“I’m happy to dabble for a thousand dollars an hour.” She gave a faint smile. “There’s a certain cachet to being the daughter of somebody who shows up on the power lists from time to time.”
“Nice to know I can be helpful,” Carter said dryly.
For a few moments they just toyed with the food on their plates. Larkin was the first to jump.
“So what made you pick up the phone?”
“Outside of the fact that we haven’t spoken in over five years?”
She looked down at the tablecloth. “I never wanted that to happen.”
“Neither did I.” Long seconds went by. “I suppose you heard that Celine and I split up.”
Larkin didn’t say anything.
“It’s killing you, isn’t it?” Carter said.
“What?”
“Not saying ‘I told you so.’”
She looked at him directly. “That was never what it was about.”
“What was it about?”
“Not wanting to see you make another mistake. Wanting you to be fair to yourself for once, to look at a wife as closely as you did a stock.” She stopped, aware she’d gone too far—and far too soon. “I’m sorry. This isn’t the place or the time…”
He watched her, eyes steady. “You’ve grown up.”
“Five years will do that.”
“I’m sorry I missed it.”
“You could have called sooner.”
“So could you.”
“Celine,” she said simply.
He sighed and looked out the window at the shoreline, white sand broken up with the dark lines of beached logs.
Bitter words, bitter times, hard to get past. Larkin remembered staring at the invitation written on handcrafted linen paper, announcing Carter’s impending wedding to a woman she’d distrusted on sight. Don’t do this, she’d pleaded. Give it time, for once. The argument had escalated, somehow turning back on her. Suddenly it wasn’t about Celine being after his money; it was about Larkin. For every point she’d taken Carter to task on, he’d returned a barb that had unerringly struck home. She had no business accusing him of being rash and impulsive when she’d never once finished anything. Who was she to talk about Celine when she’d never done anything constructive herself?
The battle had reverberated through both of their lives long after the echoes of the words had faded away. She hadn’t expected it to last, but somehow the years had worn on. And now, it appeared, bridging the gap wasn’t going to be as easy as either of them had hoped.
The silence stretched out as the waiters removed their plates and set out their entrées, chateaubriand for Carter and butter-poached lobster for Larkin. In the background, the pianist played “Blue Moon.” Across the room there was a burst of laughter from a large table, the enormous family she’d seen that afternoon. That was how it should be, she thought. Not silence but joy.
They were all grouped together any old way, brothers and sisters, fathers and daughters. The silver-haired matriarch threw back her head in delighted laughter. Larkin glanced over and realized that Carter was watching them, as well, her own wistfulness mirrored in his eyes. Once upon a time they’d been a family like that.
Once upon a time, when her mother had been alive.
Abruptly she had to get out. “Excuse me.” She rose. “I’ll be right back.”
In the ladies’ room, she washed her hands in cold water, touching her cool fingertips to her forehead, adjusting the straps of her ruby silk halter dress. Fifteen years had passed since Beth Hayes had been killed by a drunk driver. Months at a time could pass without Larkin thinking of her, but every once in a while, like an ambush, she’d find herself overwhelmed by a wave of loss, an absence screamingly present.
She shook her head. Pointless to think of what might have been. Carter had done what he’d been able to, and if it had left her permanently wary of any and all relationships, that was her problem.
She ran her fingers through her hair and walked out the door.
Her destination was the dining room. Somehow, though, she found herself climbing the stairs that led to the fantail, instead, stepping outside to gulp deep breaths of the cool air. To either side, tree-covered mountains rose straight up from the water in a landscape that looked too wild for human habitation. The sun was finally setting, its ruddy rays slanting across the deck. The space was empty, quiet, with just the breeze for company.
Something different, Carter had said. Larkin knew how he felt. The restlessness had been brewing for months. Usually when it hit, she moved to another city, but she’d sworn off that. A change of scenery wasn’t the cure. She needed something more.
There was a sound behind her. “I thought that was you,” a voice said.
And she turned to see Christopher Trask.
She’d breathe, Larkin thought, in a moment. When she’d met him that afternoon, he’d been casual, appealingly rumpled. Now he stood before her in black slacks and a charcoal-gray silk shirt that made his shoulders look very wide. The effect was simple, sophisticated and sexy as hell. The man she’d met that afternoon clearly worked with his hands; the man before her belonged in an expensive gallery or on the scene of a sleek nightclub so new that celebrities didn’t even know about it.
He grinned. “I told you the ship wasn’t that big.”
She turned to face him, her back to the rail. “Nice to see you’ve survived so far.”
“Nice to see you, period,” he said. “Dinner dress suits you.”
“You clean up pretty well yourself.”
“I do my best. So how’s the first night aboard going?”
“It’s been…interesting,” she decided.
“It can’t be too interesting if you’re standing up here all alone. Didn’t your father make it onto the ship? I thought I saw you with him earlier.”
“Oh, he’s here,” she said. “Back in the dining room, actually. I just wanted to step outside for a minute. I just can’t get over all the daylight.”
He stepped closer to her. “It’s that whole midnight sun thing. It must make it hard on kids. No sneaking out at night.”
“And why do I think that that was an integral part of your repertoire growing up?” she asked, slanting a look at him.
“Ah, come on, it’s a part of summer, like watermelon and baseball. Are you telling me you never snuck out at night when everyone else was asleep? Just to see what it felt like to be outside and on your own when nobody knew about it?”
She could feel that sense of freedom beckoning just outside the window, that breathless sense of adventure. Or maybe she just felt breathless because he was so near, close enough she could feel the heat from his body.
“You’ve sneaked out now, haven’t you?” His voice was low. “You’re supposed to be in at dinner but you’re here.”
“I just—” Wanted something different. “Wanted some air. What are you doing up here?”
“I saw you.” The sunset turned his skin copper and made his eyes look dark. For an instant, she couldn’t look away. For a humming moment, a kind of a pure, distilled need surged between them. On a ship with three thousand other people, it felt like they were alone in the fading light. She could get lost in this man, Larkin thought suddenly.
She swallowed. “I should get back,” she said and turned to the doors. The motion