space. It would be the second time she’d had to move her equipment. In her next home, the one she’d started to seriously consider, she wanted a studio on-site. One where she could dabble in the occasional portrait if the mood struck. Or a space where she could showcase her new artistic direction, with vast walls just waiting for her to splatter with her work.
The more she thought about the move, in both her home and her work, the greater the chills ran up and down her spine.
From the front door of her office, the alarm chimed, telling her Beverly had arrived.
Shannon stepped from her back room, forced a smile on her face, and went to greet a woman she had no particular need to ever see again.
Wearing black dress pants, a fitted shirt, and a short jacket, Beverly stood in the doorway with her back rod-straight. The thin line of her lips and lifted chin put Shannon on edge.
“Good afternoon, Beverly.”
“It’s Mrs. Harkin.”
Ohhhkay. Guess this isn’t a social visit.
Instead of giving the woman what she wanted, Shannon said, “I trust everyone is well?”
Mrs. Harkin took a step into the room and glanced at one of the many boxes Shannon had spread around the space. “Depends on what your definition of well is. No one has died, if that’s what you mean.”
“I wasn’t using death as my barometer, but I’m happy to hear it.” The woman mimicked Shannon’s own mother when she wasn’t happy with something. Astute, condescending, and elitist. Hence the demand that Shannon not use her first name. It was the one thing her mother had taught her growing up. Make people call you by your last name and only gift them with using your first after they’ve become more than an acquaintance. And employees are to always address you as Miss or Mrs. Of course, that advice went out the window when Shannon became a Ms. “What can I do for you?” Shannon asked.
Instead of answering, Beverly took a few more steps inside the office, her gaze moving from box to box. “Are you moving your studio?”
“I’m closing it, actually.”
She released a short-suffering breath. “I suppose it’s hard to stay in business when you sabotage the people you work for.”
Now the bitter anger started to make sense. Not that Shannon was going to own any choices Corrie made in Tulum. “I’m not sure what you’re referring to.”
Beverly snapped her eyes toward Shannon. “You know perfectly well what I’m talking about. You told Corrie she shouldn’t get married.”
“I did no such—”
“It shouldn’t have surprised me, a bitter divorcée like yourself. But to interfere with a young couple so obviously in love. You should be ashamed of yourself.”
Shannon found herself tripping over the words young and love. “Your waxing poetry over Corrie and Victor is ill placed, Mrs. Harkin.” Shannon put as much sarcasm as she could in the other woman’s name. “Corrie voiced to me, twice, that she had second thoughts about getting married. I simply reminded her that she had a choice in the matter. Nothing more, nothing less.”
Beverly took a step closer. “What makes you believe she had a choice? The wedding was planned, the guests had arrived, my friends were there. Corrie’s choice had been made long before flying to that mosquito-infested part of the world.”
“Is that what has you so upset? That your friends witnessed your daughter’s rebellion? It’s her life, Beverly. Not yours.” How Shannon wished someone had spoken to her parents this way when she was younger. When Angie was still in the picture.
“My daughter’s rebellion? Is that what you call it? Corrie has been in tears since she followed your advice and ran away.”
Shannon had a hard time believing that.
“Now that she and Victor are speaking again, it’s only a matter of time before they patch up this little dip in the road. When they do, you’ll be the first to hear that your efforts to break them up were in vain.” Beverly tapped the toe of her foot against one of the boxes on the floor. “I hope you don’t plan on going into business for yourself again. I’m sure my daughter and Victor will shut you down the second you think of opening shop. And if they don’t . . . I will.”
Every muscle in Shannon’s body tensed. How much of what she was hearing was truth or fabrication?
“Thank you for the warning, Beverly. Now, if you’ll excuse me.” Shannon indicated the door.