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Excerpt

Excerpt

The Cliff House

DAISY

A man was staring at her in the oral care aisle.

A gorgeous, make-your-ovaries-shiver man.

Though it taxed her considerable powers of restraint, Daisy Davenport McClure did not stare back. She wouldn’t give the stranger the courtesy of knowing he had rattled her.

She couldn’t help feeling discombobulated, though. Dark, wavy-haired, green-eyed strangers did not stare at plain, boring her in the grocery store. Or on the street. Or in a car or on a boat or a train or anywhere else Dr. Seuss could have come up with. She simply wasn’t the sort of woman who drew that kind of male attention—and that was exactly the way she liked it.

Why was he staring? She was almost positive she had checked her reflection in the rearview mirror when she picked up her sis­ter outside their aunt’s house twenty minutes earlier. She didn’t remember seeing anything weird. No stray leaves from the yard work she’d been doing earlier, no smudges on her cheek, no splotched paint, no lettuce in her teeth.

There was no reason she could think of why this man might be looking at her as if she were his salvation.

She almost turned around to head down another aisle but de­spite her certainty that she didn’t have any leafy vegetable resi­due in her teeth, she still really needed toothpaste, which was why she was here. She drew in a breath.

“Excuse me,” she murmured, reaching around him for her favorite brand, the one that promised to whiten, give her fresh breath and vanquish any hint of tartar or gingivitis.

“Sorry,” he said, easing back a little. The man looked pale beneath his tan and she thought she saw white lines around his mouth.

Probably hungover. Maybe he was a tourist who had started his vacation here on the beautifully rugged Northern California coast by doing his own Cape Sanctuary happy hour pub crawl and now was paying the price.

He didn’t really look like a tourist, but one never knew.

She grabbed her toothpaste, tossed it into her basket and stepped away, careful not to make eye contact.

“Sorry. Have we met?” he asked. His voice was an appeal­ing tenor with a slight accent she couldn’t quite place. Austra­lian, maybe? New Zealand? It was as gorgeous as the rest of him. Naturally.

“I’m sure we haven’t,” she answered curtly. While she con­sidered herself eminently forgettable, she certainly would have remembered him.

“Sorry. It’s odd. I feel as if I should know you, somehow.”

“You don’t,” she assured him, then grabbed a box of dental floss she didn’t really need and hurried out of the aisle.

It was the kind of interaction strangers had all the time—banal, meaningless—but somehow the encounter left her rat­tled. He left her rattled. When was the last time she had noticed how long a man’s eyelashes were or the strong angle of his jaw or the little indentation that hinted at a dimple?

Longer than she could remember. That she had focused on those features of a stranger who was probably wasted did not say much for her taste or her wisdom, two things she usually took great pride in.

Edgy and unsettled, she tried to put the guy out of her head and went instead to find her sister so they could finish their shopping and make it back to their aunt’s in time.

As Daisy might have expected, she found Beatriz in the mag­azine aisle, leafing through a tabloid. Her sister might be a twenty-eight-year-old divorced mother, but she was sometimes a teenage girl at heart.

Now, Bea was a woman that someone like the tipsy stranger in the toothpaste aisle would notice, with her dramatic dark curls, the little pierced diamond in her nose, her perfect makeup—though she wore it a little heavy to Daisy’s taste. Everything about Bea drew attention, from her clothes to her hair to her wide, generous smile.

Bea had been boho before boho was a thing, with her own unique style and the voluptuous body and serenely classic fea­tures to pull off whatever look she wanted.

Daisy was only a little envious of her sister’s style. They were half sisters and didn’t look much alike, except for the hazel eyes they had inherited from their mother. Daisy’s stick-straight hair was lighter, a boring chestnut color, and she wore it in a shoulder-length classic bob, using hairbands or pulling it up into an updo to keep it out of her face while she worked.

She looked down at her own respectable three-year-old sum­mer dress and matching sandals. She dressed for comfort and ease, not fashion, fully aware that she often looked like somebody’s boring aunt—which she supposed she was, since Bea’s daughter, Mari, was her niece.

So why had the man with the delectable accent even noticed her, let alone stared at her like he was…hungry?

It didn’t matter. She would likely never see him again. The tourist season on the Northern California coast never really ended but August was particularly crowded. Tourists rarely stayed long. He would probably be gone by Monday.

She didn’t miss the fact that her sister’s arms were empty and there was no cart in sight. “You were supposed to be picking up the birthday cake and the candles!”

She had a sinking suspicion they were going to be late.

“Sorry. I got a little distracted by this.”

She flipped up the magazine so Daisy could see the cover. There, in vivid color, was a picture of one of the most famous men in the country, looking tortured and sexy. Lean, tattooed, dangerous.

Above his photograph read the headline in huge type:

Cruz in seclusion after attack by crazed fan.

In smaller type that ran across his legs, in the tight leather leggings his fans loved, another headline read:

Whereabouts of rocker unknown.

“They’ve done a two-page spread on it.” Bea flipped the magazine around so Daisy could see a scattering of several other pictures, one that looked like a grainy picture of Cruz on an am­bulance stretcher and another of a man whose face she couldn’t see, slumped against a gray wall and holding his hands against his abdomen, a red stain spreading out across his shirt.

She couldn’t read the caption from where she stood. Was that the assailant or the mysterious man who had rushed to the rescue?

The attack on hometown boy Cruz Romero had been the talk of Cape Sanctuary since it happened a week earlier. Peo­ple were talking about it everywhere she went in town. Every single client who came into Daisy’s accounting and financial planning office that week had brought it up to her, asking if she knew anything about where Cruz might be, how badly he had been injured, if it was true that he had been attacked by a jealous husband.

She imagined Bea had it much, much worse.

Cruz was her ex-husband, after all.

“Still no word?”

Bea shook her head. “Not since he called the night of the at­tack to make sure Marisol heard it from him first, before the ru­mors started flying at school, to assure her he only had a scratch. He was rattled and didn’t make much sense.”

“That’s understandable.”

“I guess. After only a couple of minutes he said he had to go, that he was heading to the hospital for a few stitches and to check on the guy who saved his life. He promised he’d call, but it’s been radio silence since then.”

“From Cruz, maybe, but you’ve heard from his people.”

“Yeah, his manager calls every day. Cruz is in seclusion but Lenny assures me he’s fine and he’ll call as soon as he has the chance.”

That was strange enough to Daisy, since Cruz loved con­necting with his fans on social media. She had never had a close brush with death, though, so it wasn’t for her to judge.

“Buy it, if you want. Buy all of them, but I would suggest you don’t let Mari see them yet. She’s still upset about her dad.”

“She’s probably read the online edition on all their websites already, along with everything else she can find,” Bea muttered.

Daisy didn’t doubt it. Her niece was not only tech-savvy and headstrong, but she also adored her father and would want to read as much as possible about the accident that had nearly claimed his life.

“You buy your tabloids, I’ll pick up the candles and the cake. We still have to stop by Melenzana’s for the gnocchi she wanted.”

“Right. Sorry. I’ll take care of the candles and grab a bottle of wine.”

Bea snatched several other magazines with Cruz’s face on them from the racks and tucked them into Daisy’s basket.

Daisy hurried to the bakery. Though located in the grocery store, where one might not expect to find gourmet fare, they still made the best cakes in town.

For months, Stella had been insisting she didn’t want a grand party to mark her fortieth birthday. She said she only wanted their family—the three of them and Bea’s daughter, Mari—together for dinner, in the garden of Three Oaks, Stella’s two-story Craftsman.

Her aunt deserved a party attended by everyone in town. She deserved a freaking ticker-tape parade, as far as Daisy was con­cerned. She knew all the other lost souls Stella had rescued over the years would certainly agree with her.

She couldn’t go against Stella’s wishes, though. She loved her aunt too much. If Stella only wanted her immediate family to celebrate her milestone birthday with her—and the money they would spend donated to her charity instead—Daisy would make sure that was exactly what happened.

She picked up the cake they had ordered weeks ago, threw in some crusty Italian bread and some of the high-quality olive oil the store stocked, then headed for the checkout.

The cashier in her line had worked at the grocery store as long as Daisy had lived in Cape Sanctuary, while the bagger was another of her aunt’s rescues.

“Hey, Daisy,” he said, not quite making eye contact. Tommy Mathews was on the autism spectrum. When he had come to Stella, he had been considered unmanageable and difficult, close to being institutionalized after his mother died. He had lived with Stella for two years, from seventeen to nineteen, and had thrived with her loving care before moving into his own apart­ment with two other young adults who had special needs.

Now twenty, Tommy had a steady job at the supermarket and was taking classes to earn an associate’s degree at the com­munity college in the next town over.

He had come so far because of her aunt, whose circle of in­fluence was legendary.

“Hi, Tommy.” She adored him and all the other young peo­ple who had come in and out of their lives since Stella began opening her home up to other foster children in the years since she and Bea had moved out.

They were the first, she and Bea. Stella’s nieces. Her aunt’s influence started there and rippled out like concentric waves from a tiny pebble thrown into a pond.

The tears suddenly burning behind her eyes took her com­pletely by surprise. She usually kept much better control over her emotions.

“Is that cake for Stella?” Tommy asked. “It’s her birthday to­morrow.”

“I know. It’s a big day, isn’t it?”

“She said she didn’t want presents but I have one for her any­way. I’m going to take it to her tomorrow.”

“Oh. That’s so sweet of you.”

“It’s a plant, the kind she likes with pink flowers. I can get it for a discount from the floral department here. It was only sixteen dollars and twenty-three cents with tax, but don’t tell her, okay?”

“I won’t say a word, Tommy. I know she’ll love it.”

“Yeah. She will,” he said with a confidence that made her smile.

Stella had fostered about twenty other children, some with special needs like Tommy and others just in need of a tempo­rary home for a while, like Cruz Romero.

So many lives, changed for the better because Stella was a generous, kind soul who loved to help people.

Unlike Daisy, who hid away in her house on the cliff, afraid to even smile at men she didn’t know who talked to her in the toothpaste aisle.

The checker had rung up the last item when Bea hurried up, candles and a wine bottle in hand. “Sorry. Took me a while to find them. Hi, Janet. Hi, Tommy! Daisy, put this on your check and we’ll split the total.”

The cashier gave a rather sour smile as she ran the candles and the wine through and added them to Daisy’s total. Her sister would pay her, Daisy knew, minus the cost of the toothpaste. These days Bea was much more careful with her money, though it had taken Daisy several years to convince her the healthy ali­mony and child support she received from Cruz wasn’t exactly a blank check.

Tommy looked happy to see her sister. “Hi, Bea,” he said. “Tomorrow is Stella’s birthday. She’s going to be forty.”

“Isn’t that great?”

“I bought her a present from here, a plant with pink flowers. I get an employee discount.”

“Oh, she’ll love that. Nice job, Tom.”

He beamed, as charmed by Bea as everyone else in the world.

“See you later,” Daisy said, used to being invisible around her more vivacious younger sister.

He gave an almost-smile as he handed her the cake. Bea reached in and grabbed the wine and the bag with the rest of the groceries.

“Bye, Tom,” Bea said. She stopped to give him a quick hug, which seemed to please him, though he didn’t hug her back.

As they walked out of the store, they had to pass a late-model luxury SUV limousine that was idling in the fire lane, one of Daisy’s pet peeves. It wasn’t just because of environmental rea­sons and the pollutants their idling vehicles were sending into the atmosphere. She hated the sense of entitlement, when people thought they were so important, they shouldn’t have to walk fifteen more feet to a parking space like the rest of the peons.

A man was climbing into the back seat as they passed. He looked up, and for just an instant, their gazes met. She should have known. It was the gorgeous man with the sexy accent.

He gave her a rueful sort of smile and a wave, which she pointedly ignored as she marched behind the vehicle toward her own fifteen-year-old BMW.

“Who was that?” Bea stared after the limo.

“No idea,” Daisy mumbled.

“He looked like he knew you.”

“He doesn’t.”

“Are you sure? He waved at you and everything. He looks familiar. Is he some kind of celebrity?”

Maybe. Daisy didn’t watch much television and her knowl­edge of pop culture was nonexistent. She couldn’t even tell which Kardashian was which and had no idea why she should care.

“You’re the one who reads all the tabloids. You tell me. I don’t know who he is. I only know I’ve never met him before in my life.”

Before she bumped into him ten minutes earlier, anyway.

“It doesn’t matter,” she said. “We’ve got to go or we’ll be late.”

“Trust me, Stella won’t notice. Mari’s over there already and the two of them are probably in the middle of a hot game of slapjack.”

She had to admit Bea was probably right. Stella hadn’t wanted them to make a fuss over her birthday anyway and wouldn’t care if they were a few moments late. “Here. You hold the cake. I don’t want to set it on the seat and risk it falling off.”

Bea made a face but held out her arms for the cake. After a quick stop at the Italian restaurant their aunt loved so they could grab the preordered meal, Daisy drove to Three Oaks, the sturdy, graceful Craftsman house Stella had purchased for a song when she brought the girls here to Cape Sanctuary all those years ago.

It had been a mess when they first moved in, she remem­bered, with only one tiny working bathroom and two inhabit­able bedrooms. She and Bea hadn’t minded sharing, so grateful to be together again and with their beloved aunt.

The three of them had worked together to make this a home: learning to put up drywall, painting, sanding floors, refinish­ing woodwork. Daisy had loved painting most of all, which was kind of ironic now, when she thought of it.

It had taken them the better part of three years but the result was a lovely home, filled with laughter and joy.

When they walked in, they found Stella in the kitchen wear­ing a ruffled apron splotched with huge yellow sunflowers. She was taking a tray of something out of the oven—her famous Oreo cookie mini cheesecakes, by the looks of it.

Her face lit up when she spotted them. “Girls! You’re both here at last!”

She set down the muffin tin on the stovetop, took off her oven mitts and rushed to kiss first Bea as soon as she’d set down the cake, then Daisy.

Daisy hugged her back, so very grateful to this woman who had rescued two lost girls.

“You’re not supposed to be doing anything,” Bea scolded. “We brought dinner for you. That’s what you said you wanted for your birthday gift.”

“You know me. I’m not good at sitting around. These are so easy, though. Mari helped.”

“Where is my child?”

“In here,” Mari called from the room off the kitchen that Stella had always called the library, which functioned as an of­fice, homework station and computer center.

“We were watching a YouTube video one of her friends posted on the computer when my timer went off,” Stella explained as she set the cheesecake bites onto a rack to cool.

Daisy watched her aunt with the same unease she’d been feel­ing for several weeks now.

Though forty, Stella looked years younger. The three of them could have been sisters, really, as her and Bea’s mother, Jewel, had been ten years older than her only surviving sibling. Stella was only ten years older than Daisy.

Stella had elfin features, high cheekbones and wide green eyes. She was petite, just over five feet two inches tall. Many of her middle school students topped her in height, something they all seemed to find hilarious.

While Stella’s features were familiar and beloved, when Daisy looked deeper, she saw that her aunt still had the guarded, closed, almost furtive look that Daisy had first noticed several weeks ago. Something was up. She didn’t know what it was; she only knew Stella was keeping secrets.

Her aunt was usually an open book, free and spontaneous. She had even been known to tell her life story to strangers she met at the diner in town.

Since about Easter, that had begun to change. She would take phone calls in another room and would often beg off arranged meetings for mysterious reasons.

Was it a new man in her life? About time, if it was. Stella deserved nothing but unicorns and rainbows. She deserved the very best man around. As far as Daisy was concerned, no one would ever be good enough for Stella.

She had often wondered why Stella had never married. She had dated here and there but nothing ever very serious, usually breaking things off right around five or six weeks.

“Do you want us to set the food up here or out in the garden?”

“Oh, it’s a lovely evening. Let’s eat outside.” Stella looked around. “Is Shane meeting you here?”

Bea looked surprised. “You said only family.”

“What do you call Shane? He grew up next door and was in and out of here more than his own house. He lives with you, for heaven’s sake. You should have invited him, poor man.”

“I think he has plans, anyway,” Bea said. If Daisy wasn’t mistaken, her sister looked slightly put out by that, making her wonder what the man’s plans were and why they bothered Bea.

“Shane has plans a lot lately.” Marisol, followed as usual by their little dog, Jojo, came in and swiped one of the cheesecake bites off the cooling rack. “We hung out with him more before he moved into the guesthouse. Hi, Aunt Daisy.”

“Hello, darling niece.” Daisy hugged the girl she adored with all her heart.

“Shane is busy right now,” Beatriz explained. “Sometimes we don’t see him for days. You know how it is. It’s the beginning of the football season. We won’t see him again until January.”

After playing college football and spending several years in the pros, Shane Landry, Bea’s best friend since they moved here to Cape Sanctuary, was in his second year of teaching biology at the high school and coaching the state championship high school football team.

One of these days Bea would get smart and figure out the man was crazy in love with her.

“Do you know of any celebrities staying in the area?” Bea asked their aunt. “We saw this gorgeous guy outside the gro­cery store tonight in a big SUV limo. He looked familiar but I couldn’t quite place him. He only had eyes for Daisy.”

“Do tell!” Stella’s own eyes widened.

Daisy felt herself flush. “He thought he knew me. I told him he was mistaken.”

“You didn’t tell me you talked to him!” Bea exclaimed.

“Apparently, I missed the family rule where I had to tell you everything going on in my life in a twenty-four-hour period.”

“Not everything, just the juicy parts about gorgeous strangers who show up in Cape Sanctuary and act like they know you.”

“Well, that rule is stupid since that has only happened the one time.”

“You’re stupid if you think I wouldn’t want to know you talked to him!” Bea said.

Stella laughed. “We all do. Tell us everything.”

“Nothing to tell. I bumped into him in the toothpaste aisle. Like I said, he thought he knew me. I said he didn’t. We went our separate ways. End of story.”

Bea, she knew, wouldn’t have let that be the end of the story. Bea would have flirted with the man, would have tucked one of those long, luxurious curls behind her ear as she turned her head just so. At the end of sixty seconds of conversation, Beatriz would have had him hanging on her every word.

But Daisy wasn’t her younger sister, she thought as she car­ried the meal outside to the garden of Three Oaks, with its long pine table and mason jars hanging in the trees, filled with solar-powered candles already beginning to spark to life in the gathering dusk.

She wasn’t her sister by a long shot.

The Cliff House
by by RaeAnne Thayne