Authors: Jannette Spann
“No,” she assured him. “I'm glad you did. Now, what's this about my mineral rights?”
She listened as he explained from the beginning about his company, the investors, her mineral rights, and the fact her back forty had been designated as one of the most likely drill sites in the area. Since all of Grandpa Will's land was located in four different sections, if they were to hit gas or oil on any part of it, she would have more money than she'd had in her entire life. The new onslaught of information was overwhelming.
Charlotte failed miserably at hiding the tears of relief stinging her eyes as she watched the taillights of Mr. Waters' rental car disappear from sight. “Do you realize how close I came to losing everything? I mean, if you hadn't tried so hard to help me, and Mr. Waters had waited until December to get those papers signed â the judge would have got it all.”
She felt the steadying warmth when his arm circled her shoulder. “Didn't I tell you everything would work out?”
“Like you knew?”
Jake laughed. “There's one thing I do know. The judge is going to croak when you let him know he's lost.”
“I've a good mind to go over there and punch the old goat's lights out!” She could picture Tom McGregor's arrogant face.
“Let's not be so hasty,” Jake said, ready to offer an alternative. “Doesn't the judge have friends at the bank in Wills' Junction?”
“Yes,” she said. “But what's it got to do with anything.”
“How much do you have in your account there?”
Charlotte shrugged. “About fifty cents. I made a payment on Hidden Hills last week.”
The quiet rocked on for a moment. “Why not let him think he's beaten you, say⦠until the day before your next payment is due? It should give your attorney time to study the contracts.”
“I know now why your boys are such brats. You're a good teacher.”
His laughter was contagious. “Nonsense, it's hereditary â comes from their mother.”
****
The negotiations on the partnership went without a hitch. Charlotte knew she had Jake to thank. He'd picked the right people. Best of all, they'd agreed to keep things quiet until she'd confronted Tom McGregor.
Charlotte debated on going to the judge's office or to his house, finally deciding on the latter for one simple fact. If they had a yelling match, it would be in private. He'd waited thirty-five years for Charles Wills to die and leave the estate to Ellen, and another three had passed since then. She hated confrontations, but this one was unavoidable and it wouldn't be pretty. Nervous fingers clutched the purse she carried, fearful the check might disappear if she relaxed her hold.
The stark elegance of the McGregor house was worlds apart from anything she'd ever want to call home, but it suited their lifestyle. With her head held high, she followed Ellen through the wide entrance hall past hand-painted portraits of their ancestors â Wills' men on the left, McGregors' on the right.
Charlotte had been in their home on numerous occasions with Mitch, but she'd never felt welcome. Ellen led her into the den, where the judge sat reading the daily news. He glanced up, then folded the paper, clearly unhappy with the intrusion.
“I was planning to give you a call after dinner,” he said, laying the paper aside. “We ran into your agent today. It seems Wilson Realty has agreed to buy Hidden Hills. Now I know their price is well below what you're asking, but it'll just about cover the loan. The market's soft in your price range, so I'm advising you to take it.”
“No â I'm not losing everything Mitch and I put into the place.”
His entire manner shifted before her eyes, becoming sharp and fierce, as if ready to attack. The intense hatred would have been daunting, had she not faced it before.
“Don't be crazy, girl. At least you'll be out from under the mortgage. You had nothing when you married into this family, and you'll take nothing out. I'll see to it.”
Charlotte held her tongue. She'd expected him to place an offer after the foreclosure, but there was a chance of someone else bidding higher. This was practically foolproof. No one would think twice if she sold to Wilson Realty, not even Mr. Grant, since it wasn't public knowledge the judge owned it. His next step would be to put Hidden Hills in his name. “No thanks, I've decided to keep it.”
“What's this?” he said, taking the check from her outstretched hand and reading the amount.
“It's the money you gave Mitch before we bought the house.”
His jaw snapped. “Where's the interest?”
She'd been in the family long enough to expect the unexpected. Her gaze remained steady in the face of his attack.
“There is no interest,” she said, steeling her voice to remain calm. ”Just as there's no proof it was a loan and not a gift.”
“You owed the money!”
“And I paid it!” she shot back, relieved she was no longer tied to Mitch's family.
The check shook in his hand. “So help me, if this bounces I'll have you under the jail!” he threatened, as if she was a common criminal. “I know for a fact you don't have this kind of money.”
Her chin shot up. “Take another look at the bank's name. You don't have a snitch on their payroll, so you don't know
what
I've got!”
“You watch what you're implying, girl!” he said, nostrils flaring. “You've not got Mitch to protect you.”
“Neither do you, old man!”
“I shouldâ”
“Does the name Samuel Jones and Associates mean anything to you?”
At the mention of the Texas firm, Ellen joined her husband on the sofa. Charlotte knew it was a ploy to give the judge time to regroup. “I don't recall⦔
“You should,” Charlotte informed him, still fed-up with all she'd learned. “I have copies of the e-mails you sent from Mitch's computer. Thought you'd get your hands on Hidden Hills before they got around to leasing the mineral rights, didn't you? You lied about me being out of the country and having my power of attorney â so they wouldn't try to contact me.”
“I don't know what you're talking about.”
“Yes, you do!” She was more than ready to leave, but first it was time to finish wiping the pompous smirk from his face. “But like I said, Hidden Hills is mine, and I'm keeping it.”
“There's a contract⦔
“But I can, and will, turn down any offer.”
“You're talking lunacy. There's no guarantee they'll find gas or oil. Do you honestly think you can pay off the debt with what you get from leasing the mineral rights?”
“Of course not,” she said. “So I've decided to turn it into a resort.”
Anger, making his face glow a dark crimson against his white hair, was no surprise. She'd been the cause of it countless times, but she was a little dismayed when his forehead splotched, and the veins in his neck popped like a frog on a lily pad. The thought of him stroking had never crossed her mind.
“It takes capital!” he hissed, actually shaking. “The world is full of get-rich schemes not even warranting a line of credit. You might as well get it out of your head, missy.”
His attitude hadn't changed one bit since he'd learned of her plans to open a beauty salon. But this time, it didn't matter. With God's help, she'd faced the fears of raising her girls alone, and now, with the additional help of Jake and his friends, her biggest liability had a chance to become her most valuable asset.
Having finished all she'd come to do, Charlotte crossed to the door, then stopped. “You know, Judge, it seems as if everything you've tried to do to me was meant for evil, but God's used it for good. I'm sorry you hate me so much.”
“Mitch should never have married you,” he said, seething. “My boy was going places!”
She was a gnat's hair from unloading her full contempt for him, when a strange calmness descended on her shoulders like a cooling blanket. In an instant, she saw the judge, not as the greedy, corrupt man she knew him to be, but as a lost sinner who'd gone through the agony of losing a son without God's strength to lean on. For the first time in her life, she felt compassion for the man.
“Mitch went to the best place of all. He's in heaven.”
“How do you know?”
“Because we discussed our faith before we married. Mitch told me he'd given his heart to the Lord when he was a junior in college.”
The judge squirmed. “About the time he started talking his silly nonsense about saving those kids.”
Tom McGregor needed someone to witness to him, but he hadn't listened to Mitch so there was no way he'd listen to her, not even if he was standing at hell's gate. She'd made it to the end of the hallway when she felt a light touch on her arm.
“Mitch would have been proud of you in there,” Ellen said, glancing back toward the den. “He never had the courage to confront his father, but I sensed he wanted to many times.”
Charlotte blinked. Not in her wildest dreams had she ever expected an ally in Mitch's mother. “Thank you?”
Ellen laughed. “I've never wanted anything to do with the house â mercy me, I grew up there. All of those floors! To this day I won't touch a mop!”
“Mitch said his grandpa was tough, but fair.”
“Sure,” she agreed. “If you were a boy. With me he was just tough⦠Charlotte, I want you to know your money will go into college funds for the girls.”
Charlotte had a new respect for the woman. Living with a man like the judge had to be difficult.
“You know,” Ellen continued when they reached the door, “I used to go to church when our boys were little. Maybe it's time I got started back. And who knows, if Tom gets tired of being alone, he might even go with me.”
Charlotte scanned the appointment log for the third time, trying to squeeze another perm in before the holidays. Norma had been able to fit Annabelle Jones in for a quick cut, but the following week was already booked solid. “Where has the time gone?”
Annabelle laughed. “You think it's flying now, just wait until you're my age.”
“It's just nerves talking.” Norma never missed a snip with her trusty scissors on Annabelle's brown locks. “Jake has invited Charlotte to his folks' for Thanksgiving dinner, and she's terrified of meeting the family.”
Charlotte couldn't deny it. Her first meeting with Mitch's family had been a total disaster, and in the back of her mind lurked the fear Jake's family wouldn't like her either.
“They're good people,” Annabelle said. “You'll fit in.”
Norma chuckled, measuring the length of the woman's bangs. “Yeah, but it's different when you're on parade as the future daughter-in-law.”
Annabelle squealed, springing from the chair. “He proposed? Fantastic! Have you set the date? And a shower â we have to plan a shower.”
Charlotte's mouth flew open. “No, it's⦓
“It's about time, is what it is. These two have been dancing around each other since the middle of summer,” Norma added, ignoring Charlotte's protest. “Seeing them together every Sunday â if we didn't know better, I'd say they were already married.”
“Now, it's not what you think!” Charlotte insisted, a bit too vehemently for her own good. “We're together because⦓
“Tell me you're not sleeping with him.” Annabelle appeared more than a little upset at the possibility.
“Of course she's not,” Norma replied. “Are you?”
“No!” Charlotte wasn't sure how she'd gone from a blushing bride to a floozy in less than a minute. “He hasn't asked â I mean, actually he did ask, but⦓
“Explain yourself, young lady. Just what's he up to?”
“He asked me to marry him, but he wasn't serious.”
“How do you know he wasn't serious?”
“I just know, okay?” Charlotte wished she'd kept her mouth shut. Other than Jake, the two women in front of her were her closest friends. But she couldn't explain what she didn't know.
Norma wasn't having it. “Neither of you have looked at another soul since you met. Don't wait for a man to lay his heart out. Look at how he treats you, how he makes you feel. There's more to love than fancy words. Why do you think he's worked so hard to turn your house into a legitimate business?”
“Because it's⦓
“I'll tell you why.” Norma persisted, determined to make her point. “He's head-over-heels in love â that's why! Now, what's your problem?”
“It's not like we're being buttinskis,” Annabelle added, softening the tone with her voice of reason. “We're just concerned.”
“Speak for yourself,” Norma continued. “The guy's a catch, and she needs to reel him in.”
“Maybe so, but it's her decision. Just make sure you love him.”
Norma wasn't to be deterred. “Charlotte, honey, I've seen men crawl into liquor bottles after losing their wives, but not Jake. They say his Bible and God's strength are what pulled him through. You've got a good man there. Don't let him get away.”
The difference in Norma's outlook since accepting Jesus as her Savior last month was amazing. Her boss's conversion made her realize it was time to move her church home to Cherry Road. Her relationship with Jake, and where it was going, had been the holdup. Since giving her problem to the Lord, she knew the peace of having a church home.
Glancing at the street, she saw the blinker flash on Jake's truck and ran for the door. “I'll make a deal with you. If he gets around to asking, and it's a big if, we'll make sure the kids get to spend our entire honeymoon with the two of you.”
“No way!” Norma cried. “Your bunch may look angelic sitting in a church pew, but we know what they're capable of.”
****