Bewitching You(37)
“Well, that’s good.” Gray leaned over and kissed her. “Because it’s mine.”
“Nuh uh. Are you kidding?”
“I kid you not.” Gray revved the engine and left Tom in a cloud of dust.
~ * ~
Penny lay in Sofia’s bed, glad to be home from the hospital. It’d been a scare, but everything turned out fine. Herbert had given them a ride home and helped Penny up the stairs. Of course, she didn’t need the help. She was finer than fine china. Not an ache in her old body. Nevertheless, it didn’t hurt to give the man a reason to stick around the house for a bit.
Just in case she had a relapse.
From the thoughts vibrating from Herbert’s mind, he was glad to spend more time with Laura.
With a smile, Herbert said, “Call us if you need anything.” Then he closed the door behind him.
Hmm. Daughter down, still working on the granddaughter.
“You feeling better?” Hayes’s voice asked from the corner of the room, and then the side of the bed indented.
“Much better. Thank you.” Penny wondered why she couldn’t read his mind this time. Could it be because he was on his way to crossing over?
“I wanted to thank you, actually, for helping me. Your spell worked out great.”
“That’s wonderful. So they’ve said they love each other?”
“Yes, and I think I’ll be able to move on now, because Gray seems very happy.”
Yes, Hayes was leaving. Penny’s heart went out to him. He was such a nice boy. “Wonderful. What of Rachel? Did she find true love?”
“She’s well on the way. You might like to know she has a gift like your daughter does. She can see me and touch me. She’s even called me, buy I don’t think she knows this.”
“Interesting. I wonder if I know her mother or grandmother. Gifts run in the family, you know.”
~ * ~
Rachel drove up to the Spencer Estate, as her mother liked to call it. Really, the residence was an immaculate museum, not an appropriate place for a child to grow up. Somehow, Rachel and her sister had managed without breaking too many things.
She felt refreshed since Hayes’s last visit. The thought that she, Rachel Spencer, had the potential to do great things had given her a boost of confidence. A small one, but still. It was enough for her to shrug off the idea of dying and concentrate on living, as he’d told her to do. She wanted to make him proud.
Besides, once she’d calmed down she realized taking her life wasn’t the answer. The very idea had been ridiculous. Selfish, really, now that she thought it through. Suicide? No, she couldn’t do that to her parents and her sister. Hayes was right. She really did have a lot to live for.
Sighing, she shut down the engine and sat there for a moment. Her parents weren’t home, she knew. She’d called ahead and asked Therese, the housekeeper, when they’d be back. Therese had said Dad was at work until late, of course, and Mom was out running errands for the wedding.
The wedding had turned into more of a hobby for her mother than anything else. Something she could talk about with her friends at the country club.
Still, Rachel felt obligated to pay back every penny her parents had put into the ceremony. She grabbed the envelope on the seat next to her and made her way across the lush green lawn to the front door.
She rang the doorbell and Therese answered right away. Her silver hair was up in a loose bun and she smelled like Pine Sol, as usual. “Rachel,” she said, as though it were a surprise. “What are you doing here? Your parents aren’t home.” The woman who used to push her on the swings and give her homemade shortbread cookies after school was getting up there in age. It seemed her mind was slipping as well.
“I know, Therese. I just talked to you.”
“Oh, that’s right. What do you need, my dear?”
“I need a huge favor, actually.” Rachel handed Therese the envelope. “That’s a letter for my mother, but I was wondering if you could wait to give it to her until after tomorrow.”
Rachel wanted to shrink back into her shell for being such a coward. This wasn’t exactly how she should be beginning her new life—by not standing up to her mother in person. But sometimes a girl had to start at the bottom to work her way up. That was her excuse, and she was sticking to it.
Therese flipped the envelope back and forth, as if she’d figure out what was inside somehow.
Rachel didn’t see any harm in her knowing.
“It’s a letter to Mother saying I’ll be moving away and a check to pay her back for the wedding. Well, the first installment, anyway.”
“You won’t be marrying Grayson, then?” Therese gazed at Rachel through silver eyelashes.
“No, I won’t.”
She smiled mischievously and stuffed the envelope in her apron. “I’ll do as you asked, my dear.”
“Thank you, Therese.” Rachel gave her a partial hug. “You won’t forget?”
“No, my dear. I’ll be looking forward to it.”
Rachel thanked her again and headed back across the lawn.
“My dear?” Therese called out, and Rachel turned around. “Well done.”
Well done? The woman always was a little puzzling. Rachel simply waved and hurried to her car before her mom showed up.
~ * ~
Just past two o’clock they arrived at the apartment complex.
Sofia followed Gray through the front door, up the stairs, and down a hallway to where Rachel lived. The building was quaint. The carpets were older. The wallpaper was pretty, but flaking here and there. Not at all swanky, like Sofia had expected.
She’d only seen Rachel once, for a short period of time, but Sofia had gotten the impression of wealth and elegance. She remembered Rachel being stylish and utterly gorgeous. Not the type of girl to burn eggs. More like have them prepared and set in front of her on a silver platter.
However, Sofia’s first impressions had been wrong before.
When they reached the door at the very end of the hall, Gray stopped and grabbed Sofia’s shoulders. “This is it.” He looked as if he might pull out a playbook and show her how to make a touchdown. “She’s not like you. She’s a little bit shy.”
“I’m shy.” Sofia was offended.
“No, you’re not, sugar. You’re you, and you’re perfect, but you’re not even close to being shy.”
“Okay.” You learn something new every day.
“What are you trying to get at?”
“I don’t know. I guess I was just prepping you. Shy sometimes comes off as bitchy, especially from someone who looks like her.”
Sofia gave him the evil eye, daring him to say anything else about how his ex-fiancée looked.
Gray let out a breath. “I love you. Okay? I never once said that to her or any other woman, for the matter.”
“No?”
“Never.”
Sofia smiled. “I love you too.”
“Good. Now let’s get this over with so I can take you home and finish what we started in that cornfield.”
“I can’t wait to see your apartment. Is that the place from the dreams?”
“No. I don’t where that is.”
“Weird.”
“I know.” Gray knocked on the door and held Sofia’s hand.
No answer.
“You don’t think the plane was going up today, do you?” he asked.
“It’s possible. But I read the dead guy’s watch. It said twenty after five.”
“And it was a small plane over a mountain range?”
“Yes.”
“That could be anywhere. She might’ve had to take one plane to get to the other.”
“I hadn’t thought of that. Darn it.” Why hadn’t she thought of that? She couldn’t ask for her Crime Solver Superhero award any time soon.
Times like this Sofia wished someone else had this stupid “gift.”
“Don’t worry about it.” Gray squeezed her hand. “We’ll figure it out. Maybe she went to the store or ran some errands. If we get to a phone, I can try her cell.”
Sofia nodded, and they turned in time to see Rachel walking up the hall, rifling through her purse as she dug out keys. She was wearing heels, a black pair of slacks and a yellow silk top.
Elegant.
She glanced up, saw them, and stopped dead.
~ * ~
Rachel had thought he was Hayes for a moment. Only briefly, before noticing the woman beside him. The waitress from that night.
But he was Grayson. Not Hayes.
What was he doing here?
Slowly, Rachel walked the distance between them, cautious about where this would lead. She hadn’t imagined Grayson would ever want to see her again. Not after she’d told him about the night with Hayes.
Did he want to yell at her? Get some closure?