Two and a half years later A white Jeep roars into my yard, barely missing my mailbox; stalls for a second; and then mows through my flower bed. Azaleas, monkey grass, pampas grass, all driven over, but when it takes out my yellow rosebushâthe one Mama planted for my first birthdayâIâm ready to murder someone.
I stamp my foot and pull out my earbuds in the middle of âUnchained Melody,â by the Righteous Brothers.
Sparky hisses, his back arching.
There. Iâm justified in my anger. H e only hisses at bad shit.
Standing on the sidewalk under the glow of a streetlight, I lift Sparky up and rub his head, his blue cat eyes still glaring at the car as it backs out of my yard (without acknowledging us), then jumps the curb and lands on the road. The vehicle zooms through the stop sign at the end of our street, then takes a harrowing right turn onto the highway.
âThank God we werenât in her way,â I mutter, and by her, I mean the girl who burst from the house next door shouting âItâs over! I mean it this time!â and then threw herself into the Jeep that nearly killed us.
Someone new is living in the old Locke house.
And if this Jeep is indicative of their company, weâre going to have problems.
Usually, Iâd go meet them, âdo the pretty,â as Mama used to say, but lifeâs been hectic since her funeral. In the few weeks Iâve been here, Iâve dealt with the bank and lawyers, gotten my sister enrolled in high school, and arranged for my things to be shipped to Texas. My clothes still havenât arrived. All I have is what I stuffed in my duffel in my apartment in New York when I heard Mama had passed from an aneurysm.
A swell of roaring grief threatens as I twirl Sparkyâs purple diamanté leash through my fingers. Sheâs gone at fifty-five. Too young. My mama. Fighting back the tears, I glare at the majestic two-story white house next door. Stately with Doric-style columns and a fresh coat of white paint on the bricks, the focal point is a big front porch, bookended by fancy wicker swings. The Party People have put a lot of work into the house since Iâve been gone.
My childhood home, by contrast, is a small two-story bungalow in need of multiple repairs. The worst part is I donât have the money to keep up with the payments. I made Septemberâs, and I have enough until the end of the year, but I donât know about the future. Mama had savings, but most of it is earmarked for my sisterâs college. She did have a small life insurance policy, but it hardly counts, and it may take a few months to trickle in. For the hundredth time . . . what am I going to do? A desperate feeling curls in my stomach. Money doesnât buy happiness, but a little right now would go a long way to easing my stress.
Anger burning bright at the Jeep, I turn my attention back to the party house. Cars are parked two by two in the long drive. Adding more insult to injury, one of them, a white M ustang, has partially pulled up behind my driveway, blocking Mamaâs (my) older-model pink C adillac.
The front door opens next door, and several women spill out, holding drinks as they line dance in the yard to â
Cotton-Eyed Joe.â The girls appear youngish . . . hang on . . . is this a college party? Blue Belle is a small town, but we do have a community college on the west side of town.
My ire rises. I need to establish some rules with my new neighbor. One, invite all the neighbors when you throw a party in the cove (itâs called southern hospitality); two, control your parking situation; three, play decent music; four, donât let your party go past ten on a Saturday night.
I march toward the houseâ
âNova! Wait a minute,â calls a voice from across the street, and I stop and turn. Illuminated by her porch light, M rs. Meadows stands on her steps, somehow appearing regal in her floor-length blue robe, fuzzy house shoes, and S tetson. I n her sixties, sheâs tiny, about five feet, with shoulder-length gray-blonde hair. Donât let the short stature fool you. Sheâs a powerhouse.
She moves off her stoop and hurries over to me, squinting at Sparky in my arms. âThat thing looks like a rat. Oh goodness, why is the skin wrinkly? It looks evil, dear. I like a calico cat, the ones with fluffy tails, but I prefer dogs. Iâve got a little Pomeranian. His name is Bill, after my late husband. He adores hot dogs. I shouldnât give them to him, but when he begs, I canât resist.â
Iâd forgotten how much she loves to talk.
âAh. Great. Sparky here is just hairlessâbut not harmless,â I say, then point to the flower bed. âOne of my neighborâs partiers took out my special rosebush and my sisterâs. I canât let that pass. Arenât you on the HOA for our neighborhood? These cars are everywhere on the street. That has to be against the rules.â
âYes, Iâm on the HOA, the school board, the beautification committee, and the booster club,â she says proudly, then sighs as she checks out my flower bed. âIâm sure it was just an accident. Iâm sorry about Darla, dear. It was so sudden. I came to the visitation and the funeral. She was a good woman.â She winces. âAnd of course, her jelly was amazing.â
I bite back a smile. Mrs. Meadows and Mama were friends but rivals when it came to food. Mama had taken the blue ribbon at the county fair for her jelly for the past five years: her strawberry versus Mrs. Meadowsâs apple.
âThank you for the casseroles you brought over,â I say. Which reminds me to add thank-you notes to my list of things to do, right next to get a job. With few employment opportunities here, I picture myself driving around town with a P izza Hut thingy on my car. Worse, I imagine myself delivering to the houses of people I went to high school with. Nova M organ, homecoming queen, delivering a deep dish right to your front door.
âYou plan on staying in town?â she asks.
âThis is Sabineâs home, and Iâm her guardian now.â Me. In charge of a fifteen-year-old.
She tips her Stetson up. âWell, at least you didnât have to relocate a family down here. Bless, you never did get married, did you? Of course, everyone thought youâd marry Andrew, but . . .â
I wince at my exâs name and hear the southern subtext. I havenât snared a man; therefore Iâm a failure.
âNope. On the shelf at twenty-nine. Now . . . if youâll excuse me, I need to talk to my neighbor.â
She takes my arm gently, being careful around Sparky. âDear. Just let Coach have his party. We beat Wilson High last nightâand itâs his birthday. The boosters are throwing him a small thing. You know how important football is to Blue Belle.â
I physically recoil. A Texas high school football coach is living next door!
Sheâs oblivious to my horror. âWe made it to the state finals last year with him. He used to play pro ballââ
I glare at my decimated bushes. âI donât care who he is.â
âI understand youâre upset, but let the flower beds go for a moment.â She gives me a reassuring smile, one Iâm sure sheâs given many Blue Belle citizens who need managing. She herds me away from the party house. âHow are you? Really? I heard that quarterback from the N ew England Cougars broke your heart for a supermodel. Just terrible. What was his name?â
Iâd bet a hundred bucks she knows his name, stats, and salary.
My chest tightens. âZane, and she was a flight attendant.â
We dated for six months; then things started to fizzle. He was in the middle of football season, and I was working two jobs. It felt like a lull, but I assumed once we werenât so busy, it would fire back up.
I didnât know he was looking for greener pastures.
We should explore options but still see each other, Nova.
In other words, Iâll keep you on the line while I bang this hot, younger girl I met on a D elta flight.
A long sigh comes from me.
Since high school, athletes were my kryptonite, but Z ane was the last straw.
Iâm done now. No more jocks. No more sexy muscles and cocksure attitudes. I swear to God and Jesus and the Holy Ghost.
âAh,â she murmurs. âI see. So youâll be looking for a man. Maybe you should meet Coach, but donât go over there angry. Let me see if I can get him to the W affle House for breakfast tomorrow, and you can drop by, yes?â
I come to a stop. âI donât need a man, Mrs. Meadows. I have a life. A career.â This is a lie. I have nothing. The Manhattan preschool where I worked has already hired someone. The Baller has tons of servers who wanted my position.
âCall me L ois. Remember that time I caught you stealing apples from my prize tree in the backyard? The green ones I use to make my jelly?â
âYes.â Iâd taken them several times before, successfully, but that day I fell out of the tree and skinned my knees. She scolded me for half an hour, pacing around her backyard and waving her hands as she warned me about the perils of a life of crime. I was ten.
âLordy, you were a handful growing up. I never told your mama about any of it.â
âThank you?â
She nods sagely. âAll Iâm saying is I know when to preserve the peace. Instead of telling your mama about you stealing my apples, I gave you a good talking-to, and that was the end of it.â
âI see. You want me to preserve the peace. With the coach?â
âYes. Iâll chat with him for you.â She leans in. âLook, things are precarious right now. Iâm worried he might not stay in town, so we got a special committee together to find him a nice local gal to settle down withââ She lets out a squeak as I flip around and march toward his house. âWait!â
I walk toward my neighborâs. âI get it, Mrs. Meadows; you donât want me to rock the boat, but Iâm not going to . . .â I inhale a breath as I search the sky for words. âRuin anything for the team or you. I just want to talk to him.â And get a look at him because sheâs made me wonder just who the heck this man is. A person needs to know their enemies, and yes, right now, heâs the bad guy whoâs having a party, and I must assess. âPlus, thereâs a vehicle parked behind mine, and I want ice cream.â Just now, I decided it.
âTake my car.â
I halt and gape at her. âYouâre serious, arenât you? He doesnât get a pass just because heâs on a pedestal.â
She reaches for her inhaler in her pocket and takes a shot. âI knew you were going to be trouble.â
âTrouble is tattooed on my ass,â I reply.
She follows me down the sidewalk to his house, her fluffy house shoes keeping step with my C onverses. âMy grandson, M ilo, plays wide receiver. Heâs really good, Nova, and weâre hoping he can get a football scholarship to U T next year. I need Coach to stay in town if itâs going to happen.â
âThatâs wonderful that Miloâs talented,â I say gently as I recall a rambunctious blond-haired little boy who used to play with my sister. âI can understand that you want the best for him. Youâre a good grandma.â
âRight. Letâs me and you go back to my house. I have this essential oil, lavender, that I put in a diffuser. It gives you calm, and Iâll fire it up; then we can have some tea and cookies. I can get out my apple jelly and give you a jar toââ
âThat sounds fabulous. Some other time.â I march up the newly redone steps of the house to the porch, taking in the mounted ceiling speakers where the music is blasting. Nice.
I dodge around the dancing women. She follows, panting slightly.
Points to Mrs. Meadows for determination, but my roses demand recompense. Seeing them mowed down is a metaphor for my entire life, and now that I know heâs an exâfootball player, I find it even more despicable.
Through the glass door I have a view of the kitchen that leads to an open area, a huge den where several women are watching a football game on the big screen. Some lounge on the kitchen stools, chatting as they sip drinks and munch on the appetizers on the countertop.
Not a man in sight.
Frowning, I pause, realization dawning. âYou mentioned a special committee. Did they invite these women?â
âYes, I planned it. Iâm head of the B lue Belle Booster Club. In hindsight, I should have invited you. My mistake. Iâll be sure youâre at the next football event.â
âDonât bother. Youâre trying to get him married?â
She lets out a gusty breath. âHow many times do I have to say it? We want him to stay, Nova. Weâve introduced him to some of the prettiest girls in town. M elinda Tyler is here. She was Miss Texas. Very good family. She might be the one.â
Ohh, a beauty queen. Only the best for a coach.
I huff out a rueful laugh. Iâm not surprised at all by the machinations. When I was in high school, the Blue Belle Booster Club bought a new E scalade for our coach after he won state. Once they rented a $2,000-a-month billboard in H uddersfieldâour biggest rivalâwith just 34â10 on it and kept it up all year. Everyone knew what it was. The score from the game where weâd decimated them. The boostersâand their special committeesâwill do whatever it takes to keep the team happy. Need a million-dollar jumbotron? Done. Want a college-size stadium? You got it. Want a wife in a small town? Weâll find her.
âUnbelievable,â I mutter.
She shrugs. âHe had a woman, but she lives in New York, and you know how those city girls are.â
âIâm a city girl.â
She harrumphs. âNot in your heart, dear. Anyway, sheâs some model and never would have settled down here. She came to some of the games last year and was highfalutin, just plain old pretentious. Thatâs who took out your bush, dear. I saw her peel out of here, and if you let me, I can call a landscaping company to fix them, and Iâll even pay for itââ
âAunt Lois! Great party!â calls one of the girls from the other side of the porch as she swings in the wicker seat. She waves. Round face, brown hair. Pretty. Chewing gum.
âHow old is your niece?â
She bristles. âTwenty.â
âHow old is he?â
âThirty-two today. He likes them young.â
My teeth grit. âWell. I canât wait to meet this fine, fine man.â
I murmur sweet words in Sparkyâs ear and set him down on the porch. I adore my cat, the only male whoâs never let me down, but heâs not a people person per se, which is why I keep a firm grasp on his leash.
Straightening my shoulders, I open the door, step into the kitchen, and scan the room.
Eventually the women take notice a few at a time and turn to look. They are all younger than me and look fabulous: cute shorts and skirts, low-cut slinky tops, hair long and styled. I donât recognize a soul. Most of my high school friends have moved on to bigger cities, or Iâve lost touch with them. Part of me wilts as I take in the fashionable crewâthen I shove it aside. Not here to impress anyone.
One of them, a leggy redhead in a shimmery green pantsuit with a belted tie, arches a carefully manicured brow at me as she sips on a martini. Thereâs a small diamond headband on her head. Hello, Miss Texas.
She rises from her seat in the den, as graceful as a swan, and glides toward us in that way that beautiful women have when theyâve had classes in posture. I had those same classes.
She gives a perfect smile to Mrs. Meadows, then takes me in. âHi there. Who are you?â She says it like Iâm a five-year-old and lost.
Iâm wearing gray joggers with a hole in one leg and a wrinkled J ohnny Cash shirt, and my hair is scraped up in a messy bun. Iâm desperately in need of highlights. Not a stitch of makeup.
You wouldnât believe it now, but a long time ago, I was a beauty queen. The memories of those days prick at my heart, and I shove them down and give her my sweet, sweet smile. I add a little extra Texas to my voice as I run a sweeping gaze over the ladies. âHey, yâall.â
âHey . . . ,â comes from a few as they size me up.
Yes, an interloper is here. Someone not in fashion and considered elderly.
âCome on, Sparky.â He prances ahead of me as I walk to the island and grab one of the cold sodas that are resting in a cute little tin tubâa woman did that. I twist off the top, then take a long drink as I glance at the myriad of food, streamers, and balloons, all in maroon, gold, and navy, Bobcat colors. H B , C is written on a large banner thatâs been draped from the ceiling over the fireplace in the den. Whoever this guy is, theyâre laying it on thick, and if heâs winning games, well then, heâs their new favorite person.
I note the stainless steel appliances and the large white marble island. The new cabinetry. The ash-colored hardwood floors, the rustic wood-and-metal pendant lights. Itâs all very urban farmhouse. The renovations make me yearn to fix Mamaâsâmyâhouse. That knot of responsibility tightens again in my chest. One day at a time, Nova.
âAnd you are . . . ?â comes from the redhead, her voice inquisitive. Sheâs followed me.
âIâm Nova Morgan.â I grab a chip, swoop it through what looks like homemade guac, and chew. âGreat party. âCotton-Eyed Joeâ on repeat is just fantastic, but Iâd love it if you turned it down. I have a sister next door whoâs trying to sleep.â Lie. Sheâs not even close to going to bed.
Someone moves in the room, and the music is turned down considerably. My bets are on Mrs. Meadows. I shake my head. She really is something, trailing me to the party in her nightclothes.
âOh. Iâve heard of you,â Miss Texas says, a light dawning in her green eyes. âYou went to school with my sister.â
I squint at the glossy red hair. The Tyler family had four girls, all gingers with M names. It dawns on me. âYouâre Marlaâs little sister?â
Miss Texas sniffs. âYes. She lives in D allas now. She married Brad.â
I wince. I might have kissed Brad, Marlaâs long-term boyfriend, in tenth grade, and I might have made sure Marla knew about it . . .
âGood for them. Whereâs Coach?â I ask the room.
âThat would be me,â a deep voice says from behind me. Thereâs arrogance mixed with exasperation in his voice, and my lips tighten. Metaphorically, I pull up my big-girl panties and mutter, Bring it on, jock-ass.
Steeling myself, I turn to face him, seeing the french doors from the den have been opened, which is probably where he came from. The back entrance leads out to a glittering blue kidney-shaped pool, lit by underwater lights. Thereâs even a waterfall. Modern, sleek-looking chaise lounges dot the area. Girls in bikinis walk around. A few men. Finally.
I focus on him, gasp, and then shut my eyes, hoping heâll disappear. But when I open them, heâs still there.
No, this canât be right . . .
But the logical side of my mind says, Fate just bitch-slapped you.
I bite back a groan.
Holy shit.
Ronan Smith.
The worst, most horrible, canât-even-think-about-it-without-cringing one-night stand ever.