"Stop it. The day I was moving back, Flynn stopped by with Moe. The first thing that dog did was run through the house and break a lamp. It wasn't a national tragedy."
"I guess I'm just jumpy, between one thing and another."
"Go in and sit down. I'll get the wine."
There was a fire already blazing. He must have seen to that while she was unpacking. Like the rest of the house, the room looked settled and warm and interesting . All the little pieces, the things she imagined he'd collected on his travels, the art, even the way it was all placed.
It spoke of a man who knew what he wanted and was used to having the best.
She wandered over to study a painting of a Paris street scene, the sidewalk cafe with its cheerful umbrellas, the rivers of flowers, the dignity of the Arc de Triomphe in the background.
A far cry from her framed postcards.
And he'd sat at one of those busy cafes, drinking strong black coffee out of a tiny cup, while she'd only dreamed of it.
Brad came in with a bottle of wine in one hand and two glasses held by the bowls in the other. "I bought that a couple of years ago," he said as he joined her. "I liked the movement, the way the traffic's bunched up on the street. You can almost hear the horns blasting."
He tipped wine into one of the glasses, waited for her to take it. "We Vanes can't seem to stop collecting art."
"Maybe you should think about having a museum."
"Actually, my father's working on something. A hotel, a resort. He could fill it with some of his art, and have an excuse to buy more."
"He would build a hotel just so he has a place to put his art collection?"
"That, and enterprise. Art, wood, and capitalism are the Vane bywords. He's angling to find the right piece of land here in the Highlands, where it all began." His shrug was a gesture of easy confidence. "But if he doesn't, he'll find it elsewhere. Once B.C. knows what he wants, he doesn't take no for an answer."
"So you come by it honestly."
"I'll take that as a compliment. He's a good man. A little formidable, but a good man. A good husband and father and a hell of a businessman. He'll like you."
"I can't imagine," she said fai
ntly.
"He'll admire what you've done with your life, what you've made. And what you're still building. He'd say you have grit, and there's nothing he respects more."
She expected a man like B. C. Vane would grill her like a hamburger patty if he ever discovered she was involved with his son.
"Do you love them? Your parents?" "Very much."
"I don't know if I love my mother." It spilled out before she knew she meant to say it, before she knew she thought it. "What an awful thing to say. I want to, but I don't know if I do."
Shocked by her own words, she lowered herself to the arm of a chair. "And my daddy, I haven't seen him in so many years. I don't even know him, so how could I love him? He left us. He left his wife and his four children, and he never came back."
"That was tough on you. Tough on your mother."
"On all of us," Zoe agreed. "But especially on Mama. It didn't just break her heart, it shriveled it up until it was all dry and brittle and there wasn't any juice left for us. When he left, she took off after him. I didn't think she was going to come back."
"She left you alone?" The sheer outrage of it vibrated in his voice. "She left four children alone?"
"She was wild to get him back. She was only gone a few days, but… oh, God, I was scared. What was I going to do if she didn't come back?"
"Wasn't there anyone you could've called, gone to for help?"
"My mama's sister, but she and Mama fought all the time, so I didn't want to call her. I didn't know if I should call any of my daddy's family, the way things were. The fact was, I didn't know what the hell to do, so I didn't do anything except mind the kids and wait for her to come home."
He couldn't fathom it. "How old were you?"