A Perfect Love. Lenora Worth
her grandparents.
“I think I’ll just stay here at Golden Vista for now,” she said, her voice hoarse with frustration. “But…thank you for the offer.”
He pushed off the post and came toward her, that predatory look in his eyes. “Want me to take you to the office, so you can get a key?”
“Sure.” She wanted a long soak and a soft bed. “I’m so tired.” Then she stopped. “I forgot about my car. I need to call a tow—”
“I already did that.”
“You did?”
“Yeah. While you were having another slice of pineapple upside-down cake.”
“I only had one slice, but it was a really big one.”
“Yeah, right. You have quite an appetite.”
She smiled then. “I can pack it away.”
“It looks good on you.”
Summer wasn’t one to blush easily, but she did now. “I like to walk,” she said by way of explaining herself. “I walk all over New York. Especially in Central Park.”
“It’s a nice park.”
Surprised that he’d been there, Summer realized she knew nothing about this man who’d moved to Athens and intruded in such a big way on her life. Or rather, the life she’d left behind. “When were you in New York?”
“Years ago,” he said as he looked off into the setting sun. “A lifetime ago.”
“And I lived here a lifetime ago,” she retorted.
“But we’re both here now.”
“Yes,” she said. “Isn’t it funny how things happen that way. You just never know—”
“No, you don’t,” he replied as he guided her back toward the covered walkway. “I never dreamed I’d wind up in a small Texas town, working at a retirement complex.”
The warm, fuzzy feelings Summer had been experiencing turned cold and harsh. “You work here?”
He nodded, looked sheepish. “Maintenance man and groundskeeper. That’s why I stay here sometimes. Sorry.”
“Why didn’t anyone tell me that?”
“Didn’t seem important. Besides, you and your grandparents were too busy having a good time.”
She regarded him as if he’d turned into roadkill. “So that little news flash sort of slipped your mind.”
He shook his head. “I didn’t think it would matter one way or another.”
“You’re just full of surprises, aren’t you?”
“You wouldn’t believe,” he said, his smile open and pure. And challenging.
Summer wanted to believe. She wanted to think that Mack Riley was just a nice man who’d become friends with her grandparents. But she’d learned not to accept things at face value. Especially pretty words coming from handsome men.
Something else was up here. Something that didn’t sit well with Summer. And she intended to find out what that something was.
Chapter Four
“Are you all settled in, honey?”
Summer turned from putting clothes in the white chest of drawers to answer her grandmother’s question. “I think so. This is a really nice apartment.”
Martha beamed her pride. “Yes, the Golden Vista is so accommodating to family members. They have two of these efficiency apartments, I think. And they keep them open to anyone who wants to come and visit. We’ve even got Internet hookup, so you can use that laptop thing I saw you unpacking.”
Summer tried to muster up some enthusiasm as she glanced around the homey L-shaped apartment. “I’ve got wireless, but that’s convenient.”
Martha rushed across the sitting room/kitchen combination. “What’s wrong, darlin’?”
Summer never could hide anything from her shrewd grandmother. “Nothing, Memaw. I’m just tired…and all of this is a bit overwhelming, I guess.”
“I told Jesse we should have called you and told you about selling the farm, but it was kind of spur of the moment. Then once we got here, well, we’re always going and doing.” She shrugged, shook her head.
“It doesn’t matter,” Summer said, finishing her unpacking with a slam of the last drawer. “I haven’t exactly been faithful in the calling-home department.”
Martha came to stand next to her, her arm going around Summer’s shoulders as they stared at their reflections in the oval mirror over the dresser. “But we always knew you were there if we needed you.”
Summer looked down at her petite grandmother, love pouring over her. “Why didn’t you…call me? I mean, if you needed money or a place to live—”
“Oh, honey, we’re all right, money-wise. Your grandfather, Lord love him, he saves money with a frugal vengeance. And whether you want to believe it or not, your parents have always helped us out. They just don’t make a big fuss about it.”
Summer scoffed, then laughed. “Oh, not like they make such a big fuss about everything else? The trips, the houses and cars, the celebrities they hang out with.”
“They’re not as bad as all that,” Martha said, a touch of censure in her voice. “They just like to enjoy life. I do wish you’d make your peace with them.”
Summer walked into the compact kitchen, then stood staring at the stark white counters and cabinets. A wistful ache pulsed through her heart. “Oh, I’d love to do that, if I ever saw them.”
Her grandmother gave her a knowing, gentle look. “Didn’t they visit you last time they were passing through New York?”
Summer raised her chin. “Yes, in the airport restaurant at JFK. That was a charming visit, let me tell you.”
“But they did make the effort, right?”
“Right,” Summer replied, her defenses up. “So I guess they should get the Parents of the Year award for that little layover?”
“No, but you could cut them some slack,” Martha said, a twinkle in her eye.
“Okay, I’ll try, for your sake at least,” Summer retorted. “But…it’s just too hard to explain.”
Martha pursed her lips. “Well, I can’t squeeze blood from a turnip, so let’s change the subject. Tell me what brought you home for this special visit.”
Summer wanted to pour out her heart to her grandmother, but the day had just been too full of surprises for that. She needed time to think, to comprehend all the things that were going on around her. She needed time to absorb all the country charm of Golden Vista. Right now, it was screaming just a bit too loudly for her to fully appreciate it.
So she turned to her grandmother, determined not to put one speck of worry on those loving shoulders. “I just wanted to see y’all, is all.”
Martha came around the counter and took Summer into her arms. “Well, I’m so very thankful for that. I pray for you every day, honey. I pray for you to find love and happiness, and I pray for all of you girls to be safe up there in that big, scary city.”
“Well, only two of us are left,” Summer pointed out. “April is staying in Texas. We’ve got a September wedding to attend, Memaw.”
“Oh, that’s so precious,” Martha said, clasping her hands together. “April and Reed belong together.” Then she hugged Summer again. “I hope you find that kind of happiness one day.”
Summer allowed her grandmother’s