This Heart of Mine. Brenda Novak

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This Heart of Mine - Brenda Novak MIRA

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that could go wrong simply had.

      “I didn’t have the tools,” she said. “I was only two years older than you are now and I was pretty well on my own. There wasn’t a lot I could do.” Especially because she couldn’t claim that she hadn’t been absolutely consumed with Riley. The day he came into her life everything had changed; it’d been like feeling the sun on her face for the first time. But after only six weeks of an intense “I have to be with you every second” affair, he’d suddenly broken up with her.

      As rocky as her life had been, she’d never felt pain to equal that.

      But she hadn’t killed anyone.

      “The girl, the one who lied, this is all her fault,” Jacob said. “Do you know where she is? Are you going to try and find her and make her admit the truth?”

      Phoenix had spent seventeen years thinking about getting out of prison and going in search of Penny. She craved vindication. But she knew chasing after it would be a waste of effort. Even if she could find Penny, it would still be her word against that of someone more credible. No one wanted to consider the possibility that an innocent woman might have been in prison for so long. And even if Penny suddenly and miraculously came forward on her own, it wouldn’t change what Phoenix had been through. It probably wouldn’t convince the people she needed to convince, since they didn’t want to believe the truth, anyway.

      “No.” In the beginning, she’d sent so many letters to Penny, pleading with her to tell the truth. All the ones she’d mailed after the Sawyers left Whiskey Creek had been returned. She didn’t even know whether the early ones had reached the girl who could’ve made such a difference. “I have to focus on moving forward, forget the past.”

      Jacob stared at his feet. When he lifted his head and spoke again, he sounded torn. “I’m not sure I can believe you.”

      “That’s okay.” She forgave him easily, was grateful he was actually trying. “I understand how hard it is. I won’t put any pressure on you. We don’t have to talk about it again, if you don’t want to. We—”

      “I think that’s enough for today,” Riley broke in. “Jacob, let’s go. We’ve got to work.”

      Anxiety-induced sweat rolled down Phoenix’s spine. But she smiled so her son would know he could leave without feeling bad about anything. She didn’t blame him for being confused, and she certainly didn’t want to detain him any longer and get him in trouble with his dad. She’d known from the beginning that she’d have to earn Jacob’s trust over time.

      Clasping her hands in front of her, she watched them get in Riley’s truck. She’d just taken a deep breath and was about to start her long walk home when Jacob turned and waved—and she knew she’d carry the memory of that tentative smile for the rest of her life.

      Jacob sat in silence as they pulled out of the parking lot. They had a job today, a remodel of one of the older Victorians in town, and needed to go to the lumber store, about ten miles away. On Saturdays, Riley hired his son to help out so Jacob could learn the trade, in case he cared to become a partner in the business when he was older or wanted to get his own contractor’s license. They had a lot to do, and they were getting a late start because they’d met Phoenix for breakfast, but right now it was difficult to concentrate on anything other than the past hour. Riley was so torn about what he’d seen and heard, he knew Jacob had to be really confused.

      “You okay?” he asked as they rolled to a stop at the traffic light in the center of town.

      Jacob gave him a morose shrug.

      “Could you use your voice?” Riley asked.

      “I feel...weird,” Jacob replied.

      He looked sullen and unhappy. “Weird in what way?” Riley could guess, since he was so conflicted himself, but he felt it was important to get his son to talk to him about Phoenix. It hadn’t been easy to become a father at eighteen. Other than the help he’d received early on from his parents while he was commuting to college three days a week, he’d raised Jacob alone.

      But Riley had a feeling that he was facing a much more formidable challenge now. He didn’t want Phoenix back in his life or his son’s, didn’t want to cope with all the old questions and doubts.

      “I met my mother for the first time a few minutes ago, and I can’t decide how I should feel about her.”

      Because he had no frame of reference. Riley hadn’t even given Jacob the many letters she’d sent, other than a handful of the less emotional ones. In his mind, he’d been protecting his son, hoping she’d move on and just leave them alone when she was eventually released. But if she was innocent, maybe standing between her and Jake had only hurt them both.

      If so, that was a lot to feel responsible for.

      “It’ll take a while to adjust,” he told Jacob.

      “How would you feel if you were me?” his son asked. “Do you think she killed Lori Mansfield?”

      The light turned green and Riley gave the truck some gas. Jacob had asked this question several times over the years, but Riley had always been able to say he wasn’t sure and leave it at that. Phoenix hadn’t ever been present in Jacob’s life, so Jacob hadn’t pushed the issue. But with her back home, he needed a more definitive answer.

      “She wasn’t herself when all of that happened,” Riley said.

      Jacob leaned forward to look into his face. “What does that mean? Are you saying yes or no?”

      Riley had no idea whether she’d killed Lori. He only knew that everyone else insisted she must have, and the scenario created at her trial seemed logical. Lori was the girl he’d started dating right after Phoenix, and Phoenix had acted terribly jealous. “I’m saying she became a little...intense after I broke up with her.”

      He’d often relied on her erratic behavior during that time as a reason to withhold another one of her letters.

      “She could have done it.”

      “Yes.”

      The expression on his son’s face made it clear he didn’t like that answer. “But ‘could have’ isn’t proof!”

      “There were witnesses, Jake.”

      “Who saw her behind the wheel! She admits she was driving.”

      “Penny Sawyer was a witness.”

      “The friend she told us about? Penny, the one who might’ve grabbed the wheel?”

      “Penny had no motive.”

      His scowl deepened. “How come I don’t know any Penny Sawyer?”

      “She moved away after the trial.”

      “Why?”

      “Because she’d graduated from high school, so she left for college like almost everyone else.”

      “You

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