were empty.
Allowing herself a small sigh of relief, Grace ignored the food that had grown cold at her own table and went swiftly outside. She dug through her purse for her keys while she walked, telling herself sheâd be back at Evonneâs in a matter of minutes. But the moment she glanced up, she saw that Kennedy Archer wasnât gone, after all. He was leaning against the front bumper of a Ford Explorer that was parked next to her Beemer.
It looked as if he was waiting for someone. She hoped it wasnât her.
For a few seconds, her footsteps faltered. Sheâd have to walk around him to get in. But she wasnâtabout to let the sight of him stop her. She wouldnât let him or his friends hurt her ever again, she thought, and picked up speed.
As she stepped off the curb, he shoved away from the Explorer as if to intercept her, but she circumvented him easily enough.
âExcuse me,â she murmured and unlocked her car. She might have been talking to a stranger.
Throwing her purse into the passenger seat, she slid inside, welcoming the feel and smell of the familiar leather. But when she pulled on her door, she realized it wouldnât close because he was holding it.
She looked into his face, and let every ounce of the derision she felt for Stillwaterâs spoiled, selfish, insensitive men show in her eyes. âIs there something I can do for you?â
The look registered. He stepped back as though sheâd slapped him, but didnât release her door.
âI just wanted to sayââ
âDonât bother.â
âButââ
âI know you, remember? Iâm sure you and your friends can recall a great many things about me, and I donât blame you for not being impressed. But I also remember a great many things about you and am equally unimpressed. So save your feeble attempts to be a nice guy for someone who canât see the shriveled heart behind that phony smile.â
With that, she glanced pointedly at the hand holding her door, and he finally let go.
Â
Kennedy watched Grace pull out of the lot. Obviously, she wasnât the âIâll do anything to make you like me,â girl sheâd been in high school. He wanted to believe sheâd confused him with Joe, or maybe Tim, but he knew she hadnât.
As he climbed into the driverâs seat of his own vehicle, he remembered Joe bragging to the varsity football team that he could get Grace to have sex with him anytime, anywhere. To prove it, heâd convinced her to meet him in the locker room after the game the following Friday.
Kennedy hadnât stayed for the show, but heâd listened as avidly as everyone else to the gossip that had circulated afterward. Heâd even laughed when Joe explained how heâd promised to take her to the prom only to stand her up.
â I never laid a hand on her,â Kennedy said aloud in an effort to ease his troubled conscience. But his conscience wouldnât relent. Maybe he hadnât been directly involvedâbut he hadnât done much to stop the others from calling her names, had he? Heâd been there, standing next to the guys whoâd nudged her or tripped her. Heâd chosen to ignore it when they slipped a pincher bug into her food at lunch. Heâd only intervened when Raelynn was there.
Raelynnâ¦God, he missed his wife. Heâd never known anyone so sweet, so perfect. She used to plead with him to make his friends stop mocking Grace, to persuade them to leave her alone. For Raelynnâs sake, heâd stepped in now and then. But his own mother often spoke of Graceâs family as if they had no right to breathe the same air as decent people, and heâd taken his lead from her.
His regret tasted bitter as he shut his car door and started his engine. Thereâd been times heâd felt sorry for Grace, but mostly heâd tried to pretend she didnât exist. The way sheâd stare at
Katie Mac, Kathryn McNeill Crane