Owen #2
His very first thought when he saw her was that her presence on the island had to be deliberate.
She’d found him. But the brief, genuine look of shock and surprise that had crossed her features when their eyes met told him otherwise.
Dr. Debbi Wineberg hadn't expected to see him here.
But that realization brought a much colder, more dangerous reality crashing into his mind.
If she hadn't come for him, she had come for the new findings at Hearts Hotel. Dr. Debbi Wineberg had somehow smelled the blood in the water and was circling like the vicious shark that she was. And that was a big problem.
Owen steered the Volvo onto the Interstate 75 ramp, accelerating into the stream of traffic heading north toward Fort Myers.
He knew Dr. Anna Caldwell would never have mentioned the find to anyone outside their inner circle.
Owen also knew that she despised Dr. Wineberg even more than he did.
But he was still going to ask her the moment she stepped off the plane because this wasn’t just about the most exciting find he’d had in nearly eleven years.
This was about something deeper. Saving Hearts Hotel.
Not named after the Hearts, but because it really was the Heart of Sweet Blossom Bay.
Owen would not let that viper of a so-called archaeologist destroy it.
He shook the thoughts away, forced his hands to relax their grip on the wheel, and focused on the road.
But the mental dam had already broken. The thought of Dr. Debbi Wineberg and his favorite professor, Dr. Anna Caldwell, together in the same conceptual space brought back the dark, heavy past he’d spent nearly a decade trying to bury.
Owen remembered the cold, sterile reality of his marriage.
It had been an arrangement of absolute convenience, engineered by his parents and the political machine of his ex-wife’s family to merge two historic Charleston dynasties.
At the time, Owen had been buried in his early doctoral research and foolish enough to mistake professional respect for something resembling a future.
Then came Dr. Gillian Oaks to complicate what he’d thought of as his neat and orderly life.
Owen felt a familiar, hot spurt of anger flare in his chest, and he forced himself to bite it down, his jaw aching from the tension.
Stop it, Owen, he muttered aloud to the empty car. Leave it where it belongs.
He pulled the Volvo into the arrival lanes at Southwest Florida International Airport, the towering concrete terminal blocking out the bright afternoon sun.
He parked the estate in the short-term garage, shoved his hands into the pockets of his khakis, and walked quickly through the sliding glass doors into the air-conditioned bustle of the terminal.
Owen pulled out his phone, his fingers flying across the screen as he sent a quick message to Dr. Anna Caldwell: I am here. Just inside the lower-level near the baggage claim.
There was no reply yet. Owen walked over to the digital arrivals board, his eyes scanning the columns until he found her flight from Atlanta. The screen flashed green, indicating the aircraft had just touched down and was taxiing to the gate.
With ten minutes to kill, Owen stepped back against a concrete support pillar, away from the flow of passengers. The encounter at the diner was still clawing at his thoughts. He pulled his glasses from his shirt pocket, slid them onto the bridge of his nose, and opened his phone's internet browser.
He typed Dr. Deborah Wineberg into the search bar, his thumb scrolling past her academic listings at the university, her published papers on Southeastern tribal migrations, and her frequent appearances on South Carolina historical preservation boards.
He scrolled down further, past the academic citations, until his eyes caught a recent headline from a regional business journal. His brows shot up, his heart slamming hard against his ribs as he read the lead paragraph.
The article listed Debbi as a newly appointed independent consultant for a major real estate acquisition firm.
Owen’s eyes widened, his breath catching in his throat as he scrolled down to the next bolded line of text: Dr. Wineberg will be providing historical and environmental impact evaluations exclusively for Baxter Johnson, Projects Director of the Wayne Group.
Owen stared at the screen, the noise of the baggage claim fading into a dull, distant hum as he stared at a picture of Dr. Debbi Wineberg and the man standing beside her.
The same man that he’d just seen her with at the diner.
A man who was a member of the Wayne Group.
The very developer who was trying to force George Heart out of his family’s heritage property.
"Owen." The familiar, sharp voice broke through his panic.
Owen snapped his head up, quickly sliding his phone into his pocket as he saw Dr. Anna Caldwell walking toward him through the crowd, her silver hair pulled back into her signature, elegant knot, her sharp eyes fixed on his face with absolute relief.
Even in her eighties, she was still a striking woman with a sharp mind.
Owen’s jaw clenched as he wondered if Anna knew about Dr. Debbi Wineberg being here. While it greatly annoyed him if she did and said nothing, it would be better than the alternative, as the last thing he wanted was for Anna to leave because she, too, had a stormy history with Dr. Debbi Wineberg.
Owen blew out a breath as he went to greet her, and that cold feeling that a storm was brewing gripped him a bit tighter.
Even if Dr. Wineberg wasn’t here for the dig, Owen knew without a shadow of a doubt that his life was once again about to change.
Only this time, he was not going to be the one to pack up and leave everything behind.
This time, no one would hurt or try to destroy the people he’d come to care deeply for—his Sweet Blossom Bay family.
Owen made a quiet resolve and promise to himself that this time he’d be prepared and not rush into anything blindly.