“You freed me, Eliza.” He stroked her hair, her cheek. “Be happy for me.”
Rising, he went to the bedroom, took a blanket, a pillow and arranged them in the tiny second bedroom. He carried her in, laid her carefully down on the floor, then covered her with a sheet.
He wasn’t an animal.
* * *
Darby consulted with a client at the woman’s pretty lakeside cottage. Noting the dock, the boat, the slope and rickety wooden steps leading down to both, Darby already had ideas.
“I bet when you’re not out on the water, you’re sitting up there looking at it,” Darby mused.
“You’d win that bet.” Patsy Marsh, a cheerful woman in her fifties, just smiled. “My Bill and I love living on the lake. Our kids are both in college now, but when they’re home, they’re right out there with us. Do you like to sail?”
“I haven’t tried it yet. Busy season for me.”
“So I see and hear. I’m hoping you can help us out, even though it’ll make you busier. You can see,” Patsy said as she gestured at the slope. “We just can’t keep mowing that. Bill kept saying leave it be, then he had a fall with the mower, and I put my foot down. He wasn’t hurt, but he could’ve been. He finally threw up his hands and said to call that girl who did Emily’s place.”
“I’m glad he did, because you’re right, he could’ve been hurt. You said you were thinking ground covers.”
“Something that we don’t have to mow, but isn’t unsightly, doesn’t get too tall.”
“I can give you some recommendations there, but—”
“Uh-oh!” Now Patsy laughed. “Emily told me to watch out if you said ‘but.’”
“She knows me too well.”
“I’m willing to listen.”
“I like to think about what I’d do if a client’s place was my place. And what I’d do here is, first, replace those steps with stone. Widen them another foot.”
“I’ve been telling Bill somebody’s going to go right through one of them and break an ankle. Keep going.”
“On the slope, I’d continue this really nice patio by doing a couple terraces of raised beds, matching the stone on the steps. Curved terraces to mirror the curve of the lake, low shrubs and perennials. And at the base, I’d do river rock.”
“I’ve seen that wall you built up at Zane’s place, and it’s gorgeous. But it’s so structured. It feels like it wouldn’t work for the cottage.”
Ah, Darby thought, a woman who can see what’s good, what’s not.
Excellent.
“You’re right, it wouldn’t. You want something pretty, but a little more, well, cottagey—like the soft, sand brown of your patio. I’d want that same look.”
“I’ve never been able to plant anything on this damn slope.”
“Your front garden’s beautiful, and so are your patio planters. You do it yourself?”
“I do, and I love to garden. I’d love plants out here. Curved,” she murmured. “Wouldn’t that just look sweet?”
“It would—from your house, your patio, and from the water. I could do a rough sketch for you to show your husband.”
“Why don’t you do that? We’re going to need some numbers.”
“I can work that up. Let me get some measurements.”
“Emily told me you’d have ideas.”
She had a million of them, and dispensed more to another potential client in Lakeview Terrace.
Darby walked the lake-facing backyard—enormous yard—with the pert and perky Charlene. “Your house, your view, your gardens are absolutely stunning. Why do you need me?”
“I really want to keep the gardens stunning. I can’t take credit for them. We just moved in this winter, but Joe and I’ve done our best to keep them up. The thing is we both work full-time, have an active two-year-old—who’s with his grammy today—and we’re expecting our second in November.”
“Congratulations.”
“Thanks. We’re excited. The thing is we need someone to do fall maintenance, spring cleanup, and, at least for a while, help us with what we’ve got here every couple weeks. The owners before us did a hell of a good job, but she was retired and an avid gardener. Before them, the owners had, I’m told, groundskeepers.”
“And that’s what you’re looking for.”
“More or less. But, both Joe and I want to work at it, too. It’s relaxing and satisfying—and it’s our yard. It’s just we sure need to learn more than we know now. We figure, when we can, to sort of shadow you.”
“That’s what I like to hear. If the goal is to have a beautiful landscape and have someone else deal with it? Nothing’s wrong with that. But better, to my mind, to take real ownership.
“You have busy lives,” Darby added. “That’s where we come in. I can put you on a schedule for the twice-monthly maintenance, and we’d follow the weather for the spring and fall.”
“Perfect.”
“Can I ask how you heard about us?”
“Britt Norten. She and I both work at the clinic. I’m an urgent care doctor. And coincidentally, Britt used to live here.”
“She, oh…” Where Zane grew up. Darby turned to study the house again; all that beautiful glass made it seem so open. But it hadn’t been. The grounds, blooming, graceful, made it seem so gracious. It had been anything but.
How would he feel about her working here?
“You know Britt, right?”
“Yes, yes, I know Britt. I know the family. Why don’t I give you a price list, and if you want us to go ahead, I’ll send you a contract.”
“Perfect. While you’re here, there are a couple of plants I just can’t figure out. I tried books, internet. Maybe you can tell me what they are.”
“Sure.”
She walked around with Charlene, identified a few mystery plants as Charlene looked over the price list.
Surely Zane had walked here as a boy, maybe hit some fungoes, tossed up a baseball to snag. Had he wandered out to the dock to sit dreaming by the water?
Dreamed of pulling himself out of the grip of those undercurrents churning so violently inside the handsome house.
“This is exactly what we need.”
“I’m sorry?” Darby yanked herself back. “I was distracted.”
“I said this is just what we need. Why don’t you email the contract and Joe and I will look it over tonight?”
When they came to terms, Darby walked back to her truck torn between the elation of signing a twice-monthly client and worry over how Zane would feel.
She might not have noticed the Mercedes across the street—luxury cars peppered the development—but its engine turned over just as she reached her truck. She had a vague impression of a man behind the wheel in a ball cap and sunglasses before he pulled away from the curb and drove off.
It struck her as slightly odd that she hadn’t seen the driver walk to the car or get in, but she dismissed it. Still distracted, she thought.
She had a couple more stops to make before joining the crew. They’d finally squeezed in a full day’s work between guests at the next-to-last bungalow.