visiting them?â
âThatâs right. McClellanvilleâsnot too far from here. Thought Iâd swing by and see Carson while I was in town. We became friendly at the Dolphin Research Center. She isnât the type to remain a stranger,â he added with a short laugh.
âNo.â Harper wished she had that talent. Carson had it, as did Mamaw. Harper was more reserved, like her Granny James. But Harperâs stomach fizzed a bit at what Taylor had just said about himself and Carson. So perhaps they hadnât been romantically involved, after all?
âWhat college did you go to?â she asked, going for a change of subject. Then held her breath, not knowing if he did go to college, not meaning to insult.
âThe Citadel.â
âHere in Charleston?â
âIs there another?â
âIsnât that a military college?â
âYes.â
âWas it hard? I mean, I heard about the hazing and things they did to the freshmen.â
âThe knobs. Thatâs what they call the freshmen. And, yes, it was hard.â
âDid you miss out on the regular college life?â
âNo. Fraternities were not my thing.â
âMine, neither.â
âWhere did you go?â
âRadcliffe. There werenât any sororities. But that didnât stop them from having cliques.â
âRadcliffe is an Ivy League, right?â
âYup.â She saw he was impressed and cocked her head. âIÂ went to good schools, got good grades. But getting into thoseschools is often a matter of who you know and how much your family will donate even more than how smart you are. My motherâs family has lots of connections. And deep pockets.â
âSo youâre saying youâre rich?â
âIâm saying my family is.â
âWhereâs your family located? New York?â
âYes and no.â She wondered whether to give him the long or short version of her history. She decided on the short. âMy mother is English and her family, my grandparents, live in England. At Greenfields Park.â
âIs that some kind of gated community?â
She laughed. âNo, the name of their property is Greenfields Park. We often call large estates parks in England.â
Taylor looked amused. âYour family has a large estate in England?â
Harper didnât like where this conversation was going. âJust a great big house and, oh, some hundred or so acres.â
He snorted with surprise. âJust a few hundred?â
So, the long version, Harper thought to herself. âItâs a farm. Trees and great gardens and barns with cows and sheep . . . lots of sheep.â
âA farm. Cool.â
Taylor seemed at a momentary loss for anything else to say, and having exhausted basic introductory chitchat, Harper fell back on good manners. âCan I offer you something to drink? Coffee? Iced tea?â
âTea sounds good. A beer would be better.â
âSorry, but Sea Breeze is a dry house.â
âTea it is.â
When they entered the kitchen, she cringed at the state of the room.Dishes and pots and pans were stacked on the table, counters, any bare surface. The entire pantry was loaded in boxes on the floor. But the kitchen gleamed and smelled of pine soap.
âIâve been cleaning the cabinets,â she said in way of apology.
âBig job.â
âJust beginning, Iâm afraid. After I finish organizing, Iâd like to fix it up a little. Paint, at least.â
âNowâs a good time, since youâve already got the cabinets cleared.â He put his hands on his hips and took a sweeping assessment of the room. âItâs a great room. Lots of charm.â He walked toward the back windows, put his hands on his hips, and stared out. âAnd look at that view.â
âYes.â She drew closer to join him at the window.
Taylor turned and looked around the room again,
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