banner banner banner
The Other Woman's Son
The Other Woman's Son
Оценить:
Рейтинг: 0

Полная версия:

The Other Woman's Son

скачать книгу бесплатно


“Would you have agreed to sing at my bar if I had?”

“Definitely not.”

“You’ve proved my point.”

She aimed a finger at him. “Your point seems to be that you feel justified in manipulating me. And manipulating your sister, too. She obviously doesn’t know who I am.”

Clay didn’t like the way her accusation made him sound but could hardly argue. “I meant to tell Darcy, the same way I meant to tell you, but I haven’t managed to find the right time.”

“Don’t tell her,” she retorted. “She seems like a nice girl, but she’s not someone I want in my life.”

“That’s crazy. She stops by the bar pretty regularly.” He threw up his hands. “How can you expect to keep something like that from her?”

“Easy. I’m not going to keep singing at your bar.”

His breath caught at the implication of what that would mean to Darcy. “But Corrine signed a contract.”

“And you’d hold us to it? After the secret you kept from me?” She annunciated every word, her expression incredulous.

He’d do almost anything to help his sister, but forcing Jenna to sing at Peyton’s Place wouldn’t accomplish that goal.

Helping her reach the decision not to abandon the gig was a different matter.

“Maybe not,” he said. “I know you’re not looking to make singing your career, but Corrine’s eager for a chance to prove herself.”

He started to ask if Jenna could take that chance away from Corrine but swallowed the question when he realized how manipulative it would sound. He wasn’t so blinded by Darcy’s condition that he couldn’t understand Jenna’s anger.

She glared at him, her dislike as visible as the neon signs that dotted the Beale Street establishments. He didn’t like himself very much at the moment, either.

“Jenna, where the hell have you been?” Corrine, her face appearing pale beneath her fall of black hair and matching dark clothes, rushed toward them on stacked heels. “We were supposed to go on ten minutes ago.”

The guitarist tapped the toe of her right shoe, communicating her impatience.

Clay couldn’t have orchestrated a scenario that would demonstrate more clearly how Corrine felt about performing at Peyton’s Place. He glanced at Jenna, but she wouldn’t look at him.

“It’s my fault, Corrine.” Clay returned his attention to the guitarist. “So it’s okay with me that you’re running behind schedule.”

“I’d hate for the customers to get restless and head off to find live music somewhere else.” Corrine talked fast, as though every moment spent away from the stage pained her. “Are you coming, Jenna?”

Clay felt his gut tighten as he waited for Jenna’s answer.

Corrine started to walk toward the bar, but Jenna didn’t move, didn’t speak. Time seemed to lengthen, although no more than a few seconds elapsed.

Obviously realizing Jenna wasn’t following her, Corrine stopped and turned. “Jenna. Come on.”

Jenna cast a final fierce glance at Clay before replying, “I’m coming.”

Clay tried to relax as he watched Jenna trail her smaller friend into the bar, but relief wouldn’t come. Jenna would perform as scheduled tonight, but there was no guarantee she’d take the stage tomorrow.

CORRINE WAITED UNTIL JENNA left the hotel room in search of coffee and a danish on Saturday morning before she auto dialed her home phone number. She listened to the phone ring at the house in Little Rock, her hands sweating so badly she could hardly grip the phone.

One ring.

Her husband Maurice loved to indulge himself on Saturday mornings by sleeping late, claiming he didn’t have the chance any other day of the week.

Two rings.

Although Maurice had been known to sleep as late as ten, he usually rolled out of bed at around nine-thirty.

Three rings.

Corrine couldn’t remember the last time he’d awakened before eight-thirty.

Four rings.

The time on the hotel’s bedside alarm clock read seven fifty-nine.

“Yo. Talk to me, man.”

Corrine’s relief at hearing Maurice’s trademark greeting was so great she almost dropped the phone. “Maurice, I—”

“If you’re someone me or Corrine wants to talk back to, one of us will give you a call.”

A beep sounded, confirming that the answering machine, and not Maurice, had picked up her call. He must have forgotten to tell her he’d changed the recorded greeting.

She disconnected the call without leaving a message, then cradled her head in her hands. He should have answered. They kept a phone beside the bed, because Maurice couldn’t stand the thought of not being reachable if one of his aging parents should need him.

A full five minutes must have passed before she told herself not to jump to premature conclusions and lifted her head. Maurice always kept his cell on when he wasn’t home. She speed dialed his number, the way she had last night when she couldn’t reach him at home. He picked up on the third ring. “Yo.”

“Maurice, it’s Corrine.”

“Hey, babe,” he mumbled, as though he’d been awakened from a sound sleep. “Didn’t we just talk a couple hours ago?”

He’d claimed to be at his friend Eddie’s house at a poker game that was just breaking up. He’d said he was heading home.

She swallowed and supplied the excuse she’d invented to justify her early morning call. “I was afraid the dehumidifier would flood the basement. I think I left it running.”

“I’ll check,” he said.

She listened carefully, she wasn’t sure for what, but couldn’t hear any noises in the background.

“I called home before I tried your cell.” Her heart beat so fast she thought she might pass out. “Why didn’t you pick up?”

“I must have been outside getting the newspaper. I thought I heard the phone.”

She didn’t ask why he hadn’t checked the answering machine for a missed call when he got back inside the house. He’d have an explanation. Maurice always had an explanation.

“You’re up early today,” she remarked.

“Couldn’t sleep. Didn’t have you next to me.” He pitched his voice low and sexy, reminiscent of the way he sounded when they made love.

Despite her suspicions, she melted. A favorite memory of him getting down on one knee flashed through her mind. She could hear him proposing, saying he wanted to spend the rest of his life with the woman he loved.

She was probably letting her imagination get the best of her. Yes, he’d smelled of what she thought was perfume after poker night last week, but he’d had a ready excuse. It wasn’t perfume at all, but the air freshener his friend’s girlfriend used to mask the scent of smoke in the house.

The hotel room door swung open. Jenna entered, holding two stacked coffee cups in one hand and anchoring them with her chin. She held the key card in the other.

“I should go,” Corrine told Maurice. “Jenna just got back with caffeine.”

“Tell Jenna I appreciate her being good to my girl. Love you, babe.” He hung up, leaving Corrine listening to nothing.

“You, too,” she whispered, then flipped her cell phone closed.

“The restaurant was crowded so I skipped the danish and got coffee to go. I thought you might like one, too.” Jenna handed Corrine the extra cup. “Double cream, double sugar, right?”

“Right. Thanks.”

Jenna sat down at the plush chair beside the mahogany desk and removed the plastic lid from her cup. “Were you talking to the charming Maurice?”

“You think Maurice is charming?”

Jenna’s eyebrows shot up. “Don’t tell me you haven’t noticed your husband has a way with words?”

And with women.

“It’s hard to miss.” Corrine deliberately changed the subject. “It’s just that you ignore Clay’s charms so well, I was starting to think you were immune.”

Jenna brought her coffee cup to her lips and drank before asking, “Why would you say that?”

“I saw the two of you talking last night. He’s obviously into you.”

“Not for the reason you think.”

“What’s that mean?”

Jenna cradled her coffee cup in both hands, staring down at the brown liquid before looking up at Corrine. “Nothing. He likes the way I sing, is all.”

“I’d be surprised if that’s all he’s interested in.”

“That’s all it is,” Jenna reiterated firmly. “What are you going to do today?”

“Catch the duck parade, then I was thinking about heading to Graceland.” The idea of visiting Elvis Presley’s former home had just occurred to her, but it seemed like a good one. Elvis could help take her mind off Maurice. “Want to come?”

“No, thanks. I brought some work with me, and this afternoon would be the perfect time to do it.”

“No way,” Corrine exclaimed in dismay. “The weekends are supposed to be about the music.”

“I’ll be singing the blues Monday morning if I don’t get this stuff done, but we could go to the exercise room together. The caffeine’s starting to kick in, so I have enough energy for a workout.”

Corrine noticed for the first time that Jenna was dressed in yoga pants and a dri-fit top. “Are you kidding me? I burn plenty of calories playing my guitar, thank you very much.”

After Jenna’s laughter faded and Corrine was once again alone in the hotel room, her gaze fell on the cell phone she’d left on the bedside table.

If she called home now and Maurice answered, she’d know he was telling the truth about getting the newspaper when she phoned the first time. If not…

She heard the seconds tick by on the bedside clock radio until one minute had passed, then two. Before the minute display could click over a third time, she anchored her hands on the bed and rose.

As she rummaged through her suitcase for the clothes she’d change into after her shower, she pointedly ignored the phone still lying where she’d left it.

JENNA STEPPED INSIDE Peyton’s Place and removed the sunglasses that had shielded her eyes from the brightness of the Saturday afternoon sun.

The bar looked different than it had the night before, the green of the tile and the booths more vivid, the wooden surface of the bar more glossy, the crowd even thinner.

But she could still feel the energizing thrill that infused her when she sang to the crowd—and the anger that had engulfed her when she learned the reason she’d gotten the opportunity.

Determination had replaced the sharp edge of the anger, fueling her steps as she marched up to the bar. She’d finished her accounting work hours ago, but now needed to take care of the real reason she’d skipped the trip to Graceland.

“Is Clay Dillon around?” she asked a tall, shaggy-haired bartender of about twenty-five who hadn’t been on duty the night before.

“He’s in the kitchen. Should be right out. Can I get you a drink while you’re waiting?” He had an engaging manner which made Jenna like him instantly.

“I’d love a double shot of whiskey,” she said, thinking it would help her get through the confrontation to come, “but I don’t drink in the afternoon.”

His grin transformed his long, narrow, freckled face into something special. “How about a cola then?”

“No, thanks,” she said. “All I need is for you to let Clay know I’m waiting.”

“Sure thing.”

She chose a booth farthest from the bar and a good distance from the other customers. Then she drummed her fingers on the table, fighting fatigue from her poor night of sleep. She wasn’t sure whether her tossing and turning had kept Corrine awake or vice versa.

It hurt that Corrine hadn’t confided what was bothering her, but then Jenna hadn’t shared her problems, either. From past conversations, Jenna was well aware that Corrine believed she should become acquainted with Margo’s daughter.

Corrine didn’t understand how Jenna felt. She couldn’t. Corrine hadn’t been the one who’d watched her mother struggle to rebuild her life. Or who’d grown up in a house with a gaping hole where a father should have been.

A warm, male laugh drew Jenna’s attention. Clay, his dark eyes crinkled at the corners, his lips split into a grin as he traversed the passageway leading from the kitchen. The grin disappeared as the bartender gestured to her table, but Clay didn’t waste time in approaching her.

He moved with the grace of an athlete and the confidence of a man comfortable in his own skin. The soft blue shirt he wore with faded jeans of almost the same shade softened his appearance, but Jenna wouldn’t make the mistake of underestimating what he’d do to get his way.

“Jenna. I didn’t expect to see you.” If he were anxious about encountering her at Peyton’s Place in the middle of the afternoon, he didn’t let on.

“You didn’t expect to see me right now or you didn’t expect to see me at all?” she challenged.

He slid into the booth across from her, his expression guarded. “I’m an optimist. I was betting on you showing up tonight.”

“I’ll be here tonight. And I’ll keep coming until the terms of the contract are up.”

He nodded, neither gloating nor showing surprise, as though he’d expected her to say what she’d said. It ticked her off all over again, because he didn’t know anything about her.