Sweet

I sensed there was more and what it was before he said it.

 

He swallowed and unloaded the worst of it. “If he never incorporated Wynn’s Garage—I’ve spent the past two weeks searching but can’t find any evidence that he did so—then the garage was a sole proprietorship, indistinguishable from the individual upon his death. Making it part of his estate.”

 

Holy fucking shit, this was not going down. “So I own nothing? I’ve worked for my dad since I was thirteen years old—unpaid for the first several years, not that it stopped him from having me do every oil change and tire rotation that came in. I took responsibility for everything when he got sick. I’ve done everything for the past year—”

 

“I understand, Boyce, and this is as inequitable a thing as I’ve ever—”

 

I stood. “I have to go.”

 

He nodded. “I’ll have to institute a search for her. If she’s worked or applied for credit, an apartment, a loan of any kind—it won’t take more than a week to find her.” He grappled with his collar again. “One last thing. I made a will for her as well—a duplicate of your dad’s with him named as her beneficiary—which made her my client. I will not represent her against you, but I can’t represent you either. It would constitute a conflict of interest in the eyes of the court.”

 

“Well, fuck,” I said, in one of the many understatements of my life.

 

Pearl

 

Saturday afternoon, I was studying when a knock rattled the front door. Besides Mama and Thomas, only Melody knew where I was living. As I expected, she’d gone utterly silent when I called and told her, like that dead calm right before the worst part of a squall hits. “Mel?” I said, and she sputtered to life, firing interrogations without waiting for answers and citing all the reasons she was certain I’d gone off the deep end.

 

Mel was in Dallas though, so whoever it was had probably come for Boyce, who’d taken a box of documents to the attorney who was helping him sort his dad’s affairs.

 

I’d spent the morning in a futile job search, the details of which wouldn’t quit replaying in my head. Most places had already hired for the summer, and I had no job history or employable skills to entice the few that had an opening. Dressed like it was rush week instead of a Saturday in the most laid-back town on the coast, I’d filled out applications and smiled until my face ached. Everyone had the same questions: Have you worked retail? Waited tables? Run a register? Worked with the public in any way, shape, or form?

 

No, no, no, and no.

 

When the knock sounded again, I tiptoed to the door. There was no peephole, so I lifted a mini-blind slat. Brittney Loper. She turned my direction and I dropped the slat.

 

“Boyce, I saw you. Open up, dammit.”

 

I was so not in the mood for Brittney Loper.

 

Granted, I was never in the mood for Brittney Loper.

 

“Boyce, c’mon! I need you.”

 

Oh God. Hoping she didn’t mean what I feared she meant, I turned the bolt and pulled the door open to cutoffs, boots, and a tank sporting the name of one of the touristy bars on the main drag. Her chest could still influence gravity. I wanted her to look worse for wear, but she didn’t. Blinking thick lashes and tilting her head full of dirty-blond hair like an adorable puppy, she checked the metal numbers tacked into trailer’s siding and then the existence of the garage next door.

 

Why hadn’t it occurred to me that his life included this. Boyce was a man. Men had needs. Needs that would be filled by women who looked like Brittney, if they looked like Boyce.

 

Her gaze swung back to me. “Pearl Frank? Right?”

 

“That’s me,” I gritted out. “Boyce isn’t here, Brittney. He’ll be back in an hour or two.”

 

“Whoa. I didn’t know you and Boyce—” She snorted a giggle. “Ah, this explains a whole helluva lot! But I thought you were away at college or something?”

 

“I graduated.” What explained a lot of what?

 

“Cool. And you decided to move back here… for Boyce? That’s kinda—”

 

“No, that’s not—”

 

“—sweet.”

 

“—why.” Sweet? Was she high? Knowing Brit, that was entirely possible. “I just needed somewhere to stay, and Boyce has a spare room since…”

 

“Since his worthless turdass of a father kicked it, finally. That guy was barely a step above my old man.”

 

A step above?

 

“So when will Boyce be back? An hour, you said? Because my piece of shit truck is shaking like a tweaker between hits.” She pointed a thumb over her shoulder at the beat-up pickup in Wynn’s driveway. “I dunno what I did to it, but it’s pissed. I gotta have that thing to get back and forth to work or I’m screwed.”

 

Even Brittney Loper was employable.

 

That’s uncalled for, my conscience tut-tutted. “I have the opposite problem. Working car, no job.” Small talk? Shut up, Pearl.

 

“But your mama is married to Dr. Frank. Don’t they, y’know, give you money?”

 

My face warmed.

 

Before I could answer, she added, “If you and Boyce ain’t getting busy then why are you living here instead of there? I haven’t been to the Frank place since we graduated, of course—what was that, four years ago? But shit, girl, they’d have to pry my ass outta there with a crowbar if I was you.” A crease popped up on her forehead. “Unless Dr. Frank—”

 

“God. No—no. He’s great. I just had a little disagreement with them about what I’m doing next. They expected me to go to medical school and I… don’t want to.” Why was I telling her this?

 

“You know you’re an adult, right?” she said slowly, as if I were dense. “You went to college even! Not married, no kids… You don’t have a kid, right?”

 

“Uh, no.”

 

“Free as a bird. And look at you—you’re a cute little thing. If you wanted Boyce, you could land him. Honestly, if you’d been a bitch in high school like your best friend was—no offense—I wouldn’t point this out, but I mean be real. Plenty of the dipshits we went to school with are still living with their mamas, but Boyce has his own place and his own business. Sure, he was a fuckup in high school—weren’t we all—well, not you—me and Boyce and Rick, etcetera. But Boyce turned out pretty decent I’d say, and Lord-have-mercy hot to boot.”

 

I snapped my mouth closed once I realized it was ajar. “I thought you and he… uh…”

 

She laughed, displaying a mouth full of white teeth. I meanly concentrated on her small overbite. “Well, yeah, but it’s never been anything serious between us. You, though. You’ve got the goods. He’d be an idiot not to go for it. Just make him work for it. Boyce doesn’t set store by anything that comes too easy, if you get my drift.”

 

? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

 

Boyce was silent when he returned, dropping the box in his room, checking the fridge and shutting it without removing anything. Unless he’d eaten while he was out, he’d missed lunch.

 

“How’d your meeting go?”

 

He shook his head but didn’t reply, staring out the window into a backyard that had been allowed to go wild.

 

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