Safe Harbour. Marie Ferrarella
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Just her, the water and the seagulls.
One thing down, everything else to go.
Not that there was all that much to get done these days. After handling Alex’s and Cris’s weddings, she’d discovered she had a real knack for event planning. And while business at the inn was continuing at a steady, brisk pace, there were only a handful of dinner parties for her to put together for the guests. Stevi had suddenly found herself with next to nothing to do.
Without events to plan or classes to study for, she was feeling incredibly restless. It was only a week since graduation, but she was already bored to tears and dying for some sort of excitement.
Stevi accelerated her pace, pushing harder.
Oh, she was well aware that she should be grateful that her life was as good, as comfortable, as it was. There were no deep, dark secrets—or shallow, light ones for that matter—no family rifts. She had a wonderful family, she got along well with her father, her sisters and even her brothers-in-law.
Stevi blew out a breath. She supposed it was some kind of sin in the grand scheme of things to feel this dissatisfied when there wasn’t one single bad thing in her life to point a finger at.
But that didn’t change the fact that she desperately craved some excitement, something to inspire her art.
That was why, a year ago, she began considering the possibility of moving to New York City, at least for a while. New York City was everything that Ladera was not. It represented a complete change of pace. After all, New York City was the city that never slept.
New York was the home of the incredible Metropolitan Museum of Art. She felt herself growing excited just thinking of the Met.
New York represented the answer to her prayers.
The only thing stopping her from uprooting this second—as impetuous as that sounded, and she was nothing if not admittedly impetuous—was guilt. Stevi knew, even though he hadn’t said a word to her, that her father didn’t want her to move away, much less move to New York.
Her dad was a warm, loving man. He’d dealt with his share of sorrow and illnesses, but somehow he’d always managed to find a way to get up again after life had given him a devastating punch to the gut. How could she turn her back on a man like that? Her father was a man who thrived on having his family not just close by, but around him.
And so far, they all were.
Granted Alex and Wyatt had a house in Los Angeles, but that was mostly for Wyatt’s convenience so he had somewhere to stay when he was in the middle of selling one of his movie scripts. The rest of the time, Wyatt and Alex lived here at the inn.
By choice.
Wyatt had once told her that his fondest memories of his childhood—as well as of his father—were all created here at the inn, where he and Uncle Dan, as she and her sisters all thought of Wyatt’s father, spent their summers. And even Cris, who could have lived in a mini-mansion because of Shane’s construction skills, stayed at the inn, in the wing Shane had built after he finished the expansion that had brought him here in the first place.
Now Alex and Wyatt were going to have a baby and Cris’s five-year-old son, Ricky, was always with his grandfather, so it wasn’t as if she’d be abandoning her dad to a life of solitude if she left.
With her younger sister, Andy, rounding out their numbers, there were plenty of family on hand.
Despite that, the thought of leaving the inn made her feel really guilty.
Yet staying here might just drive her stir-crazy.
People came to Ladera-by-the-Sea and willingly paid top dollar to bask in its tranquility, in its soothing peacefulness—in all the things that were driving her away.
Maybe, Stevi tried to console herself, if she got away for a while, gave New York City an honest try, she might just get it out of her system. Maybe she’d discover that that sort of life really wasn’t for her and that what she had right here in her own backyard was what mattered.
But she knew that if she didn’t get the opportunity to contrast and compare the two ways of life, she was never really going to appreciate what she had.
Okay, Stevi decided, feeling determined. She had her course of action planned out.
She was going to tell her father that she was going to New York City on an extended vacation, to see the sights and take in the museums and the art galleries. Knowing her father, she was fairly certain he would object if she told him she was undertaking this New York adventure on her own, so she wouldn’t mention that part.
Right, and he wouldn’t ask who you were going with.
Stevi ran even faster. Her calves protested, threatening to cramp.
Maybe she’d ask one of her friends to come with her. Oh, not for as long as she planned on staying, but just long enough for her to find some temporary place to land. Maybe an apartment being sublet.
Too bad Wyatt no longer lived there, she thought. As a boy, after his parents had gotten divorced, his mother had taken Wyatt to live there.
But then, of course, if he’d never moved out here, he never would have become a screenplay writer, never would have married her sister.
Everything turned out for the best in the end. And it would again.
At least she fervently hoped so.
Her heart rate up, her calves aching, she glanced at her watch to see how long she had been at it.
Stevi frowned as she made out the numbers, then looked up and ahead.
Rather than being on her way back by now, she had just managed to reach the squat sand dune.
That meant she was only halfway finished with her run.
Stevi sighed. There was all that distance to run back. Or walk back if she was too tired, she thought, entertaining the possibility for exactly twenty seconds.
She was in far better shape than that, she reasoned, egging herself on to pick up her pace once again.
“C’mon, Stevi, you can do this. Show your stuff. Run like you mean it, not like some little old lady who can’t put one foot in front of the other.”
Out of the corner of her eye, she thought she saw something in the distance, something bobbing up and down in the water.
Most likely, she reasoned as she continued running toward it, it was either a dead fish or, as it was nine times out of ten, a large clump of seaweed.
She and her sisters often came down to the beach to clear the seaweed away. Half the time, it smelled like rotten eggs.
She changed direction slightly, running to where she thought she had spotted the seaweed.
Her eyes widened as she drew closer to the debris that had been washed ashore. Her breath got stuck in her throat.
There