with his father ill, he needed to give her extra support, which made it difficult to keep her at a healthier distance.
âThanks, but thereâre plenty of groceries at home.â
She gave a snort of displeasure. âWhy would you go anywhere else when Iâve got dinner ready?â
âHowâs Dad?â he asked instead of answering.
âFine. Heâs going to beat this. He knows it and I know it.â
Kennedy wished he knew it. Maybe if Raelynn hadnât died, heâd have more faith. But the luck heâd experienced early in his life didnât seem to be holding.
Â
After dialing and hanging upâtwiceâGrace gripped her cell phone with more resolve. She had to contact Madeline. Sheâd been in town for two and a half days. Sheâd seen Clay and Irene, even several of the jocks from high school. She couldnât procrastinate about calling her stepsister any longer. In some ways, she didnât want to put it off. She loved Madeline. It was just that she felt too much like a hypocrite pretending to be a good sister, a good friend, when she knew what she knew.
âHello?â
âMaddy?â
âYes?â
Wearing a fresh pair of shorts and a tank top, Grace lay in the hammock that hung from two oak trees on the left side of the property, nursing a glass of iced tea. She planned to spend a few hours in the kitchen later, but she couldnât remember the last time sheâd paused to notice a sunset, let alone watch it.
After reveling in the quiet spectacle for the past five minutes, she thought she could understand why some people said that joy was in the simple things.
âItâs Grace.â
âGrace! Why havenât you called me?â
âIâve been busy getting settled. But donât worry, Iâm staying for several weeks, at least.â
â Weeks? Are you kidding?â
âNo.â
âThatâs wonderful! I drove by Evonneâs earlier hoping to catch you, but you werenât home.â
Grace refused to think of the pizza parlor debacle. âI was picking up a few groceries.â She took a sip of her iced tea, remembering her mad dash into the Piggly Wiggly, where sheâd quickly gathered a few essentials before she could run into anyone else. âHowâre things at the paper?â
Madeline had worked as the editor of the Stillwater Independent since graduating with a journalism degree from Mississippi State University. Sheâd actually bought the paper last year when the original owners retired, with ten thousand dollars down and monthly payments that would stretch out over five years. So now she owned it and edited itâand struggled to pay her bills. Grace had often wondered where her stepsister mightâve ended up if her father hadnât disappeared. The New York Times? The Washington Post?
When they were growing up, Madeline had talked a lot about working for such a prestigious paper. As it was, she seemed hesitant to leave Stillwater for any length of time. Grace suspected she was afraid her father would come back while she was gone. Or that someone else she loved might disappear from her life if she didnât keep careful watch. Ironically, Madeline was closer to Irene and Clay, even to Molly in some ways, than Grace was.
The past had affected them all very differently. Grace hated leaving herself vulnerable, so she tried to wall people out. Madeline was afraid sheâd lose the people she loved, so she tried to wall them in.
âThe paperâs doing well,â she said. âOur circulationâs been growing, especially since I started the section called âSingles.ââ
âIs that some type of classifieds?â
âA once-a-week showcase on two singles, one female, one male.â
âInteresting.â
âIt is. It helps people get to know each other. What are you doing tonight?â
Grace thought of the note sheâd found stuck
Francis Ray
Joe Klein
Christopher L. Bennett
Clive;Justin Scott Cussler
Dee Tenorio
Mattie Dunman
Trisha Grace
Lex Chase
Ruby
Mari K. Cicero