offered him a brilliant smile that melted the awkwardness. âSeems the least I can do.â
Harper stood by the door, still holding the tray of iced teas and feeling very much the fool for it.
Passing her at the door, Taylor offered a smile. âNice to meet you, Harper.â
She looked in his eyes, pulsing with warmth. She wanted to say something . . . anything . . . but couldnât.
When Carson drew near, she heard Taylor say to her in a low voice, âI didnât mean to cause any trouble.â
âYou didnât.â Carson patted his arm. âThe trouble was there before you arrived. Itâs a long story.â
Harper stood stock-still after the door had slammed behind Taylor and Carson. She squeezed her eyes shut, embarrassed for the gush of romantic feelings that had been roiling inside her since sheâd met Taylor McClellan. Enough, she told herself. No more dreaming.It was time to put away childish thoughts and focus on tasks at hand. She had a job to get, an apartment. She had to make plans to return to New York.
She turned and walked resolutely across the kitchen. Mamaw and Blake were struggling to keep up some semblance of polite conversation while Carson was out.
âCare for some tea?â Harper asked Blake and Mamaw.
They each took a glass with thanks. Harper heard her phone ding and, setting the empty tray on the counter, quickly checked it.
It was a message from her mother.
After making her excuses and retreating to her bedroom, Harper closed the sliding doors and sat on the four-poster bed. Her motherâs terse query asked why Harper hadnât responded to her motherâs e-mail from the previous week, checking in on Harper and where she stood with her return plans. Harper groaned inwardly, knowing she couldnât keep putting her mother off. She hadnât spoken to her since their blowout on the phone back in May. She was sure her mother had been waiting for her to come crawling back to New York. As the days flew by, however, and Harper remained on Sullivanâs Island, it brought Harper a smug pleasure that her mother had reached out first.
But it wasnât smugness that had kept Harper from responding to her motherâs e-mail. Georgiana had been pleasant enough in the e-mail, but Harper could imagine the foot tapping in her mind. Rather, Harper didnât know what sheâd say to her mother. She hadnât made up her mind what to do or where to go come fall. Sheâdbeen hoping the answer would become clear to her. It seemed instead she was going to rely on her default program and return to New York for lack of other options.
Staring at her phone, she summoned her courage. Sitting on the edge of her bed, she dialed a number she hadnât called since Memorial Day.
On the second ring she heard the familiar clipped British accent. âGeorgiana James here.â
âMummy?â
âHarper!â
âYes, hello. Itâs me.â
âI was just thinking of you.â
âWere you really?â
âYes. Iâve just returned from the Hamptons and the apartment is so quiet with you gone.â Georgiana released a dramatic sigh. âIâm exhausted. It was a madhouse. Everybody was there. I had to come back to New York to get some rest before the next onslaught at Labor Day. But itâs always so beautiful there, and Iâm expected. We do what we must. You should have been there. Everyone asked where you were.â
Harper doubted that but she heard the thinly veiled criticism. No one even knew she was there most of the time. Harper wondered why her mother insisted on filling the house with tiresome guests only to complain about it later. There was never respite from the loud, slightly inebriated conversations, the raucous laughter, and the long string of parties. Her motherâs packed social calendar was her lifeâs blood. In contrast, Harper couldnât bear constantly being