affair. “Of course.” Then, being fair, she reluctantly tacked on, “He did consider my designs...but only because he didn’t know you.”
“Oh, sure!” Elenora giggled delightedly at the alleged reason. “Your talent had nothing to do with it.”
“Well, of course—!”
“Nor,” she persisted, relentlessly, “those expressive blue eyes of yours. They rather give you away, you know.”
“Not to Zack. At least, I hope not. He was always too angry to look at my eyes.”
“Nonsense! No man is too angry to fail to notice your eyes. They were the first thing about you I mentioned to John,” Elenora responded, pulling the blanket snugly around her body. “That and your beautiful black hair.”
Jennel sputtered angrily. “Zack can’t stand my hair.”
“What makes you think that?”
“He insists I keep it braided up, out of the way. It irritates him.”
Elenora gave her a look of sympathy. “Oh, my dear. Are you sure that’s why?”
“Yes,” Jennel muttered. What other reason could there be?
“I’m sorry. I shouldn’t tease so. I forget how vulnerable a woman becomes when she falls in love. It really is taking unfair advantage. And after you’ve done such a beautiful job on my home.”
“I’m glad I could please you. But now I think I’ll take a walk along the beach, so that you can get some rest. I have a decision to make, and I need to think it over.” She pulled off her boots and reached for her damp tennies.
“Yes, I can see—you’ve been fidgeting more every minute. Does it have to do with Zack?”
“Yes.”
“Don’t you think you could give him more time? You’re going to be staying in Seattle.”