Folly Cove

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Authors: Holly Robinson

BOOK: Folly Cove
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PRAISE FOR THE NOVELS OF HOLLY ROBINSON

“Robinson tugs at your emotions . . . a triumphant family saga filled with heart and hope.”

—Amy Sue Nathan, author of
The Good Neighbor

“A novel that sings: of love for a child, loss and regret for a life, and the quiet triumphs of survival and finding each other again.”

—Susan Straight, National Book Award nominee for
Highwire Moon

“This book has the heart, intrigue, and secrets of Shakespeare but is written with the sensual prose of our time.”

—Ann Garvin, author of
The Dog Year

“[Robinson] will keep you turning those pages as she quietly but deftly breaks your heart. I loved every single one of her characters and you will, too; here is a novel to savor and share.”

—Yona Zeldis McDonough, author of
The House on Primrose Pond

“A thoughtful exploration of the fragility, and the tenacity, of the ties that bind.”

—T. Greenwood, author of
Where I Lost Her

“[An] absorbing, bighearted novel.”

—Elizabeth Graver, author of
The End of the Point

“A genuine, moving portrayal of the intricacies of relationships between sisters, mothers, and daughters.”

—Sonja Yoerg, author of
The Middle of Somewhere

ALSO BY HOLLY ROBINSON

The Wishing Hill

Beach Plum Island

Haven Lake

Chance Harbor

BERKLEY

An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014

Copyright © 2016 by Holly Robinson

Readers Guide copyright © 2016 by Penguin Random House LLC

Penguin Random House supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to continue to publish books for every reader.

The author acknowledges permission to use the following: “The Quarry at Folly Cove” by Emily Ferrara

BERKLEY is a registered trademark and the B colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Robinson, Holly, 1955– author.

Title: Folly Cove / Holly Robinson.

Description: Berkley trade paperback edition. | New York: Berkley Books, 2016.

Identifiers: LCCN 2016018826 (print) | LCCN 2016026354 (ebook) | ISBN

9781101991534 (paperback) | ISBN 9781101991541 (ebook)

Subjects: LCSH: Domestic fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Contemporary Women. |

FICTION / Family Life. | FICTION / Coming of Age.

Classification: LCC PS3618.O3258 F65 2016 (print) | LCC PS3618.O3258 (ebook)

| DDC 813/.6—dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016018826

First Edition: October 2016

Cover art: Photo of woman on beach by Joseph Devenney / Getty Images; photo of woman on horse by Jo Bradford / Green Island Art Studios / Moment Select / Getty Images

Cover design by Rita Frangie

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Version_1

For Tracy,
whose heart, courage, and intelligence always shine bright.

And for Dan and my children:
You are the reason my heart is so full of
love.

THE QUARRY AT FOLLY COVE

A deep spring slakes the quarry in me.

Gulls preen in calm resolve. My cries

haunt the brindled ledges of lacquered

weeping. Time succumbs sumac and seep.

I navigate by what is seen: fog cowering

in the Twin Lights of Thacher Island.

Fields of feldspar and mica, the folly of sky.

How to trust what is not trustworthy,

the imperfect armament of hindsight,

the archipelago, the arc of unknowing.

It is braver to navigate by surrender here.

Braver still to stand on the promontory,

listening. For unseen shoals at high tide.

The wreckage and the sheer. To hear

the quarry speak: Repeat after me.
After me.

BY EMILY FERRARA,
AUTHOR OF
THE AL
CHEMY OF
GRIEF

CHAPTER ONE

A
nne shivered as the taxi's red taillights winked down the gravel drive. Her feet refused to move. The baby, motionless in her arms, seemed stunned by the sudden cold of a New England night.

Now that she was here, she wanted nothing more than to escape again.

Everything looked the same as it had when she'd last visited two years ago. Her father's great-grandparents had built the Folly Cove Inn as a grand resort for wealthy Bostonians, erecting it on a rocky point above a small, horseshoe-shaped beach. The inn had fifty-two rooms, with a wraparound porch between its turreted towers.

Anne couldn't see the water from where she stood, but she smelled the Atlantic's sharp brine. How odd that this was the same ocean she'd seen below the deck of her house in Puerto Rico only yesterday.

To banish the mental images of Colin in their bed and of Luquillo Beach, with its soft white sand and turquoise water, she pictured the opposite side of the inn: a broad porch with a pale blue ceiling and a row of white rocking chairs. Sitting on that porch as a child used to make her feel as though she were gazing straight across the ocean to Europe.

Finally she was too cold to stand outside any longer. She slid Lucy into the backpack and pulled the blanket up around her. Now the baby was barely visible. Anne was rewarded with a drooling smile.

Anne grinned back and kissed her daughter's warm cheek. She hoped Laura wouldn't be here. She couldn't handle the idea of facing her eldest sister. Not tonight. Maybe not ever again.

A bellhop in a navy blazer and red plaid tie hurried outside to help her as she reached the front door, dragging her suitcases and the car seat behind her. “Sorry to keep you waiting, ma'am,” he said. “Big wedding party tonight—all hands on deck.” He was a young guy with jug ears and acne scars. Not anyone she recognized, thank God. His name tag read
TOMMY
.

“No worries,” Anne said.

She tipped him for helping her carry the luggage into the reception area and was about to approach the front desk when her mother rounded the corner. Sarah was deep in conversation with Betty, who had managed the housekeeping staff forever.

Tonight her mother was dressed in tan slacks and a black wool blazer. The outfit was accented by an antique silver brooch set with rubies. Sarah had inherited the Bradford family jewels and was never shy about wearing them.

Anne crossed her arms over the stains on her sweatshirt. She deliberately didn't look down at her feet, still in sandals. She couldn't remember the last time she'd had a pedicure. There wasn't much point when you spent hours a day on a surfboard.

Betty was leaving now, taking notes on a clipboard. She either hadn't noticed Anne or hadn't recognized her. No surprise—the last time they'd seen each other, Anne was wearing a cocktail gown.

The DJ in the ballroom was playing a Van Morrison song, “Have I Told You Lately.” Anne remembered dancing with Colin to this song in a San Juan hotel and had to swallow hard to speak. “Hey, Mom. I'm here.”

Her mother frowned and checked her watch. “You're later than I'd thought. Was the flight delayed?” Her tone was polite yet cool; she might have been addressing a guest. Sarah hated public displays of emotion.

Anne instinctively adopted the same measured tone. “No. But I had to wait nearly an hour for the train at North Station.”

Her mother bristled. “I'm sorry you were forced to rely on public transportation. I was sure you'd ask a friend to give you a ride.”

Anne thought of Hattie, her best friend from high school. She would have been more confident about the whole trip if Hattie had been able to greet her at the airport. Unfortunately, Hattie had left Boston yesterday for her sister's wedding in Colorado.

She had never been an anxious traveler, but Anne was terrified during the flight from Puerto Rico. Since becoming a mother, she'd felt as if every dangerous thing in the world was aimed straight at her baby: speeding cars, stinging insects, viruses, terrorists, the sun's toxic rays. As they'd landed at Logan International Airport, she'd been convinced the plane would continue taxiing into the glittering sea.

“Hattie's out of town this week,” Anne said.

“Laura couldn't pick you up?”

“I didn't ask Laura.”

Her mother sighed. “I hope you two have gotten over whatever you were fighting about.”

“We're fine,” Anne lied. “Laura's so busy. I didn't want to bother her.”

“I see. Well, I would have driven to Boston myself, but you know what it's like around here on weekends. It would have been much more convenient if you'd arrived during the week.”

This was one reason why Anne had moved away in the first place: the inn always came first. There had never been much room in Sarah's life for anything else. Certainly not after her father disappeared.

“Mom, it's fine. I made it here.”

“And I couldn't be more delighted!” Sarah cocked her head, openly appraising Anne.

This, too, was a reminder: their mother had been appraising Anne and her sisters every day of their lives, making sure they were well turned out and behaving. She liked to remind them that they were Folly Cove's “ambassadors” and that the Bradford family name could be traced back to William Bradford, who'd helped found the original Plymouth Colony of Massachusetts.

“Is that a tattoo?” her mother asked now. Her tone was conversational, but her eyes were narrowed.

Anne touched the outline of the small bird, a Puerto Rican nightjar, on her wrist, then pulled down her sleeve to cover it. “Yes.”

“I see. Well, that will certainly give people in the nursing home something to gossip about when you're my age.”

Anne was about to say that her tattoo wasn't any of her mother's business, but then the doors to the grand ballroom swung open behind Sarah. Three couples emerged. The men wore tuxes and were arguing about the Patriots. Behind them, the women walked with heads held high on slim necks, their bridesmaids' dresses frothing around their legs like sugary peach concoctions.

Her mother waited until the couples disappeared up the wide carpeted staircase with its oak railing, then said, “Your skin looks divine, Anne. Puerto Rico's climate must agree with you. And I'm sure we can schedule a haircut for you next week. David often has openings on Tuesdays. Would that suit your schedule?”

“Sure. Whatever.” Anne's shoulders were beginning to ache with the weight of the backpack and the tension of wondering when her mother would spot what was in it.

Sarah smiled. “Well, let's not stand here. You must be exhausted. I'm sure you'll want to bathe and change before dinner. I'll ask Tommy to help carry your things to my apartment. How does that sound?”

“Fine.”

“Good.” Sarah finally crossed the wide, deep green ocean of the Oriental carpet separating them in the reception area to kiss Anne's cheek. Her eyes widened when she saw the backpack over Anne's shoulder. “Goodness. Is that a
baby
in there?”

Anne had to laugh. “Yes.”

Sarah pressed her lips into a thin line, then said, “Is it yours?”


She
. And yes. Her name is Lucy.”

“Well, at least you didn't choose one of those awful modern names. Where is Lucy's father?” Her mother's gaze flicked about the reception area, as if Anne might have hidden a man behind one of the brocade Victorian sofas.

“New York City.”

“Will he be joining you?”

“No. Things didn't work out. That's one reason I'm here.”

Sarah let her eyes drop to Anne's left ring finger. “And you never married him, I assume.”

“No.” Anne waited for the inevitable “I told you so.” She didn't have to wait long.

“I see.” Sarah sighed heavily. “So this is what came of your grand adventure in the tropics: a baby and no husband. My God. How could you let yourself get into this mess?” Her mother clasped her hands and rocked slightly on her heels. “Turn around.”

“What?”

“You heard me. Turn around! I want to see my new granddaughter.”

Anne obeyed. She waited while her mother fiddled with the baby blanket and examined Lucy, who must either be asleep or too terrified to make any noise. Most children were terrified of Sarah. Anne had seen her mother silence an entire birthday party of elementary school children with a look.

Finally Sarah instructed Anne to face her again and said, “She isn't a bad-looking baby despite the red hair. Still, we should present this carefully. I don't want any unnecessary talk.” She tapped a scarlet fingernail against her pursed mouth.

Anne's scalp prickled. “It's the twenty-first century, Mom! Nobody's going to care if I had a baby on my own. And how is this any worse than Grandfather gambling away the family fortune? Or Dad being a drunk and then disappearing? You tell people those things often enough.”

“Sex is different.” Sarah lowered her voice as an older woman in khakis and a blue Fair Isle sweater entered the reception area carrying an ice bucket. “Wait here, please, Anne.”

Sarah walked over to the woman, greeted her warmly, and pointed her toward the ice dispenser in the hallway, all while answering questions about a whale-watching tour and the best place to buy lobster. Her mother confided in the other woman as if they'd grown up together. Once Sarah spoke to a guest, that guest felt completely at home.

Too bad Sarah's own daughters had never been granted that same magical guest treatment. Anne's knees and back still ached whenever
she thought about how many bathrooms she'd scrubbed and how many loads of linens she'd washed in the industrial machines downstairs.

Her mother returned and said, “I know this may be difficult for you to understand, given your age and lifestyle, Anne, but sex is always a scandal in New England. This is not the Caribbean. And people expect an inn like Folly Cove to uphold certain family values.”

Her mother's hair, always a sign of her mood, was starting to unravel from the coil piled on her head, long white strands rising like cobwebs. “We'll have to tell people you're newly separated from the baby's father and it's too painful for you to talk about it,” she went on. “We'll imply that you're getting divorced.”

“You're kidding.”

“I most certainly am not.” Her mother's voice was patient but determined. “If you're staying here at the inn, that's exactly what we're going to say. And my apartment isn't suitable for a child, I'm afraid.”

Beyond the double doors, the band began playing Pink's “Raise Your Glass” in the ballroom, and the crowd sang along. Anne nearly had to shout above the music. “Why not?”

“I don't have room for a baby. Or the patience. As you know.”

Anne remembered how, as a child, she'd once kicked her mother in the shins out of frustration. She felt exactly the same way now. “Lucy won't be any trouble. She can't even crawl yet.”

“How long are you planning to stay?”

“A couple of months? Just until I find a job and get back on my feet. It would be nice to spend Christmas together, right?”

“Naturally, I would be delighted if you stayed through the holidays.” Her mother brightened. “I have the perfect solution. I'll put you in the east wing. I have a room available on the third floor. That way none of the guests will hear the baby fussing and be disturbed.”

Anne's face felt hot; she knew a flush was probably spreading across her neck, face, and torso. As a redhead, she'd never been able to hide her emotions. Her skin might as well have been a neon sign.

“Mom, I can't do all those stairs multiple times a day with the baby! Please. Let me stay with you.” Anne hated having to beg.

To make matters worse, she could feel Lucy wiggling in the
backpack. She was probably hungry; at four months, Lucy was accustomed to nursing every few hours.

Anne imagined breastfeeding right here in the inn's reception area. She could plop down on the couch and whip up her shirt. What would her mother do if she flashed her boobs at the guests? A bubble of hysterical laughter escaped before Anne could swallow it.

“I'm glad you find this situation so amusing,” Sarah said. “I'm afraid I don't see the humor in the fact that you, with all of your fine education and opportunities, are reduced to being a single mother, tattooed and without a job, like half the teenage girls in Gloucester—girls without your advantages.” Sarah turned away and gestured to Tommy to retrieve Anne's luggage. “Room 307,” she said, then turned back to Anne. “Come with me and I'll show you to your room.”

I was an idiot, thinking I could come here,
Anne thought as she followed her mother down the hall to the back staircase, still carrying Lucy and the diaper bag.

Anne kept her eyes on the floor as they passed the couples returning to the grand ballroom, avoiding the sight of these women in their peach dresses and pearls. Women who were doing exactly what was expected of them instead of what she had done, which was to burn every bridge behind her.

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