Chapter One
She wasn’t looking forward to this. It had to be done, of course. Suzanna dragged a fifty-pound bag of mulch over to her pickup, then muscled it into the bed. That small physical task wasn’t the problem. In fact, she was pleased to be able to make the delivery her second stop on her way home.
It was the first stop she wished she could avoid. But for Suzanna Calhoun Dumont, duty could never be avoided.
She’d promised her family that she would speak to Holt Bradford, and Suzanna kept her promises. Or tried to, she thought, and wiped a forearm over her sweaty brow.
But damn it, she was tired. She’d put in a full day in Southwest Harbor, landscaping a new house, and she had a full schedule the next day.
That wasn’t taking into account that her sister Amanda was getting married in little more than a week, or that The Towers was mass confusion in preparation for the wedding and with the remodeling of the west wing.
It didn’t even begin to deal with the fact that she had two energetic children at home who would want, and deserved, their mother’s time and attention that evening.
Or the paperwork that was piling up on her desk—or the fact that one of her part-time employees had quit just that morning.
Well, she’d wanted to start a business, Suzanna reminded herself.
And she’d done it. She glanced back at her shop, locked for the night with the display of summer blooms in the window, at the greenhouse just behind the main building.
It belonged to her—and the bank, she thought with a little smile—every pansy, petunia and peony.
She’d proven she wasn’t the incompetent failure her ex-husband had told her she was. Over and over again.
She had two beautiful children, a family who loved her and a landscaping-and-gardening business that was holding its own. She didn’t even suppose Bax’s claim that she was dull could apply now. Not when she was in the middle of an adventure that had started eighty years before.
There certainly wasn’t anything mundane about searching for a priceless emerald necklace or being dogged by international jewel thieves who would stop at nothing to get their hands on her great-grandmother Bianca’s legacy.
Not that she’d been much more than a supporting player so far, Suzanna mused as she climbed into the truck.
It had been her sister C.C. who had started it by falling in love with Trenton St. James III, of the St. James Hotels.
It had been his idea to turn part of the financially plagued family home into a luxury retreat.
In doing so, the old legend of the Calhoun emeralds had leaked to the ever-eager press and had set off a chain reaction that had run a course from the absurd to the dangerous.
It had been Amanda who had nearly been killed when the desperate and obsessed thief going by the name of William Livingston had stolen family papers he’d hoped would lead him to the lost emeralds. And it had been her sister Lilah who had had her life threatened during the latest attempt.
In the week that had passed since that night, the police hadn’t turned up a trace of Livingston, or his latest known alias, Ellis Caufield.
It was odd, she thought as she joined the stream of traffic, how The Towers and the lost emeralds had affected the entire family.
The Towers had brought C.C. and Trent together.
Then Sloan O’Riley had come to design The Retreat and had fallen in love with Amanda.
The shy history professor, Max Quartermain, had lost his heart to Suzanna’s free-spirited sister, Lilah, and both of them had nearly been killed. Again, because of the emeralds.
There were times Suzanna wished they could forget about the necklace that had belonged to her great-grandmother. But she knew, as they all knew, that the necklace Bianca had hidden away before her death was meant to be found.
So they continued, following up every lead, exploring every dusty path. Now it was her turn. During his research, Max had uncovered the name of the artist Bianca had loved.
It was a story that never failed to make Suzanna wistful, but it was just her bad luck that the connection with the artist led to his grandson.
Holt Bradford. She sighed a little as she drove through the traffic-jammed streets of the village.
She couldn’t claim to know him well—wasn’t sure anyone could.
But she remembered him as a teenager. Surly, bad tempered and aloof.
Of course, girls had been attracted by his go-to-hell attitude.
The attraction helped along, no doubt, by the dark, brooding looks and angry gray eyes.
Odd she should remember the color of his eyes, she mused. But then again, the one time she had seen them up close and personal he’d all but burned her alive with them.
He’d probably forgotten the altercation, she assured herself.
She hoped so. Altercations made her shaky and sweaty, and she’d had enough of them in her marriage to last a lifetime.
Certainly Holt wouldn’t still hold a grudge—it had been more than ten years.
After all, he hadn’t been hurt very much when he’d taken a header off his motorcycle.
And it had been his fault, she thought, setting her chin. She’d had the right of way.
In any case, she had promised Lilah she would talk to him. Any connection with Bianca’s lost emeralds had to be followed up. As Christian Bradford’s grandson, Holt might have heard stories.
Since he’d come back to Bar Harbor a few months before, he had taken up residence in the same cottage his grandfather had lived in during his romance with Bianca.
Suzanna was Irish enough to believe in fate.
There was a Bradford in the cottage and Calhouns in The Towers.
Surely between them, they could find the answers to the mystery that had haunted both families for generations.
The cottage was on the water, sheltered by two lovely old willows.
The simple wooden structure made her think of a doll’s house, and she thought it a shame that no one had cared enough to plant flowers.
The grass was freshly mowed, but her professional eye noted that there were patches that needed reseeding, and the whole business could use a good dose of fertilizer.
She started toward the door when the barking of a dog and the rumble of a man’s voice had her skirting around to the side.
There was a rickety pier jutting out above the calm, dark water.
Tied to it was a neat little cabin cruiser in gleaming white.
He sat in the stern, patiently polishing the brass.
He was shirtless, his tanned skin taut over bone and muscle, and gleaming with sweat.
His black hair was curled past where his collar would be if he’d worn one.
Apparently he didn’t find it necessary to cover himself with anything more than a pair of ripped and faded cutoffs.
She noticed his hands, limber, long fingered, and wondered if he had inherited them from his artist grandfather.
Water lapped quietly at the boat. Behind it, she saw a fish hawk soar then plummet. It gave a cry of triumph as it rose up again, a silver fish caught wriggling in its claws. The man in the boat continued to work, untouched by or oblivious to the drama of life and death around him.
Suzanna fixed what she hoped was a polite smile on her face and walked toward the pier. “Excuse me.”
When his head shot up, she stopped dead. She had the quick but vivid impression that if he’d had a weapon, it would have been aimed at her. In an instant, he had gone from relaxed to full alert, with an edgy kind of violence in the set of his body that had her mouth going dry.
As she struggled to steady her heartbeat, she noted that he had changed. The surly boy was now a dangerous man. There was no other word that came to mind. His face had matured so that it was all planes and angles, sharply defined. The stubble of a two-day beard added to the rough-and-ready look.
But it was his eyes once again that dried up her throat. A man with eyes that sharp, that potent, needed no weapon.
He squinted at her but didn’t rise or speak. He had to give himself a moment to level. If he’d been wearing his weapon, it would have been out and in his hand. That was one of the reasons he was here, and a civilian again.
He might have forced himself to relax—he knew how—but he remembered her face.
A man didn’t forget that face. God knows, he hadn’t.
Timeless. In one of his youthful fantasies, he’d imagined her as a princess, lost and lovely in flowing silks.
And himself as the knight who would have slain a hundred dragons to have her.
The memory made him scowl.
She’d hardly changed, he thought. Her skin was still pale Irish roses and cream, the shape of her face still classically oval.
Her mouth had remained full and romantically soft, her eyes that deep, deep, dreamy blue, luxuriously lashed.
They were watching him now with a kind of baffled alarm as he took his time looking her over.
She’d pulled her hair back in a smooth ponytail, but he remembered how it had flowed, long and loose and gleaming blond over her shoulders.
She was tall—all the Calhoun women were—but she was too thin.
His scowl deepened at that. He’d heard she’d been married and divorced, and that both had been difficult experiences.
She had two children, a boy and a girl. It was difficult to believe that the slender wand of a woman in grubby jeans and a sweaty T-shirt had ever given birth.
It was harder to believe, harder to accept, that she could jangle his nerves just by standing ten feet away.
With his eyes still on hers, he went back to his polishing. “Do you want something?”
She let out the breath she hadn’t been aware she was holding. “I’m sorry to just drop in this way. I’m Suzanna Dumont. Suzanna Calhoun.”
“I know who you are.”