to say something. Eventually she had.
“You should go now.”
That was it. Four words. No explanation, no apology. Just “you should go now.”
Carly had run.
Two days later, she’d walked down the aisle and married Allen. Because it had been easier than facing the truth. Because she’d been afraid of being alone. Funny how she’d ended up alone, anyway.
“You’ll figure it out,” Robert told her. “You and Michelle were friends. Once you talk, you’ll be friends again.”
She nodded because it was easier than telling the truth. That while Carly was the injured party, Michelle seemed to be the one who had come home looking for revenge.
* * *
Michelle stepped into the kitchen at the inn and breathed deeply. The fragrance of cinnamon mingled with bacon and coffee. Her mouth watered and for the first time in months she was hungry.
The room was different—bigger, with longer counters and more windows, but the heart was the same. Damaris still ruled from her eight-burner stove, and servers and helpers jumped when she barked their names.
Michelle watched as the cook flavored eggs with her secret spices and flipped pancakes. Diced vegetables and cheese were added to omelets, blackberries added as a side to everything. Toast popped, the juicer whirred and the ever-present slap of plates was accompanied by the call of “order up.”
Her head hurt nearly as much as her hip. A testament to the aftereffects of too much vodka and too little food. But as she watched Damaris, the pain faded to the background. Here, in the chaos, she was finally home.
“Last order,” Damaris called, slapping down another plate.
Michelle glanced at the clock. It was nearly nine. This time of year the breakfast crowd faded early with most of the customers heading off to work. Midweek inn visitors were usually purposeful, with plans and itineraries to be followed.
“Morning,” she said as Damaris turned off burners.
The cook spun and pressed a hand to her heart. “When did you get here?”
“A few minutes ago.”
Damaris hurried toward her, wiping her hands on her white apron. “It’s so good to see you,” she said, pulling Michelle close and hugging her. “You’re hungry.” Damaris released her. “You must be. I’ll make your favorite.”
“You don’t have to.”
Dark eyebrows rose over the frame of her glasses. “You think I don’t know that? Sit.”
Michelle limped over to the stools by the counter and sat. Damaris poured her coffee and passed it over, then studied the ingredients on the counter.
“You didn’t stay here last night,” she said, slicing cinnamon bread. “I asked.”
“I didn’t want to.” An almost-truth. “It’s strange being back.”
“That’s because you waited too long. What were you thinking? Ten years? In all that time you couldn’t come back once to see me?”
Michelle didn’t answer. Her reasons for not visiting had nothing to do with Damaris and everything to do with Carly and Brenda.
“What do you think of the changes?” Damaris kept her attention on the eggs she whipped.
“That they’re more than you said. The whole inn is different.”
“I didn’t want to upset you. Carly suggested the remodel, but then your mother ran with it. The contractor was from Seattle. God forbid Brenda should hire local. I think she was sleeping with him.”
“My mother?”
“He took advantage of her, if you ask me. The new roof and kitchen remodel became what you see. I almost felt sorry for her. He left when he was done and never came back. Such bad luck with men.” She looked over her glasses. “Like I said, I almost felt sorry for her.”
Michelle couldn’t summon even that much compassion. “She should have known better. The inn didn’t need to be different. It wasn’t hers. She didn’t have the right.”
“Did you think that would have stopped her?”
“No.”
The pounding was back in her head. The hip ache had never gone away. She supposed she could take one of the pain pills the doctors
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