Love In Logan Beach. Shirley Hailstock
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He nodded. “Like the Miss America candidates do. I know you can’t live around here and not know all the details about that contest.”
Atlantic City was only half an hour from Logan Beach. The annual beauty contestants sometimes spilled into Logan Beach for photo shoots.
“I’ll start,” David told her. He understood she was apprehensive. He was technically her boss and he knew the dynamics that came into play when a person didn’t know the reason for the meeting.
“I was a summer resident here. My uncle used to rent a house and bring my brothers and me along with his sons here for a month.”
“So you’re not a stranger to the area?”
She gazed at him, cradling her coffee cup in both hands as if she needed it to warm her. Her voice held surprise that he was familiar with the city.
“I haven’t been here in a couple of years, but I used to come every summer, even while I was in law school.” Logan Beach wasn’t that big, even though it had a long coastline. Yet David had never run into her. He’d been in the Bach’s store. As a member of a family running department stores, he couldn’t go anywhere and not check out the competition. It was a family requirement. He wondered if his reports about Bach’s had interested his parents in the store once it was for sale.
“Most people come here for the beach. Is that what attracted your family?” Rosanna asked.
“I think it was just a place to let five boys run wild.” He laughed, but Rosanna didn’t. “How did you get here?”
“I was born in Logan Beach.”
No elaboration. David was used to people continuing to talk, more than they should in some cases.
“Any siblings?”
“Only child.”
“Were you a lonely only child?” he asked pointedly.
Rosanna stared at him. “No. My life was filled with friends and activities.”
“What kind of activities?” He was trying to get her to talk, to open up. It was on the tip of his tongue to ask about dance lessons, sports, anything young girls would do, but thought that would elicit another one-word answer.
“The normal ones—tennis, horseback riding at Island Beach, roller blading, gymnastics, swimming, dances, cotillions and proms.”
“Do you still ride and play tennis?”
“Sometimes.”
“Maybe we can have a company league and play regularly.”
“Would you like me to add that as an employee recreational option?”
He shook his head. “We’re going to have a lot to do and when our human resources department is up and running, they can work on that. But we’re not here for work.”
“Yes.” Rosanna’s head bobbed up and down. “The getting-to-know-you meeting.”
“It’s not a meeting.”
She took a drink of her coffee. David thought it must be cold by now.
“Would you like a fresh one?” he asked.
She shook her head. “We lived across from the beach. My carefree days were spent with friends, swimming and going to parties. I went to college in Atlanta—Clark Atlanta University. I majored in business finance and minored in music.”
Music, he thought, but didn’t say anything. She’d finally begun to speak in sentences of more than one word and he didn’t want to stop her with questions.
“When I returned home, I got a job with a brokerage house in Philadelphia. I hated the commute. One day I saw an ad for a job in the finance department at Bach’s. I got it and expressed an interest in being a buyer. Mrs. Bach took me aside and taught me the ropes. From there I advanced to assistant manager.”
Rosanna had delivered the speech as if she was reciting her résumé.
“During college, other than being an A student, what did you do?”
She looked at him. “How do you know I was an A student?”
“Something about you says it. And the Bachs gave you a glowing recommendation.”
“Well, I wasn’t an A student.”
“Then you were a fun student. What did you do for fun?”
She smiled. She must have remembered something.
“That’s it,” he said.
“What?”
“You smiled. I’ve been hoping you would.”
“What?” she asked again.
“I believe that’s the first time I’ve seen you smile since we met.”
“Sorry, it won’t happen again.”
David stared at her, then saw her straight face turn into a small smile. “So you do have a sense of humor.”
“Did you think I lost it in the storm?” Again Rosanna’s face had only the shadow of a smile on it, but David realized she was kidding.
“One day maybe I’ll get a full, unadulterated laugh.”
“I’ll work on it,” she said.
* * *
“So, how was your first day?” Amber asked, pouring them both a glass of wine.
Rose accepted hers and curled her bare feet under her as she sat on Amber’s sofa. The two women had met during the storm’s crisis and shared the same makeshift hospital tent. The experience bonded them as if they’d been friends from birth.
“Exhausting,” Rose answered. “I needed a hard hat to tour the store.”
“A tour conducted by Mr. Thorn, I take it?”
Her glib tone was unmistakable, especially as it was followed by a Cheshire-cat smile and a fluttering of her eyelids as she took a sip of her wine.
Rose nodded, taking a sip of her own drink.
“So, spill, how was he? Is he as good-looking as his photo?”
“Photo? What photo?” she repeated.
“I looked him up on the internet. Apparently, the entire family is made up of gorgeous guys.”
Rose had looked up the Thorns, too. She’d seen David’s photo, maybe the same one Amber was referring to. She hadn’t even made the decision to accept David’s offer until she left the casino in the early morning hours.
“He’s