She didnât tell them about Travisâs offer. She valued their input, but this had to be her decision. And she already knew theyâd be thrilled if she opted to stay in the area.
Because she loved them, that weighed heavily on the pro side.
But sheâd lived on the other side of the state for years, and theyâd never lost their bond, the connection. Her family ties stayed tight.
She had family on the other side of the state, too, in Joel, Sari, his mom, and the rest. Would that bond hold, that connection remain? Would those found family ties stay tight?
With that on her mind, she texted Joel.
Can you FT?
The answer came barely a minute later when her iPad signaled.
âHey, sis! Whoa, what? The hair.â
âYeah, I went a little crazy.â
âWhat about her hair?â Sari moved on-screen. âGirl! I love it. You cut your way to some sexy sass there.â
âYou think?â
âI know what I know.â Sari, her amazing cloud of hair dancing around her pretty face, put her cheek close to Joelâs. âYouâre looking good! Youâre looking so good!â
When her big brown eyes teared up, Sari rolled them and smiled. âHormones, honey. I got a million of them. And hey, check this.â
She stepped back, turned sideways, and pointed at her belly. If Sloan looked hard enough, she could make out a tiny pooch.
Sloan widened her own eyes. âHoly shit, Sari, youâre enormous!â
âI think maybe I felt her move. Itâs a little early, but I think maybe. Iâm so glad to get a look at you and your sexy, sassy do! We miss the hell out of you.â
âI miss the hell out of you. Maybe you could come up for a couple days. I could see about getting that house you guys liked last time.â
âI canât speak for my manâ Hell yes, I can. Weâd love it.â
âWe would. Let me see about schedules and all. But itâs likely youâll be back before we can work out the time. Just another few weeks, right?â
âItâs looking like Iâll be cleared within the month. I had my follow-up, and Vincenti was happy enough. I have to follow up with the doctor up here for the pec muscle thing to cover the bases. But somethingâs come up, and I wanted to talk to you about it.â
âYouâre okay, right?â Joel asked. âYou look a lot better, sis. You sound better, too.â
âI am better. Captain Hamm came by today. You know him.â
âSure.â
âI donât. Do we like him?â Sari demanded.
âWe do,â Sloan assured her. âHeâs the Western Region commander. And a friend of the family. He and my father go way back. Heâs losing a sergeant to retirement, and wants me to take that position. Wants me to apply for it, test, and join his unit.â
âIâm sitting down now.â So announcing, Sari pulled up a chair beside Joelâs.
âHeâs too good a commander to offer this to me because of the personal connection. If I wasnât sure of that, I couldnât even consider it. This just happened today. I havenât said anything to my family yet. I know where theyâd come down, and know theyâd tell me itâs my decision, and support either way. But since I know, I donât want to tell them about it.â
âMade a list, didnât you?â Sari kept up the conversation when Joel said nothing. âReasons to, reasons not to.â
âPros and cons, yeah. Iâd say theyâre running pretty much neck and neck. I still need to think about it. I have some time before the application deadline. But I wanted to hear what you thought.â
Joel put a hand over Sariâs. âI got a question.â
âOkay.â
âAre you stupid?â
âNo! Come on, Iââ
Now he held up his other hand to cut her off. âThen youâre going to take what you want, what youâve earned, because youâre not stupid.â
âItâs not just a matter of a promotion, Joel. It means moving across the state, leaving people Iâve worked withâespecially youâfor years.â
âI know that, sis. I didnât say it was easy. I said youâre not stupid. None of this shouldâve happened to you. You shouldnâtâve walked into that goddamn mini-mart and into a bullet. But it did happen.â
He took a breath.
âIt did. Now, whatever the reason, something goodâs come out of that bad. That terrible bad. Iâm not saying turning it downâs wrong, because it has to be right for you. Iâm saying when something you want and worked for lands in your lap, itâs stupid not to pick it up.â
âI gotta love this man.â Sari pressed her lips to Joelâs cheek. âHe doesnât give me a choice.â
âYouâd take it?â
âItâs not about what Iâd do, sis. Itâs you.â
âYouâre right. Itâs me. Iâm going to think about it some more. Iâve got time to be sure, either way, before the deadline. Thanks for hearing me out.â
âAlways will.â
âThat goes for both of us. We love you, Sloan.â
âI love you guys. I love all three of you. Weâll talk again soon.â
She set the tablet on charge. After she got ready for bed, she stood at her window looking out at the shadows and silhouettes her view offered.
It amazed her she wasnât yet tired enough for sleep. She settled down, picked up her crocheting, and got to work on the baby blanket.
As they finished up their first job for All the Rest, Nash and Theo met CJ Kirpeckne.
Since it was Theoâs turn with tunes, the Bluetooth speaker played a lot of alternative music Nash didnât necessarily get. Apparently, neither did CJ Kirpeckne.
When she walked in, she put her hands on her hips. âWhatâs wrong with genuine rock and roll?â
âThatâs what I said.â Nash came down from the ladder he stood on to finish painting the ceiling.
âCountryâs fine as long as itâs not whiny. Does Dolly whine? No, she does not! Not even on âJolene.ââ
âDolly Partonâs a goddess.â
âYou got that.â
Nash pushed back the Mets cap he wore, gave the woman a quick study.
Maybe five-three, possibly a buck-ten. The purple hair under her purple Ravens ski cap said teenager to him. But her face said sheâd seen forty.
âCan we help you?â
âTurning that bullshit downâd be a start.â
âI got it.â Theo, a blue do-rag covered in Baby Yodas tied around his head, set his roller in the pan and turned down the volume.
âBetter. CJ Kirpeckne.â She stuck out a hand as hard as an oak plank. âIâm just here to check your progress. Whoâs who?â
âNash.â Then he pointed. âTheo.â
âOkay then.â
She wandered the open kitchen, dining, living area, hazel eyes narrowed. âWell, you havenât made a mess of it. You should be about wrapped up by my clock.â
âThis is the last coat. Tileâs done.â
She walked into the bathroom, studied the work. Gave a nod, a grunt. Walked back.
âDidnât make a mess of that either. The boss said you might could use some help over at your place.â
âNo âmightâ about it. Weâve got a couple dozen windows coming in next week. The old ones leak. A lot of demo yet, but weâre living there, so one section at a time on that.â
âWeâre rehabbing top to bottom,â Theo put in. âOr right now, middle to top.â
âIâll give you an hour or two when Iâve got it. Same rate I get from the Coopers, and Iâm worth it. I got a nephew at loose ends when you need a laborer. Heâs not lazy, and heâll cart and carry, and do what heâs told. You donât want to set Robo off on his own. Heâs mostly willing, but heâs only half-able.â
âRobo?â
âHis sister couldnât say Robert back when, and Robo stuck. Gimme your phone. Iâll put his number in. You call him or donât, up to you.â
âOkay, thanks.â Nash handed it over. âWhy donât you put yours in there, too?â
âAll right. A couple hours here and there, and thatâs if the boss doesnât need me. Otherwise, Iâm your job boss on ATR jobs unless Deanâs on that.â
âNo problem at all.â Nash took back his phone.
She gave them both another measuring look. âHow come you left New York City? Women trouble, trouble with the law?â
âNo.â
âActually, I guess you could say I had some trouble with the law.â Theo lifted his shoulders. âI got to be a lawyer and decided I didnât want to be one. At least not there.â
âA lawyer? How old are you?â
âAh, twenty-eight.â
âAnd youâre a lawyer.â
âToday, Iâm mostly a painter. Next week Iâll be a licensed contractor.â
âYou know the thing about people? They never make any damn sense. Make sure everything gets put back as it was,â she told them as she headed for the door. âElsieâll come in, hang the art and such, fluff it all up.
âTheyâve got a family booked in here over the weekend.â
âWeâll get it done,â Nash told her.
âI really like your hair,â Theo added.
âRavens rule,â she declared, and walked out.
âWell, that was interesting.â Nash adjusted his cap. âLetâs finish up.â
Theo picked up his roller.
âNash, Iâm loving this.â
âSeashell Blush paint?â
âNo, but itâs a nice color for this room. Iâm loving it here. I mean, holy Jesus, look at the view.â
âYour view should be a wall of Seashell Blush.â
âIâm doing work I actually like, hanging with my big bro, and okay man, dating Dreamy Drea.â He did a quick shuffle. âThird date Friday night.â
âShould I find another place to stay, or are you just going to put a sock on the bedroom door?â
âItâs not just about sex. I want the sex, but Iâm not going to push. Sheâs worth waiting for.â
Nash looked down. âBoy, you are truly gone.â
âI am truly gone. Iâm loving that, too.â
While the Littlefields finished that last coat, Sam drove with Clara to cruise Cumberland.
Sheâd always liked the look of it, the hilly streets, all the redbrick buildings. And a lot of churches. If sheâd had a yen to live in a townâand she didnâtâsheâd have put Cumberland on the list.
She liked old buildings. People should respect and honor what came before. She liked the views, and she planned to enjoy the shops.
She wanted to find something fine for Sam for Christmas.
But first, they had work to do.
Dr. Rigsby closed his offices on Wednesdayâso it said on his web page. Taking him from work, coming or going to it, could prove too risky, especially since his offices housed themselves in one of those nice old buildings shared by other offices and practices.
âItâll be interesting to see if he does anything on his day off. Maybe he just lazes around the house.â
âOr watches porn all day while the wifeâs away.â
âOh, you!â Snickering, she slapped Samâs arm.
He navigated the curvy streets, kept right on the speed limit as they left the downtown area with the shops she wanted to browse. They moved into a pretty little neighborhood where Clara checked house numbers for the address theyâd found in their research.
âThat one there, doll. That nice redbrick on the slope. Three stories! Can you imagine? Double porches, and all slicked up for Christmas. A really nice yard, too. I just bet they have gardeners taking care of it.â
She noted they had Christmas lights up, and approved, and caught a glimpse of a tree in the big front window.
âDonât see a car, but theyâve got a garage. Neighbor on the leftâs a little close. But we could figure it out.â
âWe always do,â Clara said as he drove by. âWeâll circle around, park on up. There was that house with a For Sale sign.â
He had to smile. His babe thought of everything.
âIf anybody says anything, why, weâre just taking a look. Out in the area looking for our forever home.â
âThatâs just right.â She sighed a little. âYou know, I was thinking how I liked Cumberland, but didnât want to live in a town. But this part here doesnât so much feel like a town. And the houses arenât so stacked up together. Theyâre not that cookie-cutter deal you get either. I couldnât stand that.â
âI love our little house.â
âOh, so do I. I like we got a little bit of land to keep us nice and tucked away. But itâs fun to think what if.â
When they parked, she hauled up her purse. âIâm going to get out, take some pictures of the house for sale. The sign and all. Most donât pay much mind to a woman, and itâll look like Iâm interested in the house for sale.â
As she started to open the door, he put a hand on her arm. âHold on. Babe, you got the touch. You said we needed to come look-see this morning, and look-see that. The garage doorâs opening.â
âItâs got to be him! Unless his wifeâs really late leaving for work.â
The gleaming gray Mercedes sedan drove right by them.
âItâs him, all right. You got the touch.â Sam pulled into the driveway of the house for sale, reversed, then followed. âLetâs see where he goes.â
The Mercedes cruised leisurely through town, out of it, and onto Interstate 68, east.
Sam kept his distance, kept his eye peeled as the Mercedes racked up nearly twenty miles.
âHeâs getting off! Put his turn signal on.â
âI see it, I see it.â As Sam exited behind the Mercedes, Clara noted down the exit.
Rigsby drove another mile, past a strip mall, fast-food places, then pulled into the lot of a motel.
He got out, carrying a small overnight bag.
âHeâs checking in, Sam. Twenty miles from home, day off, and heâs checking into a motel?â
âGot something on the side! Bad boy!â
Rigsby came out, got back in the car, then drove around to the back of the motel.
âGive it a minute. Weâll know which room. Heâll park in front of his room. Weâll drive around, park a few slots down, and see when whoever heâs cheating with shows up.â
Heâd parked in front of 122, so they pulled in at 126.
Within ten minutes, a blue Toyota slipped in beside the Mercedes.
The woman who got out didnât carry an overnight, but a large purse. A blonde, she wore a short coat over a short dress, sunglasses, and high heels.
âSheâs got to be twenty, maybe twenty-five years younger than that cheating man.â
Sam grinned. âThe old dog. Iâm going to get us those Sprites out of the cooler, and that bag of barbecue chips. This may take a while.â
It took an hour and twenty minutes before the blonde came out. She shook back her hair, then slipped on her sunglasses before she slid into the Toyota and drove away.
âWe could take him now, babe. Heâs alone, and I bet heâs real relaxed.â
âNot yet, no, not today, doll. Weâre not ready for him. Itâs not time for him. And weâve been sitting here too long so somebody might remember the van.â
âWhen youâre right, youâre right.â
âWeâll follow him again, just to see. Then weâll make ourselves a plan.â
He came out, looking sleepy and satisfied.
The follow home proved easy, as thatâs just where he went.
âDrive on by, and back into town, doll. Iâm going to take you to lunch, then weâll do that shopping. Iâve got a plan coming on.â
âI know you do. One thing? The way youâve been cooking for me, Iâm taking you to lunch.â
âOh, Sam. Youâre the sweetest man in the world.â
âItâs easy to be sweet to you, babe.â
Sloan took another day, then another. She borrowed her motherâs car and drove into town. Christmas shopping headed her list, but she wanted to take stock during the trip. Of herself during the walking, standing, choosing, carrying. Of the town with its hilly streets, chatty shopkeepers.
She wanted to evaluate, weigh, compare objectively. If she went forward with Travisâs offer, this would, once again, become her home base.
She found objectivity challenging, as Heronâs Rest pumped out the charm in all its holiday finery.
Garland wrapped the posts of the old-timey streetlights, wreaths hung on doors, and trees stood in windows with their smaller cousins nestled in pots along Main Street.
When dusk came, lights would twinkle around windows, along roofs, down porch posts and doorways.
If you looked for small-town Christmas, youâd find it right here.
By the time she drove home, sheâd talked to at least a dozen people she knew (and felt undecided on pro or con), racked up a few thousand steps walking inside and out, and considered her Christmas shopping complete.
In the kitchen, she heated up a bowl of soup, eating while she sat at the counter updating her spreadsheet, her pro and con list.
She studied both of them, reread Travisâs answers to her questions before she sent him her decision.
The right one, she determined, for her. For this time, for these circumstances.
At dinner, she listened to her parentsâ easy replay of their day. Her mother had restocked books and puzzles in two vacation units, placed and decorated a tree in another, as requested by an incoming guest, inventoried linens, culled out those she felt needed replacements.
Her father and Jonah had completed the refresh of one of the apartments in town.
According to her father, the Fix-It Brothersâ work proved more than satisfactory, so theyâd contract that team to overhaul the kitchen in another.
âI need the final measurements,â Elsie told Dean. âIâll go to the suppliers, choose the new counter surface, new cabinet doors, hardware, lighting, and the rest tomorrow. Iâve got a look in mind.â
âYou always do. Iâll get you the measurements.â He gave her a look. âAnd the budget.â
âYou always do. Youâre quiet tonight, Sloan. Is everything okay? Did you get your walks in? The temperature dropped again, and itâs windy with it. But thatâs never stopped you.â
âYeah, it is, and yes, I did. With more steps added. Iâm quiet mostly because I was listening. You know, when I was a teenager, and the two of you would talk about work, I always thought: Boring. Itâs not. Itâs genius.â
Dean laughed. âNever boring to me and your mom, but I donât know if Iâd lift it to genius.â
âNo, it is. The way you both focus on your strengths, but still blend the work. The fact that you can and are professional partners and still have a loving, solid marriageâand a life outside the work. Thatâs the genius.â
âTake the âgenius,â Dean.â Elsie toasted with her water glass. âSheâs not wrong.â
âAdd that one of your daughters joined that business, with her own strengths, opinions, perspectives, and she gets professional respect from you, but is still your daughter first and last.â
âThere are timesâplenty of them,â Dean said, âwhen I wonder how we managed without her. Dreaâs got her own genius. But so do you, baby. And youâre first and last our girl.â
âI know it. Iâve always known it.â
And maybe, she thought, taken it, at least a little bit, for granted.
âBut I think coming home this way brought that, well, home. When I told you I was going to join the NRP, you didnât try to talk me out of it. You didnât pressure me when I decided to move to Annapolis. You asked questions, good ones that made me think. But you never tried to change my mind.â
âThatâs never been the easiest thing to do, has it, Elsie? Add the fact you think things through. Itâs a rare thing for you to take a jump without calculating the distance, time, wind velocity. So when you decide, youâve decided.â
âYouâve decided something.â Elsie folded her hands together under the table. âSomething important.â
âYes, I have. When Travis came to see me a few days ago, he told me his sergeant was retiring in February. He offered me that position. Iâd have to file an application, take the written exam, the oral, pass. Iâd have to leave my unit, relocate.â
Now Elsie reached for Deanâs hand under the table.
âI didnât say anything about it because I needed to think it throughâ calculate,â she added with a glance at her father. âItâs a very big jump, so a lot of calculating.â
She took a breath. âI filed the application this afternoon.â
âSloanââ
âWait.â Dean waved off his wife. âAre you making this change for us? Because we donât want that, Sloan.â
âDo you factor into those calculations? Of course you do. But Iâm doing this for me. Iâm being given a chance for a leadership position, and I want it. I believe Iâd get the same, at some point, otherwise, but this could be mine now.
âAnd why now?â she added. âWhen I ask myself, it seems like fate. And Iâve never really believed in that. Why does this opportunity drop down after Iâve needed to spend weeks back home? Weeks when Iâve started to realize how much I miss it here. I had to leave and make something, be something, on my own before I could come back.â
As simple, sheâd realized, and as complex as that.
âNow Iâve come back. I want to stay, for me. I want that chevron, for me. I want to serve under someone like Travis, for me. I want to be close to my family again, for me. And I want to be here, for you.â
âAm I allowed to tell you how happy this makes me? Makes us?â Elsie added.
âYou can be happy after I pass the exams.â
âYou know you will.â
âI damn well will. The writtenâs right after the first of the year. Iâm on it. But thereâs one more thing. Iâm going to need my own place.â
âWell, Sloanââ
âMom.â
âNo, no, youâre all grown up, of course you want your own place. I was going to say thereâs no rush. And I am going to ask you to wait until youâre fully recovered, and until youâre sure of what you want.â
âI know what I want, and what I donât. I donât want to live in town. I considered that because Iâve gotten used to it. But thatâs not what I want now. I donât want an apartment, I want a house. It doesnât have to be big and shinyâIâm not ready for anything like that. But a little house where I have some room, some outdoor space, too.â
âRent or buy?â Dean asked, and made her smile.
âEither, but Iâd rather buy something. Iâve been careful financially. I think I could afford a little house. A fixer-upper, since Iâm fairly handy, and more, I happen to know people even more handy who could help me out there. But no rush, Mom. I know I need at least a few more weeks. At least.â
âI might know a place.â
Sloan glanced at her father. âDoes this surprise me? I think, no.â
âItâs a nice little bungalowâneeds some work. Well, a lot of work, butââ
âGood bones?â Sloan commented.
âGood bones. Two bedrooms, what theyâre going to list as a den or home office, two baths. Updates needed. Eat-in kitchen, and that needs updating, too. Wood-burning fireplaceâthough Iâd want that checked out before I lit a fire in it. Itâs about eleven hundred square feet and on a little under a quarter acre.â
âRoom enough in, and that outdoor space.â
âWooded lot,â he continued, âno dock, but with lake access. No porch, no deck, and the back patio needs a complete overhaul. Itâs not on the market yet, but the owner came to see me, so I took a look. Iâve been thinking about making an offer.â
âWhat kind of offer?â
âInvestment property for resort rental and a first-home buyâtwo different things.â Considering, he rubbed his knuckles on his trim beard. âLet me do my own calculations. Anyway, you might want to take a look at it. Itâs closer to townâthe other side of the Parker place, and tucked back some. The drivewayâs rough, so that needs to be dealt with.â
âOkay, Iâll take a look, and if I donât hate it, this is one area Iâm going to put myself in your hands.â She gestured, both palms out. âYouâre the expert.â
âYou take a look,â Elsie agreed, âand if you donât hate it, if itâs what you decide you want, weâll help with the down payment.â
âI donât needââ
âItâs not about what you need,â her mother interrupted. âItâs what weâre going to do. When and if your sister decides to buy a house, weâll do the same. Itâs something weâve always planned for.â
âSay âthank you,ââ her father advised.
It took her a minute, then Sloan reached out a hand to both of her parents. âThank you.â
On the Wednesday before Christmas, Arthur Rigsby checked into a different motel. He switched them up, which Clara thought made him smart.
A cheater, a sinner, but a smart one.
As they had on the two previous Wednesdays, they watched the blonde arrive shortly after. Then, since theyâd have about an hour and a half, they drove to a nearby Burger King for takeout and munched on Whoppers and fries while they waited.
They timed it to pull back in the motel lot beside the Mercedes at that ninety-minute mark.
Ten minutes later, Clara shook her head. âTaking more time here than I like. We may have to wait a week. Butâ¦â
âYou said itâs today, so itâs today. Look, sheâs coming out. See how sheâs fiddling with her earrings. I bet he gave her those in there. Christmas present.â
âI bet youâre right. Now sheâs pulling down the vanity mirror, admiring them. Well, just shame on him. Last present heâll give her.â
It took him nearly another ten to exit. Clara opened the van door, blocking him from the driverâs door.
âOh my goodness, excuse me!â
âThatâs all right.â
She eased that door closed, stepped back and put a hand on the side door.
âSafe travels,â she said. âAnd Merry Christmas.â
Rigsby took one step forward before Sam slipped up behind him and plunged the needle in.
Rigsbyâs eyes went wide, and he made a âGahâ sort of sound. He struggled, but between the two of them they pulled him into the van.
âYou drive, babe. Heâs still fighting it.â
As she got behind the wheel, Rigsby rolled, kicked while Sam tried zip-tying his hands. So Sam pushed him back, punched his face twice until he went limp.
âSorry, Clara, I had to.â
But heâd enjoyed it.