High-Stakes Homecoming. Suzanne Mcminn
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He slowed the Land Rover as fog rolled over the road again, windshield wipers slapping at the persistent drizzle outside the vehicle. He passed the black walnut tree as the fog swept in and out, playing chicken with the road. Willa’d gotten married and moved to town, last he heard. Granddad was dead. He’d kept in touch with a couple of his old football buddies for a while, but he’d lost track of them a long time ago.
He’d bet he didn’t know a soul on Laurel Run these days. Not that many souls remained, from what he knew. He hadn’t seen a porch light since he’d passed Willa’s old place, and it was at least four miles since he’d left town after stopping for gas, and had turned down this godforsaken, unpaved road to nowhere.
You can’t go home again. But here he was.
Turning around sounded real good.
The mist cleared away again, long enough for him to see in his beams that, yeah, the bank still fell off sharply to his left and the hill rose just as steeply to his right. No escape. He had a purpose here, and he couldn’t leave till it was done.
Limberlost Farm, its four hundred acres, orchards, fields, ponds and river frontage, was worth something; maybe not a whole lot in a backwater town like Haven, but something. And all he had to do was live in the ramshackle of a farmhouse—that was likely halfway falling off the hill by now—for thirty days before he could sell it. Seed money, that’s what he needed. Limberlost was his seed money.
Damn his cousin, Jess, for getting the money up front in the will. Penn got stuck with the property and its encumbering requirement of a month’s residency to claim his inheritance. He would have fought the ridiculous requirement, but the executor of the estate had warned him that would only complicate the probate process. Penn could complete the month’s requirement before the will even reached the probate judge. Bottom line, he wanted the money. Whatever would get him there quickest.
He’d been the top-producing marketing director at Brown and Sons Ltd. when he handed in his resignation, but he wasn’t a Brown or a Son. Launching his own firm wasn’t just a dream anymore. One month of hell. It was worth it. Then he’d put the place up for sale and take whatever he was offered. Good riddance.
He fought a burst of guilt. He had a right to live his life the way he saw fit. He might have been born here, but he’d gotten out as soon as he could.
The farm shouldn’t be much farther. At least, if he remembered correctly. The wildly wooded bank to his left leveled out as he came down the last rolling hill, where the road would reach the bottom land and open pasture. He saw teetering fence posts, slumping wire. The dark, the gloam, the decaying rural scenery—it was right out of a horror movie.
He saw a flash of light in the mist. An animal sprang onto the road ahead. A calf, this time.
Fog curled in sharp again, blinding him.
He hit the brakes, but the car only picked up speed as it ran down the slope. He slammed harder on the brakes, uselessly—adrenaline shot through his veins. He couldn’t see, couldn’t stop—
No brakes.
The fog cleared. The calf stood straight ahead, staring into his headlights, frozen. Penn swung the wheel to the right. The calf bolted, in the same direction. Penn veered to the other side and—
All he knew was, that wasn’t a calf he struck.
It was a woman.
Willa hit hard, flat on her back. Sprinkles dotted her face. Rain. She lay there for a timeless stretch, aware of only the ominous sound of the growing storm around her. Wind. Cold.
Hands grabbed her shoulders, strong, urgent.
“Are you all right?”
She blinked, desperately working to clear her vision, pushing back tears that sprang out of nowhere. Reaction setting in, almost impossible to believe. Hit. She’d been hit. By a car.
His car. This stranger. She could see nothing of his face, just the gleam of his eyes. Her pulse thumped, kicking into gear out of shock. His voice sounded distantly familiar. Confusion left her blank, even as something deep inside clanged a warning she couldn’t quite grasp.
Beneath her, she felt the rough rubble of the road. She struggled to make sense of her surroundings, remember where she was. The broken fence. The calf. Then—
That car, out of nowhere. Oh, God.
Sick horror gripped her. She pushed up with her hands, fighting past the arms that tried to hold her down. She had to see if she was okay, she had to see if anything was broken. She didn’t have time to not be okay. She had the farm, Birdie, everything—too much. And it was all on her, by herself.
Relief nearly collapsed her backward when she realized her arms and legs were all right.
“I’m okay,” she cried, pushing at the stranger holding her again. “Let go of me! I have to get my calf!”
“Forget your damn calf!” he grated back angrily. “You were just hit by a car! We need to get you to a hospital to be checked out!”
Where was her flashlight? Headlights framed the stranger bending over, leaving his face in darkness. Headlights from some sort of sport utility vehicle that was even now rammed into the stone pillar at the side of her gate. Fabulous. He’d nearly hit her calf, hit her, then hit her gatepost. She was lucky he hadn’t plowed through the fence she’d just finished fixing, or plowed into her while she’d still been fixing it.
Her truck, her beat-up old Ford pickup truck, was still parked in the drive, undamaged. Thank God. She needed her truck.
Rain splashed down on them, harder now. She had to get her calf in. She had to get back up the hill to the house. Her four-year-old daughter was there, alone, waiting for her.
“Get off me!” she yelled, pushing against him with more strength now, even as his firm hands moved up and down her arms, down her body, as if checking her over. She didn’t need checking over. Not by a hospital, and certainly not by him. “I’m fine.”
She scrambled to her feet, managing to slip out from under him with a sudden move. She was fine. She was standing. Dazed, aware of an aching throb through her body, and fearsome rumblings of thunder from the dark sky above. It would be pouring soon.
He came after her, seeming taller and bigger with every step. She almost choked because she’d forgotten to swallow. It wasn’t just his voice. His shape and form were frighteningly familiar. She felt a wave of dizzy fear that made no sense. She couldn’t know him. She hadn’t been expecting anyone.
“I still say you should be checked out at a hospital,” the man said again. “You could have a concussion.” He raised his voice over the buffeting wind.
She struggled to keep her feet, even as her knees wobbled. “I’m fine,” she repeated. “And I don’t really care what you say. I stood up too fast, that’s all.” She didn’t want to admit that maybe she was just a little scared of him, or that her dizzy, sick sensation meant anything at all. She turned slowly, looking for her flashlight. She spotted it at the edge of his beams and went for it.