Annie May tilted her head slightly and motioned to her cane. “A man do that to you?”
At first Josie didn’t understand. Then she got it. “No, I wasn’t beat up. I was hit by a truck.”
“It looks bad. The good news is you lived to talk about it. You’re upright and except for buying this old place, I’m guessing you’re smart enough. So you were lucky.”
Josie wanted to protest. She felt anything but lucky. Yet in her own outspoken fashion, Annie May had zeroed in on the truth. Josie could have died in the accident. She could have lost her leg completely or be left paralyzed or facially disfigured. In the scheme of things, she’d actually gotten off pretty light.
Annie May glanced at her three helpers. “Bring in the supplies. We’re going to start with the kitchen today.”
“Yes, ma’am,” they said in unison and left the room.
“Pretty, but not the brightest bulbs in the chandelier,” Annie May said as the men walked out of the house. “Still, hiring the good-looking ones is one of the few compensations of my old age. Del accuses me of being a sexist pig, and he’s right.” She grinned. “So, let’s talk about your kitchen. I’ve seen the plans. They’re not too bad. I’d suggest a couple of changes, though. Seeing we’re going to be running pipes anyway, why not put a deep sink in the island?”
She walked to the diagram pinned to the wall and pointed. “There’s plenty of room and it would give you a second work station. Wouldn’t cost very much. If you keep the house, you’ll find it handy. If you sell, the buyers will appreciate it.”
She walked back to the kitchen and shared a couple of other ideas. Josie listened, torn between appreciating her suggestions and wishing she could talk to Annie May. After all that had happened, she really needed a friend.
The hunks returned, and Annie May set them to work, measuring the kitchen and marking where the pipes would run. When they were busy, Annie May motioned to the parlor.
“Let’s go in there. I want to show you something.”
Josie followed her, wondering if the older woman was going to suggest a wet bar. Josie didn’t think it would fit with the house. But what other plumbing issue could there be in the front room?
Annie May waited until Josie had stepped into the empty room, then she closed the French door, cutting off the construction sounds from the rest of the house. She turned to Josie, planted her hands on her hips again and spoke.
“What the hell do you think you’re doing, Josie Scott? Frankly this is a piss-poor excuse for a disguise. You really think you’re fooling anyone?”
Chapter Seven
Josie couldn’t believe it. “You know who I am?”
Annie May snorted in disgust. “Of course. I’m not a fool.” The older woman peered at her face. “Okay, there are a few changes. Your cheeks and chin, but your eyes are the same. Your voice is a little lower, but you talk the same.”
Relief flooded Josie. She took a step toward her friend. “I’ve missed you so much.”
“Me, too, child.”
Annie May enfolded her in her arms. Although the other woman was much shorter, she was strong and familiar, and Josie felt as if she’d come home for the first time in years.
“All right,” Annie May said briskly a few seconds later when she released Josie. “I want to hear about everything that happened to you.” She eyed her legs, then the cane. “You probably need to sit down. How about the front porch? We should have some privacy there.”
“Sounds perfect.”
They walked outside. The morning was sunny and warm. Josie could hear the sound of people working in the house, but they were all in the rear rooms and wouldn’t be likely to overhear the conversation.
“So tell me what happened,” Annie May said when they were seated on the top step. “Were you really hit by a truck?”
“That sucker slammed right into me,” Josie admitted. “I was driving home for lunch, and suddenly it was there. The brakes failed and the driver lost control.”
Annie May frowned. “It looks like it was bad.”
“It was. I had to have a lot of surgeries on both my face and my legs. Especially the left one.” She touched her face. “I have a lot of plastic in me now.”
“Then stay away from open flames or you’ll melt.” Her old friend studied her. “What took you so long?”
Josie knew what she meant. Why had she taken so long to return to Beachside Bay. To Del. The question made her a little uncomfortable because it forced a confession she wasn’t sure she was ready to make. She glanced down at her lap, then looked at Annie May.
“For the first couple of years, I didn’t know I wanted to come back. I was living in Los Angeles, making my life there. I had a good job, friends. Everything seemed fine.”
Although if she were being completely honest she would have to admit that fine made things sound better than they’d been. She’d suffered bouts of loneliness that she couldn’t explain, times when nothing in her life felt right.
“After the accident, I had a lot of recovering to do. I spent months either in the hospital or in a physical rehabilitation center. It’s only in the past month that I’ve been able to get around with a cane. Before that I needed a wheelchair or a walker. I couldn’t come back like that.” She shrugged. “So I waited until I could at least be upright.”
Annie May patted her hand. “Makes sense, which is more than I can say for you using a different name. What were you thinking?”
Josie flushed. “I wasn’t,” she admitted. “I never thought Del wouldn’t recognize me. I came back to talk to him and get some things settled. But when he saw me he didn’t know who I was. In that second I realized I could get to know him in a whole different way without the past coming between us. It wasn’t a conscious plan-it just happened.”
Annie May didn’t look convinced. “You’re just scared he’s still mad at all the stunts you pulled.”
“Maybe. I would like closure on our marriage. If Del knew who I was, he wouldn’t talk to me.”
“Divorce isn’t closure enough?”
“I guess not.” She decided to tell the truth. “After the accident I kept thinking about Del. That’s why I decided to come back.”
“It’s hard to forget the one who got away.”
Josie stiffened. “Del didn’t get away. I left him.”
But the words didn’t sound as sure as she wanted them to. She was beginning to question her reasons for coming back. After all, what did closure really mean? She knew that Del didn’t have a very high opinion of her and that he was well over her. If she’d been wondering if he had any lingering feelings for her, she’d received her answer. Shouldn’t that be enough?
So why hadn’t she told him the truth, and why did she have the feeling she was waiting for something else?
“Although I can’t help chuckling at the thought of Del not recognizing you,” Annie May said, “you’re going to have to tell him the truth.”
“I know. And I will.”
“It’s already been a couple of weeks. What are you waiting for? A major holiday?”
“I don’t know. I just…” She bit her lower lip. “You were right before. I’m not ready to deal with him being angry. And he’s not going to take kindly to being fooled.”
“You do know that the longer this goes on the madder he’s going to be.”
“Yeah, I know. I still want some more time before I tell him.”
Her friend’s gaze narrowed. “Which means you want me to keep quiet.” Annie May didn’t look enthused at the prospect.
“Just for a little while. Do you mind?”
Annie May sighed. “I guess in a way it’s his own fault for not being able to see the truth for himself. Which is what I’ll tell him when he starts in on me. All right. I won’t say anything. But don’t take too long. You’re only digging yourself a deeper pit with this one.”
“Thanks for understanding,” Josie said, giving her a hug.
Annie May held her close. “Regardless of the reason, it’s good to have you back, child. The world was a little less bright with you gone.”
Josie felt an unfamiliar tightness in her chest. “I’m sorry for not staying in touch,” she said softly, releasing her friend and looking into her wise, brown eyes. “I should have. I guess I was disconnecting myself from everything and everyone who reminded me of Del.”
“I understand and I forgive you. But don’t do it again.”
“Yes, ma’am,” she said meekly.
Annie May touched her cheek. “You look tired. Are you getting enough rest?”
Josie thought about her restless nights. “Not really.”
“Then you march yourself upstairs and take a load off. You’re not going to get healthy if you’re too exhausted to take care of yourself. And what about seeing a doctor? Do you need to?”
No one mothered quite like Annie May, Josie thought happily as the older woman bossed her all the way up to her bedroom. She enjoyed being fussed over and instructed to not come down until she’d had at least a two-hour nap.
When Annie May had lowered the blinds and pulled up the covers, she gave Josie a kiss on the forehead before leaving and closing the door behind her. Josie lay alone in her room and sighed with contentment. Things might not be all back to normal in her world, but having Annie May back in her life was a step in the right direction.
She rolled onto her side and closed her eyes. As she did, she felt herself straining to hear a familiar voice. She was listening for Del’s arrival at the house. He stopped by every day, and she didn’t want to miss his visit.
Josie sat upright in bed and pressed the covers to her chest. Her heart thundered loudly enough to drown out the sounds of construction. Realization slammed into her, just like that truck had a year before, and the results were nearly as devastating.
She wasn’t back in Beachside Bay because she wanted closure. She was back because of Del. Because deep down in her soul she’d been hoping and praying that he still cared for her. Her secret fantasy had been that he would take one look at her, open his arms and say, “Oh, honey, I’ve been waiting for you to come back to me. I never stopped loving you and I never will.”
Del’s brutally honest assessment of their marriage and her part in its failure had upset her not only because he’d hurt her feelings but because hearing it had caused the death of a dream. She could no longer secretly harbor a reconciliation fantasy.
She sank back onto her pillow and wondered what she was supposed to do now. Del wasn’t still in love with her. He’d moved on with his life. Shouldn’t she do the same? Put him in the past and get started with her future?
Something soft brushed against her cheek. Josie stirred, then rolled onto her back and slowly opened her eyes. Afternoon sunlight made her blink slightly as she looked up at the man bending over her. His features came into focus, making her smile.
“Del,” she murmured.
The sight was so familiar, she felt immediately at peace. Her questions and worries faded until they were little more than a dream. Is that what had happened? Had she just experienced a very vivid, very strange dream?
“Hey, sleepy-head. How are you feeling?”
He sounded warm and concerned, she thought happily. It all had been a dream. Some hideous misfiring in her brain had made her imagine a divorce, an accident and-
He held out a light-pink-and-cream rose. “I know. It’s dumb. I’ll bet guys do this to you all the time. But I couldn’t resist.”
She frowned as she took the perfect flower. “Guys do what?”
“Bring you roses. A rose for Rose. I’m sincere, but not especially imaginative.”
A rose for Rose? She blinked and realized the room around her was unfamiliar. She started to sit up but a sharp pain in her leg nearly made her cry out. And then she did want to cry, but not from physical pain. Memories returned and with them the knowledge of her current situation. The divorce and the accident hadn’t been a dream. They were very real. She wasn’t still married to Del and he didn’t know who she was.
Disappointment filled her. She ignored it, along with the pain in her leg, and forced herself to sit up.
“How long was I asleep?” she asked.
“According to Annie May, who I saw as I came in a bit ago, about three hours. It’s nearly two.” He settled on the mattress, his hip bumping hers. “I guess you needed the rest.”
“Three hours? I can’t believe it. I never sleep during the day.”
“I won’t tell anyone. Now fluff up those pillows behind you and prepare to be fed. Annie May was concerned that you might not eat lunch so she made me get you a sandwich. I’m going to sit here and watch you eat it. Pretty cool, huh?”
She glanced from him to the wrapped deli sandwich, two cans of soda and several wrapped cookies sitting on her nightstand. “You didn’t have to do that.”
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