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“Will they stay here forever?”
“For however long they need to. If that’s forever, then it’s forever. Many of these girls feel they can’t go home. Roni gives them a fresh start if they want it. She had a third girl who returned to her captor over the summer. It was hard for Roni to accept, but...well, it’s just the girls are so broken, some of them don’t know any other life, or don’t feel worthy of a better one.”
“I thought Roni ran a racing school. That’s what her website says.”
“I thought you couldn’t read.”
“My boss read it to me. He’s the one who convinced me to come back here and accept my inheritance. I wasn’t going to. I should have listened to my gut telling me this was a bad idea.”
“This is the guy you work for in construction?”
“Alex Sarno of Sarno Construction, soon to be Sarno and Stone. He’s promised to make me a partner in the business when I get back.”
“But first you need to get your hands on the Spencer dough, is that it? Did he promise you this partnership before or after you told him the news of your birth family?”
“Does it matter?”
“Maybe, maybe not.”
“I say not. Alex took a chance on me when no one else would. He’s watched me struggle and has helped me rise above my circumstances. He took me to church with him. It’s because of him that I know God wants more for me than to be an illiterate lackey for the rest of my life.”
“That sounds great and all, but money does strange things to people. Makes them act differently. Selfishly.”
“You think Alex is after my money?”
“You don’t even have it yet, and the man already offered you a part in his business. Did he name a price, or is he eagerly waiting to find out what you stand to gain from the Spencers?”
Wade cleared his throat from the doorway. He stood there with Promise beside him, his hand in her fur at her head. “Stand to gain from us? I already don’t like you for shooting at my dog. If it wasn’t for Sylvie’s quick reflexes, Promise wouldn’t be here keeping me calm. But maybe I should be kicking you out of here anyway.”
The golden Labrador retriever pressed her head deeper into Wade’s palm.
“Wade has post-traumatic stress disorder,” Sylvie said. “Promise is his service dog. She helps with his daily activities that his memories impair. You see, he’s also had circumstances he’s struggled with over the years. In fact, he turned his back on all you see around you for the life of a soldier. He knew money never fixed anything.”
“Never.” Wade stepped farther into the room, but the man’s hard-edged tone had disappeared. He must have sensed Sylvie was helping Ian to understand something and Wade respected her to know her business. She felt safe from having to answer the question of who Ian was...for now. He was an army captain, however, and would want to be briefed about why they were out in the storm and running from someone.
She didn’t know Wade well enough to know when he would require the knowledge, though. Roni was the closer friend, and even Sylvie’s relationship with his sister hadn’t come easy. Sylvie grew up downtown. Her family worked for the Spencers, and friendships between the kids would never have happened in polite society.
But polite society wasn’t the natural way of things. Kids didn’t care about the rules of social classes. They wanted to play, and on one of Sylvie’s hikes up the mountain to the McKeeny Pass, she came into contact with a very rebellious Roni Spencer on her snowmobile. The teenager gained a friend she could break all the rules with. She taught Sylvie to ride the sled as well as the race cars. She even introduced her to the handsome racer, Greg Santos.
The charismatic man quickly took notice of the blond-haired, green-eyed nobody who worked the concession stand at the track, and quickly took advantage of her.
Sylvie had fallen hard. She couldn’t believe Greg Santos would pick her over all the pretty, wealthier girls. Looking back, she had to think the other girls wouldn’t have him because they knew something she didn’t.
It wasn’t long before she understood and found herself alone and pregnant. Sylvie’s days of playing came to a screeching halt. From then on, playing consisted of baby rattles, stuffed bunnies and lullabies.
Something Wade would soon be enjoying, as well.
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