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Tempest Relief: Chapter Three (standard:drama, 3210 words) [4/4] show all parts | |||
Author: Ari Walker | Added: May 09 2002 | Views/Reads: 2644/2048 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Three sisters must put aside their differences to carry on the family legacy. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Jade looked down at his hand, his fingers trailing softly between her shoulder and her neck. Like a spider, she thought viciously, goose bumps covering her arms. She pushed his hand away. "I don't know what you're talking about." He cocked his head. "No? I'll refresh your memory. Last night you said, and these were your exact words, 'I must have fainted again.'" She didn't say anything, just pursed her lips. " The word again leads a person to believe it's something that's happened before." "I can't deal with this right now. Just shut up," she threw her hands up into the air, pivoting and quickening her pace. His legs were longer than hers were though, so it was no hardship for him to catch up. "Come on, Sleeping Beauty, tell me your name. Please?" She sighed and looked up at him. He was the most annoying male she had ever met. His bottom lip was sticking out, his eyes sad and pleading. She laughed in exasperation. "You are like a big puppy." He grinned, nodding happily. "I'll be your big, loyal puppy forever," he promised. "Oh brother!" Biting her lip to keep from laughing again, she ran a hand through her hair. "Fine. My name is Jade Spencer." Jade, Arthur mouthed. Then smiled. It was the first time she had seen him do anything but grin and she almost turned and ran. The full-blown smile transformed his face from puppy to shark and was enough to make any sensible girl tuck tail and run. His teeth were even and white against his tan skin, his lips full and promising. The twinkle in his eyes was disturbing. He was entirely too dangerous, she realized. There was no way she could handle a man like this; she didn't have the experience. "I'm Arthur Schiller," he took her hand and bowed over it with a flourish. She blinked. "Art. And I am so very pleased to meet you." "Charmed," Jade murmured. Oh damn am I ever charmed, she though to herself. Art smiled again and tugged on her hand. "Have you had breakfast yet?" Her lips opened and closed like a fish and she hated herself for being a ninny. But... Breakfast? She thought dazedly. What was that? Allowing him to pull her through one of the paths between the Victorian shops to the other side of the highway, Jade trudged through the sand to the tall, narrow house painted blue and green. **** The first floor consisted of a screened porch and a spacious sitting room with plush sofas and two different televisions. The kitchen and dining area was on the second floor, along with a bedroom. The third and fourth floors were made up of bedrooms that the Brown-Elliot-Donahue-Joskeff-O'Reilly family rented out to people who couldn't afford, say, to stay at the Tempest Relief. In truth, the Bed and Breakfast was run by Rose Brown, the matriarch of the family, and her granddaughters, Cody and Lori. But all of Rose's grandchildren helped out when needed. Her twin daughters, Grace Elliot and Jessica Donahue, weren't interested. Grace, though, lived in a mental institution, and so was obviously excused from it. Jessie, who lived in the attic with her husband, ran her own jewelry business and insisted she simply didn't have time. Jessie's 31-year-old daughter, Scarlett, had joined her mother in the jewelry business, but her grandmother bullied her into helping out around the B & B from time to time. Rose Brown's two grandsons, Ian Elliot and Theo Donahue, helped out even less than Scarlett did. And even when they did help, they complained the whole time. But that doesn't stop the scoundrels from eating my food, Rose thought, looking around the table fondly, where her noisy, loving family was eating. Not that she was ever serious about making them help out. She knew her family had their own lives to lead, and really, she, Cody and Lori could manage all by themselves. Zachary O'Reilly, Cody's husband, was a general handy man around the house, of which Rose was grateful. But she knew that she could figure out anything that needed figuring. She had raised two girls herself, hadn't she? "Oh grandma, this is the woman staying in the suite," Cody said when Art and Jade walked in, hand in hand. "Wow, getting serious?" Lori leaned back in her chair, smiling. Jade blinked and then looked down at their adjoining hands. How'd that happen? She wondered, yanking her hand away. "Jade Spencer, meet the owner of the B & B, Rose Brown." Jade smiled politely and reached out a hand. "How do you do?" she asked. Rose stared at her. If the girl wasn't an Ayala, Rose thought, then she wasn't a woman. The sea crashing against the rocks right now wasn't the Pacific. The- Realizing she was thinking too much Rose smiled back at the young woman and wiped a hand on her pants before shaking. "Hello. Hope you slept well? Have a seat; you're late for breakfast. Hello, Art." "Oh, it was heaven," Jade assured her, sitting down to the chair Art pulled out for her. "And I'm sorry for being late. I went for a walk and got distracted." Sitting on the far end of the table beside her cousin Scarlett, Lori snickered. Cody sent a warning look and Lori widened her eyes innocently. "Hello, Rose darling," Art said with a smile. Rose raised one eyebrow, and turned back to the stove to add eggs to the frying pan. "Jade, this is our only other guest at the moment, Mrs. Edwards," Cody gestured to a woman in her early forties, with a wide smile and bleached blond hair. Jade smiled in return, her dimple flashing. "Beside her is my oldest cousin, Theodore Donahue. He's the town sheriff," Cody said proudly. Jade looked at the big man with the piercing black eyes and jet-black hair, his face serious and firm. She nodded. He looked like her idea of a sheriff. "Beside him is his wife, Fayrene. She used to be a paramedic in New York City, and now she's Mermaid Point's librarian. The baby is Angel." "Hello," Fayrene said with a friendly smile. She had a cute face with a pointed chin, dominated by huge blue eyes, fluffy red hair surrounding her like a cloud. The baby girl in her lap had her father's black hair and her mothers blue eyes. As she shifted, Jade noticed the woman was pregnant. "Call me Fay." "Hello, Fay," Jade answered, liking her immediately. She looked down at the heaping plate of food Rose had set before her. Eggs and sausage and bacon and French toast. It was more than she usually ate for breakfast in a week. "The next one over is Nico Joskeff, my cousin's oldest son. He's nine, and late for school," Cody explained as the dark skinned boy wolfed down his breakfast. Beside him was a small boned woman with wheat blond hair, a trusting, round face and tilted eyes. "That's his mom, Scarlett, and her little one, Stefan." "And of course you're not expected to remember all of our names," Scarlett laughed, balancing the baby and patting her other son on the back as he choked on some food. Jade murmured something unintelligible as she took a bite of food. The food in her mouth was a miracle. "You've met Lori, last night," Cody said. Jade turned her attention to the teenage girl. Her sun-streaked brown hair was short and choppy, her features pretty. She had the aqua-green tilted, cat like eyes Jade had noticed in all of the women of the family so far. And, Jade had also noticed, enough sass to go around the table twice and still have some leftover for others. "Standing in the doorway is Scarlett's husband, Alex Joskeff." Jade looked up at the man watching her with black eyes. His skin was a warm brown, and he was the only one dressed formally. He was wearing a pinstripe suit. "He's the family blood-sucker," Scarlett said fondly. Alex laughed, his teeth piercing white against his dark skin. "A lawyer," Art explained to her. "Oh." "And this is my husband," Cody finished, patting the arm of the man beside her. He was tall and lean, with short light brown hair and rather serious brown eyes. In his arms was a baby girl with a goofy smile and brown pigtails. "Zach O'Reilly, and my oldest child, Zoey. Aaron, my son, is still sleeping, thank God." "God had nothing to do with it," Lori said, standing up looking up at the clock. She was late for first period, again. "I drugged him." She hurried out of the room before anybody could say anything. "That girl is gonna be the death of us," Theo spoke up for the first time, carefully cutting his sausage into smaller pieces. There was a round of agreements around the table. Mrs. Edwards, she noticed, seemed to be one of the family. "My Aunt Jessie and Uncle Kaleb are still asleep," Cody added. "And my older brother Ian and his family haven't stopped by yet. You'll meet them later though." Jade wondered if she would. She had paid her room for a week, but she really did need to get back to work. As if reading her mind, Art leaned closer to her, stealing a piece of bacon while he was at it. "What do you do for a living, Sleeping Beauty?" She glared at him before answering. "My best friend owns her own magazine in the Bay Area," she said, "and I'm her managing editor." "What does that involve?" Mrs. Edwards asked, resting her chin on her hand. "Well, basically I'm second in command. I take care of stuff she doesn't want to hassle with." "Like what?" Art asked. "Hiring and firing, for one," Jade shrugged. "I do some of the page layout, although we now have a graphic designer who does most of it." "What kind of magazine is it?" Rose asked, sitting down at the table with her own plate of food. Jade noticed it wasn't filled with even half the food she had been served. Which explained how Rose had managed to keep a figure, she supposed. "An arts and literature magazine. It's called Mental Visions. Original artwork and poetry from people around the area. It's grown considerably since we started," her face became animated as she spoke. Mental Visions was Natalie Carlisle's spoiled baby, and Jade was proud to be a part of it. It wasn't often that an illegitimate girl who had been raised in a crack house could rise above her life and make a place for herself in society. Which was exactly what Jade had done. She had figured out when she was very young that her ticket out of her mother's life was school, and Jade had thrown herself into school with a passion her teacher's had never seen. She had done every extra credit project she could, not because she needed to, but because she wanted to. Her extracurricular activities in high school had included Varsity Basketball, Student Body President, Peer Counseling, Track, and being editor of the newspaper; along with her Honors classes. It had been a heavy load for her to juggle, but she had poured herself into it. She had graduated valedictorian, and been accepted to the Academy of Art in San Francisco with a full scholarship. She had met Natalie Carlisle when she had interned for Mental Visions, which Natalie had been struggling to start. Jade had graduated from the Academy at 22, and gone straight to work for Natalie as a Graphic Designer. In the almost three years that she'd been there, Mental Visions had doubled in size, and was now distributed throughout Marin and Sonoma County. "I used to be poet," Rose announced, pouring ketchup on her scrambled eggs. "Really?" Scarlett looked up from wiping Stefan's nose. "I had no idea grandma." Rose nodded her head several times, chewing her food. "The creative gene runs in our blood," Rose said to Jade. Jade tilted her head, interested. She ignored Arthur, who was stealing more of her bacon. "My daughter Jessie and my grandbaby Scarlett design jewelry. They sell it in San Francisco, you know. You've probably bought some of their stuff," Jade nodded. Perhaps she had. "And then of course there's Ian. I know you've read his books. Ian Elliot?" "Ian Elliot? The Ian Elliot who has a best seller on the stands every time I go into a bookstore?" Jade was impressed. She loved his books; they were dark, twisted horror novels critics compared to Dean Koontz and Stephen King. "That's him," Cody flashed Jade a huge smile. "That's my big brother." "Wow." "Lori does pottery and sells it at the Treasure Cove, Gwen Mogler's store." "Speaking of which," Cody leaned forward, resting her elbows on the table. "Did Arthur tell you he carves things out of driftwood and sells them at the Treasure Cove?" "No," surprised, she turned to look at the man beside her. "That's pretty neat, Arthur." He shrugged it off. "Then of course there's Cody herself," Rose continued, patting her great-grandson Nico on the back as he rushed by to go get his backpack. "Cody has always been an artist. She had her first showing seven months ago. It was a sight to behold." "Are the paintings in my room yours?" Jade asked. She had been mesmerized by the art in her room, one in particular of a young girl sitting on the sand with the waves rolling over her legs. Blushing, Cody nodded. "They're beautiful. Absolutely beautiful," Jade sighed. "It must be wonderful to have such an artistic family." "And Theo won't admit it," Fay dug a sharp elbow into her husbands muscular stomach. "But he's a poet as well." "Fay," Theo warned. "What?" she asked innocently. He shook his head and then smiled. "I love you," he said, standing and kissing her forehead. He ran a hand down his little girl's smooth cheek and then picked up his plate. "I'm off," he said. A round of good-byes followed him out the door. Art, who hadn't taken his eyes off of Jade, saw her eyes fill with tears before she reclined her head. His forehead creased as questions filled his mind. What was she doing here? The resemblance to Callie was uncanny, and had him worried. Who was she to the Ayalas? "I'll be leaving now, also," Mrs. Edwards stood up, smoothing her checkered skirt. "Thank you, Mrs. Brown, for that delicious breakfast." A chorus of agreement went around the table, and soon everyone stood up, leaving the room to Jade and Art. Alex, who was still standing in the doorway, his arms crossed over his chest watching Jade, came up and put a hand on her shoulder. "Ms. Spencer?" he gave her a polite smile. "Your presence has been requested at the Ayala residence at one o'clock this afternoon. I'm their attorney and will be there as well. I could take you there, if you'd like." Jade kept her face expressionless as she nodded. "Alright. I'll meet you on the porch at quarter till. In the meantime, I think I'll go on up to my room." So saying, she stood, carrying her plate over to the sink, and then quickly exited the room. Art's frown grew deeper, as did his curiosity. Copyright2002 by Ari Walker Tweet
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