Read The Long Way Home Online

Authors: Mariah Stewart

The Long Way Home (13 page)

“That’s a whole ’nother thing,” he reminded her, “since that old linoleum has to be pulled up and the floor sanded.”

“Maybe I should start that project before I get into anything else. Or maybe I’ll paint the dining room first. I think it will be easier.” She sighed. “After I strip off the wallpaper, of course.”

“Whichever room you decide, remember to wet the walls first and the paper should scrape right off, depending on the type of glue the paper hanger used. I was serious about loaning you a pressurized sprayer. It’ll make the job much easier.”

“With my luck, it will be the antique version of Super Glue.”

“Like I said, I’d complete one room at a time. If you want to start in the kitchen, start with the floor. Then when you have it stripped down, you can start taking down the wallpaper. Either way, call me first and I’ll come over and give you a hand.”

“I’d appreciate that, thanks.” Ellie turned to the counter and picked up a silver bowl that she’d polished the night before. “I found silver in the sideboard. I still can’t believe that this house has been vacant for all these years, and it hasn’t been broken into.”

“Like I said, a lot of people have been keeping an eye on the place.”

“Including you.”

“Especially me.”

Before she asked if there was a reason for that, he’d finished his coffee in one long drink and placed the mug on the counter next to where she stood. “Thanks for the coffee.”

“Thanks for feeding the birds and the lesson on birdseed.”

“Anytime.”

She walked him out to his truck, which was parked across the end of her driveway.

“So I guess you’ve heard about First Families Day.” Cam opened the cab door but made no move to get in.

“From just about everyone I’ve run into over the past few days.”

“Are you going to go?”

“I’m thinking about it.”

“You should. It’s a fun event, involves the whole town.”

“I have to admit I’m curious. Mostly about the pirates.”

“Oh?” His mouth slid into a slow smile. “Curious about the pirates, are you?”

“How could I not be? I mean, I heard they burned down the house that originally stood here.”

“Not exactly where your house is standing now, but you can see part of the foundation for that first structure inside the carriage house.”

“Really?” She turned and looked down the driveway at the old building she’d yet to investigate.
“Maybe I’ll get lucky and find the key. I’d hate to break a window to get in there.”

“Yeah, you don’t want to expose the interior to the elements,” he told her. “Especially with winter coming on. But who knows? Maybe the key will turn up.” He swung himself into the driver’s seat.

He started up the engine and rolled down the window. “I hear it’s going to go down to the thirties tonight,” he said right before he closed the door. “You might want to bring in some of that firewood from the back porch.”

He slammed the cab door and she waved before turning to go back to the house as he drove away.

I hear it’s going to go down to the thirties tonight. You might want to bring in some of that firewood from the back porch
.

Jeez, way to dazzle with your wit, O’Connor. Could you have been any smoother than that?

What a dumb-ass.

He watched in the rearview mirror as Ellie leaned down to pick up something from the ground. There was no denying that she intrigued him on more than one level. He liked the way she looked, liked that she didn’t appear to fuss with herself too much. And that he was attracted to her … well, what guy wouldn’t be? Besides her good looks, there was a grace about her, in the way she moved and the way she gestured and spoke. She gave every indication of having been well educated, but poorly prepared for the task that she’d set for herself here in St. Dennis.

And that, to Cam’s mind, was just the start of where the problems came in.

Something just wasn’t quite right about Ellie Ryder.

There was something about her that just didn’t ring true. He’d tried—given it some thought after his visit the other day—but just couldn’t seem to put his finger on what it was about her that was off. Oh, there were the little things—like how she claimed to have little money for renovations but was driving that big Mercedes sedan. And, who, having no money to hire a contractor and admittedly no skills to do the work yourself, would buy a house that needed as much work as Lilly Cavanaugh’s house needed?

Of course, there was the possibility that she’d spent everything she had to buy the house and didn’t realize just how much work the place needed until she moved into it.

He’d give her that much, but the house itself was only half of what weighed on him where Ellie was concerned. Her hands were definitely not hands that had done much hard work in the past. They were soft and refined, not hardened by the type of tasks she was taking on, and who in their right mind would take on such a huge project without having some experience?

Then there was that feeling that they’d met before. There was something about her eyes, something familiar, and yet not. It really bugged him. He couldn’t imagine where they might have met in the past—certainly she didn’t give any sign of having met him before—and yet there it was. Every time he looked at her, he got that same feeling.

He slowed the truck in front of the vacant lot on the opposite side of the street and three houses down from the old Cavanaugh place. He just couldn’t seem to drive past without stopping, however briefly, to reflect
and remember the house that once stood there, the family that had once lived there.

Of course, the house, like the family, was long gone.

He gunned the engine and continued on his way.

Cam turned into the drive that ran between Grant Wyler’s house and his veterinary clinic and parked behind a white pickup that was parked near the garage. He hopped out and waved to the plumber he’d called in to get an estimate on the work Grant and his wife, Dallas, wanted done on the house. New expanded kitchen, new bathrooms, new sunroom. Offices in the attic and a new four-car garage. It had all the makings of one very sweet job.

He’d have to put his curiosity about Ellie aside and focus on the task at hand. There’d be time enough to discover just what was what. In the meantime, the possibility that she’d be at the square on Sunday gave him a little something else to think about, his reservations about her having done little to diminish his attraction. The errant little thought he’d had earlier began to take on a life of its own.

If Ellie was intrigued by the pirate tales, he’d just have to make sure she’d have a ringside seat—or better—come Sunday afternoon.

Chapter 8

E
VEN
the chilliest morning of the week couldn’t keep Ellie from heading toward the beach with her coffee, and this morning, a breakfast sandwich she’d made for herself. Modeled after something offered by a fast-food drive-through, it had a sausage patty topped with a scrambled egg topped with a slice of cheese on a toasted English muffin. She’d tried it out the day before and was so pleased with the results she couldn’t resist making another one. She sat on her rock, mug in one hand, sandwich wrapped in foil in the other, and took a deep breath. Despite the damp and the chill in the air—Ellie was thinking that life was pretty sweet in the here and now. Having decided that looking back at what used to be was pointless, she’d made a promise to herself to look at each new day as an opportunity to learn and to grow and to just enjoy and be grateful to be in this place.

She unwrapped her sandwich, balanced it on her knee, and watched a very large bird swoop low over the whitecaps out on the Bay, then rise up swiftly, and just as swiftly, dive headfirst into the water. Seconds
later, the bird emerged, a struggling fish in its mouth. She’d seen the bird—or one like it—every day when she came to the beach, but she didn’t know what it was.

I should know what that bird is
, she told herself.
I will know. I will learn what that one is. I’ll find an app for my phone that has seabirds on it, and I’ll bring it with me when I—

Motion in the dune grass to her right caused her to freeze, the sandwich in her left hand almost to her mouth. She held her breath, wondering if the fox she’d seen a few days earlier had returned. It had poked out of the grass, and she was pretty sure that both she and the fox had been equally surprised to see the other. They’d both stopped in their tracks to stare, the moment suspended in time, before the fox flicked its tale and disappeared back into the grasses. It had been bigger than she’d supposed foxes to be, more like a medium-size dog.

Ellie sat still as a stone, wondering if she and the fox were about to have another face-to-face, but when she shifted her eyes to the right, she saw not the fox, but a small gray dog standing at the edge of the dune. It watched Ellie as she watched it before taking small, very tentative steps in her direction. Its little nose sniffed the air, and she realized it had been drawn by the scent of her sandwich.

“Hey, pup.”

At the sound of her voice, the dog cocked its head to one side. It paused for a moment, then took another few steps in Ellie’s direction. It was close enough for Ellie to see it had no collar.

“Are you a runaway? Got out the back door when the kids left for school? Chased the mailman? What’s your story?”

The dog came closer, and without thinking, Ellie broke off a piece of her sandwich and extended her hand in the dog’s direction.

“Are you hungry, pup?”

Its eyes downcast, the dog crept nearer until it was almost to the food. Then it raised its head and looked at her as if waiting for assurance that the morsel was truly meant for it.

“It’s okay. Take it. Don’t worry, I won’t hurt you.” She leaned forward, her arm outstretched, and the dog took the food so gingerly that Ellie wasn’t sure it was actually gone. The dog sat at her feet, chewed and swallowed, then looked up at her hopefully.

“Another piece?” She broke off another bit of sandwich. The dog wagged its stub of a tale and waited patiently for her to offer it. “You have lovely manners, you know that? Someone has trained you very well.”

The dog’s tale wagged more, and Ellie couldn’t resist giving it another bite, and then another, until the sandwich was all gone.

“It’s okay,” she told the dog. “I can make myself another one.” She reached out her hand to touch the dog, and the dog met her halfway, nudging its head under her palm. What could she do but pet it? “You’re a cutie, but I’ll bet someone is out looking for you right at this very moment, so you should probably be on your way now.”

Ellie looked skyward as a breeze blew across the beach, almost flattening the grasses.

“It’s going to rain soon and it’s getting cooler. You should scoot along home now. You don’t want to get caught in the storm.”

Ellie rose and took her last sip of coffee. “Where’s your collar?” she asked. “If you had a collar with some tags on it, I could call your owner and let them know where you are.”

She walked over the dune and onto the road, the little dog at her heels.

“No, you can’t come with me. Go on home, now. And stay off the dunes, hear? You don’t want to run into that fox. He might think you look a little too much like lunch.”

Ellie kept walking, the dog trailing her at a distance. When she reached her driveway, she turned and told the dog, “Seriously. You need to go home. Someone is worried about you. I know I would be, if you were my little dog.”

She leaned down and patted the dog on the head one last time, then walked to her front door and went through it, leaving the dog at the foot of the driveway.

“It’ll go home now,” she told herself. “It was just waiting to see if there would be more food to mooch.”

Ellie was torn between starting on the kitchen or the dining room walls. They would all have to be scraped, she trusted Cameron on that, but which would be the best place to start?

Probably the kitchen, she decided. Getting the walls stripped down as well as the floor would be time-consuming and messy, maybe the messiest task.

Start with the floor, she reasoned. Cameron said there was nice wood under the old linoleum, so maybe
we rip up a piece of the crappy floor and see what we can find.

Sounded like a plan.

She began in the butler’s pantry, working on the area where Cam had lifted the linoleum to reveal the pine floor. It took her all of the morning and part of the afternoon, but as it turned out, the old floor wasn’t so hard to remove after all. Surprisingly, the tiny black iron nails that held down the flooring popped mostly without resistance. By noon, the pantry floor was back to its original pine, in need of a good cleaning, but she could see the beauty of the wood. When she talked to Cameron again, she’d ask him the best way to clean that floor and she’d tell him that there’d been no glue used when the floor in the pantry had been put down. She hoped that proved true in the kitchen as well.

A clap of thunder caused her to jump nearly out of her skin, and she realized she’d been working in total silence. She found her iPod at the bottom of her bag and scrolled through her playlist until she found some tunes she could work to. She bundled the ripped-up flooring and put it out on the back porch. She’d call the town hall to find out how best to dispose of it, but for now, it could stay where she left it.

The rain was falling harder and slanted toward one side of the house. She was happy to close the door behind her and shivered as she returned to the warmth of the kitchen. She put on a pot of coffee, determined to take a little break, and went upstairs to grab a sweatshirt to pull over her turtleneck. On the way back downstairs, she paused and looked out through
the front windows and was relieved to find the little dog gone from the lawn. She hoped it had made it home before the storm hit. It really had been a very cute little thing.

The mail truck came down the street and she walked to the door to see if it would pause at her mailbox. She stood watching for a moment, listening to the sounds of the storm outside, the howling of the wind and the pine branches scratching at the glass. She started to turn from the window when she looked down, and saw a gray mass huddled near the door.

Other books

Halfway Dead by Terry Maggert
Ragnarok by Nathan Archer
Fierce Enchantment by Carrie Ann Ryan
Fragments by Dan Wells
Wildflower (Colors #4) by Jessica Prince
Back Track by Jason Dean
Maybe Not (Maybe #1.5) by Colleen Hoover
GoingUp by Lena Matthews