Название: Dreaming Ivy
Автор: Rhonda Lee Carver
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
isbn: 9781616503802
isbn:
“Do you know any particulars about his and Elizabeth’s marriage?” Max took a step closer to Elizabeth’s painting. He lifted it, holding it out for closer examination.
“Elizabeth was said to have been in her late teens and Marcus in his thirties when they married in the late 1800s. Age wasn’t of much concern, I’m sure. It hadn’t been unusual for an older man to marry a young woman, especially a man as wealthy as Marcus. He was probably the prime catch for young and old.” Aspects of the story that she’d heard and read became clearer to her. As if it had been only yesterday that she’d learned the facts.
Max set the painting back against the wall. He strode to the window and stared out. Ivy wondered what thoughts crossed his mind. She brought her attention back to the portraits. She couldn’t deny that she found the intensity of their eyes mesmerizing. It was almost as if Marcus and Elizabeth pulled her into their paintings, tugging her into the molten colors. Although it didn’t appear that Elizabeth had painted herself with the intention of seduction, Ivy thought that the young woman staring back at her from the canvas was bewitching by nature. Any woman, with even the slightest amount of pretension, would have been bejeweled with diamonds and gold in her own portrait. Marcus could have afforded to adorn her with the finest jewelry. Elizabeth had deliberately painted herself as a simple, demure woman. Her beauty was enough embellishment.
“I wonder what type of person Elizabeth was,” Ivy wondered aloud. “Was she madly in love with her husband? Was he crazy in love with her? Did they share great happiness before tragedy struck? Did Marcus die a heartbroken man after losing all his loved ones?”
Max’s chuckle reverberated off the bare walls. “If you believe in all that romantic bullshit.”
Ivy turned on her heel and swiped a stray tendril of hair off her cheek. “Some people do believe in love.”
He snagged her with a cold stare, then pushed away from the window and started for the door. It slammed shut before he reached it.
Ivy’s breath swooshed from her lungs. “Did you do that?” She wasn’t sure if what she saw was accurate.
There was a slight hesitation before he muttered, “What the hell?”
* * * *
Max had seen a lot of strange things over the course of his career as a ghost hunter. He’d seen enough outlandish events that he’d written books on haunting and mystical spirits, sold millions of copies, but he’d never been invaded with the kind of deep-rooted sense of unease he felt at that moment.
But even with everything he’d seen over the years, he still didn’t chalk anything up to paranormal unless he had proof. A slamming door wasn’t enough to have him calling it a ghost at work.
He jiggled the knob, but the door didn’t open. “It’s locked.” He gritted his teeth. “Damn old house. It must have been a draft.”
“Yeah, must have been.”
He could hear the speculation in Ivy’s voice. She looked a bit green around the edges. He laughed. “You scared?”
She turned her lips down at the corners and she shot him her priceless “I could slap you” stare. “No, I’m not scared.” She blew a long breath through tight lips. “How will we get out of here?”
“Relax.” He gripped the handle again but it wasn’t giving. Just when he thought he couldn’t be more miserable, something happened to prove that things could always get worse. When Ivy started tapping her foot in frustration, he knew it had gotten bad. He wanted out of the room.
Running his hands along the frame, he quickly realized that he wasn’t going to break the door. It was solid wood, thicker than doors made now. He turned and looked at the window. He sighed in irritation. “I guess I gotta do what I gotta do.”
“Through the window? That’s what your big idea is?”
“Do you have another way out in mind?” She remained quiet. “Didn’t think so.”
To his luck, the window rolled up easily and was large enough to accommodate his size. Once he placed one foot on the roof, he silently hoped that it would hold his weight. He didn’t trust its durability.
With both feet planted firmly on the wood, he tapped lightly and stomped and checked out the best way down. Nothing looked safe, but he’d been in tougher situations. Satisfied that he wouldn’t fall through, he made his way slowly across the unevenly-shaped shingles toward the edge.
And there he stopped. The only way to the ground was either jumping, which risked death–not going to happen–or the rickety trellis that looked to be a relic from when the Thorntons called this place home. The paint had chipped and parts were broken. Bending, he pushed the lattice and investigated its strength. It didn’t move, but that didn’t mean anything. It was nailed to the side of the house securely but he wasn’t sure how decayed the wood was. With great caution, he scaled the lattice, securing his footing with each step. The old wood creaked and cracked under his weight, warning him that an apparatus meant for a climbing bush wasn’t built for this.
Half way down, a loud splintering sounded seconds before he felt shaking and the loosening of the boards. “Shit.”
The lattice completely separated from the house.
* * * *
Ivy heard the stomping of Max’s footsteps long before he opened the door. She had a feeling something was wrong. When the door swung open and she saw his bitter expression and the disarray of his clothes, she had a good idea what had happened. “Are you okay?” she asked.
“As happy as a pig eating slop.” He had pieces of foliage in his hair. A long scratch ran down his cheek.
“Thank you for opening the door.”
“Was there another option?” With a turn on his heel, he marched back down the hall. She could hear the thumping of his boots all the way.
Her cell rang and she saw the ID was her mother. “Mom, you okay?”
“I’m fine, dear. Just checking in.”
“Great.”
“Is that old place safe enough for you to be staying in?”
“Besides a few cobwebs, I think it’ll suffice.” Ivy hoped.
“Where will you be sleeping?”
Ivy smiled at her mother’s sincere interrogation. “In the master suite. You wouldn’t believe how lovely it is.”
“Take pictures. Is there electricity? How will you eat? You’ll eat properly, right?”
“Yes, Mom. I’ll be fine. The house isn’t the problem. I have a much bigger issue.”
“Oh СКАЧАТЬ