Page 82 of Inheritance


Font Size:  

“Because?”

“Not only because she’s dealing with a lot right now, but she was engaged—weeks from the wedding—just last summer.”

“Huh back. She didn’t strike me as the flighty type.”

“Don’t think she is.”

“Could be she has bad taste in men. That gives you a shot.”

Trey met Owen’s smirk with one of his own. “Let’s order some nachos and another brew.”

“I’m for it.”

When she got home, Sonya carried half the flowers and half the groceries into the kitchen, then went out for the rest. She’d bought too much, obviously. But maybe it wouldn’t be too much if she talked Cleo into staying a couple extra days.

She hauled in the last, shut the door.

The tablet she’d left on the desk upstairs started up with Ariana Grande’s “Thinking Bout You.”

“Maybe you shouldn’t,” she muttered.

And when she walked into the kitchen, all the cupboard doors stood open.

She dumped the flowers and groceries on the island.

“Fine! I surrender. The place is haunted. Happy now?” After yanking off her coat, she tossed it on a stool. Pulled off her hat, tossed that, then dragged her hands through her hair.

“Losing my mind,” she muttered. “Just losing my mind.”

She put the groceries away, closing doors as she went.

“Okay, vases.”

She heard it, the little creak from the butler’s pantry. She eased that way, saw the pair of upper doors over the sink open.

“I’ll deal with it.” She snagged the flowers, marched in. “I’m not going anywhere, so you deal with that.”

After choosing vases, she focused on arranging flowers.

She’d live her life, she told herself. Her normal, productive, reasonably sane life. In the big haunted manor.

To prove it, she’d warm up the shrimp scampi takeout, eat dinner, have a glass of wine. She’d take the flowers upstairs that went upstairs, make sure the room she’d earmarked for Cleo had everything ready for her.

Put in an hour, maybe two on work. Then settle in for the night with her book.

Normal.

“This is my house now,” she said as she poured the wine. “So get used to it.”

Late in the night, pounding woke her. She pulled herself out of sleep, tossed the covers aside. Someone pounded on the door, the front door, she thought. She heard it still, over the howling wind, the thrash of the sea.

As she rolled out of bed, she saw the snow—fast, thick, whirling—outside the windows.

A storm had come up, and someone needed help.

She rushed out, grateful for the night-lights she’d plugged in down the hallway.

Someone stuck in the blizzard. An accident, a breakdown.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com