“Porter or Potter?” Dry Vagina asked. “Because Potter would make more sense.”
He looked pained. “I get that a lot but it’s Porter.”
“How do you know my name?” Quinn asked.
“Look, can we just . . .” He gestured to a small table off to the side of the line.
Torn between curiosity and a healthy sense of survival, Quinn hesitated. “I’m late for work.”
“This will only take a minute.”
Reluctantly, she stepped out of line and moved to the table. “You’ve got one minute.”
He took a deep breath. “As I said, I’m an attorney. I’m from Wildstone, a small town about two hundred miles north. I’m here to give you news of an inheritance.”
Quinn blinked. “Okay first, I’ve never heard of Wildstone. And second, I certainly don’t know anyone from there.”
“We’re a small ranching town that sits in a bowl between the Pacific Coast and wine country,” he said. “Would you like to sit?” he asked quietly, and also very kindly she had to admit. “Because the rest of this is going to be a surprise.”
“I don’t like surprises,” she said, “and you have thirty seconds left.”
It was clear from his expression that he wasn’t happy about having to go into the details in public, but as he was a stranger and maybe also a crackpot, too damn bad.
He drew a deep breath. “The person who left you some property was your birth mother.”
She stared at him and then slowly sank into the before-offered chair without looking, grateful it was right behind her. “You’re mistaken,” she finally said, shaking her head. “I wasn’t adopted.”
He gave her a wan smile. “I’m really sorry to have to be the one to tell you, but you were.”
“I have parents. Lucinda and James Weller.”
“They adopted you when you were two days old.”
The shock of that reverberated through her body. “No,” she whispered. Heart suddenly racing, palms clammy, she shook her head. “They would’ve told me. There’s absolutely no way . . .”
“I’m very sorry,” Cliff said quietly. “But it’s true. They adopted you from Carolyn Adams.” He pulled a picture from his briefcase and pushed it across the table toward her.
And Quinn’s heart stopped. Because it was Carolyn, the woman who she’d met here in this very coffee shop.
Chapter 2
Quinn blinked, shocked to find herself sitting on the curb outside the coffee shop staring blindly at the Lexus her parents had given her.
Her parents. Who might not really be her parents.
“Here,” Cliff said, pushing a cup of cold water into her hands as he sat next to her. “Drink this.”
She took the cup in two shaking hands and gulped down the water, wishing a little bit that it was vodka. “You’re mistaken,” she said again. “Carolyn was just a woman I met here. We spoke only a few times.”
“Three.” Cliff gazed at her sympathetically. “She told me about the visits. She drove down here to get a peek at you, borne out of a desperate curiosity.”
“I don’t understand,” Quinn whispered.
“She knew she was terminal and had set a trust in place,” Cliff said. “She had every intention of telling you herself, but she had a seizure driving back to Wildstone the last day you saw her. She died in the accident.”
“Oh my God.”
Cliff took the cup of water from her before she could drop it. “The funeral was five days ago,” he said.
Quinn let out a sound that might have been a mirthless laugh or a half sob, she wasn’t sure. She shook her head for what felt like the hundredth time in the past few minutes, but it still didn’t clear.
It wasn’t true, she told herself. Not any of it. Harry Potter here was just a stalker, a good one. Or maybe a scammer. She hated to think that the nice woman she knew as Carolyn could be a part of something so seedy, but she simply couldn’t accept that her parents wouldn’t have told her such a crucial thing such as being adopted. For God’s sake, she’d seen infant pictures of herself in the hospital with them.
“Look,” she said, standing up. “I don’t want any part of this.”
“There’s an inheritance.”
“Especially that,” she said. “I don’t want it or any part of this game you’re playing. I wasn’t adopted and your minute is up and I’m leaving.”
“Wait.” He stood up too, and looked at her with nothing but kindness and understanding in his gaze. “Take my wand.”
She blinked, expecting to see a lightning bolt scar appear on his forehead. “What?”
“My card,” he said, his gaze turning to concern. “Give yourself some time to think about it. Contact me when you’re ready. Are you going to be alright?”
There was only one answer to that. “Of course.”
Always.
She drove to work on autopilot, Cliff Potter, er Porter’s, tale eating at her. She was clumsy in the kitchen, dropping and spilling things, plating the wrong entrees, mistaking shallots for onions, forgetful . . .
“What the hell is wrong with you?” Marcel had lost his temper with her somewhere around the time she’d dropped a platter of stuffed peppers. “Get out of my kitchen, you schlampe.”
She wasn’t positive of the exact translation on that one, but she was pretty sure it was something along the lines of grungy or dirty woman. She carefully and purposely set down her knife so she didn’t run it through him.
“You’re clumsy, forgetful, and making more work than food!”
For once he was right. Because all she could think about was Cliff Porter’s visit.
They adopted you when you were two days old . . .
“Are you listening to me?” Marcel yelled up at her. Up, because he was five-foot-two to her five-foot-seven, something that normally gave her great pleasure.
“Du flittchen,” he muttered in disgust beneath his breath, and the entire staff froze in the kitchen like dear in the headlights.
Slut. She turned to him. “Schiebe es,” she said, which meant shove it. It was the best she could do, at least in German. Pushing past him, she walked out of the kitchen.
“Where are you going?” he yelled after her. “You can’t just leave!”
But leaving was exactly what she was doing. Outside, she pulled out her cell phone to call her boss, Chef Wade.
“Everything okay?” he asked.
“I have to leave early,” she said. “I’m sorry for the short notice but Marcel is here. He’s got things under control.” By being a tyrannical asshole, but that was another story.
After she disconnected, she drove on autopilot to her parents’ house. She needed to straighten out this stupid adoption story and she needed to do so before her life imploded.
Her mom and dad were in the living room in front of their lit gas fireplace, sharing a drink. It was June in LA and the air conditioner was on full blast, but her mother liked a nightcap with ambience.
“Darling,” her mom said, smiling as she stood in welcome. “Such a lovely surprise. Where’s Brock?”
“I’m alone,” Quinn said, not bothering to address the fact that she didn’t spend nearly as much time with Brock as they seemed to believe. “I met someone today.”