driveway all night.”
“Was there?”
“You don’t seem shocked.”
“Should I be?”
“Yes, you should be. The car belonged to Jackson Perdue. Of all men, Jack Perdue!”
“Lower your voice,” Mona suggested. “I think you’re right about our not telling J.B. It would only upset him.”
“Aren’t you upset? I certainly am. By lunchtime today, the whole town will know that Cathy had an overnight visitor. I don’t think we can keep this from J.B. for very long.”
“Perhaps not, but I’d prefer you let me tell him when it becomes necessary,” Mona said.
“I don’t know where I went wrong with that girl. I did my best to bring her up the right way, but—”
“This Jack Perdue, he’s the boy Cathy was in love with when she was a teenager, isn’t he?”
Silence.
Seth needed to hear his grandmother’s answer.
“Yes,” Elaine said so quietly that Seth barely heard her. “He was wrong for her then, and he’s wrong for her now.”
“That isn’t your decision to make, is it?”
Elaine gasped. “You can’t possibly approve of—”
“It’s not my place to approve or disapprove of Cathy’s decision.”
“Don’t you think her having an affair with Jack Perdue will adversely affect all our lives, especially Seth’s?”
“Seth is nearly sixteen. He’s not a child. He has to know that it would be wrong for Cathy to spend the rest of her life mourning Mark.”
“You’re far more understanding of my daughter’s human frailties than most mothers-in-law would be.”
“I love Cathy. She was very good to my son and…and she gave us a grandchild when I’d given up hope of ever…Elaine, if she loves this man, she has every right to be with him.”
His mom had been in love with Jack Perdue when she’d been a teenager, before she’d married his dad. And now she might be in love with him again. Seth wasn’t sure how he felt about his mom being with another man. He’d thought maybe she would start dating Brother Hovater. He kind of reminded him of his dad. He guessed it was selfish of him to wish that his mom wouldn’t date anybody, that she’d stay true to his dad forever.
Yeah, that was stupid. His father was dead. His mother was still a fairly young woman. It was only natural that she’d want to get married again and maybe have more kids.
But why did the guy have to be Jackson Perdue?
Why not? What was wrong with Jack?
“Since we don’t seem to be very busy this morning, I’m going to take my break,” Lorie told Cathy. “And unless we’re swamped with customers, I may try to catch up on the bookkeeping.”
“Go ahead,” Cathy said. “I think I can hold down the fort.” She glanced around at their entirely empty shop.
Lorie laughed. “Are you sure you have the energy to even stay awake?” She lowered her voice. “Going at it hot and heavy all night with the golden god had to have taken a lot out of you.”
Grinning shyly, Cathy motioned for Lorie to hush. “Stop that. You don’t know who might walk in and overhear you.”
“Oh, sweetie, if you think half the town doesn’t already know that Jack’s Vette was parked in your driveway all night, then you’re far more naive than I thought you were.”
Cathy huffed, hating to admit that Lorie was right. “I know, and I’m dreading having to deal with what my mother is going to say and how J.B. and Mona will react.”
“It’s none of their damn business. Tell them that.”
“I just might do it. But if Seth finds out that—”
The tinkling chime hanging over the front door jingled, alerting them that a customer had just entered the store. Both of them glanced at the door. Cathy’s heart sank.
“I’ll leave you two alone,” Lorie whispered and hurried off toward the back storeroom.
Cathy faced her son. She could tell just by looking at him that Seth was upset, and she had a pretty good idea why.
“Good morning. I’m surprised to see you here. I thought you were still grounded,” Cathy said.
“I am, but Nana gave me permission to come see you. She dropped me off and told me she’d pick me up when I called her.”
“That was very nice of Mona.”
“Is it true?” Seth demanded.
“Is what true?”
“Did Jackson Perdue spend the night with you?”
This was what she had dreaded far more than a confrontation with either her mother or her in-laws. Despite being six feet tall and thinking he was grown, Seth was still just a boy on the verge of manhood. As far as she knew, he was still a