Secrets of the Lost Summer (32 page)

BOOK: Secrets of the Lost Summer
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Twenty-Two

 

O
livia was both pleased and surprised when her mother came out to Carriage Hill on her own. It was early—she was taking the morning off and didn’t have to be at the mill until noon. Just as well, Olivia thought, that she’d stayed home last night and painted and worked instead of inviting Dylan over for soup or knocking on his door. Figuring out what was going on between them was complicated enough without the added complication of explaining his presence to her mother at eight o’clock in the morning.

There was no question in her mind that if she’d seen him last night, he’d be at her house right now.

She made coffee and brought it out to the terrace. Her mother brushed her fingertips over the lavender in the backyard. “It smells so nice already. Everyone in town is talking about this place, Liv.”

“Good talk, I hope.”

“All good.” Her mother stood straight. “I divided perennials at the house. I brought a bunch over here. They’re in the car. You don’t have to take any but I thought—”

“Are you kidding? This is great. I have tons of space yet to fill.”

They headed out to her mother’s car and loaded up the wheelbarrow with daylilies, astilbe, cranesbill geraniums, yarrow—Olivia was thrilled. She pushed the wheelbarrow back to the terrace, dumped it out and started sorting the plants. Her mother hadn’t labeled any of them. She recognized them on sight.

“I don’t want to get too far ahead of myself,” Olivia said, pausing her plant-sorting to help herself to coffee, “but I keep thinking about getting into artisan soap-making. Maggie’s mother has goats now. I could do goat’s milk soap scented with herbs and flowers from my own garden.”

“The Farm at Carriage Hill Soaps,” her mother said, sitting at the table and eyeing the plants she’d brought. “I like that.”

“I even have a design in mind for the packaging.”

“You’re bursting with ideas these days, aren’t you? I know from work at the mill that some will prove to be profitable and worth the effort, and some won’t. We learned early on that we can’t compete with the large manufacturers. We had to focus on quality custom millwork.”

Olivia nodded, appreciating her mother’s insights. “Artisan soaps fit with my plans for a getaway and small shop. I wouldn’t want to get into selling soaps over the internet but focus instead on small batches, almost as a premium for guests.” She set her coffee on the terrace and knelt back down among the dirt and plants—plants that now needed homes in her backyard. “It’s all fun to think about.”

“Do you think you’ll start your own design studio or keep freelancing for your old boss?”

“I don’t know yet. It depends on finances, I suppose.”

“Liv…” Her mother stood up, stretching her lower back. “You left Boston sooner than you thought you would, didn’t you? There were problems.”

Olivia sighed, reaching for a daylily that could be further divided. “There were, yes, but they’re sorted out now.”

“You’re happy here?”

“I am, yes, Mom.”

“Dylan McCaffrey—”

Olivia quickly changed the subject. “What do you know about Grace’s book? I asked Dad and Grandma, but they don’t know much.”

“I don’t, either. I think writing helped her to cope with selling her house.”

“Has anyone read it?”

“Not that I know of. She says she doesn’t want anyone to read it until after she’s gone.”

“I know, but I was hoping she let someone read at least parts of it. Think she has secrets?”

“I can’t imagine what they’d be, or why she’d want to tell them in a book and not just take them to the grave with her. I think it’s just the story of her life.”

“Maybe there’s more drama to her life than any of us realize. I’d love to get my hands on a copy of this book. She’d never know.”

“Olivia, shame on you!”

She grinned. “I’d never do it, Mom. You know that. Doesn’t mean I wouldn’t want to.”

“What about Dylan? Does he know about Grace’s book? Is he putting you up to sneaking a copy of it?”

“I don’t know what he wants, but he’s not putting me up to anything.”

“There’s something you’re not telling me.”

“There’s a lot I’m not telling you, Mom.”

“I should be glad?”

“Ha, I wish my life were that interesting.” Olivia grinned, sidestepping her mother’s questions, and separated the roots of the daylily. The weather was warmer than she’d expected, and she wished she hadn’t bothered with a long-sleeve shirt never mind a sweater.

She and her mother worked comfortably together through most of the morning, plotting where to put the perennials, dragging fertilizer and garden tools from the shed, digging and planting.

“It’s good to have you back here, Liv,” her mother said as she started for her car. “So long as you’re happy.”

“I am happy, Mom.”

After her mother left, Olivia wandered through the upstairs of her two-hundred-year-old house. Mark could help expand the rooms and add bathrooms, whatever was needed for an overnight getaway, but right now she had to concentrate on daylong events. A local walking group had just booked their annual meeting there in June. They planned to hike up Carriage Hill.

Olivia looked out her bedroom window at the view behind her house. Wildflowers were starting to blossom in the fields. She loved this place. She couldn’t let this opportunity slip through her fingers. She couldn’t imagine what she’d do if The Farm at Carriage Hill failed. Go back to Boston and work for Marilyn? Find a place for herself in her family’s millwork business?

“I won’t fail,” she said aloud.

She headed back downstairs and out to the front yard to plant the last of her mother’s perennials. Buster followed her and flopped in the shade, dutifully staying out of her flowerbed.

Five minutes later, Dylan showed up and found her elbow-deep in the dirt. He struck Olivia as preoccupied if not distant. “What’s on your mind?” she asked, settling back on her heels as she looked up at him.

He tugged a maple leaf off a low-hanging branch. “I’m not here to screw up your life, or this town.”

She narrowed her gaze on him. “What have you found out?”

“Lord Ashworth’s sister was Lady Helena Ashworth.” Dylan tossed the leaf down to Buster. “Lady Helena married a British flyer named Philip Rankin, but she died before the war. I’m still digging, but it looks as if the jewels actually belonged to Lady Helena—she inherited them from her grandmother.”

“So why did the brother have them?”

“When she died, apparently he ended up with them instead of her husband.”

“Helena and Philip didn’t have any children?”

“A daughter, Philippa.”

“Is she still alive? What about Philip? What happened to him? Did your father—”

“I have no idea what my father knew and didn’t know,” Dylan said, more with frustration than impatience. “I’m still gathering information on the Rankins.”

Olivia got stiffly to her feet, dusting the dirt off her hands and forearms. “You think Philip stole the jewels from his brother-in-law,” she said finally.

“The police never had a local suspect. Any suspect, for that matter.”

“Was Philip in Boston in September, 1938?”

“You ask good questions.” Dylan smiled, relaxing slightly. “You could keep the bastards away from Noah Kendrick.”

“I wish I could keep them out of my own life. Was Lord Ashworth a bastard?”

“Hard to say, but I doubt he and Philip Rankin played by the same rules.”

Olivia brushed more dirt off her hands but realized it’d take a good scrubbing to get it all. She hadn’t bothered with gloves. She could feel Dylan’s eyes on her and wondered what her life would be like now if Grace hadn’t sold her house to Duncan McCaffrey but was still there, watching birds, managing with home care and friends.

Dylan touched her cheek with a curved finger. “You’ve got a smudge of dirt on your face. Olivia…” He paused, moving his finger across her cheek to her hair, tucking a few strands behind her ear. “If you’re not busy right now, I’ll grab my files and you can see what you think.”

“I’m not doing anything that can’t wait.”

Olivia watched him walk back up the one-lane road, as pensive as she’d ever seen him. She put away her garden tools in the shed out back and glanced around her yard. It was taking shape, and she could imagine sharing it with people, looked forward to having a full schedule of events. She reminded herself that the mystery of Dylan’s house in Knights Bridge involved a father he’d lost less than two years ago. Her own problems suddenly seemed insignificant in comparison. She was excited about being back in her hometown, even if she’d taken a bumpy emotional and professional road in getting there.

When he arrived back at her house with a file folder in hand, the temperature had dropped, and she struck a match to the kindling and rolled-up newspapers she already had set up in the fireplace in the living room. Dylan sat on the floor, leaning back against the couch, his legs stretched out as Buster wandered in from the kitchen. Olivia felt her breath catch in her throat at the homey image, but she had never witnessed Dylan in action in San Diego, or at his home on Coronado—or in pads and skates on the ice. She’d seen pictures of him in his hockey uniform. Could she say, really, that she knew this man?

He explained that he had been to the library and used its computer since there was no Wi-Fi at his house. He had printed out what he could find on Lord Charles Ashworth and his sister, Lady Helena Ashworth. He handed Olivia a printout of a black-and-white photograph of a man and a woman standing in front of a mansion. “It’s the only photograph I could find of either of them,” he said. “It was taken in 1932. I found it on a site about the British aristocracy.”

“She’s lovely,” Olivia said. “He’s a bit watery.”

Dylan withdrew another printout from his file. “This one’s from 1912. Their grandmother sat for this portrait. Note the ring she’s wearing. It fits the description of the diamond ring that’s missing.”

The grandmother bore a strong resemblance to Lady Helena. Olivia peered closely at the ring. “It’s something, isn’t it? It’d make my wrist hurt.”

“Not much on baubles, are you?”

“Depends on the baubles, but I have no desire to own a ring worth millions.” Olivia studied the photograph again. “None of this was in your father’s trunk?”

“Not that I found, no.”

“You can hide a ring anywhere. If our British flyer stole the jewels and hid them in Quabbin and meant to come back, there’s not much hope of ever finding them. More than likely they’re under water now. It’d have to be like Gollum stumbling on Sauron’s ring.”

“Is that what you think this is? A dark quest?”

“I don’t know what it is. The daughter would be in her seventies now. She could have children and grandchildren of her own. Would she want to know her father was a thief? Her uncle was a bastard?”

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