her utter lack of warmth, but she doesnât like me. Not at all.
Well, thatâs fine. The sentiment is definitely mutual.
He can feel her gaze following him as he leaves the room, and finds himself wondering if he should mention her to Charlotte later. Hired help, after all, is dispensableâespecially now that the master of the house is gone. Thereâs no reason in the world that Nydia should stay on at Oakgate. He and Charlotte and Lianna are capable of taking care of themselves for the remaining time theyâre here, and Jeanne has her visiting nurse . . .
Well, he wonât bring up the idea of firing Nydia yet to his wife. Itâs too soon, her grief too raw. The last thing he wants is to upset her by suggesting any sort of change at Oakgate.
Heâll take her out for a nice dinner, just the two of them, and do his best to get her mind off her sorrow.
That, Royce concludes, is all a loving husband can possibly do at a time like this.
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As she walks up the curving staircase and crosses the wide balcony toward the second-floor guest bedroom wing, Charlotte considers what will become of Oakgateâand Great-Aunt Jeanneânow that her grandfather is gone. Obviously, the place will have to be sold. She certainly has no desire to go on living here, and she doubts her cousins would want toâor that Aunt Jeanne would expect to.
The plantation and the paper mill were strictly Grandaddyâs, inherited from her great-grandfather, the first Gilbert Xavier Remington. Aunt Jeanne, the product of Great-Great-Grandmother Marieâs shameful liaison with another man, received nothing.
Jeanne never married, and barely made a living as a bookkeeper in Savannah. She used to live in an apartment located, ironically, in one of the grand historic district mansions the Remingtons used to frequent. It, like Jeanne Remington herself, had discreetly fallen from grace over the years.
Grandaddy took her in years ago when her mental health began to fail just as their motherâs had. He personally hired the finest visiting nurses available to care for her and made sure that her substantial medical and financial needs were met.
Charlotte assumes he would have expected his grandchildren to do the same after his death. She has no problem with that, though as the lone heir still living in Georgia, she canât possibly have Aunt Jeanne living under her own roof once Oakgate is sold. Itâs really time for her to have full-time care, and be surrounded by people her own age.
There are plenty of nice nursing homes in Savannah. Charlotte and her cousins will just set up her aunt in one of them, and sheâll be sure to visit her often.
Sheâs family. I have to keep her in my life, no matter what, she tells herself. No matter how challenging it is, or how much time she has left.
Itâs impossible to tell how long poor Aunt Jeanne will outlive her half brother. Sheâs suffered from dementia for years, though she still has startlingly lucid moments.
Charlotte uneasily recalls the most recent of them.
This morning, Aunt Jeanne was transported by the creaky old elevator to the first floor where the rest of the family was assembled for the memorial service. It was an unusual occurrence, as the elderly woman rarely leaves her third-floor quarters.
But today, she seemed to know precisely where she was and who was around her. She even called several of the visiting Remingtons by name. The wrong names, in some cases, but at least she wasnât staring vacantly into space or hurtling angry accusations.
When Reverend Snowdon arrived he bent over Jeanneâs wheelchair, clasped her gnarled hand, and said, âIâm so sorry, Miss Remington, about your brotherâs death. I know how difficult this loss is for yâall.â
âNot all of us,â Aunt Jeanne said darkly.
Taken aback, Charlotte laid a hand on her auntâs black crepeâcovered shoulder and said gently,