Authors: Jan Hudson
Always Friday
by
Jan Hudson
Always Friday
By Jan Hudson
First published by Loveswept
at Bantam Books, February 1990
Revised and updated ebook
edition by Jan Hudson copyright, 2012
Cover design by Lori D.
Wade copyright, 2012
Published by Janece
O. Hudson
All rights reserved.
No part of this work may be used, transmitted, or reproduced in any manner
without the written permission of the author except for brief excerpts used in
critical articles or reviews.
This book is purely a work of fiction and the product of the
author’s imagination. Any similarity between characters, names, or incidents
and real people or incidents is coincidental. Certain historical facts or
locales have been used fictitiously.
* * *
“Ain’t nobody here but me, and I’m just fixing the furnace.
Think Hook drove the ladies over somewhere in Louisiana to see that flower
garden. Everybody says it’s right pretty this time of year with the tulips and
such. I believe they’re all gone for the weekend, except Tess.”
Damn! The muscles in Daniel Friday’s jaw twitched as he
clenched his teeth, and the deep lines between his eyebrows became furrows. Why
in the hell couldn’t Gram stay put for one day? Now of all times, when he was
swamped with work, he couldn’t believe he’d flown to Galveston for nothing. His
sister Kathy had convinced him that their grandmother had moved in with a bunch
of strange people who might very well be con artists of some kind, and she had
insisted that he come check out the situation.
“Who’s Tess?”
“Tess Cameron, Miss Olivia’s niece. No,” the
stoop-shouldered man in blue coveralls said as he rubbed his chin, “I guess she’d
be Miss Olivia’s great-niece. Her mama was the niece. Miss Octavia’s daughter.
Miss Octavia and Miss Olivia was—”
“Yes, yes. May I speak to—”
“—twin sisters, you know,” the repairman drawled on,
ignoring the brusque interruption. “Spittin’ image of one another, but Miss
Octavia’s been gone about eight or ten years and her daughter closer to thirty.
Anna, I recollect her name was.” He rubbed his chin again. “Or was it Amelia?
No, I believe it was Anna.”
Daniel Friday was a man who valued his time. Tall and
impeccably dressed, he was also one whose presence commanded respect, and he
demanded the same competence and efficiency from others that he did from
himself. He was accustomed to controlling every situation, and his irritation
grew as he was forced to listen to the old geezer’s meandering drone. Not even
Daniel’s sternest “let’s cut the crap and get on with business” look, a look
guaranteed to sober every one of his employees immediately, could faze the
fellow.
Daniel stood on the porch of the old mansion on Galveston’s
main thoroughfare, shifting his weight from one foot to the other. Even the
magnificent three-storied redbrick house, which at first glance he judged to be
well over a hundred years old, captured only his subliminal awareness. All he
wanted was to find his grandmother, get her settled back where she belonged,
and return to Pittsburgh first thing tomorrow. Maybe the niece could help him
find Gram.
“May I speak to Tess?” Daniel asked when the man paused for
a breath.
“She ain’t here. Ain’t nobody here but me.”
Daniel waited for a long-winded explanation, but this time,
when one was needed, none was forthcoming. Dragging his fingers impatiently
through his thick, tawny hair, he asked very deliberately, “Where can I find
her?”
“I’m not right sure, but you could try the pier down at
Twenty-Seventh and Seawall. She goes down there most mornings about this time.
Says the fiddler crabs don’t complain about her music as much as the neighbors
do. Yep, I’d try there first if I was you.”
Fighting to control his growing frustration, Daniel secured
directions from the repairman, stalked to his rental car, and headed toward the
Gulf. The morning fog was so dense that he had to creep along and squint at the
street signs. Mumbling about his rotten luck, he finally found the spot he was
looking for, parked, and slammed the door as he got out.
A pain gnawed at his stomach. Heartburn again, he thought. Too
much coffee and too little sleep. It seemed that there was never enough time
these days, never enough of him to spread around. His twelve-and fourteen-hour
days had been stretching into sixteen and eighteen. There were always labor
problems, equipment malfunctions, material delays, and the never-ending mounds
of paperwork. Right now he needed to be in his office in Pittsburgh, not
chasing after Gram and a gang of loonies on a foggy sandbar along the Texas
coast.
A fine mist spotted his navy wool blazer as he crossed the
boulevard, deserted as far as he could tell except for a lone jogger slapping
the wet asphalt and a small black dog running beside him. Scents of fish and
ocean and rotting wood hung heavy in the humid air. Though he couldn’t see
through the fog that hovered over both the island and the water, he could hear
the cries of sea gulls overhead, mixed with the gentle lap of waves on the
shore. The occasional blare of fog horns, some distant, some closer, echoed
over the water as he descended the seawall steps.
He walked carefully onto the rock groin pier, following the
sound of a strange whining he couldn’t identify. It sounded almost like the
skirl of a bagpipe coming from the misty fog. He had no idea how long the pier
was, and he was hesitant to go much farther.
He called out. “Tess Cameron!” He listened for an answer,
but all he heard was the haunting whine from the fog, the sea gulls, and water
washing against the rocks.
Cautious of the slippery surface of the jetty under his
leather-soled shoes, he advanced slowly and hoped to hell he didn’t step off
into the Gulf of Mexico. If he hadn’t loved his grandmother so much, right
about then he would have seriously considered throttling her. He muttered a few
choice oaths and trekked on.
He had gone about thirty feet out when he saw her.
The tall, slender figure playing the bagpipe was no dour
Scot from the highlands. Instead of kilts and tartan, she wore orange overalls
and a fuchsia shirt, and a floppy yellow rain hat pulled low over her ears. She
was playing the bagpipe, playing with total abandon. And obviously relishing
every minute of it.
The scene and the sounds and the piper were so totally
incongruous that, in spite of his agitation he couldn’t help but smile. Her
whole body was animated as she played. Her head bobbed as her cheeks puffed and
blew, her bottom did an exaggerated twitch, and her knees pumped up and down as
her fingers moved along the chanter.
He wanted to laugh out loud. God, how long had it been since
he had enjoyed anything as much as she was enjoying that bagpipe? For a moment,
Gram and the pile of work on his desk were forgotten as he stuck his hands in
his pockets, ambled a little closer, and stood watching her. The fog began to
dissipate as the sun rose higher in the sky and heated the air with its warm
rays. It almost seemed as if she were cranking up the sun and banishing the
mist.
After several minutes she must have sensed his presence, for
the mouthpiece dropped from her mouth and the melody died with a discordant
whine as she turned toward him. At first she looked startled, then her face lit
with a smile wide enough to burn off the morning fog. That smile slammed into
his gut like a left jab.
“Good morning,” she said. “I was afraid you were a fisherman
who’d come to grouse at me about scaring off the fish.”
Even her voice intrigued him. It was deep, husky, with a
little catch that made him think of the hoarseness of someone who’d just
awakened or was recovering from laryngitis.
“And what makes you think I’m not?” He moved closer,
noticing as he neared how tall she was. He was six-foot-two and she was no more
than four or five inches shorter.
Her eyes crinkled and her dimpled chin lifted as she
laughed. “The fishermen around here don’t wear silk ties.” Her eyebrows, dark
and slightly unruly, rose as she looked down. “Or Ferragamo loafers. If you’re
going to walk on the jetties, you’d be wise to get some rubber soles. You’re gonna
bust your butt in those.”
“I don’t have any other shoes with me,” he said, smiling and
looking into her open, animated face.
“Then go barefoot. It’s safer, believe me.”
Her eyes were as intriguing as her voice. They were a
dancing kaleidoscope of blue, green, gold, and brown, and her dark lashes were
thick and curly. A faint sprinkle of freckles across her nose told him she wore
no makeup. But she needed none. Her cheeks were naturally blushed; her mouth
was wide and her lips, pressed together in what he suspected was a perennial
expression of amusement, were full and eminently kissable.
In fact, Daniel could think of nothing he’d like more at
this very moment than to see if they tasted like strawberries.
A funny little flush rippled over Tess Cameron as she stared
up at the man who stood only inches away from her. For a moment she had had the
oddest feeling that he, a perfect stranger, was going to kiss her. It should
have frightened her—for all she knew he could be some kind of pervert who
stalked unsuspecting women—but it didn’t.
She knew intuitively that she could trust him. Tess could
tell a lot about people from their eyes. His were nice, a soft grayish blue
that sparkled with his smile, and bespoke a man who was sincere and caring. Someone
of substance.
He had a strong face with a high-bridged nose and ruggedly
sculpted cheekbones and jaw. He exuded an almost palpable aura of quiet
strength and determination. And he was tall enough for her to look up to. He
was attractive. Definitely attractive.
No, she wasn’t frightened of him, Tess thought as she looked
into the gaze that sent another ripple darting through her awareness. What made
her nervous was that she had the strongest urge to lift her face to encourage
his kiss or to run her fingers through the thick mane of hair on his head that
almost begged to be ruffled. This was crazy. Absolutely crazy. Totally alien to
her previous experience. What was going on?
She tried to look away, but it was impossible. In the depths
of those eyes that held hers with such a riveting intensity, she detected a
hint of lingering sadness, or something akin to sadness, that grabbed at her
heart and made her want to comfort him.
Ah, that was it. Something in her nature could home in on
troubled people like a radar device. Her instinct to mother the world. Relieved
once she could label her reaction, Tess took a step back. She couldn’t explain
the wobble in her knees, so she ignored it and glanced at the big wristwatch on
her arm. “Oops, I’d better get going.”
He seemed reluctant to let her go. “I was hoping you’d play
some more. You’re quite good.”
She laughed again. “I wish you’d tell Angus that. He says I
wiggle too much to ever be a proper piper.”
“Angus?”
“Angus McFarland, my teacher. He plays with the Houston
Symphony. I drive up a couple of times a month for lessons.”
“He plays the bagpipe with the symphony?”
Eyes shining with amusement, she said, “No, he plays the
flute. But he’s wonderful on the bagpipe.” She glanced at her watch again. “Listen,
it’s been great talking to you, but I’ve really got to go.” She fluttered her
fingers at him and took off up the pier with the bagpipe tucked under one arm. “Be
careful with those shoes,” she called over her shoulder.
Grinning in spite of himself, Daniel stood and watched her
long-legged stride as she disappeared into a lingering patch of fog. Was she
for real? Then he started. “Hey, wait,” he shouted. His shoes slipped as he
hurried to catch up to her.
“Whoa there.” As she reached out to steady him, she slipped
herself. When they regained their footing, they found that both of his arms
were around her, one of her arms around him, and the bagpipe crushed between
them. Slowly she raised her gaze to his, and once more her knees started doing
peculiar things. As she stood penned within the power and warmth of his arms,
looking up at the marvelous planes of his face, her heartbeat seemed to develop
an extra pitty-pat. And it was so loud she was sure he could hear it.
She managed to smile. “You almost landed on your keester.”
“Thanks. I thought I was a goner for sure.”
He laughed, showing beautiful, even teeth, and her knees grew
even more wobbly. Why had she ever thought the reaction he aroused in her was
maternal? Those were sexual signals she’d been receiving. Loud and clear.
She had to leave before she did or said something stupid
like: Want to come to my place and see my etchings? He was, after all, a total
stranger. Tess knew most of the people in town, and if he’d been one of them,
she would have noticed him. He was probably a weekend tourist—though it wasn’t
yet tourist season—who would be gone tomorrow. He was probably married, anyway.
It was beginning to seem as if all the good ones in her age group were either
married or gay.