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The Siren Cove Series
Buried Truth
The Born to Be Wilde Series
Wilde One
Wilde Side
Wilde Thing
Wilde Horses
The Who’s Watching Now Series
Every Move She Makes
Every Step She Takes
Every Vow She Breaks
Buried Truth
Jannine Gallant
LYRICAL PRESS
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
LYRICAL PRESS BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2018 by Jannine Gallant
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
Lyrical and the Lyrical logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
ISBN: 978-1-5161-0374-4
First Electronic Edition: February 2018
eISBN-13: 978-1-5161-0375-1
eISBN-10: 1-5161-0375-0
To my daughter, Kristen. You are kind and funny
and beautiful, inside and out.
I wish you much happiness and success
in college at SOU.
Chapter One
The day from hell was finally over.
Leah Grayson locked her classroom door, fist-pumped the air, then moonwalked backward down the hallway. “Fri-day. Fri-day. Fri . . . day.” Her chant ended with a thump as she landed on her heels and met the amused gaze of her coworker as he exited the room beside hers.
“Someone’s happy it’s the weekend.” Sloan Manning tucked a bulging file folder under one long arm before he joined her in the hall. “Not a good sign when the school year is only a few weeks old.”
A rueful grin tweaked her lips. “Carina Harris’s mom brought in cupcakes for her daughter’s birthday. The kids were bouncing off the walls all afternoon.”
“There’s nothing quite like the unharnessed energy of ten-year-olds on a sugar high.”
Leah’s leather sandals slapped against the tile floor as she lengthened her stride to keep up with him. “The birthday party was just icing on the cake—so to speak. I already had my students all wound up with plans to bury a new time capsule after we dig up our old one. The kids are super excited to find out what we put in that box twenty years ago. I promised to bring it in to show them after the reunion.”
Sloan stopped beside the drinking fountain and turned to face her. His gray eyes darkened behind steel-rimmed glasses. “You still intend to open the capsule we buried when you were a student in my class?”
She nodded. “You bet. Nina, Paige, and I conducted an online poll of classmates we’re connected to on Crossroads. Everyone who responded thought unearthing it now was a great idea.”
He shoved his free hand into his pocket. “I hate to see you reveal the contents this soon. I always pictured someone excavating that box in a hundred years, not twenty.”
“We’ll all be dead by then.” She gave his plaid shirtsleeve a poke. “Besides, I doubt the items a bunch of fifth-graders deemed worthy of saving would have much historic significance.”
“You’re probably right.”
“Mostly, we’re using the time capsule as an excuse to have a class reunion. I’m off to meet Nina and Paige for cocktails and a final organizing session. Since we’re planning the event as part of the Fall Festival, we hope to have a good turnout.”
“I’m sure you will.” He set off again, taking the corner leading toward the double front doors at a fast clip.
She hurried to catch up. “We’ll send you an invitation, of course. After all, the original idea was your brainchild.”
He paused near the wide front counter, deserted at this hour. “I wouldn’t mind seeing what your classmates made of themselves, but damned if it won’t make me feel ancient.”
“Not a chance. You’re still the same cool teacher we loved back in the day.” She flashed a quick smile then glanced at her watch. Almost five. “Oops, I’d better get moving or I’ll be late.”
Leaning forward, he held the door open for her. “Leah?”
She glanced back as a gust of wind off the ocean blew her long hair around her like a curtain flapping in the breeze. “Yes?”
He hesitated then shrugged. “Enjoy your evening.”
“I’m sure we will. Have a nice weekend, Sloan.”
With a nod, he headed toward the parking lot while Leah ran down the steps to pull her pink cruiser out of the bike rack attached to the brick wall of the school. She slung the strap of her oversized purse across her chest, tucked the loose hem of her skirt beneath her, then set off, only to coast to a stop beside the pole where the janitor was lowering the flags.
“Hey, Jesse, how’s it going?”
Her former classmate turned with the stars and stripes draped over one arm in blatant disregard for proper flag-folding procedure. “No worse than usual.”
“How’s your dad?”
His perpetual scowl lightened. “He finished his last round of chemo a while back. The doc says he’s cancer-free.”
“That’s wonderful news. Is he returning to work soon? I’ve missed all his corny jokes. No one tells a knock-knock joke like Edgar Vargas.”
Jesse snorted. “Yeah, my old man’s a riot. Pop hopes to start working again in a couple of weeks. When he does, I won’t have to fill in for him anymore and can find something a whole lot better.”
“Well, give him my best.” She pushed off then put her foot down again. “I don’t know if you heard, but we’re planning a fifth-grade class reunion to open the time capsule we buried.”
His heavy brows drew together in a frown. “Why would you want to waste your time doing that?”
“Mostly it’s an excuse to see friends we haven’t hooked up with in years. I hope we can count on you to come.”
“I doubt any of my compadres will show up.” He made quick work of folding the flag into triangles and tucked it beneath his arm. “We didn’t exactly hang out with the same crowd since I’m from
the wrong side of the tracks and all.”
Leah rolled her eyes. “That ‘poor me’ crap isn’t going to fly, Jesse. We don’t have any tracks in Siren Cove.”
A slight smile curled his full lips. “You know what I mean.”
“I do, but it’s a lame excuse.” She glided away. “See you Monday.”
Peddling into the wind as she headed toward the downtown area of her hometown, Leah cruised past the park and community swimming pool, then turned onto the main drag lined with shops and restaurants catering to the tourist trade that kept their economy afloat. As she approached Old Things, her friend’s antique shop, Paige Shephard stepped outside and waved.
Leah braked to a stop and leaned over to give her a hug. “Good, I’m not late.”
Paige grinned, her blue eyes sparkling beneath blond hair drawn up into a complicated knot at the top of her head. “That’s because Nina told you we were meeting fifteen minutes before the actual time. After all these years, we know you well enough to make allowances for your perpetual tardiness.”
“Smarty.” Leah hopped off her bike and pushed it up the sidewalk beside her friend.
Paige gave her an assessing look. “I’m surprised you didn’t get your skirt caught in your chain. All you need is a wreath of daisies in your hair to look like the original flower child.”
Leah smoothed a lacy peasant blouse over her turquoise gauze skirt. “No one was uptight in the sixties, so I would have fit right in. Anyway, I’m only late because I got sidetracked talking to Sloan about the reunion.”
“He’ll always be Mr. Manning to me.”
“It took me forever to think of him by his first name. Hey, there’s Nina.” She raised a hand as the third member of their intrepid trio since preschool days parked her Mini Cooper in front of Castaways and climbed out.
Nina Hutton’s green eyes brightened with a smile as she waited beside her car. The ends of her short, wispy dark hair lifted in the breeze to flutter around her face. Wearing pencil-thin jeans, paint smudged on one knee, and a shirt the same cherry-red as her car beneath a denim jacket, she still managed to look like a model. Leah had gotten over being jealous of her friend’s stunning looks years ago. Between Nina’s casual elegance and Paige’s petite perfection in a short white skirt and chunky knit sweater, she figured she’d better stop by the restroom to at least comb her hair.
“The gang’s all here.” Nina reached out to give them each a brief hug. “I’ve been holed up in my studio all day painting and could use some human interaction. Let’s go order drinks and catch up.”
Leah lifted the front wheel of her bike into the rack at the edge of the sidewalk and followed the other two women toward the entrance.
Paige glanced back. “Don’t you ever lock that thing up?”
“Nobody’s going to take it since it can’t be worth more than fifty bucks, and there’s not a person in town who wouldn’t recognize it as mine, even if someone did.”
“Good point.” She pushed open the door. “Ooh, it’s nice and warm in here. With the marine layer rolling in, there’s a definite chill in the air.”
Out over the ocean, a fog horn blew, long and mournful. Leah paused on the stoop to savor the cool dampness typical of early evening on the central Oregon coast. After a moment, she followed her friends inside.
“Why don’t you two claim a table while I make myself presentable? With that wind, my hair probably looks like I battled through a typhoon.”
Nina smiled. “Using a comb wouldn’t hurt.”
With a nod, Leah turned right down a short hallway to the ladies’ room. Once inside, she sorted through her bag for a brush. A glance in the mirror made her wince. Her stick-straight, mink-brown hair had looked decent pulled back with a ribbon when she left for work that morning. By lunch, she’d lost the tie, and her mane hung in tangles down her back past her waist. Working out the knots took several minutes, but when she finished, her one concession to vanity shimmered beneath the crappy fluorescent lighting above the sink. Another search through the clutter in her purse turned up a tube of pink lipstick. She stroked on a coat and met her wide, chocolate-brown gaze in the mirror. “Passable.”
After washing hands that had touched God knew how many germs that afternoon, she left the bathroom to wind through an assortment of tables to the one occupied by her friends on the far side of the bar. She plopped down on the empty chair, dropped her bag at her feet with a thump, and took a moment to enjoy the view of waves crashing on the beach below. Offshore, the three huge rocks that gave Siren Cove its name were silhouetted by the setting sun. A sigh slipped out. She loved Paige and Nina dearly, but once in a while it would be nice to face a man across the table instead of her old pals. Not that Brock would have noticed nature’s splendor on the other side of the window since his gaze would have been glued to whatever sporting event was playing on the TV above the bar.
“What’s wrong?”
“Huh?” Leah jerked her attention back to Paige.
“You were making a face like you just bit into a lemon.”
“I was thinking about Brock.”
Nina picked up the appetizer menu. “Why would you want to think about your loser ex-husband?”
“I’ve no idea. Chalk it up to a momentary brain freeze. I’m just thankful he won’t be coming to our little reunion, since his family didn’t move to Oregon until we were in high school.”
“Praise be. I—” Paige broke off as their waitress approached. “Hey, Janice. Did you get your hair cut? It looks cute.”
“Not cut. Colored.” The older woman smiled. “Glad you like it. What can I get for you ladies?”
Nina glanced up. “Margaritas?”
Leah nodded. “After the day I had, you’d better bring us a pitcher.”
“And some nachos.” Nina slid the menu between a vase filled with blue-tinted carnations and the napkin holder. “Please.”
“Coming right up.” Janice tucked the order pad in her apron pocket and hurried away.
Paige leaned back in her chair and studied Leah. “Why was your day so rough?”
“Just a long week, plus the kids are beyond excited to create their own time capsule.” She smiled. “Although they weren’t exactly thrilled when I told them they had to write essays about growing up in the new millennium to put in with their treasures.”
“Way to take a fun project and turn it into a learning opportunity. Spoilsport.”
Leah laughed when Nina made a face at her. “Yeah, I’m a heartless tyrant. But between bouts of sadistic cruelty, I did reserve the upstairs banquet room at the Poseidon Grill for our reunion and set up menu options with the owner, Arnold Dorsey. Since his son was in our class, he cut us a break. The cost will be a flat twenty dollars per person for food. Soft drinks included. Cash bar.”
“That was nice of him.” Paige frowned. “I heard George got divorced a while back and moved home to Siren Cove to work for his dad.”
“Mr. Dorsey mentioned George is living here now, which is why he’ll be able to attend the party.” She turned to glance at Nina. “How are the invitations coming along?”
“I just got them back from the printer.” She paused as Janice returned, carrying a tray of salt-rimmed glasses and a pitcher of icy margaritas.
She poured a round of drinks then set down the pitcher. “Enjoy. I’ll bring your nachos out in a few minutes.”
“Thanks.” Leah took a sip and looked over at Nina. “You were saying . . .”
“The invitations are ready to send just as soon as we have all the addresses.”
Paige straightened. “That would be my cue. Drum roll, please.”
Nina thrummed her fingers on the table.
“With my superior powers of detection, I’ve damn near found an address for every member of our fifth-grade class.” Paige lifted her glass in a toast. “To the internet—a most wondrous creation.”
Leah regarded her friend in awe. “You’re amazing.”
“I know.” Paige set
down her drink and pulled a sheet of printed labels out of her purse to hand across the table to Nina. “Here you go.”
“I’ll put the invitations in the mail tomorrow. We have less than a month until the Fall Festival. I hope people will show up on such short notice.”
“I think we’ll get a decent turnout, especially since over a third of us still live in the area.” Leah moved her glass as their waitress returned with a towering plate of nachos. “Yum, I’m starving.” She smiled as Janice stepped back from the table. “Thank you.”
“You’re welcome. Yell if you need anything else.”
As they dug into the appetizer, Paige paused with a chip dripping melted cheese halfway to her mouth and glanced over at Leah. “Did you talk to someone at the school about pulling up the bricks in the outside eating area off the cafeteria?”
“Huh? Why would I do that?”
Her friend frowned. “That’s where we buried the time capsule. They built the patio over it, what, five years later?”
Nina wiped her fingers on a napkin. “I’d completely forgotten you went to see your grandparents that weekend and missed out on all the excitement.”
The confusion in Paige’s eyes deepened. “What are you talking about?”
“Didn’t we tell her about it afterward?” Leah ran her finger over the salt-rimmed glass and glanced at Nina.
“Her grandpa had a stroke. I guess she was a little preoccupied at the time.”
Paige dropped her chip and scowled. “Are you going to tell me what the heck I missed?”
“After the school board approved funding for the new patio, Leah, Ryan, and I decided to rescue our box.” Nina grinned. “We snuck out in the middle of the night like a band of thieves, dug it up, and then reburied it in a safer location.”