Seaside Avenue (Cedar Cove #7)(26)



“Good evening, James.” The minute she’d slipped inside the vehicle, she took off her shoes and rubbed her aching feet. She’d had a lot of clients and hardly any breaks.

“Did you have a good day?” he asked in a solicitous voice.

“Yes, thanks.” Generally James wasn’t very talkative. For some reason he’d been more sociable the last few days.

“I thought it was commendable of you to invite your family for dinner last weekend.”

Well, it’d been an experience, that was for sure. “It’s nice of you to say so.”

He dutifully closed the car door before walking around to the driver’s side. About halfway home, Teri noticed that James kept glancing at her in the rearview mirror.

“Is something the matter, James?” she asked, finding his behavior curious.

“Wrong, miss?”

“You keep looking at me.”

“Sorry, miss, it’s just that you and your sister don’t resemble each other at all.”

Teri snickered. “She’s my half sister and she got the beauty while I got the brains.” Teri wasn’t convinced that was an accurate assessment, but it sounded good.

“She is beautiful,” he murmured.

Surprised at the comment, Teri studied him for a moment. It had never occurred to her that James might be romantically interested in her sister. But why not? And why wouldn’t Christie be interested in him? He was single, employed and attractive in his own way. A considerable improvement over the men she usually chose.

“James,” she said. “Don’t take me directly home this evening.”

“I beg your pardon, Miss Teri?”

“Take me to my sister’s house.”

“She lives in an apartment.”

“Okay, her apartment then.” Teri hadn’t been in contact with Christie in quite some time and certainly hadn’t visited her current home.

“Should I let Bobby know?”

“No, we’ll only be a few minutes.”

James sat up a bit straighter. “Whatever you say, miss.”

“James, call me Teri.”

“Yes, miss.”

The drive took a few minutes, so Teri asked James about her husband. Ever since the threat, he’d hardly left the house. But every day, regular as clockwork, he sat in front of the chessboard. How he could concentrate without men on the board was beyond her, but what did she know?

“How was Bobby’s day?” she asked. Teri was more concerned about her husband than she wanted to let on. He’d become withdrawn lately. The fact that he sent his driver to escort her to and from work told her he was almost paranoid about her safety. He hated it whenever she left his sight. Clearly there was more to this threat than she’d known. Bobby knew, though, and he wasn’t taking any chances. Teri loved her husband; because of that, she wasn’t about to let some goon blackmail him, using her as bait. She needed to find out what was going on and take action.

James didn’t respond to her question right away, which implied far more than anything he might have said.

“He stayed in the house all day, Miss Teri.”

“Do you know why he hasn’t played in any tournaments lately?” she asked, deciding to force the issue.

“No—Teri.” He drove into the parking lot of the apartment building on Beach Road

and turned off the engine. “Your sister’s in the bottom-floor unit, number 102,” he told her.

“Thank you, James.”

He was out of the car and opening her door before Teri had even managed to unfasten her seat belt, then waited by the vehicle while she walked toward her sister’s place. The stretch limo had caught the attention of several residents and half a dozen children came toward James, full of questions.

Christie answered her knock with a soda in her hand. She blinked in astonishment when she saw Teri.

“What are you doing here?” she asked.

Teri shrugged, feeling a bit awkward. “I came by to see how you’re doing.” That was the truth—or part of it. She genuinely wanted to reestablish a relationship with her sister. She also thought that encouraging a relationship with James could benefit them all.

“You care?”

“I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t. I’m inviting you to dinner.”

Christie eyed her suspiciously. “Again? Aren’t you worried that I might hit on your precious Bobby?”

She was and yet she wasn’t. She trusted her husband. Of all the women in the world, he’d chosen to fall in love with her. Bobby Polgar might be many things but fickle he wasn’t, and any fear or jealousy she’d felt had evaporated in the warmth of his love.

Teri grinned. “You can try, but it won’t get you anywhere.”

Christie straightened when she saw James standing outside the car with kids swarming around him in the parking lot.

Teri noticed her sister’s reaction right away. “I’ll send James to pick you up tomorrow. Shall we say six?”

“I guess that’d be all right.” Christie acted as though she was doing Teri a favor.

James held the car door for Teri when she returned. “I hope you won’t mind picking up my sister for dinner tomorrow night,” she said.

“Not at all, Miss Teri. It would be my pleasure.”

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