husband was alive.
It didnât happen. The will was read without a hitchâand Betsy went on to get rehitched just six months later, to a man her own ageâor perhaps a decade younger. As Gilbert dryly stated at the time, he probably needed someone to pay his college tuition.
I miss you already, Gilbert.
And you, too, Silas.
This world seems to get lonelier with every passing week.
Tyler is acutely aware of his status as a widower himself, and as sole survivor of a lifelong threesome referred to back in their boarding school days as the Telfair Trio. He sinks into his leather swivel chair behind the mahogany desk at which two previous generations of Hawthornes practiced law.
The days of standing weekly golf games and lunches at the club with Silas and Gilbert were long gone well before his friends died. But despite having drifted with old age from their social and recreational rituals, the bond forged four scoreâgive or take a year or twoâago, remained.
The trio staged some risky schoolboy pranks and escapades in their days at Telfair Academyâalways knowing they had each otherâs backs.
That loyaltyâthat willingness to cover for each other, even if it meant lying to an authority figure, or a spouseâlingered into adulthood. They knew each otherâs deepest and, in some cases, darkest secrets.
Thanks to Silas and Gilbert, Tylerâs beloved Marjorie went to her deathbed never knowing of his foolish, youthful indiscretions.
And thanks to Silas and Tyler putting their own careers as doctor and lawyer on the line, Gilbertâs family fortune remains intactâand, perhaps even more importantly, the Remington name untarnished.
Perhaps it was the Telfair Trioâs final escapade, that ultimate test of their allegiance, that pushed them all too far. After that, things were never quite the same. On the surface, yes. But deep down, Tyler suspects, guilt had finally caught up with all three of them.
Perhaps Gilbert most of all.
But it all happened years ago. Another lifetime, it seems.
Tyler drums his fingertips on the green blotter and turns a nervous eye toward the swinging pendulum of the wall clock opposite.
In about five minutes, Gilbert Remington IIâs descendants are going to walk through that door, fully anticipating that they will walk back out set for life, millionaires many times over.
One wonât be disappointed.
âRemember, you need to be ready when I come back here to get you.â Parked at the curb in front of Caseyâs house on Bull Street in Savannahâs historic district, Mom taps the steering wheel of her white Lexus SUV with both hands for emphasis.
Lianna almost wishes old Stephen had driven her into town instead of her mother. But the chauffeur has gone to visit his daughter in Atlanta for a few weeks, and Great-Grandaddyâs shiny black car sits unused in the carriage house until he gets back.
âIâm going to call your cell phone when Iâm on my way,â Mom goes on, âso youâll have plenty of warning, and I swear, if youâre not readyââ
âI will be,â Lianna says, wishing her mother would stop talking to her, and frowning over at her in the passengerâs seat, as if sheâs a naughty little girl. Itâs enough to make her add, snippily, âJust donât call and say youâre coming back a half hour from now and expect me to be happy to see you.â
âDonât use that tone with me.â Momâs violet eyes darken ominously.
Lianna canât help but notice, jealously, that her mother is strikingly pretty even when sheâs angry. It isnât fair. Why canât Mom look like a regular person, the way her friendsâ mothers do? Or, if she has to be so beautiful, at least Lianna could have inherited her looks.
Lianna apparently resembles not her father, with his dark good looks, but his side of the family, though she doesnât know
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