“Hang on a sec. What’s your name?”
“Jacob.” He banged the lower edge of the window with his fist. It slid down another two inches.
“Jacob, I’d like to ask you a few questions.” Like how rotten the old house was, and exactly who lived in it. Beulah’s solicitor hadn’t mentioned children. And where was the caretaker? Could it possibly be the tiny woman repairing the roof?
“I’m not supposed to talk to strangers,” Jacob said through the glass.
Of course he wasn’t. But Jordan would probably get more out of the kid in five minutes than a wily old caretaker. He hadn’t talked to his aunt for at least ten years but that didn’t mean he’d forgotten her. Beulah had been borderline crazy, in his opinion, and like attracted like. The five apartments in the house probably housed all sorts of misfits. Like the woman on the roof for instance. “If we introduce ourselves, we’re not strangers. I’m Jordan.”
He pasted on his I’m-a-nice-guy smile, the one he used right before he told his clients how much it was going to cost them to save their companies. Jacob sent him a withering look. “That’s not the way it works.”
Okay, the kid wasn’t stupid. Time to talk business. “Give you a couple bucks if you answer some questions.”
“About what?”
“About the—umph.” Jordan crumpled to his knees as someone ambushed him from behind. An arm wound around his neck, cutting off his air supply. What in blazes? He grabbed the slender arm and tugged. If he could get to his feet, he could fall backward and shake off—
“I’ve got a hammer in my hand,” a voice grated in his ear. “You move, and I’ll use it.”
The woman from the roof.
“Call 9-1-1, Jacob. Tell them we have an intruder,” she said.
“Perry will come when he hears our address,” Jacob shouted through the window.
Roof Lady swung her hammer under his nose. “What kind of sicko sneaks up a fire escape in the pouring rain and offers a child money to talk to him?”
Jordan eased back on his heels, his attacker plastered to his back like Spider-Woman. “You don’t want to call the police.”
Her grip tightened around his neck. “Are you a friend of Tony’s?”
“I’m Jordan Tanner, Beulah Winer’s nephew.”
Her arm went slack, and he heard her suck in a sharp breath.
“Oh, boy.” Jacob slammed the window all the way shut.
She climbed off his back. “Mr. Tanner?”
“Yeah.” He got to his feet and wiped the rain from his face as he turned around on the small landing. The woman barely reached his armpit. With her huge green eyes and small pointed face, she reminded him of a drowned kitten. He looked pointedly at the hammer in her hand until she slipped it into the hoop on her tool belt.
She crossed her arms over her chest. “You’re early,” she said in the same voice his secretary used when he was late.
“Why are you up on the roof when— You’re the caretaker.” The conclusion he’d been trying to avoid couldn’t be ignored any longer. Round one to Beulah Winer. He’d assumed she’d left him the house because he was the last living member of their not-so-illustrious family, but only five minutes in, and it wasn’t stacking up that way.
He’d hoped the house would provide the means of cementing the financial security he’d always dreamed of and very nearly achieved. But he’d failed to take into account the fact that his great-aunt was the benefactor. There was a good chance Beulah had left him the house to torture him.
“That’s right, I’m the caretaker.” Roof Lady elbowed past him and after a couple of thumps, yanked the window open and slid through. Jordan barely had time to register her trim butt before she turned and eyed him. “Do you have any ID?”
“You’ve got to be kidding.” Hadn’t she been listening? He owned the building.
“You were lurking outside my window, trying to bribe my kid with money. I’m calling the cops if you can’t prove who you say you are.” She grabbed the phone from the kitchen counter and cradled the hand-set under her chin. Her right hand stole down to rest on the head of her hammer.
“I thought—” he got out through clenched teeth as he wrestled his wallet out of his soaked pocket “—that you were a jumper.” He flipped his wallet open and held up his driver’s licence. “Jordan Tanner, at your service.”
BEULAH WINER HAD BEEN MEANER than a swarm of wasps on a hot summer day. And just as crazy. She hadn’t been particularly fond of Nell—she hadn’t been fond of anyone as far as Nell could tell—and Nell had returned the favor. Like everyone else living in the house, she’d made a wary peace with the spiteful old lady, had even helped her as much as Beulah allowed. In return, Nell had found a safe harbor for the past two years. A safe harbor that was quickly sinking out of sight.
“You thought I was going to jump off the roof?” She slid the phone back on the counter. With a sinking stomach she studied his driver’s licence. Even with his hair plastered to his head and rain trickling down his face, Jordan Tanner still managed to look as self-assured as his photo. He had a stubborn chin and clear blue-gray eyes with a black rim around the iris.
“I didn’t see the hammer from the street,” he said as he pushed his dark hair off his forehead. “All I saw was a…woman up on a roof in a storm.”
Nell narrowed her eyes. Okay, so she was drenched. And of course he had to arrive before she had a chance to change out of her overalls and get rid of her tools, but— What was she doing? The only thing that need concern her was getting Mr. Tanner in and out of the building and her life as quickly as possible. And if that meant playing nice for the next hour or so, she could do that. She didn’t have to like it, but she could do it.
She bit back a smile as she demurely motioned for him to crawl through the open window. She knew she should suggest meeting him at the front door, but watching him clamber through the narrow opening was much more appealing. He shot her a hard look, as if to say he knew exactly what she was up to, then in one graceful move, somehow managed to maneuver his wide shoulders through the small frame. She took a step back when he straightened to his full height, the room dwarfed by his size. She should have guessed he’d rise to the challenge.
“If you give me your suit jacket, I’ll hang it up in the bathroom and grab us some towels. Unless you want to go home and dry off. Come back later.” Hard to keep the hopeful note out of her voice.
“I’d prefer to look around now.”
With a heavy heart she accepted his sodden jacket and trudged off to the bathroom. Of course he wanted to look at the apartments today. From the little she’d been able to squeeze out of the tight-lipped solicitor who’d handled Beulah’s affairs, Tanner was a business consultant who lived in Seabend, the upscale seaside community just twenty minutes out of Halifax. Seabend had become so crowded with trendy coffee shops and boutiques, Nell barely recognized it anymore. The only reason Waterside hadn’t developed in the same way was because they were another forty minutes down the road, making them a solid hour from the city. Tourists trickled through in the summer, but they stuck to the waterfront where a few stores had sprouted. Thankfully, people like her, who lived a few blocks back in the old neighborhoods, were left undisturbed. Heaven forbid Tanner should waste time making a second trip here. She rolled her eyes. God save them all from consultants.
In the bathroom, she scrubbed her face with a towel and studied her reflection in the mirror. Her eyes were huge, and if anyone bothered to notice, they’d see the slight tremble at the right corner of her mouth.
She gripped the edge of the sink with both hands and leaned into her reflection until her breath steamed up the mirror. You will not be