when David picked her up at 7:00 A.M. She knew it wasnât something that Ariel would have done, but she couldnât bear to face âMiss Pommy.â Besides, she told herself, she wanted to see how Ariel and R.J. were getting along. Had he believed the switch?
âCoward,â David said pleasantly as she opened the door to his BMW.
âThrough and through,â she said and laughed. âHave you heard from Ariel?â
âThink your boss threw her out before breakfast?â
âHe sleeps naked. I worry that he seduced Ariel.â
Sara was only kidding, but when David almost ran into a fire hydrant, she gasped.
âHe wouldnât really, would he?â David asked.
Sara was trying to figure out what his concern was. Arielâs last letters said that David was half in love with some âvery unsuitable girlâ who lived on âthe other sideâ of Arundel. But now Sara was wondering if there was more between them than sheâd realized.
As they drove though Arundel, Sara got her first look at the town. It was like a set for a movie about a perfect little town. So this is where I came from, she thought. She hadnât been born in Arundel, but sheâd been conceived here. âOn top of a Ferris wheel at the county fair,â if her father was to be believed.
They passed big, old houses surrounded by beautiful gardens. Huge trees of magnolia and gingko shaded perfect lawns. Flowers bloomed everywhere. Houses had signs in front of them telling the name of the house and the date it wasbuilt. She saw the name Ambler, her motherâs maiden name, twice. In spite of her refusal to memorize the genealogy of the townâs founding families, she remembered Arielâs comments about the Amblers: oldest, richest, most prominent. Her ancestors had walked on these streets, lived in these houses.
She came out of her reverie when David turned beside an enormous Victorian house painted blue and white. It was covered with porches, turrets, and little round windows, all romantic and dreamy.
Looking at her, David smiled. âBuilt by your great, great, great, et cetera, uncle.â
âA man of taste.â How good it felt to belong! she thought.
When they got to the parking lot, Ariel and R.J. were outside putting boxes in the trunk of his rented Jaguar. Actually, Ariel was putting in the boxes and R.J. was talking on his cellphone to somebody in Tokyo. Sara fully expected him to start ordering her around as soon as she stepped out of Davidâs car, but he didnât. Instead, she found out what it was like to be on the receiving end of the R.J. treatment, as sheâd heard it described.He looked her up and down from head to toe, then back again. When heâd finished that, he looked into her eyes.
For the first time, Sara had an idea of why so many women fell for him. But she knew him and wanted nothing to do with his hot looks. It was easy, almost natural, for her to become Ariel and give him her best imitation of the look. When David reached her, Sara squeezed his arm possessively.
R.J. looked from David to Sara, then back again. There was a knowing little smirk on R.J.âs face, as if to say, This
boy
is no competition for a man like me.
Sara had to fight the urge to tell him what she thought of him, but to do that would give the game away.
âYou must be Ariel,â R.J. said, at last off the phone. He put himself between her and David, and took her arm to lead her to the front passenger seat.
âAnd you must be Mr. Brompton,â she said, moving her arm out of his.
âPlease, call me R.J.â
She was tempted to say, âCall me Miss Weatherly,âbut she just smiled and put more space between them.
âIâm glad Sara asked to bring her cousin along on this trip,â he said suggestively.
Sara had to bite her tongue to keep from putting him in his place. Sheâd seen the way he flirted with women and the way they