In every way.
She stretched back in her chair, reached her arms up to the ceiling, and stretched.
Done. She was done. Of course, she needed to read and polish it a few times, but her story was told.
She walked to the tiny village, humming under her breath. She stopped in at the newsagent’s. The shop carried a couple of international papers, always a day or two late, but she limited herself to the Sunday New York Times.
Tramping back across the fields with her paper, a pint of milk, and a loaf of fresh bread, she stopped for a moment and took a slow, luxurious turn. It took no imagination at all to picture this as it had been a hundred years ago, two, three hundred years. Block out the cars and trucks and the telephone poles, and the scenery would have looked almost precisely the same. Sun glinted off the fields while sheep munched quietly, barely bothering to lift their heads as she walked by on the common footpath.
The village at her back was postcard quaint with its old stone houses scattered with thatched roofs. Hart House rose like a fairy tale, and behind the lawns, at the edge of the wooded section, sat her little house. Built from the same pale stone.
It was so peaceful. A perfect place to work. She’d never felt so content. Perhaps it was a perfect place to live. At least, part of the year.
She wouldn’t give up her house on Bainbridge Island. Why should she? And Arthur wouldn’t give up the parsonage. Or the pub. They’d simply enjoy two homes.
She opened the thick oak door and walked in. The fresh flowers she’d bought herself yesterday were a cheerful sight on the kitchen table where she’d written. She opened the French doors to connect herself with the outdoors.
“Still at your murder and mayhem?”
She glanced up to find Arthur walking toward her. She couldn’t have written a better timed entrance.
“No,” she said. “I’m finished.” She reached for the bottle of bordeaux on the counter. “Care to celebrate with me?”
“Yes.” He walked in, looking much less happy than she felt, and kissed her. “Congratulations.”
“Thanks. I know there’s a corkscrew here somewhere.” She opened the cutlery drawer and he reached over her shoulder. “I’ll do it.”
While he opened and poured the wine, she watched him, feeling ridiculously pleased with herself.
He handed her a glass and raised his. “Here’s to my favorite author,” he said.
“And here’s to my favorite villain.”
“You drink to your villains?”
“Well, I have a small secret. Something I’ve been keeping from you. I never, ever write characters who are in any way like people I know. Never ever.”
“I see. Makes good sense, that.”
“Except this time.” She looked up at him, at that strong face, the sharp cheekbones, the blue-gray eyes, and the black hair. He gazed at her in the same magnetic way he’d stared at her that first day. “I saw you and you were the perfect model for my sadistic killer.”
He blinked. “Well, cheers.”
She laughed. Oh, she was so high on this moment she might never come down. “You know what? I always fall in love with my villain.”
“You do?”
She nodded. “Especially this time.”
He put his glass down as though he’d forgotten about it. “What happens to this one? In the end. You said you were going to kill him off. Was it very gruesome?”
She put her own glass down beside Arthur’s and walked up until they were almost touching. “I thought he was going to die. All along, I knew his death. But when I wrote it, I found out I was wrong. He doesn’t die.”
“Don’t tell me the rotten bugger gets away?”
“Oh, no. He gets caught, of course.”
“Does he now? What’s his punishment?”
She kissed the man she loved more than all her villains combined. “He gets the perfect punishment.”
“And that is?”
“A life sentence.”
He reached out and traced her jaw with one finger, his blue-gray eyes glinting at her. “To be served where?”
“Does it matter?”
Maxine was right, she realized, gazing at Arthur-he did glow. Or maybe it was her own glow of happiness reflecting back. He smiled at her. “Not particularly, no.”
He moved, letting his finger trail lazily down the side of her neck to follow the curve of her collarbone. She shivered as ribbons of pleasure played over her skin. They were going to make love, right here in the kitchen, maybe on that sturdy table where she’d typed her novel, always with his dark, sexy image before her.
“Come with me to Seattle?”
He pulled her to him and kissed her, a long, perfect kiss. “I thought you’d never ask.”
UNION JACK
Chapter One
From: Maxinelarraby@Harthouse.org
Subject: I know you’re there!
Message: Hey, sis. We’re worried about you. Mom says she hasn’t seen you for weeks, and you sound weird on the phone. Yeah, yeah, I know, but nobody else has seen you either. Possibilities. 1. You’re seeing a hot new guy and you haven’t crawled out of bed in weeks. 2. You’re depressed. Which makes perfect sense given that your divorce became final and they closed the restaurant a couple of weeks later. Pissy timing, huh?
Let me know what’s up. Miss you.
TTFN, Max
To: Maxinelarraby@harthouse.org
From: chefgal@hotmail.com
Subject: I’m fine
Rachel Larraby paused and looked at her subject line. Should she add an exclamation mark after fine? Or would snarky punctuation make her older sister suspicious?
She looked down at herself and was glad she’d never invested in one of those Internet cameras. She really didn’t want designer Max to see her like this. Her comfy sweatshirt was a pretty accurate food diary for the last couple of weeks. There was a Thai noodle, desiccated and lonely, rather like Rachel herself; there was the tea stain from where she’d fallen asleep watching an I Love Lucy episode. There a blob of chocolate from where she’d laughed so hard at a Seinfeld rerun she’d dropped the chocolate out of her mouth. Not one of her finest moments. Day-Glo orange Doritos dust, butter smears from popcorn, an unidentifiable foodstuff she suspected had once adorned a pizza. The old UCLA sweatpants that had been Cal ’s weren’t in much better shape. Still, she was showering daily and brushing her teeth regularly. She even took her vitamins every morning. She was fine.
Mostly.
Don’t worry about me. I’m catching up on my sleep and hanging out at the beach.
How’s England?
Luv, Rach
Maxine Larraby cried out, “I knew it!”
“Knew what, darling?” George asked, coming up behind her at the computer and kissing the nape of her neck.
“My sister is a mental case.”
“Every family has one. My uncle Cecil takes my aunt Winifred everywhere with him.”
Maxine stared at the screen as though she could see all the way to L.A. and her sister. “So?”
“She was cremated. In 1966. He has a lovely box for her-Georgian silver, I believe, with her favorite poem engraved on the lid. A Shakespearean sonnet, but it’s a bit disconcerting to people who aren’t used to the pair of them, such as the staff of restaurants. And the family. I once sat on poor old Aunt Winnie at Christmas dinner. Caused a fearful row and put me right off my roast goose.”
“Rachel’s not that kind of mental case. She’s depressed.”
George read over her shoulder, leaning in so she smelled his skin and felt the warmth of him. “She says she’s hanging out at the beach. That doesn’t sound very depressed.”
“Rachel hates the beach and she gets hives if she sits in the sun. That’s what worries me the most. If she had to lie, couldn’t she make up something I might believe? No,” she said, rising. “This has gone on long enough. That e-mail is a cry for help. We’ll have to stage an intervention.”