Название: Alaskan Hideaway
Автор: Beth Carpenter
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Вестерны
isbn: 9781474077927
isbn:
âYou really think this RV park thing is a good idea?â
âYes, I do. In order to compete with the new resort theyâre building in Seward, I need to offer something they canât. It will be good for the Caribou, too, since youâre next door. This way groups can vacation together even if they donât all have RVs.â
âWe can always lower our room rates. The resort will probably charge a pretty penny.â
Easy for Marge to say. She and her husband inherited their B&B from his grandparents years ago. They didnât have a mortgage to consider. âI need to make at least enough to cover Samâs loan payments and ongoing expenses.â
âThere is that. You wouldnât want to drag down Samâs finances. Especially since they have a new baby.â
âExactly. And if Sam sold the inn, Iâd have to move back to Anchorage. I donât want Rory to have to change schools again, when sheâs just starting to make friends. Letâs just hope our mysterious neighbor is open to possibilities when I stop by tomorrow with the rolls.â
Marge adjusted the position of her coffee cup. âI hope heâs not gluten free. Most of those actors are, you know. Heâs probably on some weird acorn and kiwi fruit diet or something.â
Ursula shrugged. âI guess Iâll find out tomorrow.â
URSULA PULLED TWO pans of cinnamon rolls from the oven and set them on a wire rack to cool. The divine aromas of yeast, butter and spice filled the kitchen. She eyed the pans doubtfully. Everybody liked bread, right? Occasionally she had a guest with special dietary needs, but the odds of her new neighbor not appreciating a plate of homemade cinnamon rolls had to be low. And even if Marge was right and he was an actor from Hollywood who didnât eat gluten, heâd surely appreciate the gesture.
Movie star. She shook her head and smiled. Why would someone famous want to buy Bettyâs cabin? It only had two bedrooms. The kitchen hadnât been remodeled since the forties. Neither had the bathroom. The guy probably asked Pennyâs husband, Fred, not to spread his name around to avoid a pesky relative or debt collector.
Could someone really do that? Keep your name a secret? Property tax records were public, werenât they? Ursula opened her laptop and did a search for Kenai Peninsula Boroughâs tax records. She located the property on the map and clicked on it, but the record hadnât been updated from Bettyâs name. Ah, but she had a source. The assistant at the tax assessorâs office had stayed in the inn for several weeks while she house-hunted.
Ursula picked up the phone and called. After exchanging pleasantries, she got down to business. âSo, Michelle, I seem to have a new neighbor. I was trying to look up his name on the tax records, but they havenât been updated yet.â
âWhy donât you just ask him?â
âWell, I was hoping to do some background research first, toââ
âSorry. Can you hang on a minute? Someoneâs in my office.â Michelle didnât bother to put the phone on hold, and Ursula tapped her fingers while listening to a long conversation about the probable whereabouts of someoneâs stapler before she came back on the line. âIâm sorry. What was your question?â
âI just wondered if youâd received the paperwork on the new owner of the property next door.â Ursula read the parcel number from the form.
âLet me look.â Papers crackled. âHere it is. Itâs an LLC.â
âWhatâs that?â
âA limited liability company. This oneâs called R&A Holdings.â
âDoes that mean heâs running a business there?â
âNot necessarily. Some people hold their assets in LLCs for other reasons.â
âDoesnât he have to give a name or something?â
âNot on my records. Sorry. Guess youâll just have to do it the old-fashioned way and introduce yourself.â
âI guess so. Thanks anyway.â
âYouâre welcome. Stop by next time youâre in town and weâll grab coffee.â
âI will. Talk with you soon.â Ursula hung up the phone and stared at the wall. This could be good news. Her new neighbor was a limited liability company, not a movie star. Probably a flipper, with plans for a quick remodel and resell. If so, this could work out just fine. He would probably be thrilled to make a small profit with no work, and she could get started on the RV park. Win-win. First thing tomorrow, she would pay him a visit.
* * *
MACâS EYES FLEW OPEN, his dream shattering into fragments. Thanks to the heavy curtains covering the small bedroom window, only the charging light from his cell phone broke up the darkness. After a long day of unpacking and moving boxes, heâd fallen asleep almost immediately, but it wasnât long before the dreams came. He could never remember them, just bits and pieces. A scream of pain. Crimson drops of blood on a white sweater. His own heart pounding and an overwhelming sense of powerlessness.
It was in the darkness he felt the full weight of his mistakes. Heâd failed her. Failed to understand the magnitude of danger she was in. Ignored his own instincts. Told himself she was old enough to make her own decisions. Maybe she was, but he should have tried harder to guide her, should have been more supportive. Should have made it clear she could count on him if things went wrong, and there would be no I told you so. Should have said I love you more often. Because now it was too late.
Eventually, he gave up trying to sleep and moved into the living room. The dog lifted her head from her bed beside the woodstove and thumped her tail against the floor. Mac added a couple of logs to the stove and stoked the fire. He selected a branch from the woodbin, picked up his grandfatherâs pocketknife from the table and settled into a chair beside the stove. A warm muzzle rested on his foot.
The wood stripped away in long curls, landing in the kindling box at his feet. Once the branch was smooth, he began to whittle, a notch here, an arch there. As he worked, the terrors of his dream worked their way out of his head and into the wood. As the last log in the stove fell into a pile of embers, Mac laid the carving aside and yawned. Maybe now he could sleep.
* * *
ONCE SHEâD FED her guests and cleaned up the breakfast dishes the next morning, Ursula arranged the extra cinnamon rolls on a pretty blue-and-white plate sheâd picked up at the church rummage sale. She wrapped them carefully and glanced at the clock on the stove. Was nine too early to drop in on a neighbor? It shouldnât be. And she didnât want to wait too late, for fear heâd be out shopping for building supplies.
Today, instead of taking the ski trail, СКАЧАТЬ