âMaybe not, but Miz Beckyâs waiting for you. Get along, now.â
Jenny pouted, then glanced at Tory. âIâll see you after a while. Weâll talk some more.â At his warning look, she darted toward the path.
The smile Tory had for his daughter slipped from her face once Jenny was gone. She planted her hands against the log on either side of her, seeming to brace herself for battle. âIs something wrong?â
âI think you know somethingâs wrong.â Anger drove him, so intense he almost didnât know where to begin. âFirst off, Jennyâs not supposed to go to the beach without asking, even with a grown-up.â
Tory lifted her level brows. âMiz Becky gave her permission. Surely you donât think Iâd take Jenny anywhere otherwise.â
âI donât know what youâd do.â Being blunt might be the only thing that would work with the woman. âYou were probing Jenny for information about her mother.â He flung the words at her like missiles. He wanted her to admit sheâd been wrong. More than that, he wanted her gone.
She didnât give any sign of being struck. âI wasnât probing. Jenny brought it up. She wanted to talk.â
His heart seemed to wince at that, and for a moment there was no sound but the rustle of sea oats bowing in the wind. Then he found his voice. âThatâs ridiculous. Jenny was only four when her mother died. She barely recalls her.â
âMaybe thatâs the point. She wants to remember.â Passion flared in Toryâs face, vivid and startling. âDonât you realize that?â
Her question flicked him on the raw edges ofemotion, and he wanted to hit back. âI realize itâs none of your business.â
Her mouth tightened, as if acknowledging his right to say it. âYou canât stop the child from remembering.â Her voice softened, and she put up one hand to brush windblown hair from her eyes. âWhy would you want to?â
It was safer not to stare into brown eyes that seemed to know too much about loneliness. He looked beyond Tory, focusing on the inexorable movement of the waves rolling into shore. A line of sandpipers rushed importantly along the wet sand. He struggled, trying to find the right words.
âI donât. But I donât want her to be stuck in grieving. Jenny needs to look forward,â he said. âThereâs nothing to be gained by dwelling on the past.â
âAre you talking about Jenny or about yourself?â The question was like a blow to the stomach, but before he could react, she was shaking her head. âIâm sorry. I shouldnât have said that.â
âNo.â He had to force the word through tight lips. âYou shouldnât.â She had no right.
âI just wantâ¦â She let the words trail off, then held her sketch pad out to him. âLook. This is what Iâm trying to do.â
He took the pad, frowning at a sketch of beach morning glories trailing along the page. âYouâre drawing flowers. What does that have to do with questioning my daughter?â
Toryâs sigh was audible. âI wasnât questioning her. Coming down to the beach was Jennyâs idea. Shebrought me here because she wanted to show me somethingâthe morning glories. She says they were her motherâs favorite flower.â
âI donât think so.â Lila hadnât even like the beach. Sheâd longed to return to her native Atlanta almost from the day theyâd married. The beach was always too windy or too hot or too cold for her.
Tory stood, the movement bringing her close enough that her wiry hair, escaping from its band and caught by the breeze, brushed his arm. âLook.â She touched the drawing. âDonât you see? I could work this into the design for the window.â
âThe window.â Back to that again. Or maybe theyâd
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