“And announce to the entire town that I’m here?”
“How long do you think you can hide?” He gestured toward the houses flanking hers. “You’ve got relatives and friends in Rosewood. You plan on never leaving the house? Never answering the door? Or the phone?”
“My parents put the phone on suspend.” It was a weak defense, but the only one she had.
Bret tapped a booted foot on the porch.
“Okay. So I didn’t completely think the plan out.” Samantha glanced down at her lifeless legs. “But I’ll figure out something.”
“You’d have a better chance of folks not spilling your secret if you tell them first. People around here don’t appreciate being lied to.”
She swallowed. “I do know how Rosewood works.”
His eyes darkened further. “You sure about that?”
Between them, he’d always been the logical one, the most grounded. Certainly the one most connected to Rosewood. “Looks like you think I don’t have any claim to my hometown.”
“How long have you been here?”
“Few days.” It had been an excruciating trip, managing first the plane and then the bus ride on her own. She couldn’t even handle the small suitcase she’d brought along. Some strangers had taken pity on her, helping open doors occasionally. But she’d already wearied of pity while she was in the hospital. It wasn’t any more palatable because she needed help. And she’d hated having to enlist the Carruthers to pick her up at the bus station, then struggle to get her wheelchair through the back door. They’d been disapproving, believing she should contact her parents immediately. Ridiculously, she felt on the edge of tears again.
“How are you getting groceries? Supplies?”
She shrugged. Hunger wasn’t her problem. “Mrs. Carruthers keeps bringing over food. I told her not to.”
“Have you eaten breakfast?”
Sam shook her head.
“I didn’t think so.” He glanced at his watch, then pulled his eyebrows together in an annoyed crease. “Rosewood’s a hard place to keep a secret. Just having lights on in the house has probably gotten someone talking.”
Weary both physically and emotionally, she felt like a wound-down clock. Overwhelmed, under-equipped. Neither was her style. Now it was her fate.
A short time later, Bret pulled into the parking lot of Conway’s Nursery. All the lights were off; none of the displays were set out front. Peter, his assistant manager, hadn’t opened yet. And it was a good thirty minutes past opening time. Bret slid out of his Blazer and stomped across the lot.
As he singled out the building key, Bret noticed that the door didn’t look firmly closed. He stepped back a few inches. The sign indicating whether they were open was flipped to Closed. Pushing on the door lightly, it opened. “Peter?”
Silence.
Bret glanced back at the parking lot, which was empty. Peter always drove to work. Turning on the inside lights, Bret could see that the ledger was laid out on the main counter. Peter was supposed to have closed up the previous evening, which meant locking the ledger in the small office.
Heading to the back of the shop, Bret didn’t need long to see the office wasn’t locked, either. A too familiar anger grew. Peter had been slacking off more and more. And it was at the worst possible time.
The recession hadn’t spared Rosewood. People didn’t consider plants a vital necessity. As receipts shrunk, Bret had been forced to rethink his business plan. He’d offered retirement packages to his three oldest employees. That had left him with Peter, whose redeeming quality was superior horticulture knowledge, and two young women who had agreed to share one position.
However, as each woman found a full-time job elsewhere, they’d left. And, now it was just Bret and Peter. Unfortunately, Peter had taken the changes as a permanent job guarantee.
Grabbing the phone, he punched in Peter’s number. It rang and rang. Bret slammed the phone down hard enough to make the base rattle.
Just then he heard Peter’s old Camaro screech into the lot, the low underside scraping on the driveway as it did every day.
Bret gritted his teeth as Peter took his time dragging into the store.
Peter paused to flip the sign on the door to Open.
“Turn it back.”
Surprised, Peter frowned. “It’s time.”
“It’s past time.”
Shrugging, Peter yawned. “No customers.”
“If anyone had come when we’re supposed to be open, do you think they’d wait around until you decided to show up?”
Peter sighed, a long-suffering sound that told Bret that he wouldn’t listen. Certainly wouldn’t change.
“We’ve talked about this…I don’t know. What? More than a dozen times now?” Bret raised his voice. “You’re constantly late. Last night you didn’t bother to put the ledger in the office. Not that it would’ve mattered. You didn’t lock the office or the front door.”
Peter stared at the floor, clearly bored.
“Consider yourself on probation.”
“Probation?” Peter looked genuinely shocked, then amused. “You going to have the rest of the staff take over?”
“I’d do as well running the place by myself. At least I wouldn’t lead the wolf to the hen house.”
“Hen house?”
How such a dimwit could be so talented with plants mystified Bret. “Just worry about your probation. Ninety days. Clean up your act or you’re out.”
Anger flashed in the man’s muddy-colored eyes and he pinched his lips together.
Bret waited to see if Peter would save him the trouble and quit.
Instead, Peter picked up his scruffy backpack and stalked off toward the office.
Bret remembered his promise to Sam that he’d pick up breakfast at the café. “Just a minute.”
Peter slowed down, but didn’t come to a complete stop.
“I’m going out for awhile. Anything comes up, you can reach me on my cell.”
“Whatever.”
Regretting hiring the man for the thousandth time, Bret turned the sign on the door and headed to his apartment over the shop via the outside stairwell. Employing Peter had been a favor. One of his older customers, Val Gertenstal, had convinced Bret that although Peter wasn’t a people person, he was a genius with plants. When they’d been fully staffed, Peter’s odd ways hadn’t mattered, since he worked in the cultivating area. Now that he was expected to help on both sides of the business, every ugly thorn was showing. And sticking into Bret’s hide.
Once inside his apartment, Bret grabbed a cooler. Neighbors would eventually deluge Sam with casseroles and anything else she needed. Just as soon as the truth came out about the extent of the fire.